9/18/2009 11:20:08 AM
9/18/2009 11:22:34 AM
9/18/2009 3:01:24 PM
Terrorism
9/18/2009 3:21:06 PM
socialism grants a monopoly to the state. There are no means of recourse against the state.There are degrees of socialism that are acceptable, but only if they require people to pay into the system what they take out (ex: post office, utilities, etc...)Most anti-capitalists will point to things like the banks as proof that we need socialism. However, they ignore the fact that those banks haven't been capitalist enterprises for decades. If private individuals own the reward and the state owns the risk, its not capitalism. Its socialism. In a capitalist system the banks would have been allowed to fail. The system would have corrected itself by destroying bad banks and creating new ones from those who took on less risk. Instead, our socialist system has allowed a few smaller banks to fail and then allowed other banks to use tax payer money to pick the good parts out of the failed banks. The fed is then forced to own bad debt. The result is the largest of the large banks used the fed to get rid of their toxic assests and at the same time pick up the best parts of their smaller competitors. Now we have even fewer banks.When looking at healthcare, there is plenty of room for limited governement involvement. Perscription drugs is one great and obvious example. The fed uses its purchasing power to get discounts on drugs. It then sells them at cost to tax payers or at a fraction of cost based on need. This is sustainable because most users pay the cost of the system as they use it, while taxes can be used to help those in need.The absolute worst form of socialism is whats been done to the banks and what is proposed for the healthcare system. Currently hospitals and providers farm their costs off to insurance companies. The insurance companies fight the costs and they go back and forth until either the claim is denied or the provider/hospital gives in. In the new system providers will just farm their costs off to the fed. If the fed denies the claim, its no different from the current system. If the accept whatever they charge, its rife for abuse (medicare). What will end up happening is just like with the banks, the fed will become the dominate healthcare payer. The best case scenario is that it eventually evolves into price controls where the fed dictates absolute costs for each procedure. The more likely case is it will go the way of medicare. Large companies in the healthcare market will get special privledges in order to make sure they get whatever they want to charge. The result will be that we either pay the same as we pay now (via taxes instead of premiums) or we end up paying more. I've said this before, but the problem is that one side is just making up total bullshit (death panels) and the other side just ignores any rational debate (UGH HEALTHCARE IS SO FUCKED WE HAVE TO PASS SOMETHING ANYTHING WHATEVER AND WE HAVE TO PASS IT NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!). The best thing we can hope for now is that the current bill gets killed and we focus on fixing the more important issues of energy and education. Then we come back later and fix healthcare a piece at a time.tl;dr: some government involvement in the economy can work, but any system where people pay in less than they take out is unsustainable and will fail. Better to put the risk of failure on private businesses than the government.
9/18/2009 3:24:26 PM
NM. It's not worth it.[Edited on September 18, 2009 at 3:53 PM. Reason : .]
9/18/2009 3:46:01 PM
wikipedia is totally socialist[Edited on September 18, 2009 at 3:50 PM. Reason : ,]
9/18/2009 3:48:51 PM
Being anti-capitalist doesn't necessarily mean being pro-command economy or even pro-big government in general.Freer markets are what is important to allocating resources and serving the needs of people, not capitalism. You can be a free market anti-capitalist. This would involve cooperative production, though. It's better to try to create more capitalists through policies that favor putting as much capital in as many hands as possible (favoring small business, for example). I think the internet is a great tool for that.Really people's focus should be on the market and distributing as much capital in as many hands as you can as the great creator of advanced societies, not captain of industry capitalists, unless you just really got a boner reading Atlas Shrugged.[Edited on September 18, 2009 at 4:10 PM. Reason : .]
9/18/2009 4:05:01 PM
Pretty sure pro government is the definition of anti-capitalism.
9/18/2009 4:09:09 PM
9/18/2009 4:11:34 PM
theres no such thing as a stateless economy. 10 people in a commune is 10 people in the governement.
9/18/2009 4:17:49 PM
state implies coercion.are you suggesting people aren't trusting enough for non-coercive society? i mean, it is possible.
9/18/2009 4:20:17 PM
In the case of small groups its possible since you can get a small group of like minded people. 10 people in a farm commune that all like farming wont have a problem. Add someone to that group who refuses to do farm work. Either the other 10 pick up his slack or they force him to do it. Neither is fair. Now add another 9 people just like him. You end up with two opposing factions who will now fight on the best way to manage the labor resources of the commune.
9/18/2009 4:32:05 PM
well i'm being an idealist here. we can't exactly quantitatively measure the point at which what you've suggested happens so it's all just speculation, much like economics in general.
9/18/2009 4:36:09 PM
actually i'd say you've reached the point as soon as you have two people with differing opinions.
9/18/2009 4:37:16 PM
so have you never learned reconciliation?unless you think sacrificing even .0000001% of your strongest convictions automatically mean's you've become repressed.[Edited on September 18, 2009 at 4:43 PM. Reason : .]
9/18/2009 4:42:36 PM
straw-man and racist
9/18/2009 4:47:47 PM
9/18/2009 5:12:05 PM
But what about the consequences of those who can't vote w/ their feet? To be sure they should have their rights protected in some manner (thinking of federal legislation w/ regards to civil rights).This has nothing to do w/ socialism, but it has to be mentioned whenever people mention that concept. It sounds good and typically works in most ways, but there is the problem of when the vision of rights and liberties of said population is so warped (you could say this for minorities in muslim nations, for example) that it denies the rights of the minority (and there's always going to be a minority).Thankfully, in this nation, we ended up with the federalist and not the anti-federalist vision of the constitution (plus the important bill of rights). I'm all for states rights and self-determination, but not without something like a Bill of Rights. It's not enough to just say "well, vote w/ your feet" like the extreme anti-federalist would say.Wow, now I've gotten away from my argument w/ regards to socialism, but this is more in-line w/ my actual ideology.
9/19/2009 9:42:23 AM
9/19/2009 12:42:14 PM
isnt it funny that some people on an NC STATE message board are arguing that government should stay out of their lives??maybe they should have gone to harvard...
9/19/2009 2:15:34 PM
9/19/2009 2:18:01 PM
yeah why didn't all those black people just VOTE WITH THEIR FEET instead of having the gall to try to place their natural rights over the desires of some states? Everyone has the ability to just pick up and leave whenever they want![Edited on September 21, 2009 at 10:54 AM. Reason : .]
9/21/2009 10:52:05 AM
this one is easy guys.Capitalism -> you will go bankrupt in 10 years, take money from people by salesSocialism -> you will go bankrupt in 24 months, and take money from people via taxes
9/21/2009 11:14:48 AM
GOOD JOB PLAYA
9/21/2009 11:33:52 AM
We did not need a strong central government to get rid of slavery. It could have used the right to tax (which it always had) to peacefully fix the problem in the same way that every other civilization nation did: you buy up all the slaves, compensate their former owners at a reasonable eminent domain price, then everyone goes home happy. The Blacks would then be free to vote with their feet and no one need get shot. Of course, as I said, 'place' is very important to humans so very few of us have the nerve to take that walk. Especially now that the best we can hope for is change in name only for some other territory where the economy is similarly dominated by the Federal Government.
9/21/2009 11:44:11 PM
Holy Christmas...did you just suggest getting rid of slavery by taxing it? Please tell me you are trolling.
9/21/2009 11:50:16 PM
We shouldn't have attacked Nazi Germany, we just should have purchased all the Jews from them at a reasonable price. It's capitalism, people!
9/22/2009 12:00:06 AM
^^ No, I suggested getting rid of slavery by getting rid of slave owners, as was done in the rest of the world (except for those parts that still have slaves, of course). You don't need to invade South Carolina to fix a problem that only afflicts a small fraction of their people. ^ Am I not allowed to suggest that "shooting Nazis" and "shooting your cousin" are not equally justifiable on an historical basis? That said, do you think Hitler would have been willing to sell back all of Europe and all of Germany's undesirables for a trillion dollars? If so, that would definitely be a deal I would make, with the proviso that we only pay after delivery. Are you suggesting that removing Hitler form power was so important that six million jews and even more soldiers must be sacrificed for the privilege?
9/22/2009 12:09:43 AM
9/22/2009 12:21:34 AM
^^ you're a sick fuck and your demented devotion to an ideology has clouded your sense of human decency....
9/22/2009 12:35:24 AM
Hmm, to what are you referring? To my insistence that killing millions of people is bad and should be avoided whenever possible?
9/22/2009 9:07:31 AM
Bump per request
5/31/2011 12:56:38 PM
OH BOI, I CANT WAIT TO SEE WHERE THIS GOES!!!!!!
5/31/2011 1:47:32 PM
How is it that Germany's economy has recovered quicker than the U.S. when their workers are unionized, have higher pay and better benefits?[Edited on May 31, 2011 at 1:50 PM. Reason : thanks qntmfred]
5/31/2011 1:49:47 PM
Because their fundamentals are actually quite a bit stronger. They have closer to a free market than we do. Of course, they're also using the Euro, which introduces many other problems that may surface in the near future. If a Greek bailout is on the horizon, that could quickly put a damper on their recovery, which is probably why the Germans don't want to see a Greek bailout.Germany's strong economic numbers may actually prove to be a problem, for them. The ECB could easily use those numbers as justification for a rate hike.[Edited on May 31, 2011 at 1:57 PM. Reason : ]
5/31/2011 1:55:47 PM
Their system promotes furloughs and working less hours rather than layoffs. so while their employment is higher, many people are working shorter hours. Still preferable to being unemployed though IMO.
5/31/2011 1:58:00 PM
5/31/2011 4:06:50 PM
Socialism is democracy applied to the economy. Society is run by those who do the work; thus, workers are in direct control of their own industries.
5/31/2011 4:45:18 PM
If there's an agreement that the ideal is a non-coercive (purely voluntary) society, then the divergence might be in what such a society would look like, or how we should expect to reach that point. It's hard for me to imagine why anyone would take the risk of creating a productive enterprise if all the profits were going to be split down the middle, but the entrepreneur would not be forced to hire under those conditions in a free society. In a truly free market, organizational hierarchies would likely flatten over time, as the enterprises with the least "fat" (useless corporate board members that suck up profits) would be the most able to compete for labor with wages/working conditions.Now to introduce a relevant internet meme into the mix: In fact, the state is the root problem that has to be dealt with, as the state is what introduces the monopoly on force. In a stateless, voluntarist society, all organizations are inherently democratic, as those that participate do so out of their own choosing. Without a state to create barriers to entry, tax loopholes, or engage in other backroom deals, competition will flourish.The "catch" to all of this is that the people aren't ready for it. People feel as though they have no control over the system they live under, so they see no reason to care. Unless people can be made to care, we'll float between full fledged tyranny and faux democracy.[Edited on May 31, 2011 at 5:37 PM. Reason : ]
5/31/2011 5:37:03 PM
I'm not sure why you thought that post belongs in a socialism thread
5/31/2011 6:22:06 PM
Because the end game for "socialism," according to you, is not all that different than what many people call "free market capitalism." The problem isn't socialism, it's state-sponsored socialism. In the same vein, the problem isn't capitalism, it's state-sponsored capitalism. Free markets and socialism aren't mutually exclusive, which is a point worth making in a climate where the debate is usually framed as "capitalism versus socialism."
5/31/2011 6:33:56 PM
5/31/2011 6:40:13 PM
5/31/2011 6:59:59 PM
5/31/2011 7:29:13 PM
government owned production is the height of stupidity.production subsidies to private businesses are equally stupid.if theres a market where people can make money from it without government intervention, then let it be. if its a market where people cant make money, but its critical to the country (education for the poor) then provide tax credits/subsidies to the consumers (parents of the children). If its a market where people cant make money and theres no benefit to the country (wind/solar/GM) then let it die the death it deserves.[Edited on May 31, 2011 at 7:59 PM. Reason : a]
5/31/2011 7:58:37 PM
5/31/2011 8:25:00 PM
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5/31/2011 9:05:29 PM