Remember 2020? We were deep into the covid pandemic. Thanksgiving was different because we couldn't get together.
This re-post from four years ago is a good reminder that we easily obtain our holiday dinner turkey due to the "invisible hand" of the U.S. free market, not due to a bureaucratic Turkey Czar.
My niece invited the extended
family to her apartment for Thanksgiving this year. She created a
Facebook event called "A Very 2020 Thanksgiving." Then she cancelled it
because our governor's covid restrictions forbid multiple household
gatherings. Yes, a very 2020 Thanksgiving.
My household had no turkey. But if you
did, I think I know how you got it. You didn't order it special from a
local shop or farm. You put it in your cart on a normal trip to the
grocery store. You knew there would be plenty of reasonably priced
turkeys for all who wanted one.
Thousands of people made that happen:
"Poultry
farmers, of course, but also the feed distributors, and the truckers
who brought it to the farm, not to mention the architect who designed
the hatchery, the workmen who built it, and the technicians who keep it
running. The bird had to be slaughtered and defeathered and inspected
and transported and unloaded and wrapped and priced and displayed. The
people who accomplished those tasks were supported in turn by armies of
other people accomplishing other tasks — from refining the gasoline that
fueled the trucks to manufacturing the plastic in which the meat was
packaged."
There
is no turkey czar with a master plan, issuing orders, forcing these
workers to cooperate. But they do cooperate. They made thousands of
smart decisions independently. Why? To create an income and take care of
their loved ones.
"Free
human beings freely interact, and the result is an array of goods and
services more immense than the human mind can comprehend. No dictator,
no bureaucracy, no supercomputer plans it in advance."
Adam Smith called it the "invisible hand" of the free marketplace.
from the Boston Globe