I was making a joke without reading the whole thread and realizing how serious and angry it was.[Edited on July 2, 2011 at 3:32 AM. Reason : My bad.]
7/2/2011 3:26:49 AM
http://dissidentvoice.org/2011/04/adam-smith-a-progressive/
7/2/2011 9:46:17 AM
Relevant: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9Zls2AReVI
7/2/2011 10:46:58 AM
McDanger, Adam Smith was your appeal to authority, not mine. What you posted did not jive with my recollection all those years ago, so I asked for a citation. If you were unable to provide such, then perhaps you should have avoided the appeal. ^^ As always, the internet provides. So, Chance, how hard was it to Google that? ^ all true If all men were angels then it would not matter what mode we used to organize ourselves. Because all men are self interested to a fault, capitalism is best.
7/2/2011 10:56:14 AM
7/2/2011 11:16:28 AM
7/2/2011 10:40:03 PM
Well, I myself spend more time thinking about myself than I do all other people combined. I then spent the bulk of the remainder of my time thinking about the people immediately around me. I spent more time thinking about how to help my friend fix his tire problems in one day than I spent thinking about the homeless of Paris in my entire life. As such, while it would be folly to put me in charge of the affairs of strangers, I seem perfectly motivated to oversee my own affairs. Adam Smith on the subject:http://worthwhile.typepad.com/worthwhile_canadian_initi/2011/03/adam-smith-on-disaster-and-virtue.html
7/3/2011 1:27:25 AM
7/7/2011 12:20:54 PM
If what you say is true, then I would not. Does not mean an appeal to Smith's authority makes your world view correct. It still isn't even clear you are appealing to authority, given Smithian quotes to the contrary. As I said, at best you are showing Smith to be a conflicted philosopher.[Edited on July 8, 2011 at 9:01 PM. Reason : .,.]
7/8/2011 9:01:12 PM
7/9/2011 10:58:55 AM
It is not my opinion he is conflicted. Way back in the day when I read Smith, I never got the opinion he was conflicted. But what you have been claiming he said, without quotation or citation, is contradicted by everything I have ever read or heard. As such, if what you claim he said is true, without quotation or citation, it would mean he was quite conflicted with himself. However, as the little project you claim to be compiling has not yet been introduced to the tread, it is STILL just your word (mostly name-calling) against the internet. So, for the love of God, weeks and a page of posts later, PLEASE post anything to back up this claim you attributed to Smith:"Without checking greed (either through cultural/moral attitudes or through regulations), free markets don't produce equilibria that are beneficial to society as a whole."
7/9/2011 2:23:19 PM
I know the entire tactic here is to wear me down by getting me to "waste my time" but like I said, I decide to make the project larger in scope. Again: you've been ignorant your entire life, you can wait while I take my time making it worth *my* while too.
7/9/2011 6:16:35 PM
7/9/2011 9:28:19 PM
^ lol
7/10/2011 8:39:16 AM
^^ Quite hilarious, when any competent economist knows that wealth trickles up, as it is only after the capitalists have invested money building plant and providing jobs and the products we all want that they begin to gradually recoup their money over time.
7/11/2011 12:24:03 AM
We do things this way, therefore this is the way they're done Silly liberals
7/11/2011 8:32:13 AM
Government strong-arms the taxpayers into footing the bill for "too rich to fail" banks and unprofitable mega-corporations --> Call it "a failure of free market capitalism"[Edited on July 11, 2011 at 11:57 AM. Reason : ]
7/11/2011 11:57:06 AM
I think your vision of free markets would work great if we could effect a sudden, unilateral cultural change. If we could get some Smithian sympathies, you might say, it could work (just like he thought it could). Many of us don't think a free-market could exist, because the freedom inherent in it allows for domination too.I don't really understand how you reply to the "Tamerlane" problem as Noah Smith puts it: how do you prevent the first guy with the most guns from being your new government?Actually you know what, this would do much better in an actual "libertarianism and free markets" thread or something. I don't see why this should be discussed in a thread on socialism.[Edited on July 11, 2011 at 4:01 PM. Reason : .]
7/11/2011 4:00:54 PM
7/11/2011 4:15:42 PM
7/11/2011 4:19:33 PM
The difference between the two parties in this discussion is the way they view democracy. Whether or not you think it is the most or least just way to organize society is the real dividing factor. If you hate socialism, you think democracy is not just messy, but unjust because it doesn't place the individual at the center of everything, independent of others. If you think you may be a socialist, you're probably a fan of the idea of democracy, equal wielding of power and so on.If you're reading this and thinking it sounds totally foreign, you probably learned about what democracy is from watching CNN or something.
7/11/2011 4:31:42 PM
7/11/2011 4:44:51 PM
7/11/2011 6:13:19 PM
7/11/2011 7:10:22 PM
7/11/2011 7:25:58 PM
7/11/2011 7:38:58 PM
7/11/2011 8:01:10 PM
I don't really want to pick through what's been said already (a bit too fatigued to quote bomb). I don't understand how we're supposed to arrive at a peaceful free market solution (affect any real cultural change) without some form of government that's coercive (at least against employers). You do realize that, as it stands, slackening the chains on corporations (by weakening government) isn't going to increase everyone's liberty, right? I understand the desire to get away from barbaric practices altogether (and I agree there's a degree of barbarism to coersion), but defanging government really removes any and all protections that normal people have against the power of private capital. Do you really think corporations are going to play fair and nice without a government, and that the lack of any barriers to their actions at all is going to improve things from here?Another question: http://noahpinionblog.blogspot.com/2011/06/is-education-public-good.html Without public education ("coersion" against the insanely wealthy by taxing some of the duckets they didn't earn in order to educate people who will have to work to survive) how do you expect a cultural shift to happen? Given the points in the link I just provided, how do you imagine a satisfactory free market solution for education will emerge? [Edited on July 11, 2011 at 8:14 PM. Reason : .]
7/11/2011 8:11:39 PM
7/11/2011 8:46:10 PM
Education-wise in the US, things have been getting better across the board for the most part.
7/11/2011 10:17:31 PM
So, me and McDanger are discussing how the general, working population could ever become educated enough to effectively manage the capital (means of production) that they employ while laboring. I make the point that state-run education will intentionally not educate students in a way that would allow them to do that, as the state capitalist system needs the common people to remain stupid in order to persist.Participation rates and SAT scores, though, don't really indicate improved education, at least in the context of what we're discussing. A very small fraction of the general population understands what's in the Constitution, what kind of legislation gets passed each year, and the specifics of how many government-related institutions function. If people did understand those things, then "we the people" would demand a much different government, if we demanded one at all.
7/11/2011 11:33:45 PM
7/11/2011 11:50:26 PM
7/12/2011 8:41:19 AM
You assert that they can, but they can't even walk away in today's environment (with a poor job market). What is the reason they can "just walk away"? Because nobody's holding a gun to their heads to stay? What if somebody did? I seriously don't see what's stopping a private entity from accumulating and wielding power that way. You simply telling me "It won't happen" isn't convincing.Also, hell, even with a government that is supposed to be regulating environmental concerns, companies can still score massive money by polluting the fuck out of the states they frack in. How do you imagine these companies will be limited in scope at all if there's no regulatory agency overseeing them with the power to fine them and/or shut them down for violations?[Edited on July 12, 2011 at 8:46 AM. Reason : .]
7/12/2011 8:44:14 AM
Once again, what two systems are we comparing? I am a libertarian, which has a night-watchmen state, so if someone threatens violence you can either threaten violence back or call the police (whichever serves you best). Destroyer, I believe, is an anarcho-capitalist, so in his system it would be a bit more complex. An employer that threatens violence against his own employees tends to alienate them and runs the risk of destroying his own organization for very little gain. While he may succeed in enslaving his own employees, outside society would respond forcefully, as breaking "the law" results in pariah status even if you escape arrest and makes it impossible to conduct business as contracts become unenforceable in court and customers refrain from your products for fear of the violence which becomes ever more severe wherever your company attempts to operate. To sum up, once you cross the boundary and stop being a corporation and attempt to use force against others, whatever voluntary interactions you had been enjoying with society ends and you either achieve state status (build a fiefdom) or you die. Of course, I believe this is the same rule in all systems, as many a drug lord and succeeded in building a fiefdom in various U.S. cities. As for your system, we still have no friggin' clue what that is, you refuse to describe it. So I can't help you there. If you were kind, you could tell us what to do if "management" (a majority of the workers at a firm) votes to use force against other workers.[Edited on July 12, 2011 at 9:08 AM. Reason : .,.]
7/12/2011 9:06:08 AM
7/12/2011 9:14:25 AM
7/12/2011 10:05:05 AM
7/13/2011 9:25:15 AM
*raises hand but refuses to interrupt argument*
7/13/2011 9:28:10 AM
Go ahead there's not even an argument going on, just LoneSnark "playing the liberal's word games".
7/13/2011 9:33:59 AM
The more you read actual economists, the more you realize that he's full of shit. I think he stopped taking classes in it after 201 and just started reading Reason magazine.
7/13/2011 9:35:27 AM
The majority of his belief structure consists of ideas that have been laughed at since the 19th, it would seem. Well, laughed at by honest intellectuals; power and privileged have always kept lapdogs to say precisely what LS does (with all of the inconsistencies and aversion to data).LS cracks me up though. He just loves flexing his a priori reasoning without ever stopping to look at the real world. People who are good at this are called mathematicians; people who suck at it are conservative economists, apparently.[Edited on July 13, 2011 at 9:53 AM. Reason : .]
7/13/2011 9:49:40 AM
Actually the recent insurgence of right-wingers into this thread to argue for and against their favorite systems is a great thing to happen under the header of "socialism". Wouldn't quite be the socialist experience without constant right-wing harassment.
7/13/2011 9:56:36 AM
Well, no, the last economics course I took at NCState was a 500 level. But I do read an awful lot of reason magazine. So you got me at least half right.
7/13/2011 10:06:46 AM
7/13/2011 11:01:47 AM
Honestly, the pre-mid 1800s property rights system did give better rights to lawsuits in the case of environmental pollution. I doubt we'd go back to a system wherein if you got sick from coal dust, you could close a mine. It would be nice, but literally no one short of some consumer advocates.It's also not exactly useful in countering climate change. I mean, I guess I could see people in coastal Bangladesh bringing a class action or something, but it's harder to prove CC's violation of personal rights, at least right now. Plus the right's decided that they're going to act like it doesn't exist. And no one's going to accept a carbon tax. That's how people can get off proposing it to protect themselves from criticism: the bill will never come due for them and they'll never see that policy.[Edited on July 13, 2011 at 3:15 PM. Reason : x]
7/13/2011 3:13:12 PM
I don't get it...you're bashing someone with an opposing viewpoint while simultaneously claiming the overwhelming majority of Americans are brainwashed into liking what they chose to like and claiming that people (socialist systems) will eventually be smarter than people (capitalist systems) with education?Let me state this again.You think I'm brainwashed into consuming what I consume, not because I genuinely like what I'm consuming?And you think that the same people that are brainwashed in the capitalist system and make stupid decisions over and over and over are suddenly going to be unstupid under a socialist system? The same people that collectively will step on each other to get to a higher status are suddenly going to stop doing that?[Edited on July 13, 2011 at 5:59 PM. Reason : freenor ]
7/13/2011 5:57:51 PM
If you aren't being brainwashed into consuming what you consume, why do you think marketing is a 300 billion dollar a year business? Or did all those commercials featuring old people gleefully running across a beach in B&W lead you to objectively conclude that the featured heart medication was ideal for you?
7/18/2011 10:30:07 AM
7/18/2011 12:41:04 PM
7/18/2011 1:09:30 PM