Joey McGee
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2011
- Messages
- 10,307
Notice the medium you are spreading these ideas through.
Pffft the internet would be 50 years in the future without the commiesocialistfascists running things
Notice the medium you are spreading these ideas through.
Are you seriously suggesting to me that government investing in business and technology is bad for society? I fail to see the corruption. Who was this unfair to in this case? So the government funded some technology, a private company ran with it and had great success?! PERFECT WIN! Well, they did setup free public internet, those fascists!So the government helping businesses succeed to the benefit of consumers a negative thing? Well let me be the first to say that I fully suport fascist coporate-state partnerships. And man it looks like they will be continuing far into the future with no one being able to do a damn thing about it! w00t
Ehhhh... Your living in a fantasy world. Basic research and technology at times requires a large amount of technology no corporation would be willing to invest in because it requires large amounts of land, energy, and resources but the dividends are amazing.But why should I be forced to pay for the investing? Should we really be trading individual liberty for utility? Add in a majority rules democracy and we find ourselves in a situation where the stupid majority is legislating theft on the mere promise of future benefit, lulled into slavery by those power-seeking members of society unnecessarily empowered by the government's monopoly on force. Even if bureaucrats are angels and taxes are spent in the most ethical way possible, they are still a far less efficient form of resource allocation than are markets. If you are a typical American about half of your income goes towards taxes, and that's without inflation. I think you will have a hard time justifying that you are getting your moneys worth.
Hahahaha......Go tell that to the Japanese. I'm sure they would really care where the rovers being used to help stave off a nuclear disaster are a product of the army.The US government has spent 20,575.13 billion dollars on military spending according to records dating back to the year 1792. Which basically means we spent enough money to create the entire country of the United States from the ground up. Accordingly, the vast majority of technological achievements have been in the area of killing people.
Ehhhh... Your living in a fantasy world. Basic research and technology at times requires a large amount of technology no corporation would be willing to invest in because it requires large amounts of land, energy, and resources but the dividends are amazing.
How many corporations keep research facilities operational 24 hours a day all week long? As I said before you live in a deluded fantasy world if any corporation or private institution will be able to match the government labs.Businesses invest in all kinds of things all the time which require large capital investment. Construction projects, mining, manufacturing, etc.
There are two main points of view that get advocated over and over again (Libertarian versus Socialist). They are both wrong because they both divide up the pie of natural resources along the same spectrum. But why should I be forced to pay for the investing>
That is not a correct analogy. Should we be doing things cooperatively as well as encouraging competition? Yes. It's the same thing as independence/interdependence.Should we really be trading individual liberty for utility?
That's quite the way to twist the reality of our democracy.Add in a majority rules democracy and we find ourselves in a situation where the stupid majority is legislating theft on the mere promise of future benefit,
Preach it brother! Go on!lulled into slavery by those power-seeking members of society unnecessarily empowered by the government's monopoly on force.
Market fundamentalism is sooooooo old hat dude.Even if bureaucrats are angels and taxes are spent in the most ethical way possible, they are still a far less efficient form of resource allocation than are markets.
Welcome to American politics, where voting and debate rule the day.If you are a typical American about half of your income goes towards taxes, and that's without inflation. I think you will have a hard time justifying that you are getting your moneys worth.
That sometimes happens, but the opposite happens without government actions too, so it's a non-argument.If you are a fan of democracy, then you should favor the market's solution to technological innovation which allows the individual to chose exactly which areas in which he wants to spend money. This is more "democratically efficient" then voting on the broad legislation (or representatives) and then saying "Screw you, better luck next time..." to the minority.
Oh it's stealing. Well, like I said, you don't have to pay taxes if you leave the country we built here.Dollars move a lot faster than voting cycles. There are no losers in the system where you don't steal from people.
Academia and government work really well together, we should all be proud of what they have done. If you want to take all of the credit away from them and imagine that your governmentless innovators could have done a better job, go prove it to us by starting your own little society or something. There's no reason to choose that system over this one. There's a reason it is the way it is! You're just speculating based on a fantasist philosophy.Furthermore, there is no need to force charity, particularly in the case of technological innovation where individuals and private businesses stand to benefit directly from such innovation.
You're not, you're free to leave the country we built here.
That is not a correct analogy. Should we be doing things cooperatively as well as encouraging competition? Yes. It's the same thing as independence/interdependence.
That's quite the way to twist the reality of our democracy. Preach it brother! Go on!
Market fundamentalism is sooooooo old hat dude.
That sometimes happens, but the opposite happens without government actions too, so it's a non-argument.
You don't get it, most people like paying taxes here. Some people think they are too high, some people don't like where the money goes. Most want a money system and most want a government. So you will have taxes. You're forced to pay into a combined system, sure. Your say in where the money goes is in your vote and your petitions to your representitives. If you could just pay whatever you wanted to wherever you wanted, what would be the point of government at all? Is that what you're saying you want? If so, it's not going to happen here, so my advice to start a new country is actually good advice.The fact that I can leave hardly makes the tax any less involuntary in the jurisdiction in which it applies. At the very least I am being coerced, since I can't avoid it except by being forced to take evasive action. There is no option to opt out of the paying for/receiving the service. Strictly speaking nobody can be absolutely forced to do anything - what there are are varying degrees of coercion, the necessity to uproot your life and move elsewhere ranking pretty high.
No what I value is humanity and we do things well together. Just because there is a risk of monopoly or evil collusion does not make human cooperation a bad idea! There's always going to be a bunch of sad sacks complaining about their liberty on the sidelines. Life ain't fair kiddo, don't slander the rest of society just because you're not happy. You seem to have a conspiracist tinge to your ideas.Actually, its not an analogy at all. It is a statement asking you to compare values. Apparently, you do not value freedom from aggression very highly and recognize none of the disadvantages that centralizing and monopolizing such aggression has.
It might happen sometimes. Most of the time that's not the reality of the situation at all, that's what the complainers are saying because they hate the system, you know this about others, you don't think it applies to you in this case? Oh well.Yet my description is exactly what happens.
The phrase itself is a criticism. "Market fundamentalism (also known as free market fundamentalism) is a pejorative term applied to an exaggerated religious-like faith in the ability of unfettered laissez-faire or free market economic views or policies to solve economic and social problems." I understand bottom-up philosophies quite well thank you, I just don't think they run the way you wish they did. I think people are radical and fundamentalist, they have a belief system about the market and freedom. We need to get together and make decisions together. There will always be those on the outside of academia crying about corruption and whining about natural cures. No reason to disband the NIH.Any actual criticisms? Or do you actually think that resources are more efficiently allocated from the top down rather than by the individual actions of each person seeking their own self interest?
If you let the market make their own rules they will often get together and screw the customer all on their own. Case in point, Canada gets ripped off for cell service, the bills were impossible to understand, just the worst kind of bs imaginable in a group of companies, the govt came in, forced a bunch of changes and everyone is much happier. Thank the Lord.Please clarify... what opposite effect are you talking about?
You don't get it, most people like paying taxes here. Some people think they are too high, some people don't like where the money goes. Most want a money system and most want a government. So you will have taxes. You're forced to pay into a combined system, sure. Your say in where the money goes is in your vote and your petitions to your representitives.
No what I value is humanity and we do things well together. Just because there is a risk of monopoly or evil collusion does not make human cooperation a bad idea! There's always going to be a bunch of sad sacks complaining about their liberty on the sidelines. Life ain't fair kiddo, don't slander the rest of society just because you're not happy. You seem to have a conspiracist tinge to your ideas.
The phrase itself is a criticism. "Market fundamentalism (also known as free market fundamentalism) is a pejorative term applied to an exaggerated religious-like faith in the ability of unfettered laissez-faire or free market economic views or policies to solve economic and social problems." I understand bottom-up philosophies quite well thank you, I just don't think they run the way you wish they did. I think people are radical and fundamentalist, they have a belief system about the market and freedom. We need to get together and make decisions together. There will always be those on the outside of academia crying about corruption and whining about natural cures. No reason to disband the NIH.
If you let the market make their own rules they will often get together and screw the customer all on their own. Case in point, Canada gets ripped off for cell service, the bills were impossible to understand, just the worst kind of bs imaginable in a group of companies, the govt came in, forced a bunch of changes and everyone is much happier. Thank the Lord.
You think you won an argument because you didn't force me to say that it's the law that you have to pay taxes in America?You ignored my rebuttal (that the ability to relocate does not make the taxes in the US any less involuntary) so I guess you accept it.
That's your fantasy, we are aware, good luck with it tho!First, a money system is possible (and indeed preferable, although this is a different topic) without it being dependent on government. Second, taxes can be voluntary and would be sufficient if the government was limited in scope.
Straw man, mischaracterization of the ideals of liberal democracy, opinionated bs to boot.Again, why is it better to pool the money together, allocate it based upon a voting system whereby the minority is screwed
Government isn't inefficient by design, right? So we're always trying to make it more efficient. So that's really not an attack on our system of government.divy it up further with an inefficient bureaucracy
Market fundamentalism. The benefits of running a government are something you don't appreciate, obviously. You fearmonger and propagandize about their "evil powers" and "hate of freedom and equality" and such things. You don't seem to think government does any good at all! You're dreaming if you think government doesn't pay for itself.that costs money in itself and cannot compete in terms of efficiency with the market?
Oh really because people are trying to move to American as opposed to escape it's clutches.There's a reason people do not voluntarily elect to participate in such a system.
This is what you think the government is? What? You have no belief that people voted those people in there?!? What are you talking about.I think we do things well together too, I just don't think cooperation should be forced by a special class of government insiders.
Let me clarify my point about the danger of the State's exclusive right to the use of force. First, I'm not going to argue that the State shouldn't have the exclusive right to use force because this is the only way for the State to fulfill its primary function - protecting you against the aggression of others. What I said was that this exclusive right shouldn't extend to the ability to forcibly and legally extract taxes from the public, because such a power makes the otherwise illegal action of those unscrupulous individuals who would engage in things like stealing, in fact legal.Stealing should be illegal for everybody - allowing the government the ability to involuntarily tax singles out a small portion of the population for whom stealing is okay.
My wife might cheat on me, no reason not to get married, and if things get really suspicious I'll hire a private eye like a normal person would.You cannot set up such an exclusive right and expect everything to be peachy. It will be exploited for the benefit of those who hold the exclusive right.
You know nothing about the Canadian government and the cell provider industry, obviously. Just more fantasist ranting.The only reason the customers were getting ripped off was because there wasn't enough competition. There isn't enough competition because the government creates barriers to entry favorable to the oligopolists.
What, do you think someone could just waltz in and start up a cell provider lickety split? The ignorance! Both the government and the market played their roles well and the costs are coming down and the features are going up. Do a little research on that piece of business history and get back to me.Where customers are getting ripped off, there is profit to be made by the enterprising entrepreneur.
Alas, reality is not as you think, Mr C.
Even in highly competitive arenas, prices can escalate for a number of reasons: E.g. High perceived value, and outright price rigging.
Best example: Indian homeopaths. They charge a relatively high price to their patients for their wares, even though those wares are just water and sugar-pills. There is almost zero government control of those industries (in fact, of all industries), so homeopaths can charge whatever they wish and there are literally millions of them in India and Pakistan alone.
So with so many "competing businesses" in this open market, you would expect their price to go down due to all the "competition". But the prices don't go down. They stay relatively high compared to other daily staples people buy: food, transport, etc So why is that?
The internet was originally conceived to coordinate strategic nuclear command networks. Again, an outgrowth of military spending.
Which basically means it was created by Fascist corporate-state partnership.
The express purpose of Fascist corporate-state partnerships is to socialize research and development costs on to the backs of tax payers so private entities don't have to cough up the research dough on their own.
This allows private firms to reap technological gains while having their research costs be subsidized by their competitors or by other industries that have no research costs.
Thus, corn farmers and teachers are paying to subsidize the research and development costs of companies like McDonald Douglas, Raytheon, General Electric, Pfizer and others.
This is very same reason why colleges and schools are heavily subsidized. It has nothing to do with providing a quality education, and everything to do with socializing corporate training costs. Thus, again we have potato growers and gas station owners subsidizing the training costs of corporate conglomerates through the educational system.
Probably because the consumers don't have enough information to compare competitors.
Lets just be friends Joey... you seem like a cool dude. How can I argue with a skier (or whatever the hell that thing in your avatar is) and feel good about myself?
Very poetic of you Zep, I was expecting the obligatory "You are a delusional psychopath!"Sounds like something my grandfather would say, and that's always cool in my book.
I'm glad you are bringing this up.
I have been meaning to flesh out my thought process a little more in regards to why the free market is preferable to redistributive taxation or market regulation.
Everyone will agree that the free market is the preferable system when only its fundamental features (and the converse fundamental features of statism) are considered. At its base, the free market is a voluntary means of exchange. In this sense it is a default, negative position, with no interference by a third party. Statism favors one party (called government) to redistribute wealth (or impose regulation upon) from one group in society to another, so long as the consent of the majority is reached.
From a moral perspective the free market is clearly superior because it doesn't violate individual rights (the very same rights that protect you from your neighbor stealing from you) while the other does. If the statist approach is to be superior in any way, it must be superior in some way other than morality, and this way (such as efficiency, or equal wealth distribution, etc.) must be shown to be more weighty or important then the moral aspect.
What I'm getting at is that the utilitarian aspects of each of the approaches do not stand alone in any cost-benefit analysis that we make. The free market already has a huge check-mark on one side of the equation, by its fundamental character, before the issues of utility can even be discussed.
Things such as price rigging are one such utility issue that, if indeed true of the free market, need to be weighed against the value of both morality and efficiency (neither are disputed), as well as the other utility issues for both systems.
Probably because the consumers don't have enough information to compare competitors.
There's nothing wrong with having your tyupe of views about. It's just that some of the purveyors of such views are often barely impinging even tangentially on reality.Very poetic of you Zep, I was expecting the obligatory "You are a delusional psychopath!"Sounds like something my grandfather would say, and that's always cool in my book.
And there you hit on the main issue: How much is enough, how much is too much. How much government control is necessary to ensure the free market remains free and equitable for all players; and how much is too much which simply stifles, or worse, limits market operation only to that which has the "correct" ideology. Some control is necessary, but too much control is not. The practical argument is where and when government influence is needed.I'm glad you are bringing this up.
I have been meaning to flesh out my thought process a little more in regards to why the free market is preferable to redistributive taxation or market regulation.
Everyone will agree that the free market is the preferable system when only its fundamental features (and the converse fundamental features of statism) are considered. At its base, the free market is a voluntary means of exchange. In this sense it is a default, negative position, with no interference by a third party. Statism favors one party (called government) to redistribute wealth (or impose regulation upon) from one group in society to another, so long as the consent of the majority is reached.
From a moral perspective the free market is clearly superior because it doesn't violate individual rights (the very same rights that protect you from your neighbor stealing from you) while the other does. If the statist approach is to be superior in any way, it must be superior in some way other than morality, and this way (such as efficiency, or equal wealth distribution, etc.) must be shown to be more weighty or important then the moral aspect.
What I'm getting at is that the utilitarian aspects of each of the approaches do not stand alone in any cost-benefit analysis that we make. The free market already has a huge check-mark on one side of the equation, by its fundamental character, before the issues of utility can even be discussed.
Things such as price rigging are one such utility issue that, if indeed true of the free market, need to be weighed against the value of both morality and efficiency (neither are disputed), as well as the other utility issues for both systems.
There's a homeopath on just about every corner in India. So there's plenty of local awareness of prices, etc. So sorry, that one doesn't fly. Try again! Why are the prices of homeopathy in India relatively high in a free and open market with many competitors?Probably because the consumers [Indian families] don't have enough information to compare [homeopath] competitors.