Separating the presumably wiser adults from the relatively inexperienced younger individuals without specifying any gender identity for the purposes of this title
Pop quiz for self-described Republicans, Libertarians, Conservatives, and Classic Liberals.1 What is your first thought when you see this headline from an article in today’s Wall Street Journal?
PayPal Cancels Plan for Facility in North Carolina, Citing Transgender Law
Choose the one option which most closely corresponds to your belief:
- Political correctness has gone too far.
- Corporations have no right to tell people how to govern themselves.
- Godless anti-heterosexual heathens are extorting the good people of North Carolina to prevent bathrooms being one for men and another for women, as God intended.2
- Market forces always win. Get over it, North Carolina.
This quiz is not timed, and is self-graded. No pressure, take as much time as you like. When you are ready, continue on to the next section.
Grading your quiz
If you answered with anything other than response number four (Market forces always win) please head on back to the Democratic Party or a Trump rally or wherever. Here’s more information about what was wrong with your answer:
If you answered with response 1, Political correctness has gone too far: You just weren’t thinking. It’s a fuzzy answer that doesn’t even really mean anything. And it’s wrong. This is economic correctness. More on that later.
If you answered with response 2, Corporations have no right to tell people how to govern themselves: Fine, but PayPal isn’t dictating terms (at least not with North Carolina). They just canceled expansion plans, and the CEO explained why. PayPal doing business with you isn’t an entitlement. That’s what free country means, right?
If you answered with response 3, Heathens…: You couldn’t decide between answer 1 and answer 2 so you doubled down on your bemusement by pretending to know something about the Bible. Now go borrow a neighbor’s dictionary and look up bemusement.
If you answered with response 4, Market forces always win: Congratulations, though you don’t need me to say it. You already know that was the obvious choice.
A free market is not necessarily the one without any regulations; it is one in which people, whether individually or in groups, exchange goods and services with others voluntarily for their own reasons. Partners in trade have agency and autonomy. If someone wants to do business with someone else, they simply do.
Generally people and businesses trade for their own benefit. Sometimes they do so out of altruistic motivation, but ultimately that’s really the same thing. Either they get a good feeling from it, or some security in knowing that their action makes the kind of change in the world they want to see. They trade something they have for something they want more than the thing they are trading away.
Though there are sometimes snags with that arrangement, and some protections are necessary (coercion and fraud preclude voluntary action) generally the end result of voluntary trade is that people get the things they wanted most. Their purchasing choices represent their needs, desires, and values, because they make those choices themselves. When one thing is more valuable than another, they give up the less valued in favor of the more valued.
When PayPal began making plans to expand into a new Global Operations Center in Charlotte, they based that decision on a variety of factors. It’s easy to speculate that those included the taxation and regulatory structures in North Carolina, the costs of real estate and the quality of the labor pool. PayPal weighed benefits against drawbacks and decided that Charlotte NC looked like a place to move with more advantages than disadvantages. Ask anyone: PayPal is not a charity.
What PayPal’s management understands is not controversial: their employees are valuable. PayPal’s relationship with its employees is also largely voluntary, so if PayPal’s employees weren’t valuable, PayPal wouldn’t keep employing them.
While it may not be PayPal’s job to keep its employees happy per se, it’s in PayPal’s best interests to make sure that its employees can do their jobs in an environment free of harassment or hostility. I don’t know how many people of various gender identities work for PayPal, but it’s safe to say that PayPal’s employee roster includes people of all kinds.
The real question is: why would PayPal voluntarily try to relocate employees to a state where some of those employees would be unwelcome and unsafe? What would be the cost to employee morale? Cisgendered employees don’t want their trans coworkers to face the choice between a work promotion and relative personal security and safety. There are many places a company can build a new headquarters; a company’s employees are the ones that actually do the business of the business. A smart CEO or management team doesn’t mess with that — just as they don’t intentionally undermine the effectiveness of the other aspects of their operations.
While North Carolina lawmakers may claim God’s guidance in this matter, PayPal and the other businesses that have reconsidered or are reconsidering doing their business in North Carolina are answering to good old fashioned market forces. Between those two Invisible Hands frankly Smith’s has the more reliable track record on improving people’s lives. Perhaps more importantly we rarely see blasphemers struck by lightning all that often these days, but those who deny the power of the market find themselves punished predictably and often severely.
- If you actually call yourself a reactionary or a neocon, feel free to answer but I probably can’t help you with that problem. ↩
- The outhouse had not been invented in Old Testament times. If we are to take The Bible at face value, indoor plumbing itself is an affront before the Almighty. See Deuteronomy 23:13. ↩
Names
So what do you call those of us who don’t believe the government should even be in our bedrooms and/or bathrooms? Or in our weddings? And also believe that market forces alone should determine who you do business with and where you do it?
Our Governor has invited Paypal to move to Vermont. If Paypal takes him up on it, we’ll know that the decision to leave NC was not based on any rational business decision. We’ll see.
Markets (almost) always win
[quote=Dad]So what do you call those of us who don’t believe the government should even be in our bedrooms and/or bathrooms? Or in our weddings? And also believe that market forces alone should determine who you do business with and where you do it?[/quote]
That’s an important part of my point: the labor market is also a market, and market forces apply. A business making decisions based on the well-being of their employees isn’t being charitable; it is doing business. Refraining from doing business in a jurisdiction where one’s business interests are compromised by the government overreach is what a business *should* do. It doesn’t matter whether that overreach is tax law, zoning law, or bathroom law.
Where the government ought to intervene is never as simple as I would like it to be. In this case, the state legislature acted to override local municipal laws, which is something any conservative ought to be skeptical of. Watch the double-standard at work when this law is challenged at the Supreme Court. So-called conservatives will be arguing that the Federal Government has no business invalidating States’ laws which invalidate local laws meant to protect individuals from extrajudicial (vigilante) punishment. I guess that’s a triple-standard?
Laws
What you are saying then is that a locality should be able to pass laws that violate state and federal laws? I believe that local control is best, but we cannot end up with such balkanized laws that crossing a town line suddenly makes you a criminal. It is bad enough at the state level.
Dad wrote: What you are
[quote=Dad]What you are saying then is that a locality should be able to pass laws that violate state and federal laws?[/quote]
I don’t think I’m saying that. I’m wary of states passing laws specifically to invalidate municipal laws. The North Carolina law was put in place specifically to invalidate municipal law (ordinances, whatever.) There are certainly situations where that’s warranted, but I’m highly suspicious when I hear about that happening.
Paypal
I don’t believe that Paypal made this decision based on the well-being of their employees, but rather was simply political correctness. We shall see.
Correctness
[quote=Dad]I don’t believe that Paypal made this decision based on the well-being of their employees, but rather was simply political correctness. We shall see.[/quote]
At the very least, large numbers of Paypal’s own employees (still very Bay Area-centric) would be disillusioned. Messing with morale is dangerous. Maybe that’s a form of kowtowing to popular opinion, but when it’s the popular opinion of your own employees and management, I’ll call that an economic decision rather than a political one.
Also, as Marco Rubio said to Trump, it’s not necessarily about being politically correct, but just plain correct.