Tag Archives: justice

Book Review – “What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets”

Recently read:

What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets (Michael J. Sandel)

My grade (1 to 5): 4 – unsettling but insightful critique of pervasive market-based thinking in contemporary society full of different examples illustrating that, especially in the U.S., increasingly everything seems to be up for sale – and how we should think about this if we object to certain commercializing practices of things we consider too sacred or important to be treated in this way.

Key Ideas:

  • In what “Justice” author Michael Sandel calls “market triumphalism“, we find ourselves in a world where increasingly many problems are being solved by the application of a price and buyers willing to pay it. Whether we pay for convenience, trying to motivate individuals to behave a certain way, gamble on the life or death of celebrities, or try to support public goods like schools and the police, Sandel invites us to reflect on whether the practice of putting up virtually anything (and anyone) up for sale is desirable from a moral perspective.
  • Examples range from the seemingly harmless (e.g., paying to cut the line at airports, themeparks, congressional hearings, concerts, Shakespeare festivals, or naming rights on baseball stadiums) to the controversial (e.g., paying drug-addicted women to be sterilized, kids for good grades, for police cars to be rolling advertising bill boards, for the right to immigrate, for the right to pollute with carbon offsets, or for the right to kill endangered rhinos), to the outright macabre (e.g., companies secretly buying life insurance on employees to cash in upon their deaths, online sites to reward the right bet on the death of famous people).
  • For each example, the author explains that all arguments boil down to two fundamental objections every time that we feel disturbed by instances where the market/economic approach seems to inappropriately encroach on civic life. The first is an effect on reducing equality in society. The second is about corruption or degradation of the good in question by the practice of putting it up for sale. Throughout each example, Sandel applies this framework and offers his opinion whether the market approach is defensible or not based on either criteria.

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Good Archives #1 – Law vs. Justice, Respecting the Poor, Sustainable Entrepreneurship, Do Good Career Choices

If it’s true that the blogosphere is really skin-deep and that we tend to stay only on the first page of any blog, then perhaps there is some value in the ancient respected work of excavation and restoration.

To that end, I thought it might be useful to periodically dig up some previous posts and put them on a little list. Since most of the themes and questions on GG tend to be not time-dependent anyway, no dusting required! Also, some recently joined folks may find interest in them but would never in a million years bother to click through the history of this blog.

Topics in Archive #1:

  • Justice – Law vs. Justice in the Occupy Wall Street Movement
  • Poverty – Pity vs. Compassion when thinking about “The Poor”
  • Sustainability – The Right to Entrepreneurship vs. Sustainability
  • Careers – An Approach for Choosing a Do-Good Job
  • Reflections – Defining our Personal Boundaries for “Doing Good”

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On Justice

Law does not mean Justice (d’oh!) – Occupy Wall Street’s Core Challenge

  • What is the viability of the Occupy Wall Street Movement? In today’s society, is it possible to ask for justice (right or wrong) in a system where legality (rules and laws) is the official decision-making factor of a country’s rulers?

On Poverty

Respecting the Poor – What You Should and Should Not Expect from “Doing Good” Unto Others

  • How should we think about “The Poor”? What is the importance of periodically re-humanizing those we call “poor” people and what is the critical difference between “pity” and “compassion”? What’s at stake if we keep referring to those we seek to help as “the poor” without thinking about what that actually means to them (and what it would mean to us if we were in their shoes)?

On Sustainability

The Dilemma of Sustainability – Should Entrepreneurship be our Natural Right?

  • If we are serious about sustainability, should we start managing or impose stricter standards on the way every day in the world new companies get started that just add to the burden of resource depletion and emissions? Should the right to economic self-actualization overrule the need for environmental stewardship? How should we manage this unbridled activity especially in developing markets where people tend to be less educated or interested in sustainability?

On Careers

4 Steps to Choosing a “Good Career” (Part 1) – Scaling of Impact

  • How should we think about choosing careers in the so-called “do-good” jobs of social entrepreneurship, NGOs, philanthropy, impact investing, etc.? How can we make the decision as individually relevant as possible to our own desires and varying needs for ambitious results? Should we care more about how much impact we are having or how we feel about what we do?

On Reflections

Weekly Ponder #1 – Defining our Do-Good Boundaries: Will my Effort ever be Enough?

  • How can we define how much we should get engaged in the business of doing good or changing the world? Should we volunteer, work part time, work full time for our cause? How much of our effort is “enough” to achieve those goals? How much is “enough” for our personal satisfaction? What does this depend on?
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Law does not mean Justice (d’oh!) – Occupy Wall Street’s core challenge

Reference:

“Occupy Wall Street Times Topic” (The New York Times)

Key Ideas:

  • As everyone who does not live under rock is aware of, this marks the third month of the  “Occupy Wall Street” movement that has spelled mass protests in America and many other corners of the world at this point, with the end not yet in sight
  • The cause of the movement is fundamentally an outrage about unequal economic conditions and a collective demand for more fairness. The original claim in the U.S. is that “The 99%” of the population was contributed their tax money, which was then used by the government to bail out “The 1%”, i.e., banks, insurance firms, lobbying corporations, and the general financial establishment under the notion of “too big to fail”. The insult, protesters explain, is that during all this time bankers and other “one percenters” keep receiving fat salaries and big bonuses. Implicitly, they are able to do this because their companies were saved by bailout money in the first place. Meanwhile unemployment and foreclosures continue to frustrate the “ninetynine percenters” – everyone else.

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Book Review – “Justice – What’s the right thing to do?”

Recently read:

Justice – What’s the right thing to do? (Michael J. Sandel)

My grade (1 to 5): 5 – thorough, provocative, forces you to think hard about your beliefs/morals and whether you (should) like them or not

Key Ideas:

  • We have a civic obligation to learn how to think about what we consider right and wrong and why; this will help us make better, sound decisions on both small and big issues in our private lives but more importantly, on public affairs that affect society as a whole
  • We cannot properly participate in debates on whether this policy is “just” or not, unless we understand its moral premises; those, in return, have to be first studied by reading and contemplating the thoughts of great political philosophers from Aristotle all the way to John Rawls; we have to understand (1) what they actually said, (2) why they said it, (3) in what era they lived that influenced their thoughts, (4) determine in what way their philosophy can be applied to judge a decision at hand, such as abortion, gay marriage, military draft, artificial insemination or the essential nature of golf, and (5) know on what grounds we support or reject these ideas in a way that aligns with our moral values

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