The Social Welfare State, beyond Ideology

Yes, but that doesn't tell us anything about this issue, because we have no comparison base. Eg, we do not from this data know what would be the results of a system where less people would be employed in low-productivity jobs.

Sure, we do! It's not as if no one's studied it. Here's a good explanation, fully sourced, from Chapter 3 of Healing Our World by Mary Ruwart:

http://www.ruwart.com/Healing/chap3.html

That's from the first edition; the latest edition is expanded with even more information. (I have no idea why the figure's so screwed up.)

Again: I mean that there is at all times a large pool of people willing to take work, if the opportunity is given.

But whether or not it is considered an "opportunity" is dependent upon lots of things, including wage/salary, benefits, etc.

There is just no evidence that this would have brought the downfall of the USSR, or even that it would have been true.

Of course there is! The USSR is hardly the only example. Earlier (or maybe it was in another thread) I mentioned Plymouth Plantation and how Bradford originally tried a kind of socialist system (centuries before Socialism would even be devised), and the result was poverty and stagnation. After he removed it and moved towards something resembling a free market (again, over a century before the concept of laissez-faire), the result was plenty of food and prosperity. Same culture, same people, only a few years difference.

Sure, he lived until 1973. But I believe these theories were formulated in the 1920's and 30's,

Actually, even before then. We had a strong economy from 1900 (actually a bit earlier) all through the '20s. That was when his ideas were first formulated.

Or, we could compare the standard of living in Russia prior to the communist takeover, and towards the end of that period. It had clearly improved drastically.

All that's saying is, "one tyrant managed to do better than another." They didn't go to or from anything resembling a free market the way Plymouth Plantation did.

The USSR did not 'collapse' economically.

Then why was there hardly any food in the stores?

They have less opportunity, and less incentive, to do so.

Support this.

Additionally, they have a much lower opportunity to aquire training and education that would qualify them for a high-productive job.

Not true, either. Lots of people go to school while working at full-time jobs.

You keep missing the point again and again, which is that this research proves that a strong welfare state does not preclude strong economic growth. That is the scope of the article. Nothing more.

Then it's not saying anything of use. It's kind of like saying, "having cancer does not preclude living a long, happy life." There are many cases of cancer survivors living well for many, many years. But the cancer didn't help.

I doubt that, and you have not provided any.

Yes, I have. Extensively. Certainly a lot more than you have.

Could you explain what you meant by this passage, if it was not a tirade about how much better everything was in the 1930s?

Those are all ways that the Welfare State has had detrimental effects on the economy, something you claimed didn't exist.

No, because we have government regulation that prevents that.

We also have government regulations that prohibit the production, sale, and use of marijuana. Look around: you think it's stopped any?

If Microsoft and Apple had been based in Somalia, do you believe their buildings would still stand?

In Somalia, it's the would-be governors of the country that are doing that, not one business to another. In Zimbabwe and Nigeria, it is the government that's doing that.

Carefully crafted regulation can counter the destructive tendencies of market forces, in many cases. Computer software development is one area where I believe this is possible.

What regulation is needed with computer software?

However, it is a poor example, because the level of competitiveness when it comes to computer operating systems is currently very poor, and largely destructive.

How? There are many choices of operating systems, and the technologies have been improving drastically. Look at the current offerings vs. what was available 10 years ago.

Can't even open their website because they rely on a proprietary file format that is held secret by a single company.

Really? I'm using FireFox and I'm not having any trouble with it. I can even open it on Linux.

Given today's mass unemployment,

:rolleyes:

yes, there is a very significant probability that she will be unable to find a reasonably paying job. So, even given these, by your admission, tremendously good odds for success, she has perfectly good reasons not to take the chance.

Yes, starting a business is risky. If you're just looking for financial gain, starting a business is the wrong thing to do. You'd be much better off putting that money in an index fund. Yet, people start businesses all the time, and investors invest in new businesses all the time. Care to guess why? Could it be that people in the free market might be motivated by something other than just money? Ever considered that?

Yes, and it was generally accepted that if you didn't like the chieftain, you could slay him, which would likely impress the other members of society who would then accept you as the new chieftain.

Or the loyalists would kill you.

Today, most societies are democracies, which theoretically means that the government is a function of the general will.

Look at the War on Drugs and then come back and make that case.

No. You select to either have it, or eat it.

How can you eat it without having it? That's never made any sense to me.

They have both been instituted by our democratically governed societies, and so, they are equally valid.

Then slavery, Prohibition, the holocaust of the native Americans, the internment of Japanese-Americans into concentration camps, McCarthyism, etc. were also "equally valid."

Give me a break...

No. I am not saying that you do not have the right to advocate an end of welfare, just as someone else has the right to advocate the end of private property rights. However, given that we have at present chosen to adopt private property rights and welfare, you can't pick and choose.

Tell that to the heroes in the Underground Railroad.

When did I say it has been getting worse?

You've been singing the chorus of "mass unemployment" like it's out of your hymnal.

Friedman founded the Chicago school, and I argue that he is a follower of Austrian economics.

To a degree, but some of the policies he advocated, like tax withholding, would never have been supported by the Austrians.

At any rate, he advanced the theory of a 'natural rate of unemployment'.

Actually, that began with the Austrians, and I have already mentioned that.

Friedman's theory argues that it is 'necessary' to keep a certain percentage of the population unemployed who are actively seeking work, in order to counter inflation.

An Austrian would say that nothing should be done because the natural rate is, well, natural. The market will determine what the rate should be. I've never heard Friedman say what you're attributing to him, but if he did, then that is clear corruption of his philosophy by the Keynesians who insisted that unemployment countered inflation (which was showed to be clearly and astoundingly false during the '70s).

And you think that most people would have passed them in the 1800s?!?

Apparently they did.

The best kind of evidence possible, eg when the conclusion follows immediately from observation.

No, it's the conclusion following your preconceived notions.

So you think it is wrong when government gives welfare to hungry people, but you advocate using tax money to bail out bankers who of their own free will made bad business decisions on a free market?

No, why would you think I would?

In 1907, it was J.P. Morgan who did that on his own, and he made money in the process. After that, there would have been any number of investors to step up and follow his example, no government or tax money necessary.

(Of course, you could always employ a real solution like getting rid of the fractional reserve system...)

I would of course argue that this hands-off-the-economy approach during the 1920's was in fact the cause for the subsequent disaster.

Then make that argument.

Since the 1930's, we have not had any comparable economic depression,

The rate of growth of the economy is less than it was during the first half of the 20th Century, even with the enormous drag of the Great Depression. The best years of the '90s are comparable with the worst years before the Welfare State.

I would argue that while this is no absolute proof that strong government intervention can be beneficial to the economy, it very strongly supports that theory.

It most certainly does not, given what I just stated.

Uh. Malnutrition as a result of starvation, eg people being forced to eat 'trash' or not eating enough, caused serious health problems in the 1930's in the US. I could google some studies if you're unable.

Yes, DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION. I said that.
 
Maybe you can explain why in the Netherlands the Socialist Party is so popular with welfare recipients, while it opposes pretty much everything the government does.

Doesn't matter; that's argumentum ad populum.

Having an income tax and fiat currency does not necessarily mean the government wants to spend it on giving people hand outs.

But without the Welfare State, there's no reason to have either. The only budget item that even comes close is defense spending, and that's only because our foreign policy is insanely interventionist.

There exists no form of government that can avoid both majority and minority rule at the same time, as far as I know.

Then look at what our country is supposed to be: the individual sovereign over his own life. No one else, majority or minority, should be able to tell him how to live his life.
 
Doesn't matter; that's argumentum ad populum.
No, it isn't. An argumentum ad populum is a claim that something is true because it is popular. But this is not about whether something is true, it is whether something is popular. And it directly contradicts you claim that people receiving hand-outs from the government are not going to oppose the government. That's demonstrateably untrue, especially when the people receiving the hand-outs feel they are not getting enough hand-outs.

No one else, majority or minority, should be able to tell him how to live his life.
The only way that can be avoided it anarchy. Even a libertarian government will tell people how to live, for example by telling them not the steal.
 
No, it isn't. An argumentum ad populum is a claim that something is true because it is popular. But this is not about whether something is true, it is whether something is popular.

Then perhaps you can explain how popularity enters into it.

And it directly contradicts you claim that people receiving hand-outs from the government are not going to oppose the government.

Are they opposing the government? You just said they were supporting the Socialist Party.

That's demonstrateably untrue, especially when the people receiving the hand-outs feel they are not getting enough hand-outs.

Uh, no, that was my point!

The only way that can be avoided it anarchy.

Libertarianism isn't anarchy.

Even a libertarian government will tell people how to live, for example by telling them not the steal.

But that's not interfering in their life, that's stopping them from interfering with other people's lives.
 
Then perhaps you can explain how popularity enters into it.
Certainly. When you said:
"People who get money from the government are obviously a lot less likely to oppose it." you claim that a government is unopposed by the people who get money from it. A government that is unopposed by the populace is popular by definition. If your claim were true, then a government would be more popular among people who get money from it than among people who don't, but sometimes it is just the other way around.

Are they opposing the government?
Yes.

You just said they were supporting the Socialist Party.
I also said that the Socialist Party opposes almost everything the government does, because it rarely does what the Socialist Party would want it to do. The Socialist Party is an opposition party.

Uh, no, that was my point!
Then your point contradicts the statement "People who get money from the government are obviously a lot less likely to oppose it."

But that's not interfering in their life, that's stopping them from interfering with other people's lives.
How is that not interferng in their life? They have a thieving lifestyle and there is interference into that lifestyle, is there not?
 
Sure, we do! It's not as if no one's studied it. Here's a good explanation, fully sourced, from Chapter 3 of Healing Our World by Mary Ruwart:

http://www.ruwart.com/Healing/chap3.html
Wow. I haven't seen anything more blatantly unscientific since I skimmed some 70's maoist literature. Self-important assertions, tedious anecdotes 'explaining' the Truth(tm), sprinkled with out-of-context quotes from supportive sources, which are only inserted for effect, never discussed. No attempt to even discuss possible alternative explanations for made observations - in fact the author does not even seem to realise the need to make the distinction between primary observations and theoretically deduced interpretations. I would suggest to the author that perhaps she should focus her efforts a little. The article is not helped either by the garbled graph (never discussed in the text) titled '[SIZE=-1]Figure 3.1 Temporal Relationship Between Increases in Maximum Wage and Decreases in Black Youth Unemployment'. [/SIZE]Oops. I guess the proof-reading was as lax as the editing.

Of course there is! The USSR is hardly the only example.
This is quite typical: When your assertion that one example proves your point is questioned, you are suddenly uninterested to discuss it, and try to move on to another example (quite an obscure one, at that). So, what exactly is the evidence that the downfall of the USSR was caused by a lack of (or, to give you some slack, the deficiencies of) a method to determine profit and loss?

Earlier (or maybe it was in another thread) I mentioned Plymouth Plantation and how Bradford originally tried a kind of socialist system (centuries before Socialism would even be devised), and the result was poverty and stagnation.
The main problem with this example is that it is quite questionable to assign labels such as 'socialism' or 'laissez-faire-capitalism' to a society for which we have such extremely limited data. Usually, followers of very disparate political ideologies will read such single sources and interpret it to be just in line with their own particular preconceptions.

A famous example is the 'zero government'-supporters' portrayal of medieval Iceland as a model 'capitalist' society without any government. More down-to-earth people, including less on-the-fringe right wing libertarians, usually recognise this characterisation as being based on a very rudimentary and selective understanding of historical data.

All that's saying is, "one tyrant managed to do better than another."
Certainly so. But the fact is that neither the Czar regime or the USSR fell because of any economical collapse. While I in fact at least partially agree with some of von Mises theories pertaining to the inefficiencies of a Soviet-style communist economy, they do not explain, and much less predict the downfall of the USSR.

A prediction requires some precision in time and/or general description of an event that is supposed to take place. Now, von Mises theories regarding inneficiences in communist economy offered neither of these with respect to the USSR. While you can argue that von Mises theories were insightful and can help us explain the failures of the USSR, your characterisation of them as 'predictions' pretty much reveals you as a fundamentalist.

Then why was there hardly any food in the stores?
There was more food than during most of the time the USSR existed, when it evidently did not cause the downfall of that empire.

Not true, either. Lots of people go to school while working at full-time jobs.
This is another clear sign of fundamentalism: the unwillingness to concede even the most obvious of points. You would do better to argue that this effect was offset by some contrary, greater effect. Claiming that unemployed people do not have more motivation and opportunity to seek high-productive jobs, or to educate themselves to qualify for such jobs, is absurd.

Then it's not saying anything of use. It's kind of like saying, "having cancer does not preclude living a long, happy life." There are many cases of cancer survivors living well for many, many years. But the cancer didn't help.
It would be like saying that, if we had a sizable group of patients diagnosed with cancer for a long time, and which still exhibited an average life expectancy as high or higher as any reference group we could find. We might actually be able to do this, for certain benign cancers. But even then, the comparison fails, because even benign cancers do not offer any advantages. Welfare states do clearly offer advantages for many people, even if you are perfectly free to argue that these advantages are offset by greater disadvantages.

Those are all ways that the Welfare State has had detrimental effects on the economy, something you claimed didn't exist.
You are mistaken. The welfare state certainly has some detrimental effects on the economy. I believe that overall, the positive effects outweigh the negative ones. And I believe that the study in the OP shows that at the very least, any negative total effects are not significant enough to prevent strong welfare states of being as successful economically as any other states existing in the real world.

We also have government regulations that prohibit the production, sale, and use of marijuana. Look around: you think it's stopped any?
Around where I live, it certainly has. I'd smoke a lot more pot personally if it was legal. Whether or not a ban is efficient clearly depends on the circumstances. Trying to ban something which has overwhelming acceptance in the general population is usually futile, at least if it is reasonably easy to conceal.

In Somalia, it's the would-be governors of the country that are doing that, not one business to another.
There is no difference between a 'business' and a would-be-governor in that type of state.

What regulation is needed with computer software?
That is an enormous subject. For starters, we need to outlaw the spreading of viruses, and the hiding of malicious software in other products.

How? There are many choices of operating systems, and the technologies have been improving drastically. Look at the current offerings vs. what was available 10 years ago.
While the improvements have been enormous in computer software generally, owing to the cutting-edge competition that prevails in most software sectors, the development has been nearly at a standstill when it comes to operating systems. Many operating systems' vendors have tried to conceal this by bundling more and more software with their operating systems to make it seem like there is progress.

Really? I'm using FireFox and I'm not having any trouble with it. I can even open it on Linux.
That is because the singular company in question has decided to support your particular version of Firefox and your particular version of Linux. It has decided not to support the version of Firefox and the version of Linux that I am using at present, neither any of the other operating systems that I use.

This situation outlines one of the particular problems with regards to markets and computer software. A company which has developed a product with some new and desirable features will deservedly get a large user base. But the company can then use this position to prevent competition by making its software incompatible with any other solutions. I do not have any Gordian solution to this problem, but surely you must be able to realise that this is a destructive behaviour which reduces the efficiency of the computer software market?

Could it be that people in the free market might be motivated by something other than just money? Ever considered that?
I believe that people mainly start businesses in order to escape the tyranny of employers, even facing the prospect of significantly lower pay and harder work. However, for the sake of the general economy, improvements in working efficiency is the interesting factor. So in our hypothetical case, it is in the interest of society (eg, in the statistical interest of all of us) that people take the chance to start new companies when it enables them to be more efficient. And so we should aim to make this rewarding for the individual. A strong welfare state has such a rewarding effect.

Look at the War on Drugs and then come back and make that case.
You're suffering from cultural isolation, I'm afraid. The War on Drugs is, unfortunately, highly popular in large sections of the population, mainly for reasons of moral conservatism.

How can you eat it without having it? That's never made any sense to me.
Err. Well, no shame in asking, because you if you do not understand this platitude of parables, it's definitely time to learn it. It goes like this:
If you have a cake, you have two choices. Either you eat it, or you save it for later. If you eat it, you will obviously not be able to save it. But if you save it, you cannot eat it.
The parable is invoked when someone is faced with a dilemma where two mutually exclusive choices are both desirable, and the person seems unwilling to concede that only one of the two good outcomes can be had.

In our case, you have two choices with respect to a welfare state: Either you become a part of society, accepted by other members of society and thus able to reap its advantages. Or you decide not to pay taxes for welfare, in which case the rest of society will punish you or exclude you. You can't have both.

Then slavery, Prohibition, the holocaust of the native Americans, the internment of Japanese-Americans into concentration camps, McCarthyism, etc. were also "equally valid."
I do not believe there were ever any laws making it mandatory to take part in any of these things. But let us for a moment assume that there was. Then, certainly it would have been your choice to refuse to take part in these crimes, and be punished, or to go along, and continue enjoying the protection of the law.

Tell that to the heroes in the Underground Railroad.
They were certainly well aware of this fact, and ready to take the consequences of their actions. Eventually, they were successful in removing the dilemma making active resistance to slavery and protection by the law incompatible.

You've been singing the chorus of "mass unemployment" like it's out of your hymnal.
There is mass unemployment. That is not new. While there has been periods without mass unemployment, such as America in the early days where there was plenty of unoccupied land to work or Sweden during a period after the adoption of the strong welfare state but before the adoption of Friedman's theory of a natural unemployment rate, there is at present mass unemployment nearly everywhere, and it has been the norm at least since the beginning of industrialisation.

Actually, that began with the Austrians, and I have already mentioned that.
Good, then we are in perfect agreement that the theory was advanced by followers of Austrian economics, which was my entire argument.

An Austrian would say that nothing should be done because the natural rate is, well, natural.
Consequently, followers of this theory argue that nothing should be done to reduce unemployment below this level. Unfortunately, the theories put forth by Friedman puts this rate at a level where a significant portion of the population is suffering from long-term unemployment. And because every government, whether socialist or laissez-faire, inevitably involves itself with some decisions that do affect the unemployment rate, the net effect is that governments adhering to this theory will effectively work to increase unemployment when it falls below this theoretically calculated rate. This is no conspiracy theory, you will find this reasoning clearly in the deliberations of various central banks, for example.

Apparently they did.
Uh. As late as 1910, only 72% of children even attended school, according to Wikipedia.

No, it's the conclusion following your preconceived notions.
You have not offered any argument why people would still need more incentive to seek work, even when anyone looking to employ always finds willing candidates. By all means, you can disagree with my conclusion, but you're not even offering an argument.

No, why would you think I would?
You were lambasting the government for not acting as lender of last resort when the banks had overextended themselves during the 20's.

In 1907, it was J.P. Morgan who did that on his own, and he made money in the process. After that, there would have been any number of investors to step up and follow his example, no government or tax money necessary.
Then how was the government causing the depression by not acting as lender of last resort, if some JP Morgan could have done it instead?

Then make that argument.
As per your request I will briefly state that I think the depression was caused by the failure of the government to interfere when, during the 20's, the banks and the stock market engaged in irresponsible lending and speculation, to the point where the entire industry relied on fictional values motivated by impossible expectations of future economic returns. In essence it was the same mechanism as during the tulip mania or the dot com era. In fact, investors and speculators were generally aware that the collapse was inevitable, but the economy turned into a chicken-race where the person jumping ship at the last possible moment would be the ultimate winner. The problem is of course that this irresponsible gambling did not only hurt the ones willingly engaging in it, but actually jeopardised the entire economy.

The rate of growth of the economy is less than it was during the first half of the 20th Century, even with the enormous drag of the Great Depression. The best years of the '90s are comparable with the worst years before the Welfare State.
The highest percentage-wise growth is always found in very poor countries, frequently after the end of a great war or some exceptionally inept economic regime. Any improvement that offsets from a very low basic rate will result in impressive percentages.

Yes, DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION. I said that.
So if I get you right, capitalism eventually got rid of starvation, except for certain periods of starvation? Doesn't sound very convincing to me.

In contrast, my argument is that the welfare state got rid of starvation, without a single exception, whereas capitalism, after being employed for centuries, still resulted in reoccuring periods of starvation.
 
In contrast, my argument is that the welfare state got rid of starvation, without a single exception, whereas capitalism, after being employed for centuries, still resulted in reoccuring periods of starvation.

The US during the great depression had a fairly interventionist government, so I don't see why you point to that as a sign of the failure of capitalism compared to the "welfare state", which didn't really even exist in its current form at the time and so is actually untested under those conditions. And it's fairly irrelevant anyways, since the world today is so different from the world of 1930. It is not the welfare state OR capitalism per se which prevents starvation, it is the fact that our globalized economy produces enough wealth that starvation can easily be prevented (neither perfect capitalism nor welfare state structures could have possibly prevented famines 2000 years ago). The only places where starvation still occurs are places where there is a complete breakdown of social order, and that is primarily a political, not an economic, failure.
 
The US during the great depression had a fairly interventionist government, so I don't see why you point to that as a sign of the failure of capitalism compared to the "welfare state", which didn't really even exist in its current form at the time and so is actually untested under those conditions.
The US had a laissez-faire government when the great depression broke out. Only then did it change to an interventionist government (of which the first one failed badly, while the second one eventually established some sort of welfare state). The depression may or may not have been caused by capitalism or laissez-faire, but it most definitely belongs to the pre-welfare state period.

And it's fairly irrelevant anyways, since the world today is so different from the world of 1930. It is not the welfare state OR capitalism per se which prevents starvation, it is the fact that our globalized economy produces enough wealth that starvation can easily be prevented (neither perfect capitalism nor welfare state structures could have possibly prevented famines 2000 years ago).
This is completely false. Starvation does not usually occur because of insufficient production, neither now or many centuries ago. Starvation occurs because of a deficiency in the distribution of food. This was true for the USSR or China, it was true during the great depression, it is true for modern hunger crises, it was true for the 17th century starvations Adam Smith used as examples in his Wealth of Nations (in England as well as the Bengal). Of course, Smith argued against government intervention in the form of fixed food prices. Since his days, we have however seen many cases of starvation in areas where food prices were not fixed by the government, so even if he was no doubt right that this particular form of intervention can be dangerous, the deregulation of food prices were no silver bullet against starvation.
 
Starvation occurs because of a deficiency in the distribution of food. This was true for the USSR or China, ]it is true for modern hunger crises,

In modern hunger crises, WHY does distribution of food fail to feed people? In the modern world, aid agencies are more than capable of making sure that there is no widespread starvation, REGARDLESS of how poor people are, provided that they can get safe access to those people. And that IS something unique to the modern world, we never have been in a similar situation before. So, when are aid agencies unable to get safe access to starving people? That happens almost exclusively in cases where there's a breakdown of social order, as I said. Ethiopia is a prime example, where the famine in the 1980's was due to civil war. Zimbabwe could end up there in the not-too-distant future. I did overgeneralize a bit, because there is an exception: North Korea. Social order (such as it is) hasn't quite broken down, but people only starve because the government does in fact deliberately prevent aid agencies from getting access to the starving people. I suppose you could categorize this as a "distribution" problem, but it is still ultimately only one that happens because of massive and catastrophic political failure.
 
The US had a laissez-faire government when the great depression broke out. Only then did it change to an interventionist government (of which the first one failed badly, while the second one eventually established some sort of welfare state).

People weren't starving in the beginning stages of the great depression either.
 
The US had a laissez-faire government when the great depression broke out.

Absolutely false. Far from it. The banking system was all under the control of the Fed, as it is now. The Fed got to say how much money was in the economy, and the Fed, fearing inflation, hit the brakes on the money supply and caused the stock market crash. And again, they failed to properly act as Lender of Last Resort. Why do you think the banking crisis of 1933 was the worst one in history, even worse than the one of 1907, which is the one that prompted the creation of the Fed?

The depression may or may not have been caused by capitalism or laissez-faire, but it most definitely belongs to the pre-welfare state period.

You're right in that it wasn't caused by the welfare state, but it was most certainly caused by government. Your insistence that it was caused by the free market is just insane.

This is completely false. Starvation does not usually occur because of insufficient production, neither now or many centuries ago.

Really, looking around the world, even in the poorest parts, starvation is the direct cause of government. The elites in the government take for themselves and don't let the people have much. What caused the starvation in the 1930s was the lack of capital to be able to produce the food. There was no money in the banks, farmers went broke, and everybody was destitute.

Even the Irish potato famine was caused by the Irish government.
 
(Why does the new-post thread keep sending me beyond posts I haven't read yet? This is the second time I've noticed that happening. Apologies for any posts I have missed; if you wish a reply to any such posts, please let me know.)

Certainly. When you said:
"People who get money from the government are obviously a lot less likely to oppose it." you claim that a government is unopposed by the people who get money from it.

No, that is not the same thing. Less likely to oppose is not the same thing as not opposing at all.

A government that is unopposed by the populace is popular by definition.

No, because there are lots of cases in history where oppressed people have not opposed the government.

I also said that the Socialist Party opposes almost everything the government does, because it rarely does what the Socialist Party would want it to do. The Socialist Party is an opposition party.

That just means they oppose those in power; it doesn't mean they oppose government itself. And welfare is most assuredly a Socialist position.

How is that not interferng in their life? They have a thieving lifestyle and there is interference into that lifestyle, is there not?

Except that that "lifestyle" involves them interfering into other people's lives.
 
Wow. I haven't seen anything more blatantly unscientific since I skimmed some 70's maoist literature.

Mary Ruwart was a pharmaceutical research scientist for over 30 years. She knows from science. And she makes the case exceedingly well. Instead of just throwing unfounded accusations at the text, why not actually try refuting any of it?

This is quite typical: When your assertion that one example proves your point is questioned, you are suddenly uninterested to discuss it, and try to move on to another example (quite an obscure one, at that). So, what exactly is the evidence that the downfall of the USSR was caused by a lack of (or, to give you some slack, the deficiencies of) a method to determine profit and loss?

Um, because that's the way it happened? And no one was left with any money or any incentive to produce anything?

The main problem with this example is that it is quite questionable to assign labels such as 'socialism' or 'laissez-faire-capitalism' to a society for which we have such extremely limited data.

We have very good data thanks to Governor Bradford's accounts.

A famous example is the 'zero government'-supporters' portrayal of medieval Iceland as a model 'capitalist' society without any government.

Whoever said it didn't have any government? Have you actually read anything about it? Again, we have very good records from that period.

A prediction requires some precision in time

No, it doesn't. Just causality. No one knows when the supervolcano under Yellowstone will erupt, but we know that sooner or later it will.

[more namecalling deleted]

There was more food than during most of the time the USSR existed, when it evidently did not cause the downfall of that empire.

Um, I've talked to several people who lived there at the time, and you are wrong.

This is another clear sign of fundamentalism: the unwillingness to concede even the most obvious of points.

Except that your point is not obvious; it is clearly wrong. It's the tendency to continue to treat a completely wrong point as obvious which is indicative of fundamentalism.

Claiming that unemployed people do not have more motivation and opportunity to seek high-productive jobs, or to educate themselves to qualify for such jobs, is absurd.

When on Earth did I say that? I said that of people on welfare, not unemployed people. There's a difference. There are lots of employed people on welfare, and lots of unemployed people not on welfare.

There is no difference between a 'business' and a would-be-governor in that type of state.

You're an idiot, that's just all there is to it. A business is just someone running a store or something to try to earn a living. A governor is someone seeking power over the lives of others.

That is an enormous subject. For starters, we need to outlaw the spreading of viruses, and the hiding of malicious software in other products.

And how could a ban on those possibly be of any help? Especially since the FREE MARKET has resulted in plenty of tools you can use to effectively defend your computer against same. Heck, just keeping it updated will get rid of probably 99% of them, as they almost always exploit a vulnerability that was patched months before their release.

That is because the singular company in question has decided to support your particular version of Firefox and your particular version of Linux. It has decided not to support the version of Firefox and the version of Linux that I am using at present, neither any of the other operating systems that I use.

Okay, now I know you're a liar. This is my particular field of expertise. So, tell me, what "version" of FireFox and what "version" of Linux are you using?

This situation outlines one of the particular problems with regards to markets and computer software. A company which has developed a product with some new and desirable features will deservedly get a large user base. But the company can then use this position to prevent competition by making its software incompatible with any other solutions.

Until someone comes in and programs a way around it. WINE project, anyone?

I do not have any Gordian solution to this problem, but surely you must be able to realise that this is a destructive behaviour which reduces the efficiency of the computer software market?

The best solution is the elimination of "intellectual property" insanity like the DMCA.

So in our hypothetical case, it is in the interest of society (eg, in the statistical interest of all of us) that people take the chance to start new companies when it enables them to be more efficient. And so we should aim to make this rewarding for the individual. A strong welfare state has such a rewarding effect.

No, the welfare state is detrimental to this effect. And the more regulations government passes, the more difficult it becomes to start a new business.

You're suffering from cultural isolation, I'm afraid. The War on Drugs is, unfortunately, highly popular in large sections of the population, mainly for reasons of moral conservatism.

And yet, over 50% of people in more than one survey admitted to using marijuana at least once in their lives.

Err. Well, no shame in asking, because you if you do not understand this platitude of parables, it's definitely time to learn it. It goes like this:
If you have a cake, you have two choices. Either you eat it, or you save it for later. If you eat it, you will obviously not be able to save it. But if you save it, you cannot eat it.

Nonsense; you can eat half of it and save the other half of it for later. Or you can eat it all and then bake another cake. In any case, you have to have a cake before you can eat any of it at all!

I do not believe there were ever any laws making it mandatory to take part in any of these things.

There absolutely were. The Japanese-American internment was done by executive order. Slavery was maintained by the Fugitive Slave acts, the acts in certain states about limitations on free blacks, etc. This drove Jefferson and Washington to fury in their efforts to free their slaves. Washington was finally able to do so in his will; by the time Jefferson died, even that loophole had been closed.

There is mass unemployment.

Constantly asserting it does not make it true. How about some evidence?

Good, then we are in perfect agreement that the theory was advanced by followers of Austrian economics,

Consequently, followers of this theory argue that nothing should be done to reduce unemployment below this level.

No, they say that nothing can be done to reduce unemployment below this level.

Unfortunately, the theories put forth by Friedman puts this rate at a level where a significant portion of the population is suffering from long-term unemployment.

No, because natural unemployment is not long-term. There might still be 3% unemployment six months from now, but it's a different 3%.

And because every government, whether socialist or laissez-faire, inevitably involves itself with some decisions that do affect the unemployment rate, the net effect is that governments adhering to this theory will effectively work to increase unemployment when it falls below this theoretically calculated rate.

I challenge you to find anything of the sort supported by any Austrian economist.

This is no conspiracy theory, you will find this reasoning clearly in the deliberations of various central banks, for example.

Austrians are against central banks.

Uh. As late as 1910, only 72% of children even attended school, according to Wikipedia.

And yet, at the time of the nation's founding, literacy was near-universal (except for the slaves). I'd be willing to bet that most of that 28% not attending school were blacks.

You were lambasting the government for not acting as lender of last resort when the banks had overextended themselves during the 20's.

The banks didn't overextend themselves; the money wasn't there!!! The Fed had pulled most of it out of circulation!

Then how was the government causing the depression by not acting as lender of last resort, if some JP Morgan could have done it instead?

Because the Federal Reserve Act took that option away from the potential Morgans out there. Plus, the Fed yanking out most of the money affected all of them, too.

As per your request I will briefly state that I think the depression was caused by the failure of the government to interfere when, during the 20's, the banks and the stock market engaged in irresponsible lending and speculation, to the point where the entire industry relied on fictional values motivated by impossible expectations of future economic returns.

Which was directly due to the Fed's monetary policy. The inputs of the fiat currency caused the money to inflate, yet no one was noticing this effect, and that was the start of the bubble. It was this point at which Mises and Hayek predicted the Great Depression. It had nothing to do with what happened earlier.

The highest percentage-wise growth is always found in very poor countries, frequently after the end of a great war or some exceptionally inept economic regime.

Except we weren't in that position. it had been almost half a century since the Civil War, and the economy was string.

So if I get you right, capitalism eventually got rid of starvation, except for certain periods of starvation? Doesn't sound very convincing to me.

Because you're lying again. Capitalism got rid of starvation until the government induced a depression.
 
In the modern world, aid agencies are more than capable of making sure that there is no widespread starvation, REGARDLESS of how poor people are, provided that they can get safe access to those people.
Aid agencies do not always arrive in time to avoid mass starvation, but still: aid agencies are not needed to avoid starvation in welfare states.

[The US had a laissez-faire government when the great depression broke out.]
Absolutely false. Far from it.
Sure. And the convinced leninist will of course claim that the USSR just wasn't leninist enough and that's what caused all its troubles. The governments before the great depression were as laissez-fair as any real-world US government.

Why do you think the banking crisis of 1933 was the worst one in history, even worse than the one of 1907, which is the one that prompted the creation of the Fed?
Already told you: because the government took a passive stance and let the stock market and financial markets overextend themselves to a point where real businesses were dependant on impossibly high expected future returns.

Really, looking around the world, even in the poorest parts, starvation is the direct cause of government. The elites in the government take for themselves and don't let the people have much.
Look. I don't deny that there have been numerous starvations caused by governments. USSR and Cambodia spring to mind as obvious examples. However, even in these cases, the cause certainly has not been that the government "take for themselves and don't let people have much". That is just a nonsense theory with absolutely no relation to any real event, ever.

In cases where starvation is caused by capitalism, usually because a few capitalists buy up land and decide to grow non-food products (tobacco, coffee, flowers etc), starvation is also not caused by capitalists "taking for themselves and not letting people have much". Sure, the people in power (whether governments or capitalists) will certainly feed themselves well even during a starvation, but that is patently not what causes the starvation. Rather, the problem is that an unexpected shortage (perhaps due to a bad harvest, war disruptions, etc) cannot be compensated by large segments of the population because they lack the means to provide even at a very basic level. Eg because they no longer own land, or are not allowed to cultivate it as before.

Instead of just throwing unfounded accusations at the text, why not actually try refuting any of it?
Refute what? She doesn't even discuss the figures she's citing. There's simply no analysis there to refute. If this had been a scientific text as opposed to a political pamphlet for the already converted, she would have outlined a few possible theories that attempt to explain the observed data, laid out some arguments for and against the various theories, and thus ultimately made a case that some theories explain the data better than others. She just doesn't do any of this.

And no one was left with any money or any incentive to produce anything?
Nothing was produced in the USSR when it collapsed? Yeah, and UFOs did it too.

In fact they had growth right up until the end. After the collapse, the economy took a massive downturn, largely as the result of fundamentally misguided attempts to impose a laissez-faire economy. Note that this does not really prove that the fault was laissez-faire economics, because the disastrous consequences were to a very large extent clearly a result of the methods for reform rather than whatever principles that were supposed to guide the new system. Eg, it would not have been necessary to hand out most of the industry to mafia-like organisations, though this is in fact what they did.

Here's statistics for growth
of the USSR, and for the fmr USSR combined after 1991.

We have very good data thanks to Governor Bradford's accounts
Data from one uncheckable source is always extremely questionable. Especially so when the source in question is a stakeholder.

[Iceland]
Whoever said it didn't have any government? Have you actually read anything about it?
The zero-government types, DUH. I have read about it.

No one knows when the supervolcano under Yellowstone will erupt, but we know that sooner or later it will.
That can qualify as a prediction because we know how it will happen. A theory explaining how molten lava can kill a hamster is no prediction of that eruption because although it has some bearing on volcanoes, that is not what will cause the eruption. The same goes for von Mises theory of the shortcomings of the USSR when it comes to determining loss and profit.

Um, I've talked to several people who lived there at the time, and you are wrong.
Yeah right. And the World Bank just claims the USSR had growth because they are controlled by aliens, I'm sure. Yes, there were shortages during the 90's in the USSR. That was a result of serious flaws in their economy. But the economy was in fact stronger than ever during the history of that country, and the standard of living was higher.

I said that of people on welfare, not unemployed people. There's a difference. There are lots of employed people on welfare, and lots of unemployed people not on welfare.
This is pointless. You keep forgetting what we are discussing and then you change the subject. This was the argument:
You see so many people in the US being employed in jobs such as holding signs, watching public lavatories, or other things which would be completely unthinkable in a high-minimum-wage country such as Sweden.
Why aren't the sign-holders, lavatory guards, etc. doing other jobs already?
Because they are busy holding signs all day, DUH.
It's impossible to look for another job while you're working a job?
They have less opportunity, and less incentive, to do so. Additionally, they have a much lower opportunity to aquire training and education that would qualify them for a high-productive job.
Not true, either. Lots of people go to school while working at full-time jobs.
This is another clear sign of fundamentalism: the unwillingness to concede even the most obvious of points. You would do better to argue that this effect was offset by some contrary, greater effect. Claiming that unemployed people do not have more motivation and opportunity to seek high-productive jobs, or to educate themselves to qualify for such jobs, is absurd.
I said that of people on welfare, not unemployed people. There's a difference. There are lots of employed people on welfare, and lots of unemployed people not on welfare.
You have acknowledged several times that we were talking about unemployed people. Then when I point out the absurdity of denying that employed people have less opportunity to go to school than the unemployed, you try to deny that you even said it.

A business is just someone running a store or something to try to earn a living. A governor is someone seeking power over the lives of others.
Seeking power over others is one way to try to earn a living. The Cosa Nostra, Executive Outcomes, Blackwater, Securitas...it is only a matter of degrees. The better the government regulates against destructive corporate behaviour, the less coercive power will be used by businesses.

Okay, now I know you're a liar. This is my particular field of expertise. So, tell me, what "version" of FireFox and what "version" of Linux are you using?
If this is supposed to be your field of expertise, then I guess that explains your hilarious lack of knowledge in other fields.

Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux ppc; rv:1.7.8) Gecko/20061114 Debian/1.7.8-1sarge8

It doesn't help your case calling me a liar for no good reason like this. I'm sure it bothers you that I'm calling you a fundamentalist relying on woo. But I have my reasons to do so. Such as your tendency to completely ignore widely accepted data on economic growth in the USSR and claim that their economy must have been collapsing because some anonymous fundamentalist woo friend of you lived in the USSR and 'saw' it. Yeah, I'm sure I can point you to some hard-line leninist who lived in the US and observed clear evidence that it is collapsing economically, too...
 
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Aid agencies do not always arrive in time to avoid mass starvation, but still:

Yes they do. Can you name a single case of actual mass starvation in the past 40 years where aid agencies were not prevented by violence or the threat of violence from reaching people?

aid agencies are not needed to avoid starvation in welfare states.

Sure they are, and that's been your whole point. It's just that you call the aid agency in question your own government.
 
Aid agencies do not always arrive in time to avoid mass starvation,

The aid agencies show up a lot faster than government. Katrina, Charley, Fran, etc., in disasters the private aid--from charities, businesses, and individual volunteers--get there much faster than FEMA. And FEMA impedes much more aid than it gives.

[The US had a laissez-faire government when the great depression broke out.]

No matter how many times you repeat a lie, that doesn't make it true. Income Tax, central bank, fiat currency, "progressive" regulation, government intrusion into labor...

Sure. And the convinced leninist will of course claim that the USSR just wasn't leninist enough and that's what caused all its troubles.

The difference is, the Austrians have the evidence on their side--and they were able to predict it before it happened, unlike the Bible Codes.

Already told you: because the government took a passive stance and let the stock market and financial markets overextend themselves to a point where real businesses were dependant on impossibly high expected future returns.

And why on Earth would businesses do that in a free market???

Look. I don't deny that there have been numerous starvations caused by governments. USSR and Cambodia spring to mind as obvious examples. However, even in these cases, the cause certainly has not been that the government "take for themselves and don't let people have much". That is just a nonsense theory with absolutely no relation to any real event, ever.

Did you see the Stossel report where the government of Zimbabwe bulldozed a lot of individuals' businesses, sometimes with them getting out with their life and what they could grab?

In cases where starvation is caused by capitalism, usually because a few capitalists buy up land and decide to grow non-food products (tobacco, coffee, flowers etc),

Now, that's ridiculous. There's plenty of land to grow food for everybody--mostly thanks to free market innovations that if anything government has been impeding.

Rather, the problem is that an unexpected shortage (perhaps due to a bad harvest, war disruptions, etc) cannot be compensated by large segments of the population because they lack the means to provide even at a very basic level.

Wrong: governments can't do it, your Welfare State can't do it, but not only can the free market do it, it's what the free market does best.

When government gets out of the way, that is.

Refute what? She doesn't even discuss the figures she's citing.

Geez... :rolleyes:

"[SIZE=-1]If we support minimum wage laws, we destroy jobs, especially those that would have gone to the unskilled or disadvantaged.[/SIZE][SIZE=-1] By using aggression, we limit wealth by destroying the jobs that create it. No wonder welfare to the newly unemployed increases when the mandated minimum wage goes up!" Sourced and referenced.

"[/SIZE][SIZE=-1]Because minimum wage laws hurt the disadvantaged the most, they are frequentlyused to "legalize" discrimination. In South Africa, white unions lobby for minimum wages (called "rate-for-the-job") in order to "reserve" particular jobs for whites. If the unskilled blacks are forbidden by law to negotiate a training wage, they can never gain entry into these professions and are effectively barred by law from creating wealth in those occupations." Sourced and referenced.

"[/SIZE][SIZE=-1]The same thing happens in the United States. Minimum wage laws hurt the very people they are supposed to help. Many disadvantaged workers are black; the most unskilled blacks are, of course, the young. As the percentage of jobs covered by minimum wage laws has increased (Figure 3.1A), black teenage unemployment has increased much more than white unemployment (Figure 3.1B). What is particularly distressing is that black teenage unemployment was almost identical to white unemployment before the 1950s! By trying to help the disadvantaged with aggression, we've hurt them more than the selfish employers ever did!" Sourced and referenced, AND REFERRING TO THE FIGURES YOU LIED AND SAID SHE NEVER REFERRED TO![/SIZE]

"[SIZE=-1]With minimum wage laws, the skilled and educated no longer have to compete with the ambitious disadvantaged workers wh Buse rising through the ranks. Only those who can afford to pay for training can get hired when the disadvantaged are forbidden from creating training jobs for themselves. When fewer skilled people are available, the experienced workers can command higher wages. Unions frequently lobby for minimum wage laws because such laws favor their skilled membership at the expense of unskilled workers, the handicapped, and minorities." Sourced and referenced.

"[/SIZE][SIZE=-1]Without minimum wage laws, what will prevent employers from colluding to pay only slave wages to workers, even when they learn to create more wealth? The natural balance of the marketplace ecosystem keeps employers' greed in check automatically by simply allowing them to reap as they sow. If it didn't, employers would be able to pay low wages to workers even when they had experience! Because employers voluntarily pay more than 90% of the workers who are 24-65 years of age more than the minimum wage, the marketplace ecosystem is obviously regulating the marketplace well without aggression." Sourced and referenced.

"[/SIZE][SIZE=-1]An example of this type of regulation occurred after the Civil War. Many Southern landowners didn't want to have anything to do with the newly freed blacks. However, wealth creation on their plantations was much more profitable with hired hands than without them. Blacks offered to work for less than whites would, making plantation owners choose between their prejudice and their pocketbook. Many chose to hire blacks to maximize their creation of wealth.

[/SIZE] [SIZE=-1]At first, the landowners tried to collude to pay the blacks as little as possible. Even though such action was perfectly legal, the marketplace ecosystem foiled such plans with its self-regulating magic. A few landowners soon found that if they paid the best workers a little bit more than everyone else did, they had their pick of the skilled blacks. Experienced workers created more wealth for the plantation than unskilled ones, so profits increased. Landowners who paid low wages were alarmed to see their best workers leaving to work for these more enlightened employers. They either offered higher wages or found themselves without help. Even whites with deep prejudices found themselves persuaded by their pocketbook to treat their black hired hands better than they wanted to. Exploitation of newly emancipated slaves was limited by the employers' own greed. They were still able to discriminate (and many still did) but they paid dearly for it. By allowing them to reap as they sowed, the marketplace ecosystem taught them the hazards of exploitation and discrimination." Sourced and referenced.[/SIZE]


[SIZE=-1]I know you don't want to deal with it, I know you just want to stick your fingers in your ears, hum really loudly, and wish it would all go away, but it's there--evidence, sourced, referenced, with the figures you said she never referred to.
[/SIZE]

There's simply no analysis there to refute. If this had been a scientific text as opposed to a political pamphlet for the already converted, she would have outlined a few possible theories that attempt to explain the observed data, laid out some arguments for and against the various theories, and thus ultimately made a case that some theories explain the data better than others. She just doesn't do any of this.

Again, you're just wrong. She laid out the theory, gave a hypothetical scenario to explain it, gave examples throughout history, and cited the facts and figures that back it all up.

Nothing was produced in the USSR when it collapsed?

Extremely little.

[personal derision, insults, and outright lies deleted]

That can qualify as a prediction because we know how it will happen.

And Mises knew how the Great Depression and the fall of Communism would happen as well. It not only happened, it happened the way he said it would.

[more lies deleted--I just don't have the strength today]

If this is supposed to be your field of expertise, then I guess that explains your hilarious lack of knowledge in other fields.

Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux ppc; rv:1.7.8) Gecko/20061114 Debian/1.7.8-1sarge8

YOU ARE A LIAR!!! I have a computer running Ubuntu, which is built upon Debian, and runs Firefox, AND I CAN READ THE SITE JUST FINE!!!!

You just don't want to deal with what it says.

[yet more personal insults and derision deleted]
 
The aid agencies show up a lot faster than government. Katrina, Charley, Fran, etc., in disasters the private aid--from charities, businesses, and individual volunteers--get there much faster than FEMA. And FEMA impedes much more aid than it gives.
Such aid agencies have a partial role to fill in the US, I guess, where welfare is very weak. There are no such aid agencies in the strong welfare states of Europe.

No matter how many times you repeat a lie, that doesn't make it true. Income Tax, central bank, fiat currency, "progressive" regulation, government intrusion into labor...
Who is repeating? I gave an argument. You just responded by repeating a mantra. Might as well have been the Christian profession of faith there. Well, this devil just won't go away...

The difference is, the Austrians have the evidence on their side--and they were able to predict it before it happened, unlike the Bible Codes.
Predict what? The massive downturn in USSR economy that never happened and that you invented just because otherwise the prophecies don't fit?

I notice that you ignore my statistics on USSR economic growth. No surprise, facts usually don't appeal to fundamentalists.

And why on Earth would businesses do that in a free market???
Because it is very profitable, assuming you jump ship in time. Ever heard of a pyramid scheme? In a stock market bubble such as that of the 30's, or the tulip mania, or the dot com era, we have a pyramid scheme of gigantic proportion.

Did you see the Stossel report where the government of Zimbabwe bulldozed a lot of individuals' businesses, sometimes with them getting out with their life and what they could grab?
If you could rephrase that into a proper sentence, maybe I'll understand what you're trying to say. It doesn't seem to be any evidence that the Zimbabwean government are hoarding huge quantities of food so that eventually no one else will have any.

Now, that's ridiculous. There's plenty of land to grow food for everybody--mostly thanks to free market innovations that if anything government has been impeding.
No Shanek. There is not plenty of land for everybody.

"[SIZE=-1]If we support minimum wage laws, we destroy jobs, especially those that would have gone to the unskilled or disadvantaged.[/SIZE][SIZE=-1] By using aggression, we limit wealth by destroying the jobs that create it. No wonder welfare to the newly unemployed increases when the mandated minimum wage goes up!" Sourced and referenced.
[/SIZE]
Ok, let's do an analysis of this quote.
We have some assertions:
A1. Minimum wages destroy (fundamentalist vocabulary warning lights YELLOW) jobs.
A2. Minimum wages especially destroy jobs for unskilled people.
A3. Minimum wages especially destroy jobs for disadvantaged people.
A4. Aggression (fundamentalist vocabulary warning lights RED) destroys jobs.
A5. Jobs create wealth.
A6. Welfare to newly unemployed increases when the mandated minimum wage goes up.

We have one conclusion:
C1. Aggression limits wealth by destroying jobs (from A4 and A5).

We have nothing else. No argument beyond the not-too-impressive C1. A6 seems to be an attempt at a conclusion but it fails to be even this because there is no previous mention of welfare. There's no data to support any assertion, nothing. Yes, she does cite a 29-year-old article from a conservative that agrees with her, but she doesn't actually use anything from that article (unless she couldn't figure out these assertions by herself).

I'll leave the other quotes because this is like arguing with somebody who just pastes the Bible into some thread and argues that it is proven because there are references to other Bible chapters throughout.

YOU ARE A LIAR!!! I have a computer running Ubuntu, which is built upon Debian, and runs Firefox, AND I CAN READ THE SITE JUST FINE!!!!
Oh. This is embarrassing really. So you're an expert at, what? Tell me, have you ever heard of a thing called a 'computer processor'? Hint, it is sometimes abbreviated 'CPU'. Do you have any idea what it does? Can you tell me anything about how a computer program is related to the CPU, and why a specific program may or may not work with a specific CPU?

I get the idea that perhaps you're the kind of computer 'expert' who knows how to enter numbers in cell A1 through A10 in Excel and has a nice certificate to prove this proficiency, but again.. it doesn't help your credibility to call people liars just because you don't understand something. It really becomes very embarassing when what you did not understand is extremely basic.
 
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Such aid agencies have a partial role to fill in the US, I guess, where welfare is very weak.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. You accuse me of being a fundamentalist, yet you're the one acting like one. Projection, anyone?

Because it is very profitable, assuming you jump ship in time.

It is absolutely not profitable.

Ever heard of a pyramid scheme?

Yes, welfare states love using them. Whaddya think Social Security is?

In a stock market bubble such as that of the 30's, or the tulip mania, or the dot com era, we have a pyramid scheme of gigantic proportion.

Ridiculous. There was nothing about the dot-coms or the stock market of the 20s that worked in any way like a pyramid scheme.

If pyramid schemes are so profitable, then why didn't Rockefeller structure his business that way? He was trying anything and everything he could to make profits. Why not that? And why didn't he use violence against his competitors the way you insist that businesses would?

No Shanek. There is not plenty of land for everybody.

Oh? You're one of those "we're running out of land" nuts, too? Okay: prove it!

We have nothing else.

No, you're lying again, and anyone who read the chapter can see that. Minimum wages hurt the very people they're purported to help. It's not even a controversial stand in economics anymore! They'll teach it to you in a beginning economics course!

I'll leave the other quotes because

you have no response to them.

Oh. This is embarrassing really. So you're an expert at, what?

Computers, computer networks, and security.

[more personal insults deleted -- I'm soooo glad this is the kind of "debate" the moderators want this site to have...]

The web site IS VIEWABLE UNDER LINUX USING FIREFOX. You are just WRONG. Moreover, since that would be clear to anyone who even tried it, it's clear you are LYING.

I can tell you all about processors. I can tell you the difference between CISC and RISC processors and why AMDs are faster at comparable clock speeds. I can tell you all about cacheing, dual-core, and why you might not see any great speed increases in the 64-bit processors. I have even programmed in machine code.

But you'll just come up with any pathetic ad hominem to avoid actually arguing the facts, won't you? Backed into a corner? Call him a fundamentalist! Caught out in a lie? Attack his knowledge of computers!

How pathetic.
 
It is absolutely not profitable.
Nonsense. Pyramid schemes are zero-sum games. Most people lose, this loss turns to a profit for a few people. In case of a stock market bubble, the winners are those who sold their stocks before the bubble burst.

Yes, welfare states love using them. Whaddya think Social Security is?
Err, you can of course call social security a fraud or a scam if you like to, but it is most certainly not a pyramid scheme.

Ridiculous. There was nothing about the dot-coms or the stock market of the 20s that worked in any way like a pyramid scheme.
Yes there was. Initially, people invested in these stocks because they expected massive growth in the sector, which would lead to high profits, which in part would be distributed to shareholders. That is the normal stock market principle, which is rational and sustainable.

In a stock market bubble, this changes. Here, people no longer invest in order to reap profits from the companies, but because the stock prices keep rising and rising. In this situation, it is trivial to see that the profits from the actual companies can never pay a reasonable interest rate for their entire stock value. So why do people still keep buying these stocks? Well, because as long as you sell before the bubble bursts, you still make a profit. When does it crash? This happens when there is not enough new money invested. That must happen, for the same reason that all pyramid schemes crash, ie because the new investment required to keep the scheme afloat grows exponentially.

If pyramid schemes are so profitable, then why didn't Rockefeller structure his business that way?
Several reasons. First, it's illegal. Second, it is not easy to get a significantly large pyramid scheme going. Besides, because it is a scam, it would hurt someones business reputation very badly even if it wasn't illegal. Since no actual value is produced in a pyramid scheme, it takes a really huge one to make Rockefeller kind of money. Additionally, I never said pyramid schemes 'are profitable', only that in every pyramid scheme, some people make a profit, where others make a loss. It is a zero-sum game.

And why didn't he use violence against his competitors the way you insist that businesses would?
There are two possible answers. One answer is that he didn't because the government had regulated against it. The other answer is that maybe he would not have used violence even if it was legal, for some philosophical reason perhaps. But in that case, someone else would have, and that person would have ruined Rockefeller.

Oh? You're one of those "we're running out of land" nuts, too? Okay: prove it!
There are millions of landless farmers in Brazil. The MST is trying to do something about it by occupying and using unused land.

No, you're lying again, and anyone who read the chapter can see that. Minimum wages hurt the very people they're purported to help. It's not even a controversial stand in economics anymore! They'll teach it to you in a beginning economics course!
It's extremely controversial, but you're losing grip here. People who disagree do not lie. You might want to look up the definition of 'lie'.

you have no response to them.
You have to start somewhere, I started with the first quote. I found worth arguing because there was no real argument there, just some unsupported assertions basically. If you think there was something of value there, please explain what. If you can find something in the first quote, I'd be happy to proceed with the rest. But surely we don't need to refer to some external document just to find the same kind of unsupported assertions that you can evidently write up yourself here in this thread.

The web site IS VIEWABLE UNDER LINUX USING FIREFOX. You are just WRONG. Moreover, since that would be clear to anyone who even tried it, it's clear you are LYING.

I can tell you all about processors. I can tell you the difference between CISC and RISC processors and why AMDs are faster at comparable clock speeds. I can tell you all about cacheing, dual-core, and why you might not see any great speed increases in the 64-bit processors. I have even programmed in machine code.
If the above is really true, it appears impossible that you would not realise why a certain program will not run with a version of Firefox specified as
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux ppc; rv:1.7.8) Gecko/20061114 Debian/1.7.8-1sarge8

So you claim you have programmed in machine code, and yet you have absolutely no idea that a program needs to be made for the specific family of CPUs in order to work on them?

But really, the problem here isn't so much that you are clueless about computers. We are all ignorant on some matters. The problem is that when there is something you do not understand, your reaction is not that you want to learn, but to call me a liar.
 
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Nonsense. Pyramid schemes are zero-sum games. Most people lose, this loss turns to a profit for a few people. In case of a stock market bubble, the winners are those who sold their stocks before the bubble burst.

Please explain how the stock market can be a pyramid scheme.

Err, you can of course call social security a fraud or a scam if you like to, but it is most certainly not a pyramid scheme.

How is it not? The money to pay benefits is money taken from new investors! That's a classic Ponzi scam!

And go and learn what a stock market "bubble" is and what causes it before you come rambling in here with more insanity.

Additionally, I never said pyramid schemes 'are profitable',

Another lie! I asked you why businesses would do this in a free market, and you responded, "Because it is very profitable."

There are two possible answers. One answer is that he didn't because the government had regulated against it. The other answer is that maybe he would not have used violence even if it was legal, for some philosophical reason perhaps. But in that case, someone else would have, and that person would have ruined Rockefeller.

Ridiculous. You're really embarrassing yourself here. Go read Freakonomics and learn how, even in an illegal drug ring, they had lots of incentives not to use violence.

It's extremely controversial,

No, it's not! They teach it to you in INTRODUCTORY COURSES!!!

People who disagree do not lie.

Right; people who lie lie. And you lie.

You might want to look up the definition of 'lie'.

Lying is when you say something you know to be untrue. Like when you claimed that you never said pyramid schemes were profitable when you did.

If the above is really true, it appears impossible that you would not realise why a certain program will not run with a version of Firefox specified as Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux ppc; rv:1.7.8) Gecko/20061114 Debian/1.7.8-1sarge8

FireFox IS the program, you idiot! FireFox takes the data from the Web--which is NOT a program--and displays it on your computer.

So you claim you have programmed in machine code, and yet you have absolutely no idea that a program needs to be made for the specific family of CPUs in order to work on them?

This is untrue, too. Even without getting into technologies like Java, FireFox is coded in C++ and the source is portable to any machine. The only things you have to change are the hooks for whatever OS you're compiling it for. The object code is what you need for a specific family of CPUs, and this is what is created when the code is built.

FireFox for Linux, FireFox for Windows, and FireFox for Mac, with a very few exceptions that probably aren't even 1% of the code, are all made using the EXACT SAME SOURCE CODE.

Again, YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT.

But really, the problem here isn't so much that you are clueless about computers. We are all ignorant on some matters.

:rolleyes:

I'd really like to hear you explain why the browser ID string would explain why you can't open a basic web site because of Microsoft's horrible monopoly...
 

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