I'm never wrong (today). Anyway, it's one thing to question practices. I just object to some of the erroneous analysis & loopy solutions.
If both sides think that they're never wrong and that the other person's solutions are "loopy," then one may find much to object to in the real world.
They aren't the same level of choice. The choice to borrow money to buy a house doesn't involve the level of unanticipated coercion which would induce a business to leave the country.
They're both choices made from different perspectives. However, I would reject the notion of anything being "unanticipated." Myopia is not an excuse.
But the real issue is about effects of public policy. It makes no sense to justify bad policies by saying anyone who dislikes them can emigrate. It should be about whether the net effects make things better or worse.
I'm not saying that anyone should emigrate, but if the issue we're discussing involves choices, then the same arguments could apply to anyone in any number of situations. But I agree that the real issue is related to public policy and its effects. But I don't you can be that certain about what will make things better or worse. All you can really say is what you and others in your profession might do if a policy or regulation is enacted, but you can't say with any accuracy what the long-term effect to the entire society would be.
I've noticed that both Dems & Pubs have moved left.
Really? I see them both moving to the right, especially with their bipartisan support of globalism and free trade. Organized labor has lost a lot of support in recent decades (much of it they brought on themselves).
There may have been an overall leftward shift due to FDR which also had an effect on the Republican Party as well. The old guard conservatives and isolationists which dominated the GOP prior to WW2 all but vanished after the war, turning more towards internationalism and aggressive anti-communism. At the same time, though, they made concessions in terms of US domestic policies, at least as far as giving continued limited support to FDR's New Deal and the programs which were still in place (some of which were derided as "socialistic"). By the 1960s and 70s, that may have marked the furthest "left" the country actually got before the Reagan era saw us going back in a rightward direction again.
If you look at the CFR (Code Of Federal Regulations), you'll find that Reagan wasn't too successful.....the volume of regulation increased every year under his reign.
Well, he had a lot of irons in the fire. He also said he was going to cut Federal spending and reduce the national debt, but his record showed just the opposite. Still, he was one of the leading proponents for deregulation.
Deregulation has happened here & there at times, but the net effect is continual escalation of federal control. Add to this state & local increases, & you'll see why Americastan has fallen in worldwide ranking of economic liberty every year for some time.
I wanted to check on this ranking, and according to surveys I found (
such as this one), the US ranks 12th in the world, which isn't really too bad, all things considered. Even in comparison to the countries which ranked higher, I think we may still be better off overall in America.
I put responsibility upon those who sign the contracts.
A lot of these may be poor innocent people who may not realize the consequences of what they're doing, but the bankers and lawyers are supposed to be knowledgeable and should know better than to take advantage of such people. Therefore, I place the higher level of responsibility on them.
While you would be harsh and unforgiving towards the weak and the ignorant (or as you put it "whiney, deluded, miserable little victimhood wallower"), I reserve my harsh and unforgiving side to the sharks and predators who take advantage of the weak and ignorant.
The call shouldn't be simply for more intervention, but rather for intervention which works well. Too often we just hear calls to ban this or that right or punish some demonized group. No attention is paid to consequences which will certainly accompany such policies.
But we won't know what the consequences are until we actually do it. It's also a matter of the consequences to society at large versus the "consequence" of wealthy people being a little bit less wealthy.
I was trying to recall a quote in which it's suggested that the healthiest society is that which has the fewest laws. That's not to say that fewer laws make society healthy or efficient, but the presence of numerous laws and regulations would indicate that there may be something unhealthy and potentially harmful at a deeper level in society. That is, all the laws, regulations, legalese, etc. may be a symptom of a deeper problem which will ultimately have to be fixed before we can worry about which system works best for us.
"Legalese" is really just spelling out the agreement in detail. It would be great to eschew arcane language, but it can be learned.
Sure, it can be learned, but that's beside the point.
You're speaking so generally that there's really no claim.
Well, the most obvious claim I could make would be to reference the aforementioned subject of slavery. Why did capitalists fight tooth and nail to keep slavery? Why would they insist on fighting such a devastating and costly war just to maintain a gross injustice? Or if that example is too extreme for you, what about all the labor unrest and violence associated with it, when people had to work under grisly conditions with little pay. All they wanted was to be treated fairly and get a fair day's pay for a fair day's work, yet the capitalists instead resorted to violence and other coercive tactics?
Why can't they make a deal
before it gets to the level of extremism and violence? Why are they so stubborn? I can come up with dozens (if not hundreds) of examples of extremely stubborn capitalists throughout history and the violence they've caused.
Every country which ditched capitalism has failed economically, eg, N Korea, PRC (pre-capitalist PRC), USSR.
If you're enumerating countries which ditched capitalism, then North Korea wouldn't even qualify, since the Allies decided the fate of North and South Korea at Yalta. They weren't really given a fair choice before it was thrust upon them (with our complicity). Stalin installed his own puppet in North Korea, and they apparently enjoyed having absolute power so much that they decided to keep it.
As for the PRC, I would say that they ultimately fared better by ditching capitalism than what was apparent under the governments which ruled China prior to 1949. Considering how badly the Chinese capitalist government did against the Japanese in WW2, as opposed to the Chinese communist government fighting us to a stalemate in Korea, I think that serves as an effective point of comparison.
It was much the same with the USSR, which fared much better under communism than they did under their particular brand of capitalism prior to 1917. Likewise, capitalist Russia did very badly against the Germans in WW1, but communist Russia clearly had it more together and soundly defeated the (capitalist) Germans in WW2 (and taking half of Europe in the process).
Moreover, both Russia and China lost the most people and suffered the greatest devastation in World War 2, yet they recovered on their own and without any Marshall Plan money or the wherewithal of the Western empires (France, Britain, US). Yet they still gave us a good run for our money, and China could still overtake us.
China is doing better because they became flexible; they made compromises. Our business and political leaders are too inflexible and stubborn, and that will be our undoing. That's why the Soviet Union fell, and that's why North Korea is in the shape it's in now. Not because of their system, but because of wanton intransigence and irrational devotion to an ideology just for the sake of the ideology.
What alternative to capitalism do you propose?
How well has it fared in the real world?
It depends on what part of the "real world" you're referring to. When I look at the real world, I try to look at the entire world, both past and present. Others think of the "real world," yet are only considering what they can see from their front porch.
People who oppose capitalism love to talk about theory, ie, the way things should be if only people would just act a certain way or if government just had more power. But that's theory. Back in the real world......
Well, it's just as much "theory" from the pro-capitalist side as well. As far as I'm concerned, the policies advocated by FDR, John Kenneth Galbraith, and various progressives are the only policies which have had proven success in America. Those policies carried us through World War II, the bulk of the Cold War, and were also instrumental in helping to promote the cause of Civil Rights and other social reforms which continue to be felt today. That's about as "real world" as it gets, don't you think?
And it fared rather well, up until Reagan, who screwed it all up to the thunderous applause of all these wonderful capitalists. What adds insult to injury is that most of these conservatives and capitalists nowadays have the audacity to actually to blame our economic woes on liberals and so-called "socialists." Rather than simply owning up to it and taking the consequences and the blame for their own choices, they want to blame someone else - just like you were saying about those "whiners."
Where do you live?
What non-capitalist country would you like to move to?
Where I choose to live may be based on factors other than what kind of economic system it has.
One must be skeptical of one's own ideology. It might be great in theory, but practice is more complex, & results will vary. I prefer to go with what works, guided by ideological goals, eg, freedom from coercion.
I think one has to be aware of the flaws and pitfalls of one's own ideology and at least be willing enough to acknowledge them. I think socialists, liberals, and progressives these days can look back on past policies and ideas they once supported and be willing to admit that mistakes were made. They're willing to move forward and correct whatever flaws may have existed in the past.
But I don't really see any of that coming from capitalists. They're not willing to admit their mistakes and their faults in contributing to the situation. They seem to live in a fantasy world where "capitalism can do no wrong," and that's what I simply can not accept.