muhammad_isa
Veteran Member
See my post #362Care to explain why you disagree with what you quoted?
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See my post #362Care to explain why you disagree with what you quoted?
Fantastic! Thanks for providing this.Sure.
- Premise 1: Poverty, hunger, lack of shelter and access to basic necessities happen mostly due to the poorest having a lack of resources/money.
- Premise 2: The rich people have many more resources/money than necessary to provide for their basic necessities and comfort.
- Premise 3: If the government taxes the rich people, it has access to their resources/money.
- Premise 4: If the government has access to their resources/money, the government distributes these resources/money to the poorest.
- Premise 5: If the government distributes theese resources/money to the poorest, the lack of resources/money of the poorest will be reduced.
- Conclusion: Therefore, if the government taxes the rich people, the lack of resources/money of the poorest will be reduced.
Yes, I do believe this is a pretty good description - I'll go with it unless some unnoticed detail reveals some sort of discrepancy; I think you get the idea of my position or what I'm getting at.Ok, so your disagreement is that you presume that if we heavily tax the rich people, they will no longer produce the wealth that we are using (through taxation) to feed the poor, is this correct?
I agree that there may be several ways to address this, including educating voters, and I have quite a few:There are many ways to address this, but I would like to make sure we are on the same page before I continue.
It would be a mistake to assume the problems you guys see in San Francisco are typical of problems everywhere in the USA; Your city has a unique set of problems compared to other places. But I also recognize there are good and bad people everywhere, so of course there are gonna be bad capitalists. There are also bad poor people, black people white people, cops, doctors, immigrants, gay, straight, etc. etc. But what I do not do is focus on a particular group of people, only recognize the bad among that group and label the entire group as bad; because that would make me a bigot, and I am better than that. Yes there are bad people in every group, but I also realize there are good people in every group; that's called being fair.Why do I need to know them "personally"? Why do you keep asking these stupid questions?
Let me give you an example.
All across the U.S. there have formed "investment groups" (greedy capitalists) that have pooled their excess money, and they've been using it to buy up single family homes in specific areas, all across the country. This, of course, causes the price of SF homes in that area to increase dramatically, as the available stock diminishes dramatically. And the result is that home buyers in that area can no longer find or afford to buy a home. Which means they now have to rent one.
And guess who has a whole bunch of homes available to rent! Yep, the greedy investment groups that bought them all up. And guess what they do next ... they raise the prices of the rents dramatically because they now own most of the available rental homes. And because all those potential home buyers are being forced to rent, they will have to pay those excessive rent prices.
What's going on is that by combining their excess wealth, these investment groups were able to deliberately create a housing monopoly in a whole bunch of areas of the country, and of course they are using that monopoly to price gouge the people living there for housing. And this is all perfectly legal because the government is always years behind when it comes to responding to these sorts of greedy price-gouging schemes. Ignorance, corruption, incompetence, and not having the ready funds to counteract these schemes make sure of it.
And this is just one small example of MANY, MANY, MANY similar examples where capital investors have deliberately created monopolies and used them to price gouge everyone else on everything from housing, transportation, communication, home energy, gasoline, health care, insurance of all kinds, education, and pretty much anything else that people NEED in a modern society to survive. And the fact that you are not seeing this tells me that you have your eyes and your mind intentionally and deliberately tightly closed to it. Because it's a GLARING problem in this country and in many other capitalist countries, too. But in this one it's becoming dangerous in that most U.S. citizens have no savings and are buried in debt to the point that one life setback will drive them into poverty. And now, even into homelessness.
What you're not understanding is that the ideal goal of the capital investor is to invest in a monopoly, and then squeeze everyone involved in it for everything they have.
But you aren't seeing ANY of this, are you. And you are going to continue not seeing it, I suspect. In fact, you will FIGHT to deny it if anyone like me tries to point it out to you.
Why? I have no idea.
Raising interest rates do not prevent wealth from being created; the Central bank does not have the ability to prevent people from creating wealth. Care to try again?That is decided by the state (central bank).
If they decide that there is 'too much wealth' in the system (inflationary), they use
monetary policy (usually raise interest rates) to control it.
As I've already pointed out, that main feature of capitalism causes inequality .. BY DESIGN.
When people effect a transaction, each person wants what he gets more than what he gives. If one person is drowning in a lake and someone else is dying of thirst in a desert, the first trades his excess water for the dry land that the other pays. Both are much happier and far better off. It's the same thing that happens when you're hungry and you trade money for food. The grocer wants the money more than the food and you want the food more than the money. He would have been willing to sell for less and you would have been willing to pay more. You're both better off.That is actually destruction of wealth. OK, it is only money, but I could have bought something valuable with it. When I give it to a scam company which has no contact to the IAU, it has lost all its value.
(Not really, the money is still there, but all the resources and energy that went into the scam are now lost for a bit of hot air.)
Creatio ex nihilo? You think the wealth gets created through the transaction? That thing I bought from you had no value when you had it?
Just because you (or I) don't value it doesn't mean it has no value. My point is; the ability to create wealth is not limited to what is here on Earth.That is actually destruction of wealth. OK, it is only money, but I could have bought something valuable with it.
If I can convince you it is valuable enough to spend money on it, that is when the wealth is created.Creatio ex nihilo? You think the wealth gets created through the transaction? That thing I bought from you had no value when you had it?
That is not my experience..Raising interest rates do not prevent wealth from being created..
You are misunderstanding the free market.It's a lie .. they merely wish to keep the wealth in their corner by 'sleight of hand'.
They exploit people's fear of inflation, by insisting that controlling it through usury is the
only way. This results in oppression of the poorest, while the 'free-market' advocates increase
their wealth at their expense.
I don't think so .. the detail is in the word "free" .. unregulated .. able to makeYou are misunderstanding the free market.
I don't think so .. the detail is in the word "free" .. unregulated .. able to make
whatever financial transactions you wish.
controlling it through usury is the
only way. This results in oppression of the poorest
Though it may have drastically slowed down, I can assure you it didn't come to a complete stopThat is not my experience..
In November 1979, the Thatcher government in UK raised interest rates to 17% in order to tackle inflation. This harmed manufacturing industry and exports, but did eventually have the desired effect on inflation.
- BBC Archives -
This caused mass unemployment, thus creating an underclass with little or no opportunity.
Her words:- "unemployment is a price worth paying" .
So we could say that the fact the earth rotates around it'a axis creates social issues and that would also solve nothing. If we want the world better for humanity we must first decide what we want and then consider the costs. Please explain what you want changed with how labor is sold and purchased.
With what you are suggesting, government would redistribute a majority of the wealth. Am I understanding you right?
I believe it is doubtful that in a free market environment that an individual would be able to accumulate and misappropriate the amount of wealth that government would have access to in a State environment.
Perhaps I’m wrong. A pure free market economy has not been tried so is therefore in the realm of hypotheticals. (A free market economy would require the absence of government, at least, from an anarcho-capitalist point of view).
I think the word you used was "psychopath". Replace crazy with psychopath, and my point remains the same.
Only to an extent
What are you talking about? I said nothing about employees responsible; I'm talking about the typical ups and downs of business profit. Do you believe employees should see a reduction in pay when profits are down?
Capitalism is indicative of pulling people out of poverty and giving them more.
How about if the person is not an actual psycopath, but is just someone who does not share your views on how to solve the homeless problems?It does not. Because it doesn't make sense to have a debate with a psycopath concerning social issues if he is going to pull the 'there is no need to solve that' card.
I think there should be a safety net for those who fall between the cracks,Great. So our disagreement is on the extent. Where do you draw the line and why?
So when profits are up, wages should be tied to profit; but when profits are down, what should wages be tied to?If the employee is responsible for the down, yes. Else, no.
How about if the person is not an actual psycopath, but is just someone who does not share your views on how to solve the homeless problems?
I think there should be a safety net for those who fall between the cracks,
So when profits are up, wages should be tied to profit; but when profits are down, what should wages be tied to?
Exceptions to the rule. People with unfortunate circumstances that prevent them from contributing to society financially.What are you calling 'cracks'?
But during times the company loses money, there is zero value generated by the labor. I'm gonna assume you expect labors to be paid even when their labor produces zero value; is that correct? If so, what should their pay be based on?In both cases, wages should be as close as possible to the value generated by the labor.
Maybe the company needs those years of massive profits to make up for and balance out the years of massive losses while the labors still expect to get paid. Does this sound fair to you?But that is an ideal scenario that is not realistic when the company wouldn't be able to afford that. It is, however, far more realistic when there is massive profit, since then the company is able to afford that.