REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Voters steer Europe to the right

POSTED BY: GEEZER
UPDATED: Friday, June 26, 2009 07:01
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Thursday, June 18, 2009 3:25 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I've thought about that quite a bit. I think what an economy needs to accumulate and implement, more than anything else, is efficient production technology. Capitalism excels at that.

Let me explain the good part of capitalism: Let's say you could accurately put a value on the entire world's output and find that it was a $10T a year. Then, if you look at all of the wages paid, you might find it was $8T a year, the remainder $2T goes to the owners of companies as "profit". Let's say that of that $2T, only $1T is used to buy goods like houses and stuff and the rest is left over. There is a word for the remainder, and it's called "savings". So on the one hand, you can call it "profit" and spit on it, on the other hand you can call it "savings". Under capitalism, there is a HUGE incentive to take those "savings" and spend it on automation. The drive is towards more production with less labor cost, and that's what we want. BUT.
Quote:

But signy you have to ask yourself if there would really be opportunity in a marxist society that is economically uncompetitive? Would the wage-slaves in these developing capitalist economies be better off in a marxist country, even if that country's industry loses out, and becomes slowly more and more uncompetitive?
Why does one need to "compete"? WHAT are we competing for?
Quote:

What about in ten years, thirty years, fifty years...? Seems to me if you want to be a tiger economy that will lift your people out of grinding poverty, capitalism is your best bet.
You're talking about two different things: competition, and lifting people out of poverty. I find that where capitalism touches, poverty isn't far behind. I have to wonder: in a world where so many people need water, housing, schooling, and medicine (including family planning!), and so much of the world NEEDS to be remediated- reforested, cleaned up etc.... why are people out of work?? Unemployment seems to be a product of capitalism.


----------------------
We should have strapped him into a glider, filled it nose heavy w/ explosives, and dropped his Allah lovin' ass into a large, empty field. After which, release wild boars into the area so they could make good use of his remains. Now THAT's justice.- rappy

Yeah, that's what Sheikh Issa said. Seems you both have a lot in common.- signy

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Thursday, June 18, 2009 3:34 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Quote:

In theory, a "communist state" is an oxymoron.




Has communism had the opportunities for better, more promising leadership, and just missed them? And so generally just been unlucky to have been largely perpetrated by thugs?

Heads should roll



And also outside influences

If the US hadn't of reacted with hostility immediately after the Cuban revolution, no bay of pigs, no embargo, and Castros government didn't have the security concerns created by those outside influences, what may have changed?

With no need to run to the Soviet Union for protection, maybe relations with the US could have been much more balanced, economic pressures would point to the US as the mast desirable export market, and perhaps without the fear of direct invasion, or the threat of US backed counter revolutionarys a system of this type might have prospered.

With money from these exports channeled into healthcare and education ( we have seen that they have spent whatever they could there as it is ) reforms in everything under the sun might have come out 1965-1975 as these people changed their own system from within.

Damn I am beginning to ramble




" They don't hate America, they hate Americans " Homer Simpson


Lets party like its 1939

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Thursday, June 18, 2009 3:53 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Why does one need to "compete"? WHAT are we competing for?


These developing capitalist economies that you are always decrying - the implication is that those toiling lower classes would be better off after a marxist revolution? But would their industries be competitive on a global scale, would they be able to attract businesses and so on? And so the answer is a marxist revolution might benefit these people by spreading the country's wealth more evenly, but their children and their grandchildren would miss out if the country had significantly less wealth!

Is marxism only viable if it's universal then? Or do you believe in the possibility of a marxist tiger economy?

Heads should roll

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Thursday, June 18, 2009 4:05 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Quote:

In theory, a "communist state" is an oxymoron.




Has communism had the opportunities for better, more promising leadership, and just missed them? And so generally just been unlucky to have been largely perpetrated by thugs?

Heads should roll



And also outside influences

If the US hadn't of reacted with hostility immediately after the Cuban revolution, no bay of pigs, no embargo, and Castros government didn't have the security concerns created by those outside influences, what may have changed?

With no need to run to the Soviet Union for protection, maybe relations with the US could have been much more balanced, economic pressures would point to the US as the mast desirable export market, and perhaps without the fear of direct invasion, or the threat of US backed counter revolutionarys a system of this type might have prospered.

With money from these exports channeled into healthcare and education ( we have seen that they have spent whatever they could there as it is ) reforms in everything under the sun might have come out 1965-1975 as these people changed their own system from within.

Damn I am beginning to ramble




" They don't hate America, they hate Americans " Homer Simpson


Lets party like its 1939



No that's ok, fair points. Can't all those changes still come though? There's no soviet union anymore, and there's not going to be any more bay of pigs/assassination plots.

I'm thinking in terms of this communist ideal which we are yet to see, 'stateless' and democratic in its policy-making.

Heads should roll

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Thursday, June 18, 2009 10:07 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


I don't buy this 'capitalism is natural so it's good' guff even if it were true. Firstly, you can't just describe nature or natural things as good. Nature can be cruel and savage. Animals eat each other alive every day, rip each other apart hideously. Lifespans are short, old and young often dying horrible deaths, left behind, eaten by their own parents.... Death, disease and disasters are all 'natural'

Marx also thought that capitalism was natural, and that communism would ultimately replace capitalism 'naturally' once the inherent flaws in the system made it untenable.

On the original topic, its hardly surprising that the British labour party is likely to face defeat by the Tories. They've been in power since 1996 or thereabouts and everyone sick to death of them. That and the fact that Gordon Brown has the personality of a wardrobe.

it is perfectly possible to live in a society with both free market elements and government or nationalised institutions and still be an effective, thriving economy. Singapore is one such example.

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Friday, June 19, 2009 2:29 AM

BLUESUNCOMPANYMAN


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
So Bluesun- are you interested in a discussion?

Indeed I am. I've been logged off until today. Allow me to gather some thoughts and I'll respond.

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Friday, June 19, 2009 4:45 AM

JKIDDO


Quote:

But would their industries be competitive on a global scale
Again, WHAT are they "competing" for? Markets? Jobs? Money? Land? Fruitflies?
Quote:

would they be able to attract businesses and so on
If you have sufficient resources, a peaceful society, a population which generates its own demand as well as it's own labor, and you're willing to use labor-time without the benefit of IMMEDIATE production (ie. research, technological development) why do you need to attract business?

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Friday, June 19, 2009 5:13 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Originally posted by JKiddo:
Quote:

But would their industries be competitive on a global scale
Again, WHAT are they "competing" for? Markets? Jobs? Money? Land? Fruitflies?
Quote:

would they be able to attract businesses and so on
If you have sufficient resources, a peaceful society, a population which generates its own demand as well as it's own labor, and you're willing to use labor-time without the benefit of IMMEDIATE production (ie. research, technological development) why do you need to attract business?



Okay signy, so you take over one of these developing countries and install a marxist economy. You make the country self-sufficient, producing everything the populace needs and wants. These products are vastly more expensive than what can be imported (your industries are uncompetitive, for numerous reasons) - so you put restrictions on imports. Most of your population are poor, but straight away you are denying them cheap food etc.?

Heads should roll

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Friday, June 19, 2009 6:11 AM

CITIZEN


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Okay, you two are disagreeing with each other, but it seems to me signy is closer to the mark - this from wiki:

"Communism in the Marxian sense refers to a classless, stateless, and oppression-free society where decisions on what to produce and what policies to pursue are made democratically, allowing every member of society to participate in the decision-making process in both the political and economic spheres of life."


It depends who you listen to actually. Communism was supposed to reach an end stage which was a classless stateless system, through a state run by a vanguard party. Communists call that stage the "socialist state", most everyone else calls it the "communist state". I prefer communist state because socialism is a much much bigger subject than just communism.

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Friday, June 19, 2009 6:14 AM

JKIDDO


If they're producing everything they need and want, how are locally-produced goods expensive? Conversely, if imports are "cheaper" than locally-produced goods, doesn't it mean that the exporting country is either employing a lot of automation (in which people are unemployed) or paying substandard wages (in which people don't enjoy a decent standard of living)?

I'm not trying to be abstruse, I've reached a point of confusion. I've thought about our previous discussion.

I said that unemployment is a product of capitalism. On second thought, that may not be the case. The Roman Empire had a big problem with unemployment. So did monarch France. So did some of the Chinese dynasties, and industrializing Britain. What did they have in common? Well, they had over-towering differences in wealth and power. The question is, did the vast difference in wealth CAUSE unemployment, or were both caused by a third factor? In industrializing England, problem was an introduction of more efficient production technologies, tossing people out of work. But if that's the case, why doesn't the work just uniformly spread out? Why are SOME people worked to death, while others starve to death because of LACK of work? Needs more thought.

Also, I tried to imagine a system that you propose, of capitalist production and social distribution. The problem is, I reach the same conundrum as before: as long as competition for markets is the the main driver, that approach (capitalism with a friendly face) will be out-competed by "pure" capitalism all the time, every time. Some other factor has to come into play, either political (trade agreements), unionization, immigration (people move for better wages) or some other factor that I'm not seeing.

Anyway, I expect I'll be very busy today, so hope to ttul.

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Friday, June 19, 2009 10:52 AM

BLUESUNCOMPANYMAN


Friday's work is complete. And now I might turn my attention to our evolving conversation.

Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
BlueSun... what does "freedom" mean to you?

What an expansive answer this question requires. Part of the discussion is actually contained in something you posted eariler:

Quote:

Someone once told me a long time ago that Americans have a different definition of freedom than Europeans. Americans think of freedom as "freedom to..." while europeans think of freedom as "freedom from...".
I like that statement. I've actually understood this fact for some time, tho defined differently. I like your phrasing of it better, and will probably use it myself in the future.

I believe that liberty, (or freedom in this conversation) is a socially evolving philosophical paradigm. When humanity was 1st able to create true tangible cultures the repeating pattern of rule was strongest over weakest. Whether one describes strongest in terms of physical might or wealth aquisition is irrelevant because the result is the same: humans have a singular greedy nature. Our biologies demand it from the many thousands of years of survival evolution. It is only through our power of heightened thought that we are able to overcome our greed and need to control others. This establishes a journey of society down an axis of liberty.

The journey along the axis is a trip from one extreme of control to another of absolute individualism. I believe that the european thought process exists about halfway along this axis and is defined in many ways by the glorious revolution of 1688 in england and the subsequent bill of rights that followed: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_of_Rights_1689

With the advent of that document the thought process of european political philosophy shifted into an new gear...but the way I've always seen it they are still driving in that gear. Your statement of "Freedom From.." is quite apt in this regard. It's a defensive stance. It's a position held out of fear. "What will I do without X? If I support a certain political position will I ever again have to worry about X?" The american model took a new step forward to ask a different question: "How can I achieve Y? If I support a certain political position will I have a greater opprounity to pursue Y?"

I read Robert Kiyosaki's book Rich Dad Poor Dad 5 years ago. Robert is actually a rather poor prose writer but his lessons were good and mirrored those of the United States Marine Corps: "Proact. Don't react". The english of 1688 reacted to tyranny and established an english bill of rights (a great thing) but they've been reacting ever since. In the USA there was a great new ideal of expansion and ambition. The divergent anglo cultures became alike to first cousins.


Ask yourself this: At it's very core, what exactly is social security? Answer: It is society's response to the emotion of fear. All socialist paradigms exist as a reaction to fear. What happened just after FDR declared his most famous phrase? (The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.)

Social Security.

As I said previously, you ask a broad question. What is freedom to me? The answer is:

Absolute choice. So long as such choices I make do not violate the rights life, liberty, or property of any other human being.

The reason I resist your attempts to sound a trumpet of universal care is because under that system I'm not going to be given a choice. Do I have a choice to pay into social security? No. Why does the system not exist as a program that asks each citizen if they want the lifetime benifits or not? Why are we forced to pay? The answer is that when given the choice, most would not participate and the system requires broad participation to work. So instead the power structure agresses upon the citizens and siezes income. I tell you now that I will not require social security when I'm old. I'm building my own security dispite the undue burden of paying for the broken program that won't help me anyway.

Freedom is choice. Pure and simple. I have no desire to reside in the UK because I like having broader economic choice here. I harbor no ill will to europeans who dwell in and debate their fearful economic policies, I really don't. But to have someone like you attempt to transplant foreign governing models into our soil which will force new aggression upon me, well I cannot support it. And in the final analysis I might actually openly fight against it.

Instead we should import european models of personal freedom. We should end the useless drug war. We should stop using our military to aggress abroad. We should pass an amendment that limits federal power and further strengthens the 10th amendment (states rights). Most of all we must allow each and every american to choose what's best for them in all manners and in all ways.

The USA is one step further down the liberty axis than europe. But we are not at the limit. Not by a long shot.

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Friday, June 19, 2009 11:41 AM

FREMDFIRMA


Lemme lob this bomb in here, BSCM...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarchist_Catalonia

See, when you do start breaking the chains, you become the enemy of EVERY GOVERNMENT ON THE PLANET.

That's a lesson we've never forgotten, nor have we forgotten that right up till the rage of the populace at it's horrors made fascism politically unsupportable, american big business did (and still DOES - See Also: Business Plot) think it was the greatest thing since sliced bread.

And american PEOPLE volunteered to fight it*, despite our government actively supporting that murderous bastard Franco cause he was taking on those pesky worker collectives and unions which make things so unprofitable, yanno...

NEVER will we forget staring into the gunbarrels of the communists, socialists, fascists, and democracies of the world at the same time - because who we are, WHAT we are, directly threatens all of them, most especially the lie that people need to be controlled by leaders "for their own" good, which was bullshit when the nobility (helped along by religion) floated it in the dark ages, and it's bullshit now.

But point that out, prove it wrong, and everyone who depends on it for wealth and power instantly becomes your enemy, and they have plenty of guns, bombs, and fools willing to use them.

I've spent my whole live depriving them of the latter, as you well know.

Reason I mention this is the need to think it all the way through to the bloody finale when discussing this - what will you DO when you become enough of a threat for them to engage their armies, their weapons, against you ?

I have my own answers to that, but it's something I want you to think very hard about when discussing this topic.

And if you even for an instant think that such a thing would not happen in america, the use of military force against those who simply want their rightful due as human beings, just because they are not engaging the Gov directly...

Let me FIRMLY disabuse you of that notion.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Blair_Mountain

Now, if you can find some way around that without the massive bloodshed and casualties, be kind enough to share it with me, ehe ?

-Frem
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_Brigade
I do think it kind of ironic that they would name their anti-fascism brigade after a man who in retrospect, happens to be one of the nastiest fascists in history, but american public school "education" being what it was at the time, they didn't know just how much bullshit the lincoln myth really was.

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Saturday, June 20, 2009 6:25 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

doesn't it mean that the exporting country is either employing a lot of automation

You're against automation? You want to go back to where we were all peasants, all 'employed' toiling the fields? Or should we use technology to liberate humanity, make the price of food much cheaper and then employ more scientists/artists/entertainers etc.? In my mind you can apply the same principle of automation for food production to production for all essential goods.

Quote:

(in which people are unemployed)

Only one generation of workers is left redundant to society, like an obsolete branch that is cut off the tree. Progress is natural, and cruel like nature - again I'd argue that government let nature take its course and put a safety net in place to help the obsolete workers that fall into it. The tree will be stronger in the future as a result, as that manpower will be reabsorbed and put to new uses.

I see unemployment as part of the 'natural' system's cycles. In any civilisation and any economic system technology will render some workers obsolete, and resources that a town has been built around will dry up, etc. Just the fallout from an evolving natural system - another argument for a role for government.

Quote:

or paying substandard wages

Japan and Germany are two major exporter nations with generous social welfare systems and worker priveleges. I think the happy thing here is that to a large extent social welfare is like investing in people, so that you get more from them (eg. education). Of course you need to have the wealth first, before you can really start to invest it - which is where capitalism, global trade and 'tiger economies' come in, in my view.

Quote:

Also, I tried to imagine a system that you propose, of capitalist production and social distribution. The problem is, I reach the same conundrum as before: as long as competition for markets is the the main driver, that approach (capitalism with a friendly face) will be out-competed by "pure" capitalism all the time, every time.

Germany, Japan... even the US to a very significant extent pays for social welfare for its people. No society is interested in employing 'pure capitalism' as you describe it, and if it did I doubt it would be competitive in this modern world - an educated worker is worth several uneducated workers.

Heads should roll

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Sunday, June 21, 2009 3:54 AM

JKIDDO


Quote:

You're against automation?
Nope. I'm all for it. Like I said, its one of the factors that keeps us from having to work in unending dawn to dusk toil. Ideally, we should have just enough automation ot give people about four hours of productive work a day. (And that's for psychological reasons.) I do, however, have a problem with automation under pure capitalism,
Quote:

Only one generation of workers is left redundant to society, like an obsolete branch that is cut off the tree. Progress is natural, and cruel like nature
You have this in your head:

natural= good.
natural= cruel
therefore cruel= good.

Please get rid of it, as its false on its premises.
Quote:

Germany, Japan... even the US to a very significant extent pays for social welfare for its people.
And then we have a boatload of other economies which have NO support networks at all, which includes all of Africa, and most of southern and south-east Asia and Russia, and (possibly) China and virtually all of South and Central America. For decades the USA has made extensive use of that cheap labor for profit, and actively impoverished a dozens of nations in the process, leaving them in worse shape than before our involvement. (Confessions of an Economic Hit man). PART of our wealth comes on the backs of exploitation elsewhere. Even China is exploiting Africa (coal and copper mines). As I see it, capitalism seems to be a zero-sum game. India, the latest to experiment with free(er) market capitalism, has seen the development of shopping malls and a larger upper class, but ALSO the growth of the ultra-poor. ON BALANCE, the only thing that capitalism has done in India is to separate the wealth, not generate it. Meanwhile, the Indian state of Kerala, which is run on cooperatives, is the only state which continues to do well and which consistently has a a much better standard of living.

Capitalism is viral. That's not necessarily a good thing. Just because something grows rapidly sucks up everything in its path doesn't mean its good, as that description could apply to viruses, cancers and hurricanes.
Quote:

No society is interested in employing 'pure capitalism'
But economic policies aren't always determined by "societies". Quite often they're dictated by foreign powers, corrupt leaders and corporate heads. Russia underwent "shock treatment" which threw their economy back sixty years, actually REDUCED the standard of living and lifespan by fifteen years(!), because of a few people who followed the Chicago School of economics. Regulated capitalism only works in viable democracies (which, I argue, the USA is not).

Everywhere capitalism has been introduced and allowed to develop "naturally" has seen an increase in misery, from industrializing Britain to Russia, South and Central America, Africa, and India. And while you seem to think that the misery is only temporary, that the unemployed will be folded into the new economy, that capitalism has within itself the economic seeds of its own solution ("progress is natural") you also argue that regulation is needed. It sounds like you haven't quite decided whether capitalism can/ does right its own problems, or whether outside intervention is required, and whether that intervention is natural and economic or not.

So let me tell you that history shows that the only thing which rights capitalism's exploitation is pushback by workers. In the Industrial revolution, the standard of living didn't naturally rise. In fact, it was heading towards more exploitation and greater poverty UNTIL riots and strikes forced such issues as the workweek and wages. The same thing happened in the USA- although that lesson was blunted by our unique post-war position in which we could exploit the entire non-communist world. "Pure" capitalism does not create a better future on its own, it does not painlessly become generous and concerned. And the response to capitalism is every bit as natural and economic as capitalism itself, since capitalism's problems are economic. "Economy" deals not only with wealth creation but with wealth distribution and capital flo, and that's where capitalism really falls down..

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Sunday, June 21, 2009 6:05 AM

CITIZEN


Also, what is Capitalist about centralised Government regulation, legislation and social programs. All those things are socialist in nature, there's nothing capitalist about them, whether they're being applied to a largely capitalist economy or not.

Which comes back to what I was saying earlier, that was largely seemingly purposefully misrepresented.

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Monday, June 22, 2009 1:15 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


So anyway KPO, I've given your proposal considerable thought. As I understand it, it seems to me what you're saying is that you can't have progress without am initial period of misery. In a broad way, this is probably so: in order to progress, one must work without an immediate reward: keep the peace, educate the population, build an infrastructure, perform research, invent new and better ways of doing things, build new factories or retool old ones, even keep people healthy. None of that is immediately involved in production. AFTER productivity is increased, wealth can be distributed.

HOWEVER, that distribution does not happen "naturally" under capitalism, which concentrates wealth and power in a positive feedback cycle. Some other factor must be introduced such as unions or government.

----------------------
We should have strapped him into a glider, filled it nose heavy w/ explosives, and dropped his Allah lovin' ass into a large, empty field. After which, release wild boars into the area so they could make good use of his remains. Now THAT's justice.- rappy

Yeah, that's what Sheikh Issa said. Seems you both have a lot in common.- signy

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Tuesday, June 23, 2009 4:14 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

You have this in your head:

natural= good.
natural= cruel
therefore cruel= good.



Lol, no. Your problem is you think too much in terms of good and evil. Is nature/capitalism good or evil? What a pointless question. I personally only think about what is effective, and best for humanity - I never talk about good.

Concerning nature one could describe it: vibrant, diverse, chaotic, cruel - and capitalism by analogy is the same: it has advantages and disadvantages. I'm arguing to take the advantages and then use government to tackle the disadvantages. There's no ideological purity there, but I'm a pragmatist, I want what is most effective. In the same vein I'm not interested in calling socialism 'evil', just useless - it's an economic system that doesn't generate wealth!

Quote:

Ideally, we should have just enough automation ot give people about four hours of productive work a day. (And that's for psychological reasons.)


Interesting. Is this for all kinds of work, even for people who enjoy their jobs? If we increase automation perhaps we can all have enjoyable jobs in the future - we'll all be artists/entertainers etc. Why do marxists think that human civilisation has 'arrived'?

You have lots of historical arguments against capitalism, but we'd be arguing all day if we get into our different interpretations of history - plus marxism's track record is definitely not perfect. Can we not just agree that capitalism has a track record of lifting millions out of poverty, and its success doesn't have to come at the unfair expense of other nations via imperialism...? I'm thinking of post-war Germany and Japan, and all the tiger economies examples... I've been saying all along capitalism has to be properly managed.

Quote:

Regulated capitalism only works in viable democracies (which, I argue, the USA is not).


Hmm, I think the US GDP per capita is very impressive - surely you can't fault capitalism for the amount of wealth it has created? I don't task capitalism with spreading that wealth out across society, government must step in here.

Quote:

it seems to me what you're saying is that you can't have progress without am initial period of misery.


I suppose I am - but sometimes the misery of capitalist toil is a step up from grinding poverty. Sometimes not, and that makes me angry - heads should roll. What can I say but poor countries first of all need good, uncorrupted leadership - this isn't just for capitalism though, this is a lesson we've learnt just as well from some African countries striving to become 'socialist paradises'.

Quote:

HOWEVER, that distribution does not happen "naturally" under capitalism, which concentrates wealth and power in a positive feedback cycle. Some other factor must be introduced such as unions or government.


You've got to be careful with unions though, because they can bring industry down (or at least make it uncompetitive) when they get too powerful and demand too much. I would rather government intervene if it can, with legislation. Democracy can solve this, in theory. But I heard recently that America is quite unique in that its working class do not traditionally offer strong support for the political left and the labour movements, that in any european country would represent them.


Heads should roll

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Friday, June 26, 2009 7:01 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Unions bring an industry down???

What, you don't think that workers should be able to negotiate their pay and power from an equal position? Don't believe in real negotiation? Isn't that the basis of capitalism: that EVERYONE gets to represent themselves on an equal footing in the economic sphere? (Or, at least that was part of Adam Smith's theory!)

I'd like to continue this, but in another thread. this one's too long.

----------------------
We should have strapped him into a glider, filled it nose heavy w/ explosives, and dropped his Allah lovin' ass into a large, empty field. After which, release wild boars into the area so they could make good use of his remains. Now THAT's justice.- rappy

Yeah, that's what Sheikh Issa said. Seems you both have a lot in common.- signy

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I'm surprised there's not an inflation thread yet
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New Peer-Reviewed Research Finds Evidence of 2020 Voter Fraud
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