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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
odds and ends
Monday, January 2, 2012 10:20 PM
MAGONSDAUGHTER
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:09 AM
CANTTAKESKY
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Whether you meant to or not, you very much left the impression that small businesses are more affected by regulation than large ones.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:17 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: All evidence is that people, buy and large, choose cheap over local and or personal in the long run. Hence the popularity of internet shopping. You wish it were not that way, but wishes aint fishes.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:31 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: A market economy based on supply and demand with little or no government control.
Quote:Nothing there about the size of business, elimination of stock market, or anything else in your definition.
Quote:In fact, there is no way to GUARANTEE competition in an unregulated market.
Quote:In an unregulated market, history seems to show that the large get larger and that businesses consolidate,...
Quote:...what you would LIKE a free (unregulated) market to look like doesn't make it so.
Quote:You have not shown me, or anyone, that an unregulated market will remain competitive.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 3:13 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: So what mechanism is there that would prevent shareholding businesses, or lending money and charging interest, or if you can get the money, buying up all competitors in town and then closing them down.
Quote:Point of interest, in a truly deregulated economy, what would stop anyone from creating their own currency?
Quote:... then you can pay very, very low wages and crummy conditions and you probably will.
Quote:Doesn't mean that they will be able to properly educate their children, have health benefits, pay their mortgage and utilities.
Quote:I've seen places where the street wiring was horrifically dangerous, with cables strung willy nilly all over the place. I've seen places where people's sewerage system runs past their houses, where workers on high rise building sites where no harnesses or hard hats, where glass blowers didn't have basic protective gear, where food was being sold from street vendors cooked in hideously unhigenic conditions. My personal favourite is the motorbikes in Asia, where babies are held on the handle bars, often with granny and a washing machine or a sheep hanging off the back.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 3:36 AM
DREAMTROVE
Quote:Nothing there about ... elimination of stock market
Quote: An example regarding wages, if you run a business where the skill level required and a labour source that is greater than available jobs, then you can pay very, very low wages and crummy conditions and you probably will.
Quote: People have willingly used slaves if they can get away with it and payment of wage isn't regulated.
Quote: Wages and conditions are not fixed, and choice for workers is only an option if there are better payed jobs available where they live, or if they have the opportunity and the capacity to upgrade their skills.
Quote: Businesses have always thrived when there is a cheap source of labour available.
Quote: That is also a mechanism of free markets, but it doesn't always go that the majority of people, at least those that work in those industries will benefit other than they will have a job. Doesn't mean that they will be able to properly educate their children, have health benefits, pay their mortgage and utilities.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 5:16 AM
SIGNYM
I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 5:17 AM
BYTEMITE
Quote:You're an extremist, and extremists are dangerous people.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 5:22 AM
Quote:Magon to Sky: You're an extremist, and extremists are dangerous people.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 5:28 AM
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 5:31 AM
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 5:42 AM
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 5:47 AM
Quote:Communism and free market alike have shown promising results on a small scale, in small communes and small local economices and what not. So I don't think it is illogical to ask for a chance to try it on a larger scale.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 7:38 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Actually, CTS is a True Believer, very much like The Operative. She is willing to sacrifice all kinds of people for a belief that even she doesn't fully understand.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 12:12 PM
FREMDFIRMA
Quote:Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 12:29 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: All evidence where you are. All evidence that you know. There is a world out there that doesn't always abide by the consumer culture you are familiar with. Price is definitely a big factor in consumer decisions the world over, yes. But it isn't the ONLY factor. Time, transportation, interaction, "brand" or seller loyalty, safety, quality of products, smells, sounds, familiarity.... all these variables affect buying decisions. Culture matters. If economic models don't take culture into account, they're wrong.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 12:40 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: So if people choose to behave without concern for culture, in your world, what do you do about it?
Quote: Can you please stop being such a tosser. You are not the only person on these boards to have travelled and experienced different cultures.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 12:48 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: I think any economic system will show flaws when propagated to a large scale. Only on the small scale is it self-regulating. But, there may be something to be said of a large scale composed of a lot of independent small scale efforts.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 12:50 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: That's pretty awesome. Sky, I'm jealous. Extremists *and* dangerous. She almost just called you a BDH ;)
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 1:09 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: So what mechanism is there that would prevent shareholding businesses, or lending money and charging interest, or if you can get the money, buying up all competitors in town and then closing them down.Mechanism? It's called refusal to sell. Or demand a price high enough that you can move everyone elsewhere.
Quote:So create your own currency. Why shouldn't currency be competitive as well?
Quote: Quote:... then you can pay very, very low wages and crummy conditions and you probably will. Yes, this has happened a lot throughout history. It is up to workers to demand higher wages and better conditions. This is called a union. This has happened a lot throughout history as well.
Quote: Quote:Doesn't mean that they will be able to properly educate their children, have health benefits, pay their mortgage and utilities.This happens NOW in fully regulated economies like that of the USA. If a bad outcome occurs in both regulated and unregulated economies, then the chances are, the bad outcome is caused by something else besides regulation or lack of regulation.
Quote:LOL. Yes to all of it. Freedom isn't utopian. We already knew that. You're a Core planet kind of gal, and the outer planets with the religious nuts, bandits, and reavers horrifies you. Sure. 1) Situations that are unacceptable to you aren't unacceptable to them. Meaning, you can choose to never live in unregulated economies yourself. But you can't choose to make them live in YOUR lifestyle, or that your lifestyle and your standards are the only right ones. 2) For people who are used to living this way, as long as the babies don't fall off the handlebars and the high-rise worker doesn't fall off the building, everything is fine. They would rather take these risks than live under a culture of regulation where someone else TELLS them they are not ALLOWED to take risks. Shouldn't they be free to decide that? You'll find that despite the horror of the risk, not a lot of babies actually fall off the handlebars of motorcycles.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 1:27 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Right, I'd only recommend a reduction of regulation IF we were in that environment where small businesses outcompete big businesses. One has to come before the other. Our challenge this day and age is to bring about that economic revolution. I do not believe that can be done through government intervention, I think it has to be a populous movement, since the government is made up of the same people coming from those corporations. But you are welcome to try. I suppose the issue of shares may depend on the wealth of the person investing. Certain economic systems have less wealth disparity than others. A family offering up shares to create a family restaurant (or even a chain of them) or even seeaking out investors is perhaps not a deal-breaker for an economic system, provided none of them or the combination of them is Hilton-family level wealthy.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 1:45 PM
Quote:I was responding to DT who excluded the idea of competitive currencies in a free market.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 1:58 PM
Quote:Originally posted by dreamtrove: My definition was *my* free market. Not the one I'd create, but one I'd accept as free. If a system allows the govt. to give billions of dollars to a company which that company can use to knock out competition, then it's not exactly a free market. It's still incomplete, but I would accept my four points as being a free market. Things that only fit the one line I would still think were free market policies, but not ideal. Still, if they can fit my definition, they're my definition of a free market. That still doesn't mean they're a system I would set up.
Quote: It's not regulation that prevents the creation of new currencies, it happens all the time. It's very hard to make a currency that's stable enough to get people to put their money in it.
Quote: If a company wanted to raise money, they might issue bonds, something with some sort of guarantee, but you notice that when they set up bonds, they didn't give people a share of control over the company right at the outset, because that's not a bright thing to do. The only reason they do it is because large banks are handing them billions of dollars out of the starting gate for doing it, and they are able to create that money by force of law.
Quote: And good for you. You've created jobs. Wages are cheap, any business looking to create jobs will come in. That will take care of your excess skilled labor, and wages will go up. Remember about 20 years ago when Korea was a cheap labor market that people outsourced to? I remember hearing a lot of grumbling about it at the time. Labor was cheap. Everyone went there and created jobs. That's why the wages went up. I was just reading Samsung assembly workers make $20-$30 an hour, teach are making 75-$150k, looking for work? Maybe you should move to Korea. Curious how this turns around isn't it?
Quote: Ah, but who is it who creates slavery? Is it a free market? Or was it done by force of law? Did the supply of blacks really so vastly exceed the available work that their labor was really worthless? Or did the situation have to be held down with threat of violence? In comparison, the apple factories in China, which is not to make a product comparison, but a national one, because I agree corporations would probably go wherever, there is a situation of very close to slave labor. What happened? A few things. 1) The factories have armed guards, barbed wire fences, and can keep the workers in line 2) The govt. of China will back them up if there is a problem 3) The companies have been docking the workers pay considerably, and even trucking workers into debt. This is what happens at migrant farms also. If you want this not to happen, you need to design your currency to prevent it. This is a problem of not the free market, but crime, that has weapons backing it up, and govt. weapons behind those. This happens here in the USA, and it happens because the govt. lets it happen, not by not stepping in, but by stepping in on the wrong side.
Quote: This is what happens when you have a govt. which steps in. It steps in on the side of power, because that's where its friends are. It doesn't step in for the little guy, because the little guy isn't worth anything to big govt, in fact, he's a liability.
Quote: For centuries we didn't have this problem, and neither did China. People could live where they lived without having to worry about the cost of living.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:01 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Quote:I was responding to DT who excluded the idea of competitive currencies in a free market. I would be very surprised if he did. Sig, DT and I all seem to be on the same page of using currency to undermine existing broken economic systems.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:02 PM
Quote:frankly you are usually better off being employed by a larger company than a small one, where you have a better chance for career progression and financial reward as a worker.
Quote:As I said earlier, the modern world just won't operate with just small businesses and everyones just a street stall vendor.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:06 PM
Quote:see his post above about why competing currencies could not occur.
Quote:You don't need regulation to stop that from happening. If you don't want me just printing my own dollars, then the maker of the currency can just make it impossible to counterfeit, or at least so difficult that it would cost me more than a dollar to do for a one off.
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: Why not concentrate on what works best, rather than blindly following an ideology to its extreme.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:13 PM
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:19 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Um. First of all, perhaps you aren't aware that your response to me has an ad hominem in it.
Quote:Second of all, I'd say that I find it contradictory to extol the virtues of big business when previously you've used monopoly in a negative sense.
Quote:Third of all, CTS has apparently been giving examples of places where such a system exists in the modern world. Your issue with it is that it is not a developed economy. To which I say, so?
Quote: Fourth of all, you seem to not be very familiar with the demoralizing, impersonal, and depressing corporate world aka hamster wheel aka meatgrinder of the United States. Maybe you have it different in Australia? But it kinda sucks here.
Quote: Depends on the economy. Some economic systems self-select against larger businesses. With enough technology, any manufactured product could become easily produced locally. I don't believe the future is a continuing growth of business, business is already global, there's not much place to grow except for making up profits or finangling the system. These global businesses are affected by instability in any of the countries they are invested in, and global means the vibrations and ramifications of that are also global. Sustainable communities are an answer to many problems, and most likely to survive any global instability that comes up.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:22 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Magon: Free trader does not mean what you think it means. Every single one of us here would be against Free Trade, and therefore not free traders. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Trade I'm really hoping that was accidental, as I would be offended to be intentionally called a free trader. Free trade has resulted in NATO, and is related to the recent wars in the Middle East. I'm not even committed to a free market, as you might have noticed in the course of this conversation. I'm only committed to individual communities choosing their own economic system as suits them in a unanimous or at least democratic manner, or possibly through social contract.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:23 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: The ideal behing free market is that it governs itself.
Quote:Ah yes, the 'all government is bad' philosophy. I never understand this philosophy from free traders.
Quote: Unfettered business appears to be all good,
Quote:Black and white thinking.
Quote:The truth is that power lies with both businesses and governments, and both are at their very core, collections of individuals who may behave well, may behave badly, may be altruistic or purely self interested, or a combination of all those features.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:31 PM
Quote:If you have a point here, perhaps you could actually make it. I know you feel it is your duty on this board to blindly defend CTS whenever you perceive they are being attacked, but it doesn't actually add much to the discussion unless you have something to say that supports their argument.
Quote: Ah yes, sustainable communities would be ideal. How to achieve, is the big question.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:37 PM
Quote:Originally posted by canttakesky: Ideally, a true free market would function like a sustainable ecology. Yes, some animals are going to be at the top of the food chain, but they never eat enough to upset the balance of the ecological system.
Quote: Government is force. Force is bad. Therefore government is bad. Business usually doesn't use force on its own. People, in principle, can refuse to work, refuse to sell, and refuse to buy. The line is drawn at use of force and enforcement.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:39 PM
RIONAEIRE
Beir bua agus beannacht
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:43 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: I know you feel it is your duty on this board to blindly defend CTS whenever you perceive they are being attacked,...
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:50 PM
Quote:And I don't like the idea of more than one currency, unless its something like gold which is already worth something in itself, if someone wants to pay me in nuggets that's fine with me.:) But no terras, credits, platenum, ... then again ...
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 2:54 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: That did not elucidate your own stance on whether your issue is that CTS is talking about Peru, which is a developing economy. I was getting the impression this was the case, as it's seemed to me you've been suggesting that local business can't meet the same high-tech demands or manufacturing needs as a big business, which would be an issue of development.
Quote: I've corrected CTS a few times in this thread, and you might have noticed that I don't really support a free market?
Quote: I'll have to go through the paragraph about your personal experience working with different sizes of business. I think that this discussion is about the impact of big business, I suppose wages and opportunities of the workers factor into that, but I'm not sure that's a macroeconomics discussion. I also have to confess myself confused, I remember a posting of a chain email encouraging people to buy local for Christmas. I certainly did... And I did have to fight a local business that tried to rip me off by giving me only a piece of my full order, but I make an effort to support local business whenever I buy, even when it means a three hour transit due to not having my own car.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 3:01 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Magonsdaughter: What is a sustainable ecology????????????????????
Quote:This is your belief system, not a reality.
Quote: You could also argue that governments are just a way of organising societies. That all societies have governance of one form or another.
Quote:That some governments are oppressive and some are not.
Quote:Some are representative of the people and some do not.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 3:14 PM
Quote: I suppose I am arguing these points because DT has made the point that free markets and the existance of large corporations should not co-exist, and I disagree. They are not mutually exclusive.
Quote:Quote:Sky: So create your own currency. Why shouldn't currency be competitive as well? Magon: Well I don't wish to live in your world at all, so I can't answer that. I was responding to DT who excluded the idea of competitive currencies in a free market.
Quote:Sky: So create your own currency. Why shouldn't currency be competitive as well?
Quote:Magon That's my point, DT, you don't get to set the free market rules, cause there aint no rules.
Quote:Are you saying that the only way banks can lend is because of laws?
Quote: Ah, but without regulations, the government doesn't step in at all, remember.
Quote: This has never ever happened. People have had to worry about the cost of living since they stopped being hunter gatherers. Once we moved into a societies, we've had to manage shortages and excesses whether due to climate, conflict or governance.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 3:39 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Fremdfirma: The part y'all seem to miss in your salvos against each other ain't which SYSTEM is any better or worse, but the danger of concentration of power into the hands of those who were not voluntarily given it - or from who it cannot be effectively revoked, that more than anything else is a sign of a doomed system that will inevitably fail, as Kennedy once noted.
Quote: and that is the use of violence against bad actors - generally a privledge of The State, cause really all Law and Regulation come from force, backed by the barrel of a gun, and this isn't really a lot different than what would happen to a bad actor in a free market, only it'd happen sooner with varying degrees of effectiveness depending on the situation, anything from wild-eyed idiots getting mowed down to the whole damn enterprise getting levelled by overwhelming force.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 3:48 PM
Quote:I mean, I meant people do not have to work for others, to push themselves into servitude for abstract moneys to live somewhere because the house they built did not have to pay interest. Sure, it needs repairs, but repairs take hands. Rent and mortgage and property tax are vampires that suck the blood of the people living in the property like ticks and lice.
Quote:If you don't have these problems, sure, you still need to farm etc. to produce food, and no, managing shortages is not something that came with civilization, hunter gatherers had to manage shortages. Don't believe me? Look out side, check out those squirrels.
Quote:Chris posted this thing by Derrick Jensen that was an excellent send up of Civilization. He basically says "civilization is a giant consumer. It derives from the city, which by definition is something where people live beyond carrying capacity. Because of this, they must take their resources from somewhere else. Since there are people on the something else land, those people must by oppressed by the civilization so that it can get the resources. This enables the civilization to grow, but as it grows, it must oppresses more of the world. Eventually, a civilization requires the oppression of the entire planet to continue, at which point the civilization collapses."
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 6:56 PM
Quote:Quid Pro Quo there darlin, so are you. Systems are made of PEOPLE
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 2:29 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: CTS is proposing something called the "free market"... with all the ingredients for an economic clusterfuck... money, private property, banks, stocks, arms...
Quote:And CTS is so oppositional that she cannot abide by the thought of ANY rules whatsoever, not even the rules which prohibit exploitation of one by another.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:32 AM
Quote:Do I want to see people voluntarily reject things I am not thrilled about by becoming educated about their outcomes?
Quote:I oppose rules ENFORCED by a concentration/monopoly of force and violence.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:49 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: But a minority continues to own slaves, insists, in fact, that slave ownership is their right.
Quote:What does the majority do? How do they enforce this "no slave ownership" rule?
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:55 AM
Quote:That is my underlying principle: No force used on people who are not using force.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:57 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: As far as I can tell, CTS, you want a fantasy.
Wednesday, January 4, 2012 3:59 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: And, those who are using force will be restrained by....?
Quote: You and your squirrels. I never said hunter gatherers didn't have to manage shortages, but they are primary producers of their own food and housing. Once society grew into more complex units, specialisation occured and people became at the mercy of cost of living, usually the cost of their staple food.
Quote: And you agree with this? Doesn't this go against everything you have ever argued?
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