Blue jeans have more in common with drugs than you might think.
One of the more consequential episodes in the history of crony capitalism occurred in 17th and 18th century France. Cheap clothing made from cotton was threatening the rich woolen, linen, and silk manufacturers, so they persuaded the government to ban it. In short order, government agents began spying into homes and coaches and reporting on anyone who dared to wear the new fabric.Thousands of violators of the ban were rounded up and either sent to prison or to ships as galley slaves, which was a death sentence.
In Britain, the same manufacturers demanded a similar ban from the King, but were turned down. As a direct result, Britain launched its industrial revolution by making cheap cotton clothing for the world, and began to get rich, while France stagnated economically.
If France had not banned cotton, and had not fallen so far behind Britain economically, Napoleon might have had the money to build a huge fleet and successfully invade Britain. European and world history might have turned out quite differently.
It is easy to recognize and mock the absurdities of crony capitalism in the past, but not always easy to spot it today.
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1 comment:
Let's go a step farther and look at the banning of industrial hemp to please the cotton industry, and medical cannabis to please the pharmaceutical industry.
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