The thing is, there are methods of establishing regulatory bodies that do not create a governing body beholden to the entities regulated. Consider the Sierra Club, for example; they regulate environmental impact but don't answer to the corporate interests they oversee/certify, but instead to their shareholders/members directly.
Consider the Sierra Club, for example; they regulate environmental impact but don't answer to the corporate interests they oversee/certify, but instead to their shareholders/members directly.
Remember that time someone gave the Sierra Club a bunch of money, explicitly so they would drop opposition to immigration from their platform, and they did?
A response essay written by Eliezer Yudkowsky posted at Cato Unbound for the issue Brain, Belief, and Politics:
Is That Your True Rejection? by Eliezer Yudkowsky
The lead essay has been written by Michael Shermer:
Liberty and Science by Michael Shermer