10/4/2016 10:44:07 AM
This is why I can't give y'all one damn inch. Do I think EITC is ideal? Absolutely not. Do I think the government getting less money is good? Absolutely.I'm not "OK with it", but I do think it's preferable to a minimum wage increase. [Edited on October 4, 2016 at 11:21 AM. Reason : Dh][Edited on October 4, 2016 at 11:22 AM. Reason : This is why no one is willing to compromise anymore. ][Edited on October 4, 2016 at 11:23 AM. Reason : That's what I get for trying to be reasonable and have a decent conversation ]
10/4/2016 11:17:46 AM
I agree tho, EITC > Min wage
10/4/2016 12:15:22 PM
what about my questions isn't reasonable and decent? you made a compromise in your comment about EITC, which is a pretty big shift from what seems to be a fairly hard-line history you have on zero redistribution, zero taxes. and it's those "shifts" that are actually the compromises that all parties need to make to get the government working.I'm unclear as to why you think my asking where else you'd compromise is anything but reasonable. i think it's well within the realm of discussion to ask if you think there is any room to compromise on redistribution to save lives.the only reason I can think of you believe you should not have to compromise any more than you want to[Edited on October 4, 2016 at 3:42 PM. Reason : .]
10/4/2016 3:37:39 PM
i do not think it is ever morally acceptable to use violence or threat of violence to take money from one person and give it to another. the only exception would be financial reparation to one party for a violation of property rights committed by another party (the most basic function of government).with that said, i am willing to take any steps that move us closer to liberty. so if you think of a road with totalitarianism on one end and anarchism (not chaos, simply a lack of goverment) on the other end, i'm willing to do anything that takes us towards the anarchism end. i'm not sure where we should stop the car along that road, but i know what happens if we keep going the other way. tax cuts move us towards liberty, so i'm good with them, even if they are only for a select group. i'll take whatever i can get. i even supported a negative income tax as a replacement for the welfare state in another thread.hell, i would probably vote for a progressive like jill stein if it came with a guarantee of a 10% cut in government spending. at least she wants to audit the fed. not as good as ending it, but it's a good start.
10/4/2016 6:09:33 PM
10/4/2016 10:29:29 PM
what happens if i don't pay my taxes?
10/4/2016 10:34:23 PM
you get physically assaulted? just like if you get caught doing 90 in a 35, right?
10/4/2016 10:48:24 PM
everyone knows they will come and point guns at you and take your shit. don't play dumb.[Edited on October 4, 2016 at 10:50 PM. Reason : government is by definition violent and coercive]
10/4/2016 10:49:20 PM
10/4/2016 11:08:50 PM
not dealing with your first statement. volumes upon volumes have been written about it. if you actually want to learn about it, i will be glad to point you to some literature.as for your question, how do you define government? what makes a group of people a "government"?[Edited on October 4, 2016 at 11:22 PM. Reason : i think we should just see how little government we can get along with]
10/4/2016 11:17:38 PM
i've mentioned more than once (and at least once while addressing you, specifically) that i don't think we should have no government. i think we should have a lot less than we have now. how far we go towards the anarchy side of the continuum, i'm not sure.for the US, i think holding the federal govt to the enumerated powers and letting the states handle everything else would be a really good start. the states are free to try out whatever policy they want. the cream would rise to the top and other states would adopt the policies that work. [Edited on October 4, 2016 at 11:34 PM. Reason : o]
10/4/2016 11:28:47 PM
you have the same problem as the politburo had - a lot of literature and little reality
10/4/2016 11:30:13 PM
ok
10/4/2016 11:36:29 PM
I'm not convinced there's a stable form of a technologically and scientifically advancing America that has a gov that's not approximately the size of our current gov. We don't allocate our budget optimally, our tax brackets need tweaking, but our tax rates are favorable compared to our peer countries, who are beating us in different areas.
10/4/2016 11:41:15 PM
you might not like it, but it's true. you have a different utopia from their socialist version of it, but it's an unobtainable one just the same. the only difference is your is driven by an irrational belief in your own self worth where as theirs was driven by an irrational belief in the government's self worth. success lies in the middle, not as you approach the limits.
10/4/2016 11:42:38 PM
10/4/2016 11:49:35 PM
i wish i had an answer for you.
10/5/2016 12:50:58 AM
The problem with the libertarian utopia vs the socialist one is that even in the best case scenario, I'm still stuck having to work for a living.
10/5/2016 8:44:35 AM
There are scalability issues with a lot of forms of government. I don't think anyone could rationally argue that our current system is the optimal system for a group of 350 million people unequally distributed across a land mass of 3.8 million sq miles.Our system has a lot of the same flaws (and forgive the overused comparison, but it's apt in this case) that the Roman system did as it grew from a smallish city state to a far flung empire. Socialist systems work wonderfully amongst small, self-selected groups. There are plenty of successful communal farms, kibbutzes, and the like. Libertarian communities are less common (not surprising given the individualist bent of most libertarians) but have worked well on occasion.We don't really have voluntary systems of government. If you're born here you are a citizen and subject to the laws of the city, county, state, and nation whether you like it or not. People who do self select to live here are wonderful. I've never met a person who became a citizen after moving here who wasn't orders of magnitude more patriotic and optimistic about the US experience than the average citizen.I don't think it's a viable solution yet, but I see somewhere in the not too distant future a breakup of the US or a diminishing of it's importance in people's identities. It seems counter-intuitive since we seem to be moving towards a more global society in broad terms, but I think we'll see a period of a return to tribalism and isolation until the really marginal beliefs lose in the market place of ideas and secular western style values win out. I'm just fearful that the relative pacifism of the people who believe in free association, have a laissez faire take on issues of religion and speech may lose even if not worldwide, at least in some parts of North America.
10/7/2016 12:38:41 PM
^the biggest schism in the US, in regards to ideology/tribalism, is easiest to predict based on age. After Boomers die out, Gen X and Millenials are gonna be mostly secular, more likely to support civil rights, more anti-war, more tolerant of people that are nothing like them etc etc etc. the nation will be more diverse than ever but it's political bent will be mostly moving in a classically liberal direction. The exception will be economic policy where there will still be heated arguments I'm sure, but I hardly see those difference being as significant as say, when Pinkertons were cracking laborer's skulls in the street.What trend exactly are you basing the coming breakup of the US on?
10/7/2016 1:16:51 PM
10/7/2016 1:39:46 PM
https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/697477Could possibly apply to minimum wage, basic income, or EITC:
8/1/2018 7:27:04 PM
https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2018/07/are-stock-buybacks-starving-the-economy/566387/
8/3/2018 7:45:06 AM
^ I'm rather doubtful of these numbers. They probably left out a big chunk of the workforce to get such large per-worker numbers. Most of those are retail establishments, which means you're leaving out the factory and transport workers whose labor was integral to the final product but don't collect their wages directly from the retailer. Had they been included, the numbers would have been quite a bit smaller. Also, how does redistributing corporate profits to the workforce help those that work in industries that aren't so profitable? Many companies loose money every year. Historically, all "profits" usually constitute somewhere around 10% of GDP. You're not going to revolutionize the lives of 90+% of the workforce with only 10% of GDP to throw around. What you would do, however, is render the entire economy dysfunctional, collapse would rule the day.
8/7/2018 7:53:10 PM
Did you read the article? The paper isn't calculating the total redistribution of all profit across the economy to all employees. Its calculating an individual company's stock repurchases redistributed to an individual company's employees.Your post is still wrong, but it also doesn't really address the argument the article is making.
8/8/2018 7:42:17 AM
8/8/2018 11:55:19 AM
If a company were stupid enough to sink all their stock buyback money strictly into employees, investors would flee immediately and those employees would soon be looking for another job as the company tanked. Money goes where it's treated well.
8/8/2018 1:04:20 PM
employee-owned companies are better for everyone. the stock market is a scam.https://www.forbes.com/sites/darrendahl/2016/07/19/are-employee-owned-companies-the-best-investment-around/#e5f9b1f50bee
8/8/2018 1:41:33 PM
^^close to 80% of total market cap is owned by institutional investors. While I’m sure some of their trading is relatively short term, a vast, VAST majority of it is owned for 6 months and much of it even longer than that. Do you really think they base buying decisions on whether a company missed its stock price projections by a dollar in Q2??? Or do they base it on the fundamentals of a company and the projected future value of a stock?Stock market INVESTING will be just fine without stock repurchases (see America pre-1982 for an example). Speculative trading, well, that might take a hit (bye!).
8/8/2018 4:59:09 PM
again, institutional investors would see the stupidity of dumping good money into marginal employees like those hired by McDonalds. They would take their money and run for the hills if they saw the company being run that way.
8/8/2018 5:50:10 PM
8/8/2018 6:05:32 PM
^you don’t think we can make the stock market work for the greater good?^^Mcdonalds should invest in future growth if that makes more sense for them. Automation, 3d printed burgers, Expanding markets, whateves.
8/8/2018 6:34:41 PM
8/8/2018 6:57:32 PM
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gGeevtdp1WQ
8/9/2018 12:26:14 AM
8/9/2018 10:03:27 AM
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2018-10-24/what-minimum-wage-foes-got-wrong-about-seattle
11/6/2018 12:29:52 PM
Because the people in charge aren't rational (in terms of economics that are beneficial to the average person) and are completely willing to lie and deceive in order to build increasing amounts of power.
11/6/2018 12:37:43 PM
^^ That the economy is sufficiently complicated to bury the effect of a minor policy change doesn't negate the effect. When prices rise, people find ways to use less of it. That a minimum wage increase did not result in sufficient dislocation to measure doesn't prove the minimum wage never results in dislocation. As the author says: "Now of course, we should consider the argument that Seattle’s economic growth has been so strong that it overwhelms any negative effects from the higher minimum wage. No one should ignore that possibility and we will be among the first to acknowledge that this could be the case. We may never know for sure, because in economics you don’t get a chance to run control experiments; you only have the facts at hand."We have no credible theory to suggest that Seattle's low-wage employing industries are cartelized to the point of enabling a city wide monopsony, so we have no theory to explain why wages going up wouldn't lessen employment opportunities. However, we do understand well that strong demand can easily hide those losses, and we do know Seattle's economy is growing fast enought do that. Seattle's economy won't be booming forever, and the poorest among us will eventually miss these opportunities.
11/8/2018 12:39:11 PM
11/8/2018 8:13:40 PM
11/8/2018 9:45:15 PM
11/8/2018 10:53:57 PM
11/8/2018 11:01:48 PM
11/12/2018 9:20:19 AM
11/12/2018 12:07:50 PM
I mean, is your theory even falsifiable, LoneSnark? You're prepared to rationalize any counter-evidence away, so I think not.
11/12/2018 12:08:56 PM
^ Which theory? That humans at least sometimes respond to incentives? No, I don't see how that could be falsified. That's like asking how much proof would it take before I rejected the theory of gravity. Now, to narrow it down more. You could provide proof to demonstrate why raising the minimum wage in Seattle would never result in lost employment opportunities. You could prove that Seattle's labor markets were cartelized between a tiny handful of players which were exhibiting unassailable monopsony power. Such setups exist in some regions of the planet, and the burden of such proof is not very high at all. However, we have no such evidence to suggest such exists in Seattle. Terds theory that "rising wages among the poorest results in increased productivity for the whole of the workforce" is wishful thinking at best, nonsense most likely.
11/15/2018 10:07:29 AM
you're admitting your theory is non-falsifiable? i suppose the debate has been settled then
11/15/2018 11:37:08 AM
^^The theory that raising the minimum wage always costs jobs and harms the economy.I'm curious: Do you think eliminating minimum wage and allowing sweat shop wages in America would boost the economy?
11/15/2018 12:14:07 PM
11/15/2018 12:27:58 PM