ic policy intersects with market behavior. Thus the tobacco lobby seeks to offset government regulations against smoking, while trade groups (e.g., a Yacht Association) seek to cut industry-specific taxes. In other words, government regulation became its own marketplace, so that "by the 1970s, Modern Liberals had reached an impasse . . . unable to restrain the political disorder that had been unleashed by opening government to the intense pressures of interest groups" (123).
Modern liberal proposals for political reform are all meant to foster increased equalization of wealth distribution. They can be distinguished however. One proposal is neoliberal ac
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