Quote from achilles28:
And that's where you are wrong.
Individuals have a right to put a price on their own lives.
No individual has the right to put a price on OTHERS LIVES, without their consent.
And that's what Ford did.
They withheld key information on the Pintos safety from consumers.
Now if Ford had told consumers beforehand, the Pinto was a great, cheap car with a faulty gas-tank that could blow-up, Ford wouldn't be liable.
But because they sold a product under fraudulent pretenses, where the risks were known, but not disclosed, Ford was sued for damages, and rightly lost.
What Lee Iacocca did was unconscionable.
The choices before him were thus:
1) Increase the sticker price of the Pinto by a measly 13 dollars
2) Eat the cost of gas tank redesign by 13 dollars, per car
3) Some combination of 1 and 2.
4) Keep the faulty gas tank, hide the safety data, and subject thousands of lives to a firey death.
He chose #4.
I would not chose#4. Would you?
Quote from jsp326:
What a bunch of tripe.
http://peterlbrandt.com/keynesian-ideology-the-real-smoking-gun-in-the-mf-global-default/
Quote from athlonmank8:
That kid was excellent. Both had good points. Takes some balls to step in front of your peers and go face to face with Milton Friedman. I was also impressed with his communication skills.
You seem kinda dense
===============Quote from Mav88:
at the other extreme we have a liberal crown jewel which shows what happens when idiots like Moore get their way, and yes grown ups do have to put a price on human life ...
http://www.nofluoride.com/asbestos.cfm

Quote from bigarrow:
The boy kicked Friedman's ass in that discussion and out classed the old scholar too. I wonder what the young man is doing today. My bet is he is a successful man.
Friedman's is just being an argumentative asshole. The actual argument he is making has little to do with the exact situation the young man is making and Mr Friedman knows this. Ford was guilty and I don't remember for sure but I think the courts verified that.
Quote from Biog:
A little lite reading:
http://www.wfu.edu/~palmitar/Law&Valuation/Papers/1999/Leggett-pinto.html
"In conclusion, all of the arguments against Judge Posner's negligence-efficiency argument center around valuing human life. Is it possible to set a price for all things, especially a human life? Is it ethically correct to attempt to do such a thing? Should a company be allowed to use this standard to determine whether to "upgrade" an automobile. The answer to all of these questions is yes. The use of the risk/benefit analysis maximizes overall economic value and general welfare. In fact, these choices are subconsciously made by individuals, companies and governmental agencies on an everyday basis. Judge Posner argues this standard was used long before Judge Learned Hand first expressed it in algebraic terms in Carroll Towing. While criticizing the numbers or values used by the Ford Motor Company in the risk/benefit analysis may be valid, the use of the risk/benefit analysis itself cannot be questioned."
Quote from bigarrow:
I'll pass on the reading. My point was valid though, Friedman did not argue the issue brought up by the young man. The young man won the short debate between the two. Very impressive considering the age, intelligence and speaking skill of Friedman.