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It's unclear to me that government funding stuff, even when it turns out to be something good in the end, is actually critical or even beneficial on the whole when you consider all efforts and money have alternatives that weren't taken. Did Newton, Einstein, etc. need government investment? Edison, Ford or Franklin?

Is it not possible that without government funding, private funding would have taken place? I can see that charity is down as government welfare spending goes up. We stop expecting to help directly, a moral good, when so much of our income is already taken for government's preferences. Tithing used to suggest 10%, yet a typical American's income likely has 30% spent by his various sovereign (city, county, state, federal).

Must innovation arrive as soon as possible to be best? Governments also fund anti-research and anti-innovation, like with massive regulation against nuclear energy and losing 70 years of innovation while propping up fossil fuel companies, or funding recreational drug research during the Nixon years that showed little reason to put people into cages for their choices, and that created ever greater harm across the world trying to prohibit it.

Like charity, research may be best (and certainly it's the most moral way) when it's by voluntary choice directed by those like-minded people who are pursuing some good, knowledge or profit. Those people balance the their economic reality to be spent on limited resources.

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I take your point, and it's well argued, but one thing consider- Eric Weinstein has made the point that pure innovation (so not by expanded application) stalled in the mid seventies. He had been at a loss to explain why. I can tell you exactly what it was- if you look at the NASA budget by year, expressed as a percentage of the federal budget, this was exactly the time that NASA funding began to be reallocated towards social spending...

Newton was awarded a chair, and was made a Master of the Mint in later life. Edison enrolled himself in the Cooper Union in order to give himself access to the resources for his first innovation, which produce the seed money for his later work (so charitably funded initially). You couldn't do that these days, because, as I am sure you are aware, most universities own their students work (at least this side of the Pond).

Ford didn't receive any government help, although he was a beneficiary of government in a way- infrastructure made his innovation possible :).

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Very good points. It's always trade-offs, but we never know how things would have turned out in the otherwise scenarios of innovation and market forces. The US did land giveaways for railroads and were paid by the mile of track rather than the mile of useful/necessary track. Central planning for innovation doesn't have a great track record (pun intended). I'm not against all government spending, but its greatest funded innovations, sadly, are in the tools of war and spying.

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Good stuff! I agree 100% with this:

"Instead of protests on the streets which emphasis the transparent differences of skin tone, gender and sexuality, perhaps we should fight causes which transcend petty differences and enshrine the value of all human life".

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