Neoliberalism
In the fifties when Milton Friedman and the Chicago school advocated for cutting all utilities and services owned by the people and supported by the government so the free market, unfettered by government restrictions and social programs, would be able to create these services and improve the countries economic prosperity, he was seen as a crank. Later in the seventies and eighties these policies were adopted in America and the UK. Not long after it became the global economic and social hegemony, leading to a speeding up of climate change, social inequality while furthering the massive wealth gap between workers and their elite capitalists owners.
Nick Robertson
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