Author Topic: another Ron Paul post  (Read 13248 times)

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Xavier_Onassis

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #60 on: November 15, 2007, 11:00:28 AM »
Some folks just need to have others get out of their way. In my opinion, liberty allows people to find their own way to address the needs of others and allows people in need to find the sort of help that suits them best. Socialism, as best I can tell, says there is one way and all people must adhere to it.

=========================================================
What sort of help might be available to an illiterate Bengal sharecropper with 10 children?
Often there is no choice of help. In fact this is more the rule than the exception in the world these days.

Some degree of Socialism can help everyone in society. In Sweden, subsidized housing is one example. In the US there are periodic real estate booms, fueled by 'flippers' who do not buy out of need, but greed, and as a result housing becomes an impossibility for teachers, policemen, firefighters and many more of the middle class for extended periods. In Scandinavian countries, affordable decent government housing is provided, and there are many fewer people who must pay half or more of their incomes just to have a warm place to live. Public transportation makes individual cars and associated costs, such as fuel, maintenance, insurance and parking unnecessary for many, and everyone benefits.

"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

_JS

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #61 on: November 15, 2007, 06:43:40 PM »
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I don't think [social equality as defined by JS] is against human nature at all. I think that it tends to go against White Anglo-Saxon Protestant modern thinking, acting, and structural beliefs about the way society "has" to be ordered. Yet, many cultures are far more comfortable with with my view of Social Equality and WASP's would be as well, if they would look beyond the short-term and really begin to see society as important.


I don't agree. Even in primitive cultures there are leaders and followers, there are those who want many things and those who want little, those who will work more and those who will work less. There may be cultures in the world where this is not so, but I do not know of one. In addition, I think you sell WASPs short by implying that they do not see society as important. Some may not, but many more do. There are numerous charities that support this, and think the issue is not WASPs not seeing society as important, but that a majority don't really agree that socialism is the way to go.

I'm going to try and be more patient and explain a little better this time. This is not about leaders and followers and who will work less or who will work more. My point is that Social Equality, as I defined it, is not against human nature at all. Before Calvinism and the development of the "Protestant work ethic" and WASP culture in the modern west, the importance of society, family, and the view of the poor were vastly different than they are today. It was an historical shift towards placing value in accumulating wealth.

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Whenever there is a massive accumulation of wealth then there is also deprivation. There is only so much capital possible at any given time.


But this is not a zero-sum situation. At any given time there may be a specific amount of capital available, but that does not mean that more cannot be created.

It is a finite number. Yes, over time more can be created through untapped capital but a lot of people mistake pecuniary benefits for expansion. Plane is a good example.

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The point being that there is only so much wealth to be had at any given time. So the barriers exist whether you wish they didn't or not.


No one said making more capital or more money was easy. But it is not impossible, and generally not restricted to class or education level. Thomas Edison, J. C. Watts, Martha Stewart, et cetera. It can be done, and there are things we can do to make it easier. But Martha Stewart's success is not a barrier to someone else attempting a similar success.

There you go again. This is not about easy or difficult. You don't think Martha Stewart's success is a barrier to others? How many people would be lifted out of poverty with the money Martha Stewart makes? How many families with no housing could live in one of Martha's homes? Sure, to her and you it is just a sign of her success and her "right to own property" but it is a true testament to society that there are homeless children, while Martha Stewart (and others like her) have numerous multi-million dollar mansions spread around the country or even around the world. That is her individual right, you'd say. I'd say that is to society's detriment.

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With democracy, as we have it those with the most accumulated wealth also have the most influence. Sure we need more liberty, but until we achieve a socialist, classless society - that liberty is nothing but the scraps that the elite wishes to grant us.


If we are going to lay the blame for this on democracy, then the blame lies with people who support and vote for policies that tie business and government together. Which is to say, all those policies intended to regulate the market and correct for "market failures". Socialist policies, imo, have brought us to this point, so I have a hard time seeing this as a detriment of capitalism. Possibly one could argue against democracy, but that seems like a whole other topic best left for another time.

Don't even pretend like this nation has a real left. We once did when Eugene V. Debs was alive and there was a small but dedicated socialist movement, but the United States left is a joke. We have no socialist policies. This is your capitalism at work spending millions on the coming election. Just watch those corporations spend on the campaigns - now do you think they are doing so with no planned ROI?

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Look at Jefferson's "self-evident" truths! All men are created equal? In this country? It wasn't true when he wrote it and it is not the case now. Not only is it not self-evident, it was pure unadulterated horse shite.


That depends on what one means by equal. You seem to be thinking of equal in terms of wealth. I doubt that is what Jefferson meant.

Jefferson didn't even mean race, so I'd hardly call him an authority.

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The problem is forcing other people who disagree with you to participate in your agenda whether or not they want to do so. The problem is punishing people for surpassing some arbitrary limit of "unfair" economic success.

What punishment? Either we are equal or we are not. My problem is that you are calling it punishment, and I don't see it as that. In a classless society this idea of accumulating wealth at the expense of society becomes an irrelevancy. It is not punishment because it is not there's, yours, or mine any longer.


Very few people if any ever consider their accumulation of wealth to be done at the expense of society. And in many cases the accumulation of wealth occurs because someone is contributing to society. The person who runs the grocery store, the baker,  the barber, and more are all contributing to society. If, say, the baker is successful, has he succeeded at the expense of society? Has he deprived someone else? I think it is not so. But what about the extremely wealthy? What does some scion of some wealthy business owner contribute? Maybe something, maybe nothing. But I don't find it a push toward equality to say to the business owner that he is wrong for making a more comfortable life for his family. I think part of the problem I have with your thinking is that you seem to be wanting to define for everyone else what is and is not a contribution to society. Again, I come back to the impression that what you want is everyone living according to your ideals of social behavior, and I simply cannot agree with that.

There is no butcher, baker, grocer, or candlestick maker any longer. (OK, before some asshole responds, there are some left - but those who are are generally protected by laws despite the libertarian medieval utopic vision). The largest grocer in the United States is Wal-Mart or Kroger, I haven't checked recently. I'm guessing one of those two is also the largest "baker." The largest barber is probably some chain, I apologize for not being up on chain barber/salons. You don't think Wal-Mart can have a negative impact on society? We're not talking about the small European village where people really still go to the baker, the butcher, and the grocer everyday (my Oma did this every day, but again, these were protected from chains by German law).

What I dislike about your response is that I am somehow not permitted to discuss what is and is not good for society. As if we cannot come together and say, "let's not use lead paint on children's toys." But no, now I'm determining something for the sake of society at the expense of the individual who may want his or her children to suck on lead paint loaded toys all day because he can save a few bucks. Accumulating wealth while others live in deprivation may be your idea of "contributing to society" but it is not mine. I really don't care if you dislike my definition or not.

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I believe that if we strengthen the individual, meaning not one person only but all individuals as individuals, then we will by extension strengthen society. Society is, after all, a collection of individuals.

That is a paraphrase of a famous quote by Maggie Thatcher, and more wrong a person could not be. Though, I will credit you for not entirely dismissing the notion of society completely. It is interesting that you breakdown society into the components of individuals. I tend to think of individuals as a reflection of society, among other factors.


I don't dismiss the notion of society at all. I guess you're talking about Thatcher's statement that society does not exist. I do think that is a stupid comment in and of itself because clearly society does exist. Personally, I just don't place society over the individual. And society does not exist before individuals. Society exists because of individuals. The thing is, society is never the same for all people. The Goths, the Goreans, the Wiccans, the Baptists, et cetera all live in sections of society that are in many ways different from one another. What is important to one group is not important to another. This sort of decentralized order arises because society is a collection of individuals. To impose an order from the top down is to disregard individuals as individuals. And I agree, to an extent, that individuals are in many ways influences by the society in which they live, but individuals can also influence the society. Menlo Park, Civil Rights marches, the Founding Fathers, I could go on and on about individuals and groups of individuals who changed society. I have a difficult time seeing society as something other than a collection of individuals, because to be, that is the reality of the situation, To try to claim something else would be, imo, trying to claim something that simple is not so.

I place society over the individual. Of course society is not the same and it will and must change. Civil Rights was about the power of a collective group. Trade Unions and the changes they brought were about the power of a collective group. I don't see where you are going with this at all.

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No, this is capitalism and the democracy it has created. Even worse is the horrible discrimination that on your best day you must admit has been a serious black eye to capitalist nations. Still today, both in the public and private sectors an individual is limited in her advancement for no other reason than she is a woman, or black, or came from a poor background. In this very country!


I don't know how one can blame racism, sexism or other similar discrimination on capitalism. Capitalism doesn't make discrimination happen, individuals do.

Now you are separating capitalism from the society that uses it when it is convenient. Discrimination is used all the time, in a passive and an active form in the public and private sectors of this very country. Those scions of wealth, the people in places of power, the elite, still use their economic tools (i.e. capitalism) to keep barriers in place. You may not like it, but it is the way of things. And even if you chalk it up to individuals - isn't that what individualism is about?

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Who is claiming to give the government more power?


Are you not one who advocates more wealth redistribution by the government?

Sure, but that isn't really socialism. I'd prefer a Swedish style system here and I've even provided good data to back it up, but socialism itself only comes from the working class after capitalism collapses upon itself.

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As I said above, it is more than income inequality. Capitalism has given monumental strength to racial, gender, and other types of inequalities.


On the contrary, while I agree capitalism has resulted in people having some power of discrimination, I think it allows people of various groups to find success anyway. I'm not saying capitalism as it functions is perfect. People are involved, so it can't be perfect. And I'm not saying there is not more to be done to fight racism and the like, but as I said before, such discrimination is the fault of individuals, not of capitalism.

I'm sorry Prince, but that sounds like a cop-out more than anything.

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Some believe the government (commune, works councils, whatever form it is) should have absolutely no role in private individual lives. Others, like myself, believe that it is the responsibility of the works councils to ensure that some basic principles and societal norms are maintained.


Again, what I see is you wanting to see society controlled. But what I don't see is how you can possibly achieve that and have a classless society where no one is discriminated against and everyone is socially equal according to your definition. I think your means are at odds with your goals.

I don't see where I can convince you otherwise, to be honest.

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The problem with your explanation is that you place every individual in a vacuum as if one's actions has no consequences on another. Slavery in the United States had consequences that still exist to this very day. The mega-wealthy living opulent lifestyles have consequences. The modern notion of individualism and low taxation has consequences, especially on the poor. Someone "reaching the level of financial achievement that suits them" sounds nice on its face, but is it really? What are the consequences? Who did he step on and over?


I have no idea why you would think that I'm placing every individual in a vacuum. In point of fact, I am recognizing that people live in a society where the actions of one or some can have impact on the lives of others. This is part of the reason why I oppose things like corporate welfare, socialist programs, and closed borders. It also part of the reason I support things like capitalism, the protection of individual rights and helping others in need. Yes, the consequences of slavery are still playing out, and the proper response, imo, is not to make the individual the drone of society but to protect better the rights and liberty of the individual.

Your apparent assumption that financial achievement requires someone to "step on and over" other people is not correct. You're ignoring that I'm not talking about everyone wanting to be "mega-wealthy" because in reality, not everyone does. Many people are satisfied with a level that we would currently call middle class living. Even small business owners are not generally looking to be the next Bill Gates. They just want to do something they enjoy and to live with reasonable financial comfort. If someone sells a lot of a good or service that people are willing to buy then he's not stepping on anyone. He is merely making an exchange a good or service for money. This is part of how people cooperate. I don't have to grow my own vegetables or make my own shoes or find my own medical treatments. I can cooperate with others who do those things by exchanging something I have for something they have. People working together, contributing to society. Is this system perfect? Of course not because people are involved. But it is getting better.

Division of labor? Really? You don't honestly believe that socialists haven't thought of that one, do you? *sigh*

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You seem to think that I am against freedom of trade and I am not.


No, I just have trouble reconciling trade with a removal of the notion of property from society.

I don't see why. Goods and services would still be produced.

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Look at Mexico and their poor farmers. They were swallowed up and destroyed by ADM after NAFTA. They simply cannot compete with American agribusiness, so a few large landowners in poor third world countries get wealthy by selling their land to American Agribusiness. Then it can either be used for agriculture, or allowed to lie fallow forevermore. You paint a nice little David & Goliath scenario, but in the real world it doesn't happen like that. Our own small farmers in this nation cannot compete with ADM (and the other major companies) even with both being subsidised.


You seem be assuming that the only thing holding the small farmer down is larger farms and businesses. Part of this picture is also tariffs, subsidies, regulations and assorted laws and fees that the government has imposed. I'm arguing that we get rid of all or most of that. If we did I think you would see that taking down the artificial barriers would help the poorer farmers accomplish more.

I'm going to say something that I normally would not. I think you very much need to read up on the economics of agriculture, especially in third world countries. Look at the agriculture of Canada and Mexico after NAFTA. Of course there are costs to running a farm, including fees, but it is a competitive industry. Start by looking at the real price of agricultural commodities since the mid 80's or so. You may very well be surprised.

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Minimum wage laws are not a socialist idea and in fact, if you read British history you'll see that in the UK the Trade Unions vehemently opposed the wage floor (until the so-called "moderate" union leaders came in the 90's with Tony Blair). If the United States had decent Trade Unions a minimum wage would not be necessary and it is by no means a socialist notion, at least not in my book. It is your typical bourgeoisie tool, used very effectively by the right and center.


I certainly don't see it as a tool of the capitalists. And I don't see the right pushing for minimum wage increases.

No, the right obviously does the opposite and keeps the artificial wage floor as low as possible. It is a wonderful tool for capitalists as it doesn't have to reflect economic reality of the working class in any way. Ideally this should be handled by Trade Unions, not politicians.

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I'm not trading liberty for safety at all. Again, I think you misunderstand socialism to a great degree.


That is entirely possible. However, socialism as you present it looks to me a lot like trading liberty for safety.

And yet, my final statement gets attacked as being a common and trite attack on libertarians, but this is different? *sigh*

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For example, you use the phrase: "trying to define for other people what should make them happy" and that isn't even close to what socialism does. Social Equality and Social Justice are what they are. Happiness is an internal emotion, it has nothing to do with socialism (or capitalism, or any political philosophy for that matter).


I disagree. My political philosophy has much to do with allowing people the liberty to pursue happiness. Your version of socialism, with lack of all property and worker councils to enforce social behavior rules seems to me to be exactly about defining for other people what should make them happy. Contributing to society according to the rules of socialism and as enforced by socialists is what people are supposed to want to do, apparently. You leave no room for the individual because you have taken away something that is fundamental, the right to property. The right to property is not just about owning land and cars and such. It applies to the individual as well in that the individual owns himself. He owns his body, his labor, his time and his mind. Socialism takes that away. The individual is then owned by society and the worker councils. Why is this desirable? For the sake of social equality and social justice you tell me. Not so the individual can find his own happiness but so we can supposedly protect society. Safety for liberty. Controlling society to prevent individuals from behaving differently, having different social opinions, et cetera. This is intimately connected with happiness for the individual. And this goes back to me recognizing that people live in a society where the actions of one or some can have impact on the lives of others.

No. You are forgetting the first part of my definition of Social Justice. Socialism absolutely does not remove what you say it does. But it does remove class, poverty, and discrimination and all of the humiliation and degradation that comes with those. If you call that a loss of liberty in exchange for safety then so be it. I'll plead guilty every day of the week and twice on Sunday.

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What I see in liberty is just the status quo of promises that democracy and capitalism continue to make and break on a daily, monthly, yearly basis. Yet, still we have the growing gap between rich and poor. Still we have terrible discrimination. Still we have a society, not only content, but even some are damned proud that we disregard our poor, starving, homeless, sick.


I don't know any of those proud people, and I think possibly you're being unfair. What I see in liberty is the hope of changing the society for the better rather than being forced into a top down pattern of control. What I see in socialism is stagnation and social mediocrity.

As little as I have apparently convinced you of socialism's merits, you have really provided nothing to persuade me of libertarianism's positive aspects.

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And you offer empty promises of more liberty? To do what? Starve more freely? Die of preventable disease with more liberty? Bourgeoisie noise.


Come on, JS. I expect more of you than this. Here we are, back the same old tried and tired notion that wanting liberty means wanting people to suffer and dies in misery and alone. You could not be more wrong. I could talk about how liberty for the individual involves freedom to cooperate with others for common goals. I've done that many times before. But I want to focus on something else for the moment. The implication of the wanting liberty means wanting people to suffer and dies in misery and alone notion is that somehow socialism is the answer to all of society's ills. Socialism will make everyone equal. No one will starve and no one will suffer from preventable disease. And so on. The general idea being that socialism will protect people from the bad things that happen in life. Safety in exchange for liberty.

Supposedly socialism is inevitable because capitalism will peak and then collapse in on itself and the masses will then demand socialism. I don't buy it. One of the things that makes capitalism work is that it is a decentralized and adaptable system. The more people try, generally via the government, to move away from that decentralized and adaptable system to something more centrally structured and rigid, which in my opinion would be socialism, the more problems will arise. And if the goal is more power in the hands of the people, then a decentralized and adaptable system is exactly what we need. Will it solve all of society's problems. No. But will be better able to respond to problems and progress toward effective, long-term solutions.

I have nothing against people choosing for themselves to live in a socialist community. But I do have a problem with trying to force all of society to do so. The reason is that I don't believe much in one-size-fits-all solutions. People fault liberty for not addressing all of society's needs, but I think that is unfair. I don't believe it is up to liberty or any single ideology to address all of the problems in society. I think that is up to people. And not all people need or want the same solution. And I think we fail society if we try to enforce one solution on everyone. Some people may need a lot of help. Some folks just need to have others get out of their way. In my opinion, liberty allows people to find their own way to address the needs of others and allows people in need to find the sort of help that suits them best. Socialism, as best I can tell, says there is one way and all people must adhere to it.

[/quote]

As long as there is no social equality, no social justice, and there is class struggle there will always exist a multitude of problems in every society. Socialism won't cure everything and it isn't perfect. Nor will it look the same in every society, but it will have common traits, including social equality, justice, and classlesness.

Something Sirs said once has stuck with me, not because I want to pick on Sirs, but because I think it is a common modern attitude with WASP American culture. He said, "I don't want to pay for other people's mistakes." We were talking about welfare at the time. I think Sirs, like most Americans is a decent person. In fact, he may have a bit more common decency than most folks. Yet, to me that is the essence of individualism.

You think no one is hurt by ownership of property? Ask yourself how many people died so you, a white man, can own the land you live on today. How many people die in ridiculous wars over what? Land, to obtain minerals, water, oil, or other valuable resources. People are willing to kill another human being to protect their "property rights." But you say it doesn't hurt anyone? Hunger kills millions in this world, many, many, many, MANY times more than will ever die from international terrorism will die in one year from hunger. Yet, how much food and agricultural products are simply wasted? But - that is an individual's property right, correct?

A famous man said the quote in my signature and it is likely someone many people would not expect it to be. I find the right to property to be sinister at best.
« Last Edit: November 15, 2007, 06:45:11 PM by _JS »
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sirs

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #62 on: November 15, 2007, 07:31:57 PM »
Something Sirs said once has stuck with me, not because I want to pick on Sirs, but because I think it is a common modern attitude with WASP American culture. He said, "I don't want to pay for other people's mistakes." We were talking about welfare at the time. I think Sirs, like most Americans is a decent person. In fact, he may have a bit more common decency than most folks. Yet, to me that is the essence of individualism.

I appreciate the sentiment Js, and your recollection of my position and what you believed I said is close, but not entirely accurate.  It's not so much that I "don't want" to pay for other people's mistakes.  It's that ethically and morally I should not be made to pay for other people's mistakes.  That strikes as being a full time enabler, facilitating a continuation of those mistakes, since there are no repercussions, outside of perhaps a stigma.  And even that is frowned upon, because it might make said person feel bad, maybe even feel offended.  Just keep making mistakes, and we'll have the Government take other people's money to bail you out, again, and again, and again, and again.

When does it stop Js?  When do you tell the person who's making the mistakes to learn from them and stop making them?  And more importantly, how do you facilitate that process vs the enabling process of socialism?
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Plane

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #63 on: November 16, 2007, 02:28:10 AM »
Quote
Quote from: _JS on November 14, 2007, 03:04:35 PM

Whenever there is a massive accumulation of wealth then there is also deprivation. There is only so much capital possible at any given time.



But this is not a zero-sum situation. At any given time there may be a specific amount of capital available, but that does not mean that more cannot be created.

It is a finite number. Yes, over time more can be created through untapped capital but a lot of people mistake pecuniary benefits for expansion. Plane is a good example.


I wonder if we are talking about the same thing. 
Consider that if all of humanity were stricken with amnesia, there would be no capitol at all.
Most of Capitol is produced day by day and one use of capitol is to increase the capitol producers ability to produce capitol.

I imagine you as a relatively well educated person , gaining this education cost someone some capitol  , but , after you gained the education your ability to produce capitol was greater than it was before you got educated.

If you are an artisan the you may use some of your capitol to buy supply's or infastrucure for yourself such as clay or a kiln, paint or an easel, thereby continuing or improving your ability to produce capitol.

If you are an employer , you want to make money from the efforts of each employee , this doesn't only motivate you to minimize unproductive employees , it motivates you to increase the number of employees you employ productively.

If you are running a productive enterprise , you have a great motive to produce more and better and to expand improving your plant and hiring more .Perhaps i you can afford it doubling your production by building a sister to your first factory.

I could make this a very long list of things that can be done with capitol to increase capitol , but you are probably getting my point by now, to consider Capitol as a fixed quantity is to ignore the nature of Capitol.

Taxes tend to reduce the capitol available for the production of capitol , lower taxes therefore do not necessarily reduce the tax receipts if the total result is less restriction on the throat of the Economy.

Socialism is espoused by people who do not understand that the socailism itself depends on the portion of the economy that is not yet socialized , which is the part that is allowed to grow , the part that can produce the tax.

To the extent that we can afford Socialism and still have a viable economy ,  and the expense is tolerable, it can be a good thing in small doses ,  but to try to achieve a just and fair society through the use of socialism is self defeating  . It becomes a process of seeking out the very people and processes that produce the most capitol and stopping them.

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #64 on: November 16, 2007, 07:55:51 AM »
It becomes a process of seeking out the very people and processes that produce the most capitol and stopping them.
===========================================================================
All societies do this. It is called "crime prevention".

Who has a better way of acquiring capital than the thief?

Multi-level marketing comes close to extorting the highest possible profit on cheapo goods, but it only borders on illegality.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

Michael Tee

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #65 on: November 16, 2007, 09:16:56 AM »

<<All societies do this. [seek out and stop the very people  and processes that produce the most capital]  It is called "crime prevention".>>

"All property is theft."  (La propriete, c'est le vol!)  Pierre-Joseph Prudhon

All kinds of philosophical ramifications from that.  One being, "so what?  It's just the way we are."  There's an anarchist streak of commonality at war with what seems to be man's animal nature.  But there have been communal societies.  The greatest advances come from capitalism and greed but they also produce the greatest miseries.  But philosophically you can even question the significance of misery - - even pain is a part of life.  And who really gives a shit?  I think in the end it all comes down to love, which is not a logical thing, it's either in your heart or it's not.  If it's in your heart to love your fellow man and feel his pain as your pain, then you're a communist; if you feel, fuck him, it's HIS problem, I'm gonna get mine, then you're a capitalist.  There's no real right or wrong, it's just who you are.

_JS

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #66 on: November 16, 2007, 01:49:38 PM »
Quote
Quote from: _JS on November 14, 2007, 03:04:35 PM

Whenever there is a massive accumulation of wealth then there is also deprivation. There is only so much capital possible at any given time.



But this is not a zero-sum situation. At any given time there may be a specific amount of capital available, but that does not mean that more cannot be created.

It is a finite number. Yes, over time more can be created through untapped capital but a lot of people mistake pecuniary benefits for expansion. Plane is a good example.


I wonder if we are talking about the same thing. 
Consider that if all of humanity were stricken with amnesia, there would be no capitol at all.
Most of Capitol is produced day by day and one use of capitol is to increase the capitol producers ability to produce capitol.

I imagine you as a relatively well educated person , gaining this education cost someone some capitol  , but , after you gained the education your ability to produce capitol was greater than it was before you got educated.

If you are an artisan the you may use some of your capitol to buy supply's or infastrucure for yourself such as clay or a kiln, paint or an easel, thereby continuing or improving your ability to produce capitol.

If you are an employer , you want to make money from the efforts of each employee , this doesn't only motivate you to minimize unproductive employees , it motivates you to increase the number of employees you employ productively.

If you are running a productive enterprise , you have a great motive to produce more and better and to expand improving your plant and hiring more .Perhaps i you can afford it doubling your production by building a sister to your first factory.

I could make this a very long list of things that can be done with capitol to increase capitol , but you are probably getting my point by now, to consider Capitol as a fixed quantity is to ignore the nature of Capitol.

Taxes tend to reduce the capitol available for the production of capitol , lower taxes therefore do not necessarily reduce the tax receipts if the total result is less restriction on the throat of the Economy.

Socialism is espoused by people who do not understand that the socailism itself depends on the portion of the economy that is not yet socialized , which is the part that is allowed to grow , the part that can produce the tax.

To the extent that we can afford Socialism and still have a viable economy ,  and the expense is tolerable, it can be a good thing in small doses ,  but to try to achieve a just and fair society through the use of socialism is self defeating  . It becomes a process of seeking out the very people and processes that produce the most capitol and stopping them.

You're not paying attention Plane.

Capital is finite at any given time (t). There is no such thing as infinite capital.

Let's use a basic example, because a factory is getting a bit complex (though we can get into that if you like).

Example

Let's say you decide that in your neck of the woods there is a niche for mid-range Jamaican cuisine. You just happen to know a great Jamaican chef, and you have some start-up money available. Your efforts prove to be fruitful and your restaurant is a big hit. You pull in $80,000 in net profit during your first full quarter.

Now, you might be inclined to say that is $80,000 in pure new capital expansion. Not including the chef you hired, the raw goods you bought, the property you're leasing, etc.

But is it?

Let's look closer. One of your favorite patrons is XO. He cannot get enough Ackee and Saltfish. Now, XO has a budget for eating out. This budget exists, whether he sits down and writes it out or he just keeps track of it in his mind. This is true for most wage-earners or those on fixed-income (retirees). Your Jamaican restaurant is getting a piece of XO's entertainment budget. Now, has XO's entertainment budget expanded because of your restaurant? Of course not. He has simply transferred his conspicuous consumption dollars from one establishment to another.

So let us look at that establishment, your competition. Sir's restaurant is a mid-range seafood spot down the road that caters to Caribbean tastes. XO and many like him have not eaten at Sir's restaurant in quite some time. They've clearly taken their business to your establishment. To cut costs Sir's has had to let some of his staff go, he's also shown a P/L of ($70,000) last quarter.

Fresh Fish and Poultry Delivery Inc. brings their business to you first, because you pay upfront (as you have the resources to do so). You buy the prime pieces of Cod and chicken, whereas Sirs purchases what's left on his line of credit. There is finite number of fish and fresh fish providers. Sirs could offer frozen seafood as an alternative, but he has to weigh that against his need to bring in more customers.

So where has this $80,000 of net profit come from? Is it "capital creation?" No, quite clearly it is not. It is what we call a pecuniary benefit. In a closed vacuum Plane's restaurant created capital, sure. His chef has more purchasing power. He has a high net profit. Plane has higher purchasing power.

But it is not a vacuum is it? Sir's has lower purchasing power, his released employees have lower to no purchasing power. XO is not spending more on eating out, he simply shifted priorities within his budget to where he no longer eats at Sirs place and instead dines on Jamaican cuisine at Plane's joint. Fresh Fish and Poultry Delivery Inc is happy to have more liquid assets from Plane, but they aren't particularly any better off than before. Even if they are and are selling more fish than before, that fish comes from some finite amount of fish and means that somewhere someone (some company) is getting less.

Does that make sense now?

I'm really surprised that this is such a difficult concept, even right wing economists have no problem with this. As I said earlier, that is the entire argument against public sector budget expansion.

Quote
Socialism is espoused by people who do not understand that the socailism itself depends on the portion of the economy that is not yet socialized , which is the part that is allowed to grow , the part that can produce the tax.

I'll be perfectly honest, that statement is not even worth addressing. It is a typical strawman argument. Weak, illogical, and unworthy of discussion.
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Plane

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #67 on: November 16, 2007, 11:55:35 PM »
Capital is finite at any given time (t). There is no such thing as infinite capital.




Sigh.

Capitol is not Infinate I did not say that it was.
Capitol is not finite either .

One point at a time , Infinte and finite are not the only states a number can have.

Human capitol is neither my saying that it is not  finite does not even imply that it is infinite.


Look at how you must qualify the finite nature of capitol by sayig it is "finite" at " any given time (t)" this is an admission that the stuff is in flux. What does its being finite for an instant do for a human liveing his life? 

Flux is not infinate and it is not finite either.

Flux is the real state of Capitol and flux is not "finite".

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #68 on: November 17, 2007, 12:21:20 PM »
It becomes a process of seeking out the very people and processes that produce the most capitol and stopping them.
===========================================================================
All societies do this. It is called "crime prevention".

Who has a better way of acquiring capital than the thief?

Multi-level marketing comes close to extorting the highest possible profit on cheapo goods, but it only borders on illegality.



This must be the most intreagueing post I have seen this year.

You make no distinction between theft and earning?

Do you cash paychecks with a sense of shame?

This is so alien to my way of thinking that I can hardly be sure that I am understanding you at all.

To me theft and earning are antonyms.

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #69 on: November 19, 2007, 01:20:34 PM »
Capitol is not Infinate I did not say that it was.
Capitol is not finite either .

One point at a time , Infinte and finite are not the only states a number can have.

Dear Lord.

Seriously?

I've been about as patient as I could be in explaining this. Was it really so difficult to understand?

Your response is nonsensical.
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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #70 on: November 19, 2007, 02:11:46 PM »
The processes that provide the highest growth of capital will involve the highest return with the smallest outlay of expenses.
If I could copy Microsoft Visa Office Super MegaloPro onto a DVD and sell it for, say $200, it would cost only about 15 cents outlay and maybe a couple of minutes of my time. This would not be real theft in the extent that Bill Gates could still use his copy and sell it for whatever price people might pay.

If I were to steal your Rolex, it would take less of my time, but you would no longer be able to find out the time from it, and that would be a greater degree of theft. I'd get a higher profit, too, but there is a far greater risk that I would get caught and clobbered.

I could sell advertising to you and your ad might not draw even one customer, but I would have to help with the ad some. On the other hand, this would be legal.
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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #71 on: November 19, 2007, 03:14:15 PM »
I've been about as patient as I could be in explaining this. Was it really so difficult to understand?  Your response is nonsensical.

Where as your response has been non-existant    :-\
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Plane

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #72 on: November 19, 2007, 04:18:02 PM »
Capitol is not Infinate I did not say that it was.
Capitol is not finite either .

One point at a time , Infinte and finite are not the only states a number can have.

Dear Lord.

Seriously?

I've been about as patient as I could be in explaining this. Was it really so difficult to understand?

Your response is nonsensical.

IT is my point in the first place that it makes no sense to call "Capitol" as a global phenominon  "finite" .

Even you qualify this "finite" as at a moment or point of time.

What sense does that make?

No it is not infinate, but to say that it is not two o'clock does not imply  that it is seven o'clock so when I say it is not "finite" amd not saying , nor implying that it is infinite. It is neither. Finite and infinite are opposites just as twelve and six are opposite on a clock face there are a lot of other numbers on the clock face and so to say it is not twelve should not lead one to state that it must therefore be six.

  An undeterminable number is neither infinate nor finite.
  An imaginairy number is real and can be infinite or finite or otherwise.
  An irrational number is finite , in a manner of speaking , but its real value would take all of eturnity to state.

   Finally Zero is not a finite amount nor is it infinite , it is both.
 

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #73 on: November 20, 2007, 10:26:19 AM »
This is an unbelievably dumb thing to have to argue Plane. It is common sense that when dealing with economics, a number is either finite or infinite. But, for your pleasure I had an Oxon friend provide a more detailed explanation:

Quote
?For the Maths, the answer?s ?No, but.? In set theory, a set is finite if there is a one to one correspondence between the set and a proper subset of the set of natural numbers, with the empty set being given as finite. From there, the definition of infinite is a set that is not finite (you then get this definition subdivided into 2, with countably infinite being a set with a one to one correspondence between the set and the natural numbers and uncountably infinite being everything else). This definition doesn?t take into account proper classes  http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ProperClass.html (e.g., the class of all sets), but proper classes are bigger than sets, so would automatically be classed as infinite. That, however, looks at just sets, and not things with mathematical structure on them. To look at things with mathematical structure on them, the obvious ideas that spring to mind concern Measure Theory http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Measure.html. I don't really know much about this at all (I know quite a bit about Lebesgue Integration mentioned in the link, but nothing about Lebesgue measure, for example). The essence of measure theory is to put measure on things, giving you a concept of quantity, but as the functions all fall into the real numbers, your measure of quantity will always be finite (infinity is not a real number). Going back to the mathematical structure setup, the standard way to work with something in maths is to work in a Category http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CategoryTheory.html, or if your being really crazy, you work in higher categories  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N-category. From there, you have the notion of small category, where the objects are sets rather than a proper class, and there are lots and lots of ways to count and put quantity on categories, objects in categories, morphisms in categories etc, but 99.9% of these are useless, don't tell you anything, and are just you (you in general, not you in particular) just making up bullshit that no one would care about. Categories are something I know a lot about (my PHD is currently based around working with something called the stable homotopy category of equivariant spectra), but I know nothing about classing categories by size (except for classifying k-tuply monoidal n-categories, which you really, REALLY, don't want to know about). Finally, you can obviously classify (weak) n-Categories by the n, and this leads onto lots of cool stuff being developed at the moment on infinity categories, and the theory there is tending towards classifying them in the form (infinity,1), (infinity,2) etc, suggesting that actually, although these things are in a sense "infinite", there's a lot more to it than that. Sorry if this answer makes no sense!?

 My point is easily made that his point that everything is either finite or its not, in which case it?s called infinite, is what I was saying! Especially when he says ?infinity is not a real number?! I knew that one! His use of infinity 1, etc, is done not to confuse the non-mathematicians where aleph-hull, aleph-one, etc would be used instead.
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Universe Prince

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Re: another Ron Paul post
« Reply #74 on: November 21, 2007, 01:31:50 AM »

This is not about leaders and followers and who will work less or who will work more.


I think it is since you're defining social equality as "a system of relationships where everyone has equivalent privileges and status".


My point is that Social Equality, as I defined it, is not against human nature at all. Before Calvinism and the development of the "Protestant work ethic" and WASP culture in the modern west, the importance of society, family, and the view of the poor were vastly different than they are today. It was an historical shift towards placing value in accumulating wealth.


I'm sure they were different. I'm not sure I believe they were in line with your view of social equality and social justice.


Quote
But this is not a zero-sum situation. At any given time there may be a specific amount of capital available, but that does not mean that more cannot be created.

It is a finite number. Yes, over time more can be created through untapped capital but a lot of people mistake pecuniary benefits for expansion.


I did not say it was not a finite number. I said this is not a zero-sum situation. The number is finite but it is not fixed.


There you go again.


You've been watching those Ronald Reagan debate videos again, haven't you?


This is not about easy or difficult.


Yes it is. That's why we keep talking about this whole class and social equality thing in terms of money and who has how much.


You don't think Martha Stewart's success is a barrier to others? How many people would be lifted out of poverty with the money Martha Stewart makes? How many families with no housing could live in one of Martha's homes?


See?

No, I do not believe Martha Stewart's success is barrier to someone else. That she has more does not stop anyone else from striving for similar success.



Sure, to her and you it is just a sign of her success and her "right to own property" but it is a true testament to society that there are homeless children, while Martha Stewart (and others like her) have numerous multi-million dollar mansions spread around the country or even around the world. That is her individual right, you'd say. I'd say that is to society's detriment.


She is also able to provide funds for Mt. Sinai Hospital, Heifer International and Robin Hood (the charity, not the fictional character). I'd say her success allows her to contribute to society in important ways.


Don't even pretend like this nation has a real left. We once did when Eugene V. Debs was alive and there was a small but dedicated socialist movement, but the United States left is a joke.


I quit reading at LewRockwell.com because I got tired of people preaching about what is and isn't true libertarianism. I'm sorry you don't like the left in the U.S., but I find your argument a little weak.


We have no socialist policies.


Uh-huh. Okay, you need to define what socialist polices would be then. How about the New Deal, was that socialist? What would be a socialist policy?


This is your capitalism at work spending millions on the coming election. Just watch those corporations spend on the campaigns - now do you think they are doing so with no planned ROI?


I'm sure they are, but that is not my capitalism. I'm opposed to the partnership of business and government.


There is no butcher, baker, grocer, or candlestick maker any longer. (OK, before some asshole responds, there are some left - but those who are are generally protected by laws despite the libertarian medieval utopic vision).


I'm sure you can explain that.


The largest grocer in the United States is Wal-Mart or Kroger, I haven't checked recently. I'm guessing one of those two is also the largest "baker." The largest barber is probably some chain, I apologize for not being up on chain barber/salons. You don't think Wal-Mart can have a negative impact on society? We're not talking about the small European village where people really still go to the baker, the butcher, and the grocer everyday (my Oma did this every day, but again, these were protected from chains by German law).


I don't recall having said Wal-Mart cannot have a negative impact on society. It probably can, but that doesn't mean it necessarily does. Wal-Mart is one among many store chains that provide goods to people at relative low consumer cost. I see this as a benefit. Seems to me, so do most of the people who shop at such chains.


What I dislike about your response is that I am somehow not permitted to discuss what is and is not good for society. As if we cannot come together and say, "let's not use lead paint on children's toys." But no, now I'm determining something for the sake of society at the expense of the individual who may want his or her children to suck on lead paint loaded toys all day because he can save a few bucks. Accumulating wealth while others live in deprivation may be your idea of "contributing to society" but it is not mine. I really don't care if you dislike my definition or not.


Oh dear. I never said you were not permitted to discuss what is and is not good for society. (I kinda thought that is what we were doing.) I believe my objection is to the apparent desire to decide for everyone else what their behavior should be. I am fairly certain that no point did I suggest anyone was wrong for wanting to keep lead paint off of toys. I am also fairly certain that lead paint on toys isn't at all what we were talking about. I believe what I was commenting on was that the accumulation of wealth is not necessarily something done at the expense of society. But now you're talking as if I'm defending lead paint on toys when I'm doing no such thing.

Accumulating wealth while providing a service to society, such as baking bread, making shoes, bringing the products to market for less cost to the consumer, is this really the same as using lead paint on toys? I believe it is not. Maybe you think higher prices and everyone having to make to make his own shoes is a better way. I don't see that as a path to a better society.



I place society over the individual. Of course society is not the same and it will and must change. Civil Rights was about the power of a collective group. Trade Unions and the changes they brought were about the power of a collective group. I don't see where you are going with this at all.


Yes, you see a collective. I see individuals. Personally, since society is merely individuals, I don't see how society can be more important than the individuals.


Now you are separating capitalism from the society that uses it when it is convenient.


No, I'm separating capitalism as a whole from the actions of individuals. While I'm sure it would be preferable to paint capitalism as a source of evil, capitalism is not an entity that makes people do bad things. There is no devil called 'Capitalism', with bat wings and a handlebar mustache with waxy buildup, secretly influencing people to become purveyors of evil. Yes, a person can be both racist and a capitalist, but the one is not a requirement for the other. And I find myself doubtful that socialism and bigotry are mutually exclusive.


Discrimination is used all the time, in a passive and an active form in the public and private sectors of this very country. Those scions of wealth, the people in places of power, the elite, still use their economic tools (i.e. capitalism) to keep barriers in place. You may not like it, but it is the way of things. And even if you chalk it up to individuals - isn't that what individualism is about?


Yes, discrimination does happen all the time. I discriminate between this grocery store and that grocery store. I discriminate against Pepsi in favor of Coca-Cola. I discriminate in favor Ron Paul and against the other Presidential candidates. Not all discrimination is evil or malicious or even bad.

In this instance, I'm not sure what barriers you're talking about here, but there are more barriers to economic advancement from the government than from the children of wealthy people. So yes, in a sense, you are correct that people in places of power use tools to keep barriers in place. I'm sitting here arguing against those barriers.

Even if I chalk what up to individuals? Discrimination? Racism? Yes, I think people should pretty much be allowed to believe as they choose. Is that a problem? Are you arguing for thought-police?



I'd prefer a Swedish style system here and I've even provided good data to back it up, but socialism itself only comes from the working class after capitalism collapses upon itself.


Sweden? The country that is finding socialism so taxing (no pun intended) on society that the government has had to make slow, small but gradual steps toward less socialism and more of an open market? That Swedish style system? Seems to me, socialism is proving to be the unstable economy and that as it collapses, capitalism becomes the profitable alternative for individuals and for society.


I don't see where I can convince you otherwise, to be honest.


That's okay. You tried. More than some people do. And I've enjoyed this conversation.


Division of labor? Really?


Yeah. Really.


You don't honestly believe that socialists haven't thought of that one, do you? *sigh*


I'm sure they have. I didn't say they haven't. My point was that this notion you're trying to promote of capitalism being every individual for himself is not true.


Quote
No, I just have trouble reconciling trade with a removal of the notion of property from society.

I don't see why. Goods and services would still be produced.


Even if I accept that as true, trade is by definition an exchange of property.


I think you very much need to read up on the economics of agriculture, especially in third world countries.


My basic understanding is this: wealthy countries prop up their farmers with subsidies and tariffs, keeping prices artificially low, making entry into the market place extremely difficult for farmers in poor, third world countries. And the surpluses of food from the wealthy countries are then dumped into local markets in poor countries. Do you have some information contrary to this? I say again, I am for eliminating the subsidies and tariffs and regulations that place artificial barriers to the market for many farmers in poor countries. Seems to me if helping the poor is the goal, then eliminating artificial barriers that do far more harm than good would be desirable. If you know some reason this is not so, then please, feel free to explain it to me.


And yet, my final statement gets attacked as being a common and trite attack on libertarians, but this is different? *sigh*


Actually it was attacked for being trite and wrong. Mostly for being wrong.


No. You are forgetting the first part of my definition of Social Justice. Socialism absolutely does not remove what you say it does. But it does remove class, poverty, and discrimination and all of the humiliation and degradation that comes with those. If you call that a loss of liberty in exchange for safety then so be it. I'll plead guilty every day of the week and twice on Sunday.


Socialism does not remove the right of property? Really? I would be interested in seeing you explain that. And no, removing "class, poverty, and discrimination and all of the humiliation and degradation that comes with those" is not what I am calling "a loss of liberty in exchange for safety". I'm calling the imposition of rules and laws to control human behavior trading liberty for safety.


As little as I have apparently convinced you of socialism's merits, you have really provided nothing to persuade me of libertarianism's positive aspects.


This is no doubt due to my lack of skill in explaining things. I am not the most eloquent person, and I think you might be more persuaded by a more academic argument which I am really not able to offer.


As long as there is no social equality, no social justice, and there is class struggle there will always exist a multitude of problems in every society.


I would say so long as there are people involved, there will always exist a multitude of problems in every society.


Something Sirs said once has stuck with me, not because I want to pick on Sirs, but because I think it is a common modern attitude with WASP American culture. He said, "I don't want to pay for other people's mistakes." We were talking about welfare at the time. I think Sirs, like most Americans is a decent person. In fact, he may have a bit more common decency than most folks. Yet, to me that is the essence of individualism.


Possibly, though I should think most folks, even Sirs, would object to being made to pay for other people's mistakes, not to choosing to help people who have made mistakes.


You think no one is hurt by ownership of property? Ask yourself how many people died so you, a white man, can own the land you live on today. How many people die in ridiculous wars over what? Land, to obtain minerals, water, oil, or other valuable resources. People are willing to kill another human being to protect their "property rights." But you say it doesn't hurt anyone?


I don't recall having said no one ever got hurt as a result of ownership of property. I still have not heard how socialism is going to make vanish from society the desire of some people for power, which has more to do with the wars you talk about than property. And I'd like to point out that I have never seen any stories of Wal-Mart hiring people to blow up Target stores or to start killing K-Mart employees. Occasionally one sees stories about someone being shot over a pair of shoes, but mostly people just go buy some of their own rather than steal or kill to get them. Is owning property the problem, or are individuals in pursuit of power the problem? I think the latter is the case generally.


Hunger kills millions in this world, many, many, many, MANY times more than will ever die from international terrorism will die in one year from hunger. Yet, how much food and agricultural products are simply wasted? But - that is an individual's property right, correct?


One, yes, that is a property owner's right. Two, I have many times over argued against the policies that I think interfere with the development of poorer countries and cause hunger around the world. This world can produce enough food many times over to feed the world. The problem is we've gotten so caught up in bulls--t policies of protectionism and nationalism that we've interfered with the natural workings of trade that would help to solve a lot of those problems. Three, I get that you're trying to claim some sort of moral ground here with the comment about wasted food. But society does not become more moral by passing laws to control human behavior. Morality is a choice. Say what you will about property, I don't see anywhere in scripture where God established strict moral control over society. Even in the Old Testament, with all of its laws, before the Israelites demanded a king, the social order God established was one without a central controlling government. All through out scripture people were supposed to choose. When you start taking away choice from people, they loose the capacity for moral decision. If a person does something because the law demands it rather than because it is moral, the person has obeyed the law, not made a moral choice. You cannot make people be moral by law. And more often than not, trying to force people to be moral is in itself not a moral choice. This is what the Pharisees sought, and for what Jesus so often condemned them. The obedience to the law rather than the liberty of the rational choice. The law said no work on the Sabbath, no eating without washing hands, and Jesus broke these laws suggesting along the way the the law was not the point, but rather that choosing to serve God was the point. I'm sure you can argue with all I just said, but my ultimate point here is that while you're trying to claim a moral ground and perhaps to thereby shame me into agreeing with you, I don't believe you have the moral ground, nor am I ashamed of supporting liberty.


A famous man said the quote in my signature and it is likely someone many people would not expect it to be. I find the right to property to be sinister at best.


Well, I went and looked it up, and as best I can determine, Pope John Paul II is the source of your quote. Being Protestant, I claim the right to disagree with the Pope. I find the right to property to be reasonable, moral and beneficial. At the very least it helps to protect the individual as an individual and not merely as a "dignified" cog in society. We need more recognition of it, not less.
« Last Edit: November 21, 2007, 01:38:48 AM by Universe Prince »
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