“What Would Happen If We Began Trading With Cuba Again?”

I can’t help but feel that Libertarians have a blind spot for the deep immorality embedded into their philosophy. Yet, it’s not like I disagree with everything Libertarian. For instance: I concur with George Mason economist Bryan Caplan that the U.S. embargo of Cuba has been detrimental to both countries. It should be stopped immediately. A few exchanges from Caplan’s Ask Me Anything at Reddit follow.

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Question:

What would happen if we began trading with Cuba again?

Bryan Caplan:

They’d quickly get a lot richer, and we’d get some very nice vacations. In the longer run, the chance that Communism in Cuba would collapse or collapse into mere rhetoric is high.

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Question:

Do you feel that the rise of China is beneficial to the interests of the United States?

Bryan Caplan:

When countries produce cheap stuff to sell us, it is good for us. And rich countries are very rarely militarily aggressive, at least once they’ve been rich for a full generation.

Question:

Is the U.S. a counterexample?

Bryan Caplan:

Not really. Most dominant powers throughout history have been far more aggressive. The U.S. today is scared to lose a few thousand soldiers. Why? Because rich people value their lives. Thankfully!

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Question:

What books have influenced you and your career?

Bryan Caplan:

Atlas Shrugged, For a New Liberty, Economic Sophisms, The Armchair Economist, The Bell Curve, The Myth of Democratic Failure, The Nurture Assumption, and Modern Times. Mike Huemer’s been a massive influence on me, but mostly his articles, especially “Moral Objectivism.”

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Question:

With the drought in Southern California is it possible the state is overpopulated? Meaning we have to halt immigration into the south west?

Bryan Caplan:

No. Just raise the price of water!•
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In 1959, Ed Sullivan interviews Fidel Castro:

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