Optimus Prime
Electric Beats
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2007
- Messages
- 405
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2010
I guess I'm somewhere around minarchist/classical liberalist.
well if you are all for political freedom you must of agreed with the subtle racist questions
So I'm now right wing and less libertarian than before. Interesting, considering I'm all for political freedom.
I'll concede this.withoutaface said:There's a prisoner's dilemma situation applicable within the industry, but not across broader society. If I like widgets the fact that there are two widget makers out there can only be a good thing from my perspective of getting good quality and value for money.
Because workers don't have the capital to start up a cooperative, and the people with capital don't have an interest in doing so. Furthermore, a worker's cooperative is a concept not widely known. People are conditioned to go to school, achieve good grades then get into a tertiary institution, after which they are supposed to find a well paying job. This is the society we live in.withoutaface said:Then why are cooperatives not more common?
Capitalism cannot ever hope to have its grip on everybody, as proven by the numerous anti-capitalist organisations and the people that disregard wealth over enjoyment of their work. People do not choose to work under capitalism. Sure, you can decide that you're better off working for somebody than starving, but that's hardly a 'choice' now is it?withoutaface said:I'm saying that if there are teachers and such who decide to take a career for reasons other than money, and enjoy that career, then the capitalist system is not as constrictive as you make it out to be. Maybe people choose to be slaves to the new world order.
Completely dehydrated desert men are not homo economicus and your hypothetical situation is a complete red herring.Suppose there was a completely dehydrated and thirsty man, on his knees in the desert.
you like personal freedom however you feel the need to cripple business and ruin the economy.
what does this meeeeeeean?
The man with the water has made a perfectly fair deal, and the thirsty man should obviously accept.On another note, I ask you this: Suppose there was a completely dehydrated and thirsty man, on his knees in the desert. Without an immediate bottle of water, he will die. Another man with a horse, packed with water, finds this destitute, dying man. The man with the water offers the other some water in exchange for everything he has, knowing that the man will accept.
What do you make of this?
It was an ethical question, I didn't intend to relate it to economics. I'm simply interested in responses to this (and other such dilemmas) and how they correlate with people's political persuasions.funkshen said:Completely dehydrated desert men are not homo economicus and your hypothetical situation is a complete red herring.
Besides, the value of the water to the man on the horse is probably far less than the benefit he may extract from knowing he's responsible for saving another man's life. Your argument is that of a monopoly supplier and a single consumer which isn't applicable to ~free market economics~.
*shakes hand*
you like personal freedom however you feel the need to cripple business and ruin the economy.
If the worker didn't want to be treated like shit he'd get leverage over his employers. Namely, he'd improve his human capital.No, you care about the worker that is being treated like shit by the corporate fat cats.
you're a moron.No, you care about the worker that is being treated like shit by the corporate fat cats.
I am afraid sir that you are deluded. What you are over-emphasising here is that the owners of the means of production compete with one another to an extent where they will allow workers increased power. Unemployment exists because the capitalist class benefits from it by ensuring a compliant and servile working class. The reality of the situation is that in any capitalist society of any level of market restriction, free or government restricted, there need to be people to take orders and produce, and there need to be people to profit from the labour of their employees *cough* wage-slaves *cough*. Now, those capitalists are not going to suddenly start giving more benefits and higher wages to their employees in the absence of government restriction. If anything, the situation of the worker will be worsened without the minimal protection government provides. Ostensibly, worker conditions will rise under free market capitalism - which is an absolute farce. Capitalists will not empower their workers by increasing their wages.Debauchee said:If they were to have a free market, however, (eventually) there would be an absolute shit load of jobs, so much in fact that employers would be competing for employees, probably to some extent for even unskilled laborers, and so incomes and working conditions would rise, because people will be able to afford to 'shop around' for employment because employers will be offering better wages and conditions in order to lure employees away from other firms.
Based on what? What free market capitalist system are you basing these ludicrous claims on? There are no such systems.Debauchee said:Economic illiterate statists like you are forever talking about intentions, without ever thinking about the actual consequences. Acting individuals in a free market are all pursuing their own respective self-interests, and this almost always results in greater collective utility.
The State does not exist to help the poor. The State exists to protect the interests of the upper class in the nation it governs. Pure, stateless socialism has never existed. The only socialism that has existed is State socialism, which I would agree is largely futile. Socialist Cuba has a higher life expectancy for its citizens than the capitalist United States, thanks to free universal health care. Statism aside, Anarcho-Syndicalism was strong in the Spanish Civil War, with production increasing, particularly in agriculture, and without the need for authoritarian or hierarchical constraints.Debauchee said:States and economic systems like socialism will have the intention of helping the poor and making everyone happier, but as has been demonstrated HUNDREDS of times over the past century they always bring about the exact opposite and absolutely destroy standards of living.
China's problem isn't a lack of jobs in fact there has been a reported labor shortage.you're a moron.
In places like china that have a very un-free market, there aren't many jobs, and as such, people are forced to accept whatever job they can get, which may be a dollar a day very unsafe sort of job.
If they were to have a free market, however, (eventually) there would be an absolute shit load of jobs, so much in fact that employers would be competing for employees, probably to some extent for even unskilled laborers, and so incomes and working conditions would rise, because people will be able to afford to 'shop around' for employment because employers will be offering better wages and conditions in order to lure employees away from other firms.
Economic illiterate statists like you are forever talking about intentions, without ever thinking about the actual consequences. Acting individuals in a free market are all pursuing their own respective self-interests, and this almost always results in greater collective utility.
States and economic systems like socialism will have the intention of helping the poor and making everyone happier, but as has been demonstrated HUNDREDS of times over the past century they always bring about the exact opposite and absolutely destroy standards of living.