> world did fine before derivatives
The Hittites and Bronze-Age Egyptians had forward-deliverable contracts that, if you squint, they would trade amongst each other. The idea of being able to assign a contract to a third party to which you're a beneficiary is about as old as civilisation. In part because it's obvious. In part because it's impossible to police. But mostly because it's useful.
(I'm ignoring insurance and reinsurance, both of which are derivatives and rely heavily upon them.)
The scale of things was much different back then. Not comparable.
> scale of things was much different back then
"Scale back derivatives" is a reasonable argument. "Ban derivatives" is silly.
> Not comparable
Totally comparable. I'm actually struggling to think of an infrastructure-building civilisation in history that didn't have some form of tradable forwards.