I did, it was ignored in order to fallaciously ask me for impossible proof.
10/28/2010 7:36:04 PM
Pupils DiL8t,
10/28/2010 8:42:13 PM
only, no, you didn't support it. asking for some mechanism by which it might work is NOT asking for impossible proof
10/28/2010 8:44:29 PM
10/28/2010 9:01:45 PM
too bad even THAT explanation was already refuted
10/28/2010 9:33:08 PM
10/28/2010 9:37:08 PM
There seem to be a lot of disjointed arguments going on in this thread right now. There's the technology thing and the argument that nothing will be invented if there is no individual profit motive for it to be invented. There are references to the inevitable consolidation of power that exists in communist countries, which (in the hands of the wrong individuals, which is also inevitable) stifles innovation and growth even more than unrestricted capitalism. Let me try to tie it together a little bit.In our current time, energy is one of the most important issues we face as a country and a world. Suppose that, in theory, we could research and discover an applicable method of fusion power which we could then use in power plants, thereby replacing all less desirable methods of power generation. The only problem is that this will cost $1 trillion. Obviously, there is no person or even large group of people who would be willing to risk this sort of money on something that would bring so much prosperity to so many people. It would solve an astounding number of issues. Dependence on fossil fuels, basically all geopolitical problems in the Middle East, international competition for a finite fuel source. Amount of money spent on electricity, etc. Under a capitalist system, this energy source would not be discovered when "overall benefits > cost of discovery" but at the point where "profit motive > cost of discovery." Many of you will claim these are the same, but I feel as though they are not. The kinds of benefits a technology of this magnitude would create are unquantifiable. Much like the invention of the automobile or the cell phone. There are simply too many variables to have 100% accurate information.My question to all of you is, "As the sole entity large enough to drive this sort of innovation, is it within the right of the government to research something like this using public money?" If the government was able to find a way to make this work, assume it would own the patent and allow anyone to use it freely, seeing as it is a public discovery paid for with public money.
10/28/2010 10:12:27 PM
You are wrong in one sense. A capitalist society does do work in instances where "profit motive < cost of X", it is called volunteering. Look at all the programmers who worked on Linux, or the people that wrote Wikipedia. No one made money. The profit motive was all loss, but the benefit to mankind > cost of production. Go west and look at the Virgin Galactic project. They are spending millions, yet there is almost no chance of them making a profit, but they're doing it anyway. Why? Because it is cool, and even if they lose some money, they had fun, maybe opened space up making the world a better place, and if nothing else got exposure for the Virgin brand. As to your question, "As the sole entity large enough to drive this sort of innovation, is it within the right of the government to research something like this using public money?" if it was somehow the case that all it took was dumping $1T down a hole was guaranteed to work, then of course the government as the right to spend its money however the legislators decide. Congress has the right to give all our money to France. It says so in the Constitution.
10/28/2010 11:27:06 PM
10/29/2010 1:01:11 AM
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10/29/2010 12:12:17 PM
10/29/2010 2:14:01 PM
10/29/2010 5:16:59 PM
10/30/2010 3:06:20 AM
Snarkie, unless your memory has failed you, you should know what I was actually advocating. Do you simply prefer tearing down that straw man? GoldenViper: I suggest anarchist communism.LoneSnark: State communism is bad!
10/30/2010 12:28:51 PM
Golden, am I to understand you are Pupils DiL8t? The phrase "I suggest anarchist communism." has not been spoken in this thread once. Someone did post a link to "Participatory_economics", which danced around many issues to sound great, but strongly implied state communism. Of course, you know why I cannot speak against anarchist communism: any anarchist system would seem the same: all interactions are voluntary, so you are free to work for free (or in kind) and I am free to demand a salary. No major difference.
10/30/2010 2:10:56 PM
Okay, I guess it has been a long time. We're both older than we used to be, that's for sure.
10/30/2010 2:13:28 PM
10/30/2010 3:22:02 PM
So ugh, not to derail the thread, but if communism is so great...why did it fail in the Soviet Union?
10/30/2010 4:02:55 PM
10/30/2010 4:19:58 PM
10/30/2010 5:46:33 PM
Communism or socialism could never come directly from anarchy, nor is either system compatible with anarchy. Marx posited that you could not have communism before socialism, nor could you have socialism before capitalism. State-controlled communism is the only form it can take. Even in a best case scenario, 49.9% of the population will find that the other 50.1% is getting a better deal than them. That's why a small elite, usually in conjunction with an army, has to force communism upon the entire population. No one can be allowed to leave, because the system demands that the few are exploited by the many. Communism and socialism set the unrealistic expectation that people will be altruistic, yet anyone that takes an honest look at themselves will realize that we are not an altruistic species.What's next? Anarcho-syndicalism? Yes, we'll replace our government overlords with a unionized hierarchy and call it anarchy.
10/30/2010 5:57:42 PM
10/30/2010 6:09:15 PM
10/30/2010 6:22:12 PM
You dont know what capitalism is. Ownership does not exist without a government to define it. Capitalism did not exist before goverments existed to define and enforce property rights. Without ownership there cannot be trade.
10/30/2010 7:49:15 PM
10/30/2010 8:51:13 PM
^ Bourgeois property needs either enforcement or an unlikely general social agreement. Above all, ownership is an idea. No law of physics mandates the construct.
10/31/2010 1:39:57 AM
^ We might be talking about different things, but if you think the concept of ownership is nothing more than a bourgeois construct, you've clearly never tried to take a toy from a baby. Resource control is ultimately ownership, whether or not it's explicitly stated.
10/31/2010 9:03:39 AM
10/31/2010 9:22:52 AM
I really do believe is either one of the most deluded intelligent individuals on the site, or he is clearly and without a doubt the best troll here, hands down.
10/31/2010 9:25:53 AM
10/31/2010 11:25:18 AM
10/31/2010 1:29:43 PM
10/31/2010 1:41:40 PM
10/31/2010 3:20:37 PM
10/31/2010 4:20:08 PM
10/31/2010 4:47:30 PM
10/31/2010 5:09:00 PM
^^ Anarcho-capitalism represent a bit of departure from the earlier anarchist tradition, as contested as that was. Even Benjamin Tucker - whose thought resembles Rothbard's in many ways - suggested the limitation land ownership by use to ten acres.
10/31/2010 6:22:48 PM
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2010/wp10268.pdfI don't really want to comment on this paper's accuracy But I thought some might like to read it, it proposes a model that connects wealth inequality and economic collapses.
12/15/2010 2:35:45 PM
Well I'm not going to read it but it was obviously written by poor people who are angry at rich people because they work so hard and get paid the huge sums of money they so rightly deserve.
12/15/2010 2:45:59 PM
Well, here we have a wonderful experiment being run in volunteerism. The capitalist world has created Wikipedia, "Founded in 2001 in Cuba's long-time ideological enemy, the United States, Wikipedia is a multilingual, free-content encyclopaedia. It encourages editorial changes from everybody who comes to the site, although restrictions exist on about 2,000 controversial articles. Wikipedia has more than 3.5 million entries in English and 682,000 in Spanish, and some attracts 78 million visitors a month."The communist world, namely Cuba, has created a competitor. "The new Spanish language website will be officially launched later on Tuesday but it is already up and running with nearly 20,000 entries on ecured.cu The site says the aim is to spread knowledge without a profit motive. Updates will apparently be allowed with the administrators' approval but it is not clear who actually runs the site."Let us see which one contributes more to mankind. http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20101214/02194212268/cuba-tries-to-create-its-own-wikipedia-might-have-difficulty-seeing-it-as-it-blocks-internet-access.shtml
12/15/2010 4:49:14 PM
talk about a disingenuous comparison.
12/15/2010 4:56:12 PM
Are you trying to make a point? You should probably qualify it.
12/15/2010 4:57:33 PM
12/15/2010 6:22:03 PM
Nope, he said "soviet communism"....but I guess that's what happens when you start a debate founded on pseudo-intellectual semantics rather than actual substance.
12/15/2010 6:37:43 PM
How many times have we said that a free society would allow people to participate in a communist system? I mean, if you're a hard worker, you'd be an idiot to do so, but it would be allowed. Communism cannot be sustained without the state, because it opposes human nature, and abolishes the profit motive which is integral to a healthy economy.
12/15/2010 6:44:57 PM
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12/15/2010 10:36:12 PM