FACTBOX-Facts on new UN assembly head D'Escoto
6/6/2008 4:38:24 AM
I don't really think a Nicaraguan is the best candidate for a job like this. But at least he studied in the US, is a non-violent dissenter, and is against arming rebels in order to overthrow a government. I mean, having a guy that's so radically left isn't my ideal candidate either, but this guy seems fairly well qualified and not really that crazy (in terms of his policy ideas).Not that the UN has any real kind of power anyway...[Edited on June 6, 2008 at 8:05 AM. Reason : ]
6/6/2008 8:05:30 AM
I have a feeling that Hooksaw is unhappy with whomever is in that position if they are to the left of Franco. He fails to remember that it is a world body and not an American body. Being a world body it means that the voices of the world have a voice. Including Latin America, where socialism is much more prevelant than the rest of the Western Hemisphere.
6/6/2008 9:28:59 AM
Putting anti-American people like this in charge of the UN reinforces the point that we must be ever-alert in not letting our politicians hand our sovereignty over to theis "world body."
6/6/2008 9:40:12 AM
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSN0429589920080604
6/6/2008 9:44:00 AM
and that we'd be severely limited in who to pick if we only picked countries that liked the US (especially right now)
6/6/2008 9:45:15 AM
From the UN Fundamental Declaration of Human "Rights."http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html
6/6/2008 11:07:16 AM
6/6/2008 11:09:00 AM
TANSTAFL (tahn-stoffle)"There Ain't No Such Thing As a Free Lunch""Free Education" is simply education you pay for whether you use it or not. Furthermore, you're paying your hard-earned cash to bureaucrats who can use their privileged position to continually jack up prices while letting the quality of delivered education continue to deteriorate.Plus, government people are just about the last people who should be permitted to spew their corruption at impressionable young children.[Edited on June 6, 2008 at 11:19 AM. Reason : ']
6/6/2008 11:12:00 AM
?
6/6/2008 11:12:29 AM
sometimes i like to imagine that the terrorists really wanted to take down the UN building as well.either way, i'm sure nutsmackr and crew wouldv'e found a way to show a conspiracy with it all. lol
6/6/2008 11:13:04 AM
?[Edited on June 6, 2008 at 11:20 AM. Reason : .]
6/6/2008 11:20:39 AM
so i'm going to get this straight: megaloman is against some sort of access to free elementary education?
6/6/2008 11:23:44 AM
No, just against "free" government education. The "free" part is a vicious misnomer, since money is being extracted by force from the population to pay for it.If someone else wants to provide free education they're welcome to.
6/6/2008 11:33:10 AM
freely provided to those people. obviously it is paid for by some mechanism (likely taxes)so you think elementary education should only be provided to those that can afford it?[Edited on June 6, 2008 at 11:35 AM. Reason : .]
6/6/2008 11:34:58 AM
^^What if it is the people who decide to do it through an elected government?
6/6/2008 11:38:54 AM
I know of private schools that charge less than a thousand dollars per year for a decent education. If you can't pony up $60-70 per month to send your kid to school, then you don't really have any business having kids. Even so, if we get rid of the regulatory burden that restrains our economy, if we repeal the gas tax, the sales tax, the payroll tax, and property tax, all of which the poorest of the poor are forced to pay, there shouldn't be anyone left who can't afford elementary education. If there are, I'm sure you would be more than willing to contribute to a scholarship fund for underprivileged youth. Or are you only generous with other people's money?^ How many times do we have to go over this? Democracy is bullshit. One person doesn't have the right to rob or enslave his neighbor, so he doesn't have the right to appoint someone to do so in his name. Democracy boils down to nothing more than the theory that any crime is legitimate, so long as the perpetrators outnumber the victims. If you're willing to get behind such a naked application of "might makes right", then fuck you. The only just and rational standard for government is consent. Not forced consent, not consent of the largest faction, real, honest to goodness consent. Private education + charity is consistent with this standard, democracy is not.[Edited on June 6, 2008 at 11:50 AM. Reason : ']
6/6/2008 11:44:42 AM
Do you not understand the massive breakdown in society if that were to happen
6/6/2008 11:47:31 AM
You're right, society was in a continuous state of massive breakdown until the late 19th century, when public education first became widespread.
6/6/2008 11:51:22 AM
Jesus Christ numbnuts, you are talking about removing all forms of revenue for the State in order to allow people to afford one thing. That would create the breakdown of society. There are costs involved when you live in a society. Some of those costs are taxes. Those taxes pay for the police, the roads, etc. Remove those and who will provide those services.
6/6/2008 12:03:06 PM
I don't know, providing services is just one thing people are utterly incapable of doing.
6/6/2008 12:04:35 PM
Those services are currently being provided by people through their government.Your suggestion basically means that for people to have the police investigate a crime, they will have to pay out of pocket for it. For the fire department to come to your home, you will have to pay out of pocket. Every road would become a toll road. Don't you see the lunacy of this?
6/6/2008 12:06:28 PM
If people have to pay for those services directly, they will balance their use of them against their needs for other products and services. These services would be subject to regulation through the price system and would therefore be allocated in a rational manner.If, as we do now, we rely on taxing bureaucrats to supply these services, then their allocation will be arbitrary and irrational. Without competition, without even the test of profit and loss, each of these services will be either under-supplied or over-supplied. Costs will be through the roof, quality will be poor. It is quite inconceivable that anything even approximating an economically efficient allocation of resources will result. Don't you see the lunacy in this?You have failed to distinguish what, if any, qualitative difference exists between security, fire protection, and roads, and other, equally important products and services such as food, housing and telecommunications that necessitates compulsory, coercive provision of the former, when voluntary trade and exchange suffice to provide the latter. Your bland assertions that I'm proposing lunacy do not constitute an argument.
6/6/2008 12:19:11 PM
services such as roads, schools, police, fire, etc. are cheaper for the consumer when they are spread among the entire user base. Just like with health insurance.
6/6/2008 12:27:19 PM
Really, so the fact that comprehensive health insurance coverage is now widespread (if not universal) and the fact that health care costs, in nominal, inflation adjusted terms, and as a percentage of GDP, are at an all-time high are completely unrelated?Furthermore, the cost savings from economics of scale are enough to offset the fact that bureaucrats' revenue is independent from their attentiveness to the needs of their "customers" and that they face no competition.You're making some pretty incredible claims, which defy logic. It'd be nice if you supported them instead of just assuming their mere statement to be enough.
6/6/2008 12:35:33 PM
6/6/2008 12:39:35 PM
An assertion that public education is without value is nothing short of irrational. Everyone benefits from an educated population, socially, economically, and culturally. Your argument about a total free market approach to all goods and services amounts to anarchy, and only makes some semblance of sense assuming a level playing field at the beginning of the system, something which is impossible, so don't make the mistake of assuming there will be no such things as large conglomerates that would control these things (and your life very directly), in much the same way that government already does, except that you really have no say. I'd suggest some reading on the Gilded Age and labor practices of the late 19th century as supporting evidence. The idea of free market-run roads and similar services is not a good one: no rational profit-centered group gives a good flying fuck about anything but increasing its own profits, which they would do by reducing costs (maintenance, especially) and increasing prices as much as they can. As given groups out-compete the ones around them, they become local monopolies, and they own your ass. They genuinely do not care whether you live or die, except as it affects their bottom line.
6/6/2008 12:41:24 PM
He can't be any worse than John "asshole" Bolton.
6/6/2008 1:31:00 PM
6/6/2008 1:45:35 PM
Megaloman84 is quickly usurping Rat as King Dumbass of TSB.
6/6/2008 1:59:59 PM
clearly anyone that does not like the US must be a communist or a terrorist. Last time i checked the UN was a world organization not a US puppet organization.
6/6/2008 6:26:11 PM
6/6/2008 9:38:40 PM
My fault, Megaloman, I didn't realize you were an anarchist. That's my fault, I haven't known many anarchists since I left high school. As far as the thing about monopolies, I don't know that Rockefeller or Carnegie needed help from the government to deliberately undercut smaller companies using their accumulated assets until they went down, at which point prices could be raised. That aside, it's in the interest of non-regulated companies to engage in price-fixing and similar behaviors, so that they can raise prices. Maybe my point should have been that it seems to be in the interest of these groups to organize, merge, or drive each other out of business, given the opportunity, if not for the purpose of owning everything, then at least to gain more of the market share. Would you disagree? Also, given a group of any considerable size, individuals have no significant power, especially if that group controls something as necessary as a road or bridge. Will you just let your stuff sit and be worthless, or just take the annoyance and go on. I don't know, I don't mind admitting fault if I'm wrong. You raise a point about the roads, though I do think we're better off letting them be publicly owned if for no other reason than to guarantee fair access. But I find it surprising that you're more apt to trust a company that owes you nothing and sees you as a mound of dollars than a government that while admittedly imperfect, at least has some degree of accountability besides a potential economic hit. A sufficiently large company can tell everyone to go to hell with no worries. I'm just not a big Adam Smith believer.[Edited on June 6, 2008 at 11:39 PM. Reason : Name]
6/6/2008 11:32:53 PM
6/7/2008 1:21:18 AM
6/7/2008 3:37:28 AM
6/7/2008 8:26:18 PM
Check the next bit of the Carnegie/Rockefeller sentence, Megaloman. The drop in price that's a "boon to the consumer" is temporary. Then it's back to the gouge, once there's no more competition in an area. My point isn't as much that Rockefeller was an asshole (he was), I was giving an example of how this can work, as you pointed out when you said "underestimating how easily prices can be raised." I could be underestimating it. It could be easier than I thought, like you said. That's the entire point. It's really easy when you have a monopoly share, maybe something like the 88% cited in your source.I don't especially agree with your source to begin with, but that's more a historical bone of contention than anything else after going through some of the other articles, like the one on the misrepresentation of Progressivism, i.e. it connects Jim Crow to Progressivism directly, rather than just stating that some Progressive politicians were racist, kind of like most of white America at the time, and seems vaguely outraged that amendments were passed making U.S. Senators directly elected and giving women suffrage rights. The article is in the link below, and after reading it, I'm not nearly as inclined to accept what's found there at first glance. I'd be interested to see some of the author's work in a peer-reviewed journal.http://mises.org/story/364[Edited on June 7, 2008 at 10:33 PM. Reason : Spell edit]
6/7/2008 10:23:24 PM
^^^
6/8/2008 5:37:34 AM
^ lmao
6/8/2008 6:11:14 AM
6/8/2008 5:53:02 PM
You make fine arguments. I'd respond by saying that a small company is rarely in a position to compete price-wise with a much larger one thanks to economies of scale, i.e. Wal-Mart, so it might not be necessary to drop prices to below cost just to drive people out of business as much as just letting your marginally lower prices take business from them. Not a bad thing in and of itself, but it's bad for competition. And in the case of a hypothetical company bent on achieving monopoly, or even one just planning to maximize market share by out-competing, I wouldn't say it makes sense for a rational business person who genuinely wants to make a profit to put their money on the line knowing full well that they'll be driven out in a couple of years when their operating costs exceed their profits and they're forced to shut down or sell out at what is likely to be a very low price. I know I wouldn't pay anything like a fair price to get a competitor out if I didn't have to, based on a profit-seeking mindset.Government-mandated monopolies are generally for services that would be monopolies regardless, like power service, where competition would mean nobody could afford to stay in business, or where a service simply needs to exist, as in the case of USPS for most of the country's history.
6/8/2008 7:28:51 PM
6/8/2008 8:04:01 PM
holy shitballs man what the bible says is truemccain 08]
6/8/2008 8:04:40 PM
6/8/2008 8:10:13 PM
You didn't need to go that far back, you could have cited FedEx and UPS. I'll agree that it wasn't really right of them to put him out of business. With regards to the situation of a handful of large businesses controlling even their own markets completely, I don't think some other massive company that owns, or all but owns, some other sector of the economy moving in really counts as competition. McDonald's deciding they want in Starbucks's high-end coffee business doesn't really do me a whole lot of good as a consumer, and it makes life that much harder if I wanted to get into the business myself. I really continue to be confused by your faith in the essentially good nature of business, when compared to your total lack of faith in government. I don't believe private business is less prone to exploit people and situations than government. The last few years have demonstrated to me pretty clearly that companies cannot be trusted to act responsibly on their own, so the idea of totally deregulating business makes no sense to me. It's definitely more cost effective to dump your chemical waste into the groundwater than to dispose of it properly, and its much cheaper to pay your workers in company scrip (sp.?) while requiring them to live in company housing at inflated rent and paying inflated prices in company stores.A natural monopoly is, by definition, an industry in which is it only cost-effective for one company to be in business, and in some cases is unavoidable, unless government steps in to provide the service. Even these aren't ideal, as there is no incentive not to raise prices if they aren't regulated, and if they are regulated, there is no incentive to improve service significantly, as profits cannot be improved. If left unregulated, and if the situation you've described arises, then someone goes out of business, and service may be interrupted. A monopoly which is not a "natural monopoly" is one I would object to, and even if that company doesn't control the entire economy, they do control their portion of it. I like that the same debate is in two threads, but I feel kind of bad that the UN thread is no longer about the UN.
6/9/2008 1:01:53 AM