Clearly capitalists didn't exist in the first days of humanity (at least not by definition we'd recognize). It's worth noting out that historically capitalist revolutions result in systems with governments.
1/21/2012 10:48:15 AM
1/21/2012 11:07:00 AM
1/21/2012 11:26:04 AM
1/21/2012 11:31:24 AM
1/21/2012 12:11:38 PM
1/21/2012 12:30:38 PM
1/21/2012 12:36:57 PM
1/21/2012 12:42:34 PM
1/21/2012 12:44:08 PM
1/21/2012 12:55:37 PM
1/21/2012 4:18:50 PM
1/21/2012 5:53:47 PM
1/21/2012 7:29:29 PM
^ I will evidence burro's point.
1/21/2012 7:53:59 PM
Im not gonna read the thread, so this might be a little off topic, but from the OP:
1/21/2012 10:10:54 PM
Tieing the causes of Enron to the government is fucking stupid and an embarrassment to the conservative cause.
1/21/2012 10:25:17 PM
I'm pretty sure the point McDanger is trying to make is that Enron used its influence to create loopholes for itself, whereas if there was no government regulation it wouldn't have even had to go to those lengths to commit the fraud it committed. Government failed massively in this case, but the solution isn't to get rid of government because then it would become even easier for this type of thing to happen. Considering how much money the Enron executives made and the fact that they were never really prosecuted, many other people in their position would attempt the same things. The only thing keeping it from happening more often is because regulations are there to prevent it.
1/22/2012 2:20:21 AM
Don't you understand how moronic you sound? Enron broke the law. Enron didn't secure "regulations" that allowed it to break the law. It broke the fucking law. We aren't going to legislate good people. My reply wasn't in response to McDanger anyway.
1/22/2012 8:53:35 AM
1/22/2012 10:47:44 AM
Clearly not. There was no regulation they secured that said "let us commit fraud via accounting tricks". Fraud is fraud. This isn't a difficult concept.
1/22/2012 10:56:02 AM
1/22/2012 11:05:41 AM
1/22/2012 11:50:10 AM
1/22/2012 12:22:18 PM
1/22/2012 1:03:39 PM
1/22/2012 2:12:53 PM
Much worse than global thermonuclear war?
1/22/2012 3:05:05 PM
1/22/2012 6:09:55 PM
A recession is a particular animal. Unemployed people don't just earn less, they earn nothing. But, recessions are not a long-term feature outside of sustained regime uncertainty. So, putting recessions to the side, there is nothing inherent to a free system which makes it unreasonable to have both low unemployment and long-running loss of per-capita GDP. After the system has allocated all attainable resources to their highest valued uses, the resultant sum is simply lower than last year. Falling productivity just means it takes more labor to produce as much as we produced last year, which means plenty of jobs struggling just to produce what we produced last year. Without governmental interference, the economy will have a booming industry employing ever more workers producing whatever resource it was that we found to be short, be it food, fuel, building materials, whatever.
1/22/2012 7:25:22 PM
LoneSnark, would you mind adding "I think/believe" to the beginning of all of your sentences so that people who haven't caught onto your schtick yet won't be confused into thinking you actually use facts? K thanks!
1/22/2012 10:19:57 PM
Normal readers should be able to recognize which sentences represent facts and which do not. For example, if it sounds like something that can be found in a textbook, such as "relative scarcity is reflected in the price" or something easily verified through wikipedia such as the existence of something called "futures markets", readers should be able to interpret these as facts. When I use words like "to the best of my knowledge..." I think the average reader can deduce that I am drawing deductive conclusions. I do realize some readers such as yourself might not catch the implications of generalization, such as when I say "We today do not begrudge our relatively dirt-poor grandparents...", which anyone else would obviously conclude is not fact, as on a planet of six billion certainly someone somewhere does begrudge their grandparents for energy use. Even if it was fact, there was no possible way I could have known, making it a guess, or better described as an opinion of what I believe best resembles the truth. All that said, this is an internet forum. Nothing said here by anyone should ever be blindly accepted as "fact", myself included. If anyone here says something that totally conflicts with your understanding, feel free to explain your functional understanding and how it differs. Maybe the actual truth is somewhere in the middle. For example, a movie on this subject was shown here at NCState (a fact) proclaiming the perpetual growth requirement of capitalism. The mechanism was the banking system's tendency to make fixed payment loans at interest, which would eventually bankrupt all consumers, as a falling absolute income would render fixed monthly obligations ever more of a burden until the system collapsed. But this was obviously bunk, as the average inflation rate during the 19th century was quite negative (a fact) yet personal bankruptcy was no more prevalent than today. While real income managed to grow while absolute income fell, people still managed to pay their bills because the occasional pay-cut was expected and therefore consumers and their lenders managed to plan around it.
1/23/2012 1:01:40 AM
1/23/2012 2:01:32 AM
1/23/2012 8:15:51 PM
1/23/2012 8:58:05 PM
I'm not gonna argue it too much, because its getting way off topic but:those reasons played a role in going to Iraq but ultimately oil is the reason why we ended up in Iraq. If we were just concerned with blowing up colored people and "policing" then we would have been engaging in Africa off and on for a while now. But those regions just don't matter (except Libya and Nigeria, both Oil producing states)
1/23/2012 9:12:20 PM
well, you are correct, but not for the reasons you think you are. The oil connection occurred in 1953, and we've been tripping all over that decision ever since
1/23/2012 9:15:20 PM
I will come back tomorrow for the rest of your post. I have time for this. Switzerland is entirely dependent upon oil, yet they have never invaded anyone. Every industrialized country on this planet is entirely dependent upon cheap oil. The vast majority of them did not invade Iraq and would never have invaded Iraq if America's leaders had chosen not to. Compared to European and Asian countries, America imports far less of our oil than they do. Yet it is us that keeps invading oil producing states. It has nothing to do with oil and everything to do with our large military. We want to police the world by invading weak states that are important, and being oil producers makes them seem important in our eyes. If God had moved all the oil out of the third world, the U.S. would still be sending armies to the third world to secure whatever came next on the central planner's list, be it tin, rare earths, or friggin' coffee. Disband the U.S. military down to the size of, say, that of the European Union, and we will never invade Iraq again. But no, according to you the size of government has nothing to do with how government acts.
1/24/2012 12:04:12 AM
1/24/2012 12:44:20 AM
What are we arguing about again?You do realize that Switzerland's per capita oil usage is almost half of the United States right? Some states are more dependant than others. Also several nations in the European Union DID send their puny armies to Iraq and then several of them were major players in the Libya fiasco. Its not just America.Switzerland doesn't have an army (to speak of). Is it because they have small government? Well by a lot of metrics they actually have what some in america would call "big government." They don't have a military because thats their tradition, they as a nation value pacifism and the government reflects those values. If Americans held the same views then we likely wouldn't go to war either. Unfortunately thats not really America's mantra, there are multitudes of people in this nation that believe in shooting from the hip and taking whats theirs; not to mention the people in power that know it will be good for their bottom line etc.You keep implicating me saying that I think we should be invading everyone and I believe we should have a huge military and that I'm a racist and building all these strawmen when I never said any of those things. The only argument I was making was that it is a natural human tendency for humans to feel community and buddy up with their neighbors when they think it will help ensure their survival, especially in times of scarcity. So before we start arguing over the meaning of Iraq perhaps we should go back and take a look at how the argument originally started.[Edited on January 24, 2012 at 6:49 AM. Reason : .]
1/24/2012 6:47:21 AM
1/24/2012 9:05:19 AM
^^ I never said you said those things. You said "oil is the reason why we ended up in Iraq" and "we may have been able to avoid Iraq if we were less dependant on it". I said invading Iraq had nothing to do with our level of oil consumption and everything to do with our huge military. You have now recanted your previous position, accepting that "They don't have a military because thats their tradition...If Americans held the same views then we likely wouldn't go to war either." A statement leaving no room for oil dependence. So the conversation is over. In the parlance of internet forum rules, I win.
1/24/2012 3:29:11 PM
Ok, well in the interest of time I'd like to rewind back to the crux of my argument before the sidetracks: Our system is dependant on infinite growth and we live in a finite world, therefore our system (or any system based on endless growth) cannot last forever.and you eventually said:
1/24/2012 5:50:15 PM
Evidence? Sure. The middle ages are rife with this exact outcome. The plague would kill lots of people, per-capita income would rise for a decade or so, then begin a slow gradual decline back to subsistence wages as population grew until malnutrition brought population growth in line with productivity growth. It was called the iron law of wages. This came to an end with the rise of capitalism and the industrial revolution drove productivity growth above the population growth rate. There is no law that production growth must always exceed population growth. But that was a long time ago under radically different circumstances. As such, the persuasive evidence is deductive. Unemployment occurs when wages exceed labor productivity, so firms lay off unproductive workers. As unemployment increases, wages fall until wages are in line with productivity, firm profits rise and expand production employing more workers, ending unemployment. This is how any free market matches supply with demand. All falling productivity means is that the price where supply meets demand should fall over time. Markets allocate all factors of production. I see no where in the mechanism that growing resource scarcity (predictably higher prices over time) should halt standard operation. [Edited on January 24, 2012 at 7:39 PM. Reason : .,.]
1/24/2012 7:29:41 PM
1/24/2012 11:29:50 PM
Americans have not starved to death due to economic scarcity for hundreds of years. The world-bank calculates subsistence at less than $1 a day. Americans today rake in $129 a day. As such, per-capita income needs to fall an absurd amount before we even need to consider the possibility of subsistence living. Again, all resources are always scarce. That they are a little more scarce than we are used to doesn't change a damn thing. If food scarcity is increasing, then as prices rise consumers spend more of their income on food and less on big houses and new cars, workers will leave these sectors for the food production industry. Yes, real per-capita GDP has fallen as we now have fewer new homes and fewer new cars as consumers cut back there to cover their food bills. But the diversion of resources and workers away from these other industries will succeed in boosting food output to satisfy the demand.
1/24/2012 11:45:55 PM
^
1/24/2012 11:48:41 PM