Darth Rotor
Salted Sith Cynic
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2006
- Messages
- 38,527
Ever heard of The Devil's Advocate?I am aware that you aren't a libertarian, so I am surprised that you are defending libertarianism so enthusiastically. [/COLOR]
DR
Ever heard of The Devil's Advocate?I am aware that you aren't a libertarian, so I am surprised that you are defending libertarianism so enthusiastically. [/COLOR]
I don't see why. There is plenty about libertarianism that is enthusiastically laudible. As there is with utilitarianism. And religion for that matter.I am surprised that you are defending libertarianism so enthusiastically.
What about the truck Laws that I mentioned? Prohibiting the payment in company scrip?
What is the libertarian answer to slum landlords?
I am aware that you aren't a libertarian, so I am surprised that you are defending libertarianism so enthusiastically.
Responding to page 1: Anyone who references Somalia as an example of "libertarianism" with sincerity deserves a kick to the crotch.
It's the statist's Godwin.
Ziggurat;5204795 Why? Do you think it is merely the [i said:law[/i] which makes children uninterested in working for $0.50/hr? Do you think that many parents would force their children to work for such wages but are only stopped from doing so by these laws? That is the curious claim, not mine.
If you don't mind, could you explain exactly why it is such a bad example of libertarianism?
Your point is based solely on incredulity and assumed irrelevant facts.
First of all, you pull the $.50 figure out of thin air
I no more think it is the law that keeps most parents from making their kids work for money than I think it is the law that keeps parents from sexually molesting their children.
Again, you are appealing to present societal norms
norms heavily influenced by the assumption that child labor is illegal.
The issue is how society and those that stand to gain from child labor will market themselves and justify their actions. It is the height of naivety to think that they will just pass on what amounts to a vast expansion of the pool of unskilled labor.
My guess would be that we would see free (or even schools that pay parents or, more to the point, other guardians) vocational training boarding schools that offer just enough education to be schools under the law (assuming we don't torch the state regulation of schools while we are at it) but are thinly disguised sweatshops of some form or another.
Company script is but one of many devices historically used to place workers in a state of near slavery. Taken in abstract and out of historical context, it can seem harmless, but as practiced leads to significant abuse.While not strictly libertarian, this seems like a pretty good idea to me. It can prevent a number of abuses, and it's fairly market-neutral in the sense that it doesn't dictate wages. And the company can always then sell company scrip, so if company scrip is really a good deal they should be able to find buyers among their workers.
It is a good idea, and was needed because this was a common abuse in England in the 18th Century.What about the truck Laws that I mentioned? Prohibiting the payment in company scrip?
While not strictly libertarian, this seems like a pretty good idea to me. It can prevent a number of abuses, and it's fairly market-neutral in the sense that it doesn't dictate wages. And the company can always then sell company scrip, so if company scrip is really a good deal they should be able to find buyers among their workers.
Again this is something where I see no libertarian argument against. At least in principle, because at least some very unpleasant ones are self-made men:What is the libertarian answer to slum landlords?
That slum landlords are largely the result of land use restrictions and policies that distort the market for its allocation. The former is rather easy to understand, the latter is sometimes not so obvious.
I am aware that you aren't a libertarian, so I am surprised that you are defending libertarianism so enthusiastically.
Darth is partly right, I'm partly playing devil's advocate (be honest, this thread would be boring if someone didn't), but I'm also sympathetic to many of their arguments, and think they deserve consideration even when one reaches a different conclusion.
Not my problem. It is impossible to contradict an assumption that in your alternative universe X will be true.And yet, you have marshaled no facts to contradict it.
Who ever said I am?
Except that's not a benefit at all.
To label it as such is simply to poison the well. A genuine benefit would be to allow children for whom school offers little benefit a chance to enter the work force and learn marketable skills at an earlier age, with a possibly very large increase in their lifetime earning potential.
And the children for whom this could be most beneficial are precisely the ones that end up at the bottom of the social ladder right now, the ones every bleeding heart wants to help so badly but never seems to manage to.
As with almost everything, there really aren't only benefits to enacting child labor laws. You are attempting to justify such laws not on any serious analysis of the relative weights of those benefits versus drawbacks, but simply on the position that there are only benefits and no drawbacks. But that's simply not the case.
You have no idea whether or not I'm in favor of eliminating child labor laws. You only assume as much because I haven't adopted your absurd absolutist position.
Company script is but one of many devices historically used to place workers in a state of near slavery. Taken in abstract and out of historical context, it can seem harmless, but as practiced leads to significant abuse.
As it was used in American history, company script is generally only redeemable in company stores with inflated prices. This includes the tools needed to work, and usually the house you "rent," ... but don't worry, they will front you that and run a tab to keep you going, and credit your future wages to same. Also, there is nothing stopping the company from making said script non-transferable, thus crippling any third party competitor from offering like goods as the script is worthless to them.
So if you quit, everything you own goes to paying off your tab. Good luck finding another job when all there is anywhere near here is coal and we tend to require references... or at least have a black list. If this is after WWII, or in the north /or you are white, the good news is that it is unlikely you will be prosecuted for "breaking contract" if you quit, otherwise you wind up being sent to jail, the sheriff then rents you right back to the mine, and you now are at least free of the illusion of any sort of freedom.
Making a company pay people in actual legal currency cuts most of this nonsense off at the start. Learning the history of labor in America is essential in understanding why some labor regulations are as they are, the whole "doomed to repeat" deal.
Your constant railing against it does.
That´s the child´s benefit, which is something neither factory owners nor libertarians give a damn about.
Just take one ****ing look at a history book. Child labor isn´t about giving the children skills.
It is about making children earn pitifully low wages to help feed themselves and their families
And making them do dirty, dangerous, unhealthy work for minimal wages 14 hours a day helps them... how?
In a system like we have now, in which the poor can get support if they have too little money to feed themselves, and in which free schooling is available for children, there are no drawbacks to enacting child labor laws.
Or if you consider it a drawback to allow children to go to school, or not making them work 14 hours a day, six and a half days a week.
I get the very clear idea that you constantly blast child labor laws as being a bad thing that has only drawbacks.
We have history when child labor was legal
?? There isn't one.What is the libertarian argument against restricting someone's right to own property, and to have tenants?
In libertarian philosophy there is little/no concept of "abusing economic power" unless it is to harm people or coerce them by denying them free choice of their alternatives.Even if the landlord abused his greater economic power to get the tenants in the first place.
I am not aware of anything but you need to explain the highlighted partIf you are talking about a libertarian system, what is to stop a magnate buying the bridges out of a town, or otherwise buying up the access to a block of housing, and then bleeding the inhabitants dry? Or just buying some utility.
See above. Libertarianism does not consider there to be a difference between someone who can choose between a rock and a hard place, and someone who can select from abundant riches. Both of them are equally "free" and the unlucky one has no right to anything beyond being able to choose from available alternatives.Can a libertarian system protect against abuses of economic power whilst remaining a true libertarian system? I would argue that it can't.
Again this is something where I see no libertarian argument against.
What is the libertarian argument against restricting someone's right to own property, and to have tenants? Even if the landlord abused his greater economic power to get the tenants in the first place.
If you are talking about a libertarian system, what is to stop a magnate buying the bridges out of a town, or otherwise buying up the access to a block of housing, and then bleeding the inhabitants dry?
Or just buying some utility.
Can a libertarian system protect against abuses of economic power whilst remaining a true libertarian system? I would argue that it can't.
That is beside the point though. libertarian philosophy makes no statement about [landlords being terrible people] even being unfair, just so long as they don't restrict others' free choice. The opposition to land use laws is not for the purpose of giving unlucky tenants a better deal. It is because the law is believed to be harmful to putative land owners.We seem to be talking past each other. I am not saying there are libertarian arguments against letting landlords be terrible people who provide little to and demand much from their tenants, and are "unfair". I am saying that libertarians would argue that without land use restrictions and market interference in housing, competition would provide powerful incentives against such behavior, and make such cases rare and limited.
Same thing again. There is no statement embedded in libertarianism about any need underlying the restrictions, or whether that need is better served without the restrictions, or even served at all. The exclusive focus is on the restriction being a violation of the liberty of those who could otherwise own and use housing as they wish.If the housing market is competitive (which in many places it is not), then such restrictions become largely unnecessary.