theological economics
10/29/2011 3:08:10 PM
I know you are but what am I.
10/29/2011 4:24:00 PM
10/29/2011 4:58:23 PM
10/29/2011 5:31:15 PM
10/29/2011 5:33:58 PM
10/29/2011 5:36:38 PM
I think once the cold weather sets in and the hippies experience how harsh cold weather is on a human they will realize how stupid their cause is
10/29/2011 11:19:48 PM
http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9QL4OEO1.htm
10/30/2011 1:34:57 AM
10/30/2011 2:52:43 AM
Of course there's a pie. Lets say by some stroke of magic or miracle Herman Cain is right and if someone is poor it is only their fault. And 100% of Americans took this idea to heart. We would still have poverty, starving children and unemployment. Contemporary capitalism demands "labor market fluidity" which means some people must have crappy jobs or no jobs. A free market system in a general sense aims merely to manage scarcity and doesn't necessarily have this limitation. Capitalism doesn't aim to solve the problem of scarcity, it only cares to manage it to the detriment of a certain group of people. OWS doesn't aim to destroy the free market. They don't want communism. We need to embrace a free market system that does more than manage scarcity and can actually solve this problem.If our system now can't handle 100% of people being motivated, the that means there is some band of people whose marginal effort is worth less than the equivalent marginal effort of someone better off than them. Most people have an intuitive understanding of this concept which is where the OWS movement started. as the statistics show, this has been getting worse too, which isn't tenable. [Edited on October 30, 2011 at 3:21 AM. Reason : ]
10/30/2011 3:17:16 AM
I'm no economist, but I never understood how anyone can believe that wealth can be "created" or "destroyed."Every other physical law in the universe follows the zero-sum principles but somehow we are to believe that wealth does not? Doesn't make sense to me.
10/30/2011 3:33:53 AM
http://www.washingtonian.com/articles/people/21277.htmlHere's an interesting article that further demonstrates how Herman Cain et al are ridiculously out of touch with reality. We couldn't even go back to her g'mas times with the current economic system and the mentality of many rightist politicians and economists. The idea that the only successful careers are the ones corporations find valuable is as fascist as the idea that the gov should determine who does what job. When you have a society where even white collar jobs are being eaten by computers, we need to brace the concept of socialized investment in the arts, and fundamental (ie. sometimes pie in the sky) research.
10/30/2011 3:36:32 AM
10/30/2011 9:19:53 AM
There is a finite amount of goods (that seems to be the nature of the universe), however it doesn't have to be a zero sum game.When people accrue wealth without providing value/opportunity, this is where it becomes zero sum.For example, someone creates a very efficient energy source that provides the world with the means to live at a much higher standard of living. This inventor would likely accrue massive amounts of wealth (if ran his business right) while at the same time providing a huge value to the people.While this is probably impossible to do, a variable tax based on how much opportunity/value you create to the general public may be interesting to look at. The more you help others through your products/services, the less you are taxed.However, objectively setting what is good/valuable will be next to impossible.
10/30/2011 9:27:18 AM
Usually when people say "zero-sum" about these kinds of situations, they mean something like "a finite pie that, once divided, determines a distribution of resources". There's a more technical sense but I don't think that's what's being employed here (that payoffs sum to zero), as we're not using any of the OTHER technical senses of "game" (so why, then, "zero-sum"?).[Edited on October 30, 2011 at 9:41 AM. Reason : .]
10/30/2011 9:37:18 AM
10/30/2011 9:47:02 AM
By zero sum game, I take it to mean for one person to profit, another must suffer.Me: +1You: -1Total: 0In my example, I show that wealth creation doesn't have to be.
10/30/2011 10:15:15 AM
Wealth creation is really useless to discuss without discussing wealth distribution. Clearly if we created things more efficiently and everybody got a piece of that, everybody would be better off. In that sense the "game" isn't zero-sum, because there are cooperative solutions. I'm willing to go that far with you; without any control of distribution, however, people can get pushed to losing scenarios easily (we see it at the moment). Describing these scenarios as "zero-sum" is not so far off the mark because the psychology that grips the masses at that point is a zero-sum mentality.But I don't think anybody who claims the economy is 'zero-sum' means in the strict sense demanded by game theory (that payoffs sum to zero). [Edited on October 30, 2011 at 10:26 AM. Reason : .]
10/30/2011 10:25:12 AM
10/30/2011 11:00:44 AM
You'll never get that ten bucks if you can't sell your labor for ten bucks, if you're a regular person. Surely you can imagine scenarios (other than ones driven by GOVERNMENT COERCION) in which people end up unable to sell their labor for a living wage, as measured against money?
10/30/2011 11:11:32 AM
10/30/2011 11:34:53 AM
Oh boy what should we do? I guess the only thing we can do is deregulate everything and hand direct control to the people whose influence is already toxic.
10/30/2011 11:38:56 AM
That gorilla sure is violent, he harmed that woman even though he was in chains!"Why yes! Better remove its chains!"
10/30/2011 11:39:25 AM
Of course the difference is, it's possible to effectively control the gorilla without using the gorilla's friends. You know this, obviously, but it's easier for you to build strawmen and snark than it is to have a real discussion on the matter.[Edited on October 30, 2011 at 2:06 PM. Reason : sdf]
10/30/2011 2:05:28 PM
Get rid of the gorilla all together
10/30/2011 2:11:23 PM
That is what we want to do. Get the Government (gorilla) out of here!
10/30/2011 2:22:44 PM
10/30/2011 2:27:05 PM
10/30/2011 5:09:43 PM
I don't really get the progressive point of view on ever more regulation and control and oversight by the government. Do you guys not have your eyes open and see how well its been working for us so far?What is your plan to remove the cronies and put in people that won't be under the sway of vast sums of wealth shoveled at them from corporate interests?
10/30/2011 6:41:02 PM
^ yep, pretty muchAnd I think it's obvious why the current plan is: to be balls deep in all of the wrong fights in all of the wrong places.
10/30/2011 7:02:42 PM
10/30/2011 8:43:51 PM
10/30/2011 8:59:55 PM
10/30/2011 10:24:32 PM
10/31/2011 11:44:37 AM
10/31/2011 3:59:42 PM
^^^Campaign finance determines to whom the politicians are most beholden once they are elected or reelected; it's seen largely as an investment, and for good reason.
10/31/2011 10:49:28 PM
11/1/2011 7:27:11 AM
Bank Transfer Day is coming up, peeps.
11/1/2011 8:26:39 AM
Ah, yes. National bank run day - I'll actually be participating on November 2nd.
11/1/2011 10:03:23 AM
I've been meaning to close my Wachovia/WellsFargo account for a while and transfer everything to SECU. This might be a good opportunity.
11/1/2011 10:13:14 AM
They should have called it something other than Bank Transfer day. Without much knowledge, I'd think I'm just supposed to go and do a transfer at my bank..
11/1/2011 10:13:24 AM
11/1/2011 10:13:48 AM
11/1/2011 11:53:45 AM
This may have been posted, if not:Occupy Wall Street - Raleigh arrestshttp://www.wral.com/news/local/story/10322855/Bank of America is scrapping its plan to charge a $5 monthly debit card feehttp://www.wral.com/business/story/10322455/[Edited on November 1, 2011 at 2:02 PM. Reason : -]
11/1/2011 1:59:39 PM
11/1/2011 4:14:47 PM
11/1/2011 5:56:15 PM
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/manhattan/occupy_ball_street_aIoZXVqZ3hU8Zm9oX5aGWMyeah they wish it was the 60s/70s
11/2/2011 5:29:44 PM
this is well worth 2 minutes of your life.http://dauckster.posterous.com/a-31-year-old-video-clip-absolutely-worth-you
11/2/2011 10:05:32 PM
milton friedman is a dirty, dirty shitter.no, but seriously, there's nothing implicitly wrong with capitalism, but what we have now can barely be defined as pure capitalism. i defy anyone in here to draw the line between multi-national corporations and the state at this point.[Edited on November 2, 2011 at 10:26 PM. Reason : ]
11/2/2011 10:16:29 PM
game over-attacking cops in oakland and having permits revoked everywhere else.bag em and tag em.
11/3/2011 10:49:33 AM