Nothing.My tangential investigation into the raw data on the concentration of wealth in a separate thread (around here: http://www.brentroad.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=426719&page=3 (anyone wanna educate me on how to post a /thread link?)) led LoneSnark and 1337 b4k4 to suggest a pretty common question most people think of when the old idea of concentrated wealth is discussed: Why is it so wrong?It isn't. But it plays heavily into the limitations on information exchange brought about by our worldwide authority-and-submission based societies, which create the same problems some attribute to wealth concentration. It's groupthink among rainmakers, a possible consequence of this phenomenon, that can be disastrous to billions of people in the scale the old Marxist spoke of.A civilization based on authority-and-submission, as is the current global paradigm, is without sufficient means of self-correction. Effective communication flows only one way: from master-group ("Ultra-HNWI's" in the above-stated case) to servile-group ("HNWI's" on down). Any cyberneticist knows that such a one-way communication channel lacks feedback, and cannot behave "intelligently."The epitome of authority-and-submission culture is the Army, few would argue against it being among the most strict, hierarchical, and authoritarian organizations in the world. Some would even argue it's one of the most effecitve. But the control-and-communication network of the Army has every defect a cyberneticist's nightmare could conjure. Its typical patterns of behavior are immortalized for us in folklore as SNAFU (situation normal, all fucked up), FUBAR (fucked up beyond all redemption/recognition), and TARFU (Thing are really fucked up). In less extreme, but equally nosological form, these are the typical conditions of any authoritarian group--corporation, nation, family, or civilization.One way communication is stupidity. Two way communication amounts to rationality, growth, and progress. Anyone who's ever been in a relationship knows both, or should. Another, less touchy, analogy is the human body.The hand delivers the brain an instantaneous, raw, unfiltered message via its information exchange network when it's pressed against an object whose temperature is 500°. It passes through without regard to the class, history, ethnicity, philosophy, occupation, or any authority-denoting status of any cell in the network, though all are different.Would the hand last long if the body's network were jammed with the authoritarian barriers mirroring those of our civilization? One in which the net worth of each cell factored heavily into the likelihood it'd get a response from the brain?Or futher, where a third of those connections to it were freyed by malnutrition? Another group by the poor availability of basic sanitation? Where as many as 75% of the nerve endings don't have the education necessary to understand the problem of the temperature and thus lose the urgency of the problem?Where each individual interaction about the problem of the temperature is subject to continual manipulation, misrepresentation, and violence due to historical rivalries between cells? I could go on, but you can see that not many carriers of this urgent message of safety are going to overcome the obstacles already inherent in the network--mostly through no fault of their own. None have operated within it for longer than 30 days, or really remember it being any different.But assuming a few managed to recognize the heated surface, they'd still need to be among that even smaller section of the hand that isn't intimidated by the idea of being isolated at best, or imprisoned and killed at worst, for advancing an unpopular idea in the cellular culture. They would also necessarily have to be self-righteous enough to think the brain should give them the time of day.To apply this, take a look at the looming crises facing the largest numbers of people in the world. Then take a look at how long they've been "looming." Here's your 500° F stove, and your measure of how effectively the crisis is being communicated by the hands, feet, and all load-bearing extremities--those affected by the crises--to the brain--those rainmakers who can actually address the problems.We don't have to rely on the presumption that they are enlightened and compassionate enough to treat the betterment of society as a business venture in which we're all shareholders. 1337 b4k4 and many economists already tell us that private investment and charitable donation come almost exclusively from the rainmakers, but is that the best measure of how optimally the distribution is working? Or are the results of their work?2,333,333,333 people of all age groups, but not national origin and economic dispositions, are and will continue to be afflicted by malnutrition this year. That's one in three people of Earth. And this isn't a new problem. A third of us are afflicted by a problem as few as 0.001% of us have the resources to solve. It's just one instance of this metaphorical 500° burn afflicting the global human body, and serves as just one of our current transparent failures to address a widespread problem.With the current state of information exchange in our global culture, the concentration of wealth isn't responsible for this to be sure, but it incidentally factors in. The wealthy and powerful happen to be few in number and atop the dominance-and-submissive pyramid of information exchange, in which most information flows one way: downward. Not their fault, but not one that many of them are out to change either.The messages either aren't efficiently moving upwards, or we're left to believe that even most of the power brokers of the world are cold, heartless, materialists, or at worst, nihilists. I take the former view and chalk it up to a problem of the growing barriers of power in information exchange.I invite others to comment on their views of the concentration of wealth. Positive or negative.
8/20/2006 8:42:24 PM
I say we give all the wealth to one family. We'll call them....the royal family. And we'll call the rest of us, the peasants. This is a great system I just thought up.
8/20/2006 8:47:37 PM
I guess, I could also turn this into the place for my question for LoneSnark. From the other thread...
8/20/2006 8:54:24 PM
You've seemed to only look at it sociologically. Economically speaking, concentration of wealth tends to discourage competition.
8/20/2006 9:55:36 PM
also it implies a society with low economic mobility, the hallmark of america is high economic mobility.[Edited on August 20, 2006 at 10:01 PM. Reason : dfh]
8/20/2006 10:00:40 PM
^^ How so? The same members of every BOD? Or do you mean something else?
8/20/2006 10:22:42 PM
I may not be understanding your post clearly, but Ill write about communication. If we consider just the economy, then price signals appear to work extremely well in mostly free societies with consumers sending information to the producers who can then supply them. This, to me, is more similar to the type of communication that occurs between hand and brain than the kind you are talking about. Now you also bring up the example of a relationship. The reason that personal communication is important in our relationships is because we consider male and female to be equal. But, that is also the major factor in why relationships in the west are so likely to fail. If we were to consider the family as a unit whose function it is to produces offspring in a stable, nurturing home, then that type of equal partnership is probably a bad thing. So what happens when you try to organize society along similar lines?[Edited on August 20, 2006 at 10:38 PM. Reason : ]
8/20/2006 10:37:39 PM
8/20/2006 10:38:37 PM
Just ask the Ford Motor company how much they'd be losing if they hadn't already secured the alliances of government...
8/20/2006 10:57:37 PM
Why don't you tell me? And I'm impressed it was that easy. You start a post complaining the current global socio-economic system is doomed to failure and with one post from me you about-face and join with me to defend the world free-enterprise system from governmental meddling. Miraculous From a liberty lovers perspective, governments are rediculously medlesome nowadays, but nothing like they used to be and no longer disasterously so. People the world over are far freer today than at any time in human history. Sure, Americans are not as free as they once were, but we make up for it with technological prowess, and the rest of the world has made remarkable progress. Even Adam Smith would be forced to look favorably upon what China is becoming.[Edited on August 20, 2006 at 11:33 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/20/2006 11:30:49 PM
8/20/2006 11:39:46 PM
^ Exactly. And I'm still waiting to learn what it is exactly that those 1% are effective at...[Edited on August 20, 2006 at 11:44 PM. Reason : .]
8/20/2006 11:43:31 PM
Well I would assume most of them have been effective at investing money.
8/20/2006 11:48:32 PM
^^ Oh, sorry, missed that. Well, as Clear5 pointed out, it is the price structure which allocates societies resources, which includes talent. The money you are paid by others in exchange for goods and services is your reward for giving others what they want. If the top 0.01% is as wealthy as you say, then they are obviously very good and figuring out what the other 99.99% wants and selling it to them at a price and quality which makes them willing to buy it. A person's fabulous wealth is society's signal to tell them that they have done society a great service by either boosting worker productivity or inventing new products to make people's lives better.Or at least that is the way it is supposed to be. Governmental meddling tends to disrupt "the World of Truth" as one author described the price system, potentially rewarding individuals for harming society, what economists call "perverse incentives." [Edited on August 20, 2006 at 11:56 PM. Reason : .,.]
8/20/2006 11:50:26 PM
Paris Hilton.
8/20/2006 11:53:36 PM
And you had to wait until the third time I asked that. And the only time I asked without suggesting for you that they are effective at concentrating wealth and income.The thing is, it's more than wealth and income they've become effective at concentrating. That's why I approached the topic sociologically as well. They've been effective at concentrating power as well, which is where dominance-and-submission interference comes heavily into play. Factor that into the system and all the issues it presents.The disparity between the comfort of that 1% and the suffering below them continues to widen due to those influences. That's my case. Not that they asked for them, but that they are inefficient stewards because of them.
8/21/2006 12:00:32 AM
^^ Then, of course, there is Paris Hilton. The purpose of the price system is to first determine what people want and how much they want it, and then determine how best to produce it. It turns out humans can appear irrational to each other, but "the World of Truth" does not lie, obviously someone was buying her weirs. This is not to say "the World of Truth" is always right, in the short term people can misinterpret the signals or down right lie to each other (of course I'll be willing to pay more for carbon-neutral-electricity... NOT!), but in the long run people that lied or refused to accept reality are eventually made to tell the truth, usually to their creditors.
8/21/2006 12:17:05 AM
Paris Hilton is a moron and if she was poor would remain poor. Yet she is rich, and her exploits make her richer.
8/21/2006 12:22:45 AM
1% is a huge number of people.Power has to be concentrated to an extent. If everyone has an equal amount of power, thats anarchy. The UHNW people have a good bit but they also have competing interests. Bill Gates, for all his money, cant even manage to get his favored political party in control of government. If the market is distributing power, or these rich people have been effective at concentrating it, then it still appears to be a much better way of distributing power than bloodlines, guns, or any other method ever has been. Its not perfect, but better than everything else.[Edited on August 21, 2006 at 12:42 AM. Reason : ]
8/21/2006 12:39:08 AM
8/21/2006 12:42:10 AM
8/21/2006 12:57:29 AM
8/21/2006 1:18:53 AM
8/21/2006 1:27:26 AM
8/21/2006 1:39:09 AM
8/21/2006 1:57:35 AM
8/21/2006 2:24:03 AM
^ok, last post on thisIf these people were spending money more along the likes of Carnegie, we would see thier influence around us a lot more than we currently do. I was just trying to throw some things out there in the middle of the post and probably could have written that part much better, but its getting late. For why I wish they were less connected with the masses:Once again, they may be distant from their "problems" but they are just like everyone else for the most part. That is all Im talking about in that regard. All I can do here is give you my opinion that they should turn toward higher and better things than what many of them do. We see it some in a few individuals but I think if they were all using their money for the good of society, or of civilization we would see their influence around us much more than we currently do. I cant believe you havent heard people talk about this before because everybody from Tocqueville to Nietzsche to Weber highlight this aspect of the capitalist upper class. Government:People might be in a lower class because every hierarchy needs a bottom, but no one starves because of the capitalist economy or the concentration of wealth. People starve in the modern world because they do not live in economically liberal nations. Governments that adopt ordered liberty quickly make their people well off in absolute terms and not starving.
8/21/2006 2:45:21 AM
8/21/2006 8:43:32 AM
Poster 1: Libertarianism!Poster 2: No!Repeat ad infinum.This has been a reenactment of a Soap Box thread. Join us next week when we'll reenact a Lounge thread, and discover the intricacies and ramifications of a term called 'trainwreck'.
8/21/2006 11:03:12 AM
^ lets not forget Sports TalkPoster 1: Marcus Stone's record is 5-1Poster 2: Herb rules, fans suck
8/21/2006 11:06:58 AM
8/21/2006 11:14:59 AM
damnit this thread is going to keep me posting
8/21/2006 11:39:18 AM
8/21/2006 12:05:23 PM
8/21/2006 1:59:13 PM
8/21/2006 2:02:24 PM
8/21/2006 2:21:48 PM
Two points that come to mind immediately, but I don't have time to do the whole thread right now.In regards to Gamecat's questions about the billions suffering from malnutrition, the problem is not entirely an economic problem. To a degree it's a social problem as well. The top 1% of the world earners could dump all of their money into that 2 billion people and the end result would be the same, 2 billion people suffering from malnutrition, in part because there's more wrong than just a lack of money. It's a lack of resources and ability to use that money.If you define an arbitrator, you run the risk of a corrupt arbitrator (as is the current case with corrupt governments) if you just could magicaly give the money to everyone all at once, you still have the problem of A) Not increasing anyone's relative wealth and B) the first person to get more wealth than everyone else will start eh cycle all over again.In a away the problem is that the value of your money is proportional to how far you are from being the richest. For example, look at all the charity ads. Your $5 US will feed a family of 4 for weeks in <Radom Poor Country>, the reason for this is because there's so little money there (both relative to the global top and the local top) that every penny is worth that much more. By contrast, hear in america your $5 US will barely feed you for 1 day, because the money is much more common. You are that much closer to the richest. Now say that all the money from the top 1% went to <Random Poor Country>, now everyone is equaly that much closer to the global top, and no closer to the local top than they were before, so in the end all you've don't is lowered the value of each penny to those people, they're still just as poor as they will before because everyone has $1US, where as before everyone had 1¢.Second in regards to:
8/21/2006 2:24:06 PM
8/21/2006 2:35:16 PM
8/21/2006 3:52:23 PM
8/21/2006 4:17:31 PM
I guess we are talking past each other. You are arguing that if only we lived in an anarchist world without all the threat of violence to maintain capitalist and fascist institutions, the poor would not be in their current state. I am arguing that these institutions are not as restrictive as you let on and most of the ill effects you blame on the system actually have innocent or unrelated causes (Zimbabweans are poor because Zimbabwe refuses to allow its people to participate in the global free-enterprise system, it has nothing to do with either the U.S. Army or the New York Police Force). Did I get close? Your parents/grandparents are not the whole of American society. I could point out the large number of American families that were not here in the 1930s (immigrants), I could point out that in 1930 the vast majority of America's population was farm bound; I don't know of too many farmers going on strike for better working conditions and getting beat up for it. But it doesn't matter, my point is that even your parents would consider it wrong for someone to break into their home and steal their stuff. But even this doesn't matter; all that matters is that Americans are psychologically conditioned to perceive private ownership of the means of production as just, regardless of whether a cop is around or not. Ask Kris all about preconditioning and whether force will always be needed to maintain the conditioning. He'll say something about Asimov's dog or another.
8/21/2006 4:24:16 PM
8/21/2006 5:26:10 PM
From Drudge just today...http://www.ft.com/cms/s/3e3eeab2-3137-11db-b953-0000779e2340.html
8/21/2006 6:14:46 PM
Well, gamecat, I have read what you wrote and believe I understand your points. But I still disagree with you on the level you already know. I don't believe our world is that far from the ideal anarchist world. Yes, it would feel very different, and people would act different, but it would not look all that different from our world. You see, the furthest I go is anarcho-capitalist. I honestly believe in a state of anarchy humans will band together, agree what form money will take (probably precious metals), agree on traditions of land and property ownership, and go to work building an entire free-enterprise economy from these foundations. After several decades you will have 0.01% that are fabulously wealthy except they did it without government help (relying upon the rights of self defense and contract security guards). With today's technology and international circumstances the elites of the elites are going to be rediculously wealthy and far off countries that instead set up dictatorships will still be poor.
8/21/2006 6:24:06 PM
8/21/2006 6:33:12 PM
The problems of information exchange within such a system as evidenced in the recent news:http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14454295/site/newsweek/
8/21/2006 7:26:26 PM
I've tried to answer every question I saw that looked the least bit serious (brain cells and limbs were rhetorical, I trusted). Well, do me a favor, I'm obviously not getting your proposals, they kinda read like psycho babble at points. So, I can only continue to try and answer specific questions:"why should we not begin to shift and refocus resources--in amounts reflect the degree of our understanding of the problems--towards creating the proper incentives to encourage other methods of solving these larger problems?"For the same reason people have always had trouble shaping civilization, because we don't know how. I can tell you why Zambia is poor, I can tell you why wealth is so concentrated, but I cannot tell you how to fix it. These are complex problems and we must remain realists. There is no mechanism in this reality to fix Zimbabwe without first raising an army to invade and occupy the country. There is no mechanism to normalize resource distribution in America without taking a wrecking-ball to the free-market system (such as occurred in the 1930s: high tax rates, redistributive transfers, stronger centralized government, rigid economic controls, and ever more police force brought to bear against the American People). These are the only answer I see because like I've said repeatedly, the current round of wealth concentration had nothing to do with government barriers and everything to do with natural barriers (globalization coupled with a productivity boom). Now, maybe I've overlooked something. Perhaps you could describe to me the abstract of a bill congress could pass that would fix these problems without causing far worse problems?[Edited on August 21, 2006 at 9:25 PM. Reason : sp]
8/21/2006 9:24:55 PM
8/21/2006 10:37:04 PM
8/21/2006 11:48:27 PM
Either way Kris, it is true, we don't have that many historical examples to draw from but in every one that is how it plays out: An independently run and operated monopoly actually makes investment and serves its customers (PDVSA before Chavez), a state run monopoly sometimes does (Statoil) but usually does not (PDVSA after Chavez, Pemex, Gazprom, Pertamina, KPC, Rosneft, etc). "The fact that NOCs are sitting on the vast majority of the world's oil but pumping only about half of global output suggests a systematic failure to invest."http://www.economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=E1_SNSDPDT
8/22/2006 9:33:58 AM