Markets don’t need more regulation—they need more standards. Not the kind handed down by bureaucrats in a boardroom, but the kind forged in the fire of competition. The kind that come from people hungry to build something better, not beg for a handout.
You don’t raise the bar by complaining about who’s winning. You raise it by innovating—by creating something so good the market can’t ignore it. That’s how free exchange works. It’s not coercion. It’s not charity. It’s voluntary. And because it’s voluntary, value is earned, not taken.
Opportunity is the great equalizer, but only if you’re willing to work. In a true free market, anyone can enter—but only those who uphold high standards and push boundaries stay. That’s good. That’s just. That’s how progress is made.
Want better goods? Better services? A better life? Compete. Innovate. Trade freely. Raise the standard.