RedmondLonghorn
Footballguy
The lazy and ignorant are going to end up getting the shaft, on average, under any sort of market-based system. I would call that a feature, not a bug, of the system.Like Murray argued, what if it is systemic and ingrained, like IQ?
Then what to do about income inequality?
That was the thesis of his book. It got railroaded by race and IQ concerns, but that was his larger point. What if you even controlled for whites only?
I'm going to be really careful here, because this is a minefield of a topic, but I'd observe that certain types of people tend to exhibit a high degree of respect for education and a high level work ethic overall, even at the lower end of the economic spectrum. Those types tend to be more successful, on average, than those that do not exhibit respect for education or work ethic.
That is as it should be.
The question should be: how do you change cultural attitudes within groups where the unhelpful attitudes have become culturally ingrained to something more constructive? Telling them that the deck is stacked against them and that the whole system is unfair and will never serve them well no matter what they do is not helpful.