Letter to a conservative.

absolutemj's picture

I am a young, 25 year old man from Seattle.  I do not understand your logic.  You believe in global free markets, but you also believe in police-ing the world to your standards and protecting the innocent.  Do you have compassion in one area and none in the other?  You stand up for some, but not for all.  You believe in Darwinism, but not Darwin.  Do you understand? Do you see your hypocrisy? I think you do, and I think you don't care.

Matthew Johnson

Comments

Austro-Libertarian wrote 18 weeks 3 days ago

I'm a conservative and I'm

I'm a conservative and I'm totally with you dude. The U.S. should stop policing the world and have free markets. Compassion all around.

DRC wrote 18 weeks 3 days ago

Where do you find those "free

Where do you find those "free markets" without government rules and regulations?  The law of the jungle is not freedom.  Landlords and warlords love anarchy if they have the guns and money to operate "freely."

I want government out of the bedroom and into the boardroom.  We want a government bureaucrat between us and our banksters--the sheriff.

When conservatives come up with a way to keep Commerce from owning the State, they will be talking about political solutions to political problems.  Just blaming government and not dealing with non-governmental tyranny is just the same old Libertarian laissez faire, and it always leads to Robber Barons, Banksters and the ruination of honest Middle Class Americans.

Try some economic compassion with fair markets where predators are not allowed to do their criminal activities.  It would be real competition about real value, not leveraged buyouts and bundled derivatives.

maraden wrote 18 weeks 3 days ago

Excellent point. I'm for

Excellent point. I'm for competitive markets. I understand that companies will use any quasi-legal means for a competitive edge. This drives them to influence the politicians. This is perfectly natural, but shows why we have to guard our freedom. I'm convinced that corporations have far more influence in Wash DC than people do. If the founders could have forseen this they would have supported Jefferson's amendment. The Fin Reg is clearly a food fight between both parties for Wall St favors. I've told my Senators to focus on tough regulation. Let's see if they do.

"Even as Congress debates legislation to tame it, Wall Street is conducting a bidding war between the parties for its continued beneficence. More than 60 per cent of the $34m given by the financial industry to fund the 2010 elections has so far gone to Democrats, but since January the Street has switched its allegiance to the Republican camp. In the first quarter of this year, Citigroup, Goldman, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley donated twice as much to Republicans as to Democrats." http://robertreich.org/

stwo wrote 18 weeks 3 days ago

is this letter to a

is this letter to a particular conservative?

polycarp2 wrote 18 weeks 3 days ago

Austro-Libertarian wrote: I'm

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

I'm a conservative and I'm totally with you dude. The U.S. should stop policing the world and have free markets. Compassion all around.

Of course, as Adam Smith noted in "Wealth of Nations", free markets can't exist when there are concentrations of productive/economic power. As Ricardo noted in his
Trade Theories of Comparative/Absolute Advantage, when a nation oursources its labor costs...it will impoverish itself.

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a disease"

 

Austro-Libertarian wrote 18 weeks 1 day ago

Quote: Where do you find

Quote:

Where do you find those "free markets" without government rules and regulations?

Wherever there aren't government rules and regulations, considering that is the definition of a free market. (Currently nowhere in the world, but some markets are more free than others and the more free the better)

Quote:

The law of the jungle is not freedom.  Landlords and warlords love anarchy if they have the guns and money to operate "freely."

Right. Freedom, in this context, means justly held private property rights; The right to exclusively do with your property as you wish so long as you do not impinge the rights of other owners. It does not mean the freedom to rob, assault or steal, but freedom from robbery, theft, and assault. You're just playing loose with the word and sloganeering, even though you know what it means in the context of the discussion.

Quote:

I want government out of the bedroom and into the boardroom.

I want them out of both. And I think it's inconsistent to only want freedom in one area but not the other. What is the objective reason for it being desireable in only one area of our lives? There is none.

Quote:

When conservatives come up with a way to keep Commerce from owning the State, they will be talking about political solutions to political problems.

Here's a simple solution. Abolish the government. problem solved.

Quote:

Just blaming government and not dealing with non-governmental tyranny is just the same old Libertarian laissez faire

Non-governmental tyranny is just private crime. And there are ways of dealing with this: getting a gun, hiring private security, and purchasing insurance.

Quote:

just the same old Libertarian laissez faire, and it always leads to Robber Barons, Banksters and the ruination of honest Middle Class Americans.

There is nothing wrong with the old libertarian laissez faire. Robber Barons were part of the feudal state apparatus. Banks are organized into a cartel by the Federal Reserve Act. Their monetary expansion is coordinated by the Fed's reserve requirements and the Fed's monetary expansion. Bailouts are given to them by the government.

The ruination of the middle class is the result of inflation, mass immigration & anti-discrimination legislation, excessive taxes and regulations, which have all combined to erode incomes and destroy savings. It has nothing to do with laissez faire. If anything, the middle class arose because laissez faire allowed for several centuries of capital accumulation.

Quote:

Try some economic compassion with fair markets where predators are not allowed to do their criminal activities.  It would be real competition about real value, not leveraged buyouts and bundled derivatives.

There's nothing inherently wrong with leveraged buyouts or bundled derivatives. I am of the opinion that the current financial crisis can only be explained by the Austrian Business Cycle Theory.

Austro-Libertarian wrote 18 weeks 1 day ago

@ polycarp2 Could you provide

@ polycarp2

Could you provide a page number for the Smith quote. And are you familiar with the law of association (Absolute/Comparative advantage)? Because I don't see how Ricardo's caveat fits in with the rest of his argument and many great thinkers are right about some things and wrong about others.

polycarp2 wrote 18 weeks 1 day ago

Been through that before,

Been through that before, dude. I posted the page numbers on the previous Message Board when I was reviewing the works...along with direct quotes. I'm not going to toddle down to the library  again. Go to the old board and enter a search if you're really interested. It will refresh your memory from the previous conversations.

 Absolute Advantage was refering to nation states...not individual corporations. While outsourcing labor costs  may give  particular corporations  profitable advantages, it impoverishes the nation that allows it. I'd suggest you re-read Ricardo and Smith.

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a disease"

 

rbs wrote 18 weeks 18 hours ago

Austro-Libertarian wrote: @

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

@ polycarp2

Could you provide a page number for the Smith quote. And are you familiar with the law of association (Absolute/Comparative advantage)? Because I don't see how Ricardo's caveat fits in with the rest of his argument and many great thinkers are right about some things and wrong about others.

Austro-Libertarian - Glad you showed up here.  It was getting a little boring now that most of the liberals (real liberals) have been banned.  I can tell you right now, you're not going to get any references from poly, but it's worthwhile at least to point that out.  This ain't the mises.org forum after all.  (By the way, not sure if you participate in the mises.org forum, but look me up over there sometime and say hi if you want.  Over there I'm stevo_dubc.)

Good luck in your efforts here.  I've mostly given up.  However, you are a clear writer with a good understanding of the issues.  I would urge you not to waste too much effort in this forum.  That's been my strategy lately.  I only have so much time in a day, and the dangers of statism are becoming more evident with every day.  Sadly, the state is run based on political power, which is based (for the time being) on voters.  I am looking for voters in less ideological places. 

I think we have to make a distinction between using this forum for entertainment purposes and using it to garner support in the struggle against statism. 

Austro-Libertarian wrote 18 weeks 16 hours ago

Quote: Been through that

Quote:

Been through that before, dude. I posted the page numbers on the previous Message Board when I was reviewing the works...along with direct quotes. I'm not going to toddle down to the library  again. Go to the old board and enter a search if you're really interested. It will refresh your memory from the previous conversations.

 Absolute Advantage was refering to nation states...not individual corporations. While outsourcing labor costs  may give  particular corporations  profitable advantages, it impoverishes the nation that allows it. I'd suggest you re-read Ricardo and Smith.

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a disease"

 

I've never read Ricardo or Smith. Who said I did?

But I'm familiar with their arguments. The argument basically states that if there are proportional inequalities between the productive capacities of two nations along alternate lines of production, national productivity can be increased by specializing in the line which the nation is absolutely or comparatively more efficient and trading.

Now, the law of association applies to more than just nations. It can apply in principle to any two (or more) producing entities. It applies just as much to households, firms, or down to the level of individuals. It is the very reason why we engage in division of labour.

Labour is more productive under a division of labour than under isolated production. Outsourcing is just expanding the division of labour across national boundaries. It doesn't make nations poorer, but richer. Any argument against free trade is an argument in favour of moving closer to isolated production and greater relative poverty.

shalwechat wrote 18 weeks 16 hours ago

most of the

most of the extreme conservatives has been banned in recent years. we seem to have the same group of lefties in here as in the past 2 years.

Austro-Libertarian wrote 18 weeks 16 hours ago

@ rbs What have you actually

@ rbs

What have you actually read on Austrian economics and libertarian theory? What other subjects have you studied?

Why haven't I been banned yet? Were the other libertarians rude or something?

No offense, but unless you have a theory of strategy and know alot of economic theory and philosophy, I'm not really interested in advice on the subject.

polycarp2 wrote 18 weeks 14 hours ago

Austro-Libertrian wrote: I've

Austro-Libertrian wrote: I've never read Ricardo or Smith. Who said I did?

But I'm familiar with their arguments. The argument basically states that if there are proportional inequalities between the productive capacities of two nations along alternate lines of production, national productivity can be increased by specializing in the line which the nation is absolutely or comparatively more efficient and trading.

--------

Perhaps you should read Ricardo before interpreting his theory. A nation that can't grow Teak probably shouldn't attempt to export it. A nation where the wood grows would do better at that. Ricardo didn't include specializing in the line of the cheapest possible wage.

A nation that produces little, ultimately has little....and a few individuals can make enormous amounts of money by outsourcing labor costs and the production associated with it.

I'd suggest reading Ricardo before disconting his warnings on outsourcing labor or capital.

The U.S. population isn't getting richer...it's going broke and the nation, without an international reserve currency, couldn't so much as import an apple. The dollar is increasingly being excluded from international trade agreements including the new China/S.E. Asia pacts and the pacts between Brazil/Russia/China...where the dollar is deemed  unacceptable.

When the U.S. printing press breaks down....the country is done.

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a disease"

ArnieH wrote 18 weeks 9 hours ago

   I've noticed that

  

I've noticed that Republicans and tea baggers are always goin' on about how evil "big government" is---- such an oppressive, meddling burden on the people and business yada yada, But then on the other hand when faced with a socialist argument, always rush to "decry mob rule," and "that's why we're not really a democracy, but a Republic!!" etc.etc.--to keep those belligerent riff-raff from running things?

I don't know-seems like a contradiction to me!

polycarp2 wrote 18 weeks 8 hours ago

Well, Arnie, there is the Tea

Well, Arnie, there is the Tea Party bunch...and then there are true populists.

BILL MOYERS: How does the Tea Party differ from the people you're talking about? We have two groups of Americans, both angry and defiant, and both calling themselves populists. What don't they have in common?

JIM HIGHTOWER: Here's what populism is not. It is not just an incoherent outburst of anger. And certainly it is not anger that is funded and organized by corporate front groups, as the initial Tea Party effort is, and as most of it is still today. Though there is legitimate anger within it, in terms of the people who are there. But what populism is at its essence is a, a just determined focus on helping people be able to get out of the iron grip of the corporate power that is overwhelming our economy, our environment, energy, the media, government. And I guess that's one big difference between real populism and what the Tea Party thing is, is that real populists understand that government has become a subsidiary of corporations. So you can't say, let's get rid of government. You need to be saying let's take over government.

BILL MOYERS: Why don't you call yourself a liberal?

JIM HIGHTOWER: The difference between a liberal and a progressive is that liberals want to assuage the problems that we have from corporate power. Populists want to get rid of corporate power.

There was a fascinating discussion on  Bill Moyer's Journal last night (his final program). Growing real populism vs. the tea party movement. It's encouraging.

Transcript: http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/04302010/transcript5.html

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a disease"

rbs wrote 18 weeks 6 hours ago

Austro-Libertarian wrote: @

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

@ rbs

What have you actually read on Austrian economics and libertarian theory? What other subjects have you studied?

Why haven't I been banned yet? Were the other libertarians rude or something?

No offense, but unless you have a theory of strategy and know alot of economic theory and philosophy, I'm not really interested in advice on the subject.

Okay, that's cool.  keep up the good work.

spankycrissy wrote 18 weeks 2 hours ago

austro and other right

austro and other right wingers.

If free markets outsourcing and deregulation are so wonderful. Why were we not all prospering during the bush years?

The markets and borders were more transparent than ever.

Let me guess, If we would have allowed the system to burn down completely and reset to the new libertarian ideal then we would all be swimming in buckets of money today. Right?

The new right wants it all, they are greedy little children.

They want the freedom to cheat grandma out of her life savings but they want the protection of the limited government for their personal property.

They want the power to dictate what is moral for others but retain the freedom to interpret the rules differently for themselves.

Do as I say not as i do.

The fundamental difference is simple, the new right (fascists) believe in the doctrine that government should protect the business man from the people not the people from the business man.

A thriving business atmosphere is critical for America's survival as a sovereign nation. Border less free trade that is focused on enriching a very few is what has brought down the world economy. We know that now.

There will always be a few greedy unethical con men that will fight for a wild west lawless economic jungle where most of us are nothing but profit centers for their picking.

We need to protect ourselves from these economic predators. If we need to be more like the heard beasts that overwhelm the lions and jackals with shear numbers, so be it. Cattle can defend themselves from attack if they stick together.

We need to call the new fascism what it is, Predatory economics. It is an economics based on taking advantage of the weakness of the economic pray. And like the predators of the wild, the most effective means of attack is to isolate an individual from the heard.

So we hear allot of talk about our freedom to make personal choices and how we can make better decisions for ourselves than as a community and community organizations are somehow not working for our interests but for some hidden cause. Government is bad, less government is better and no government is best.

Without a government focused on the best interests of the majority, we may as well be animals on the plains waiting to be picked off by hyenas, jackals, and lions.

 

polycarp2 wrote 17 weeks 6 days ago

As Jim Higahtower noted in an

As Jim Higahtower noted in an interview on Bill Moyer's Journal, "And I guess that's one big difference between real populism and what the Tea Party thing is, is that real populists understand that government has become a subsidiary of corporations. So you can't say, let's get rid of government. You need to be saying let's take over government. "

Or, as one populist protestor explained:

LARRY GINTER: "The preamble of the constitution says promote the general welfare. Well, does that sound like a government that's hands off? That isn't involved into the overall well-being of everybody in this country? So this idea of get government out of my life- I don't know how that works. Because we're supposed to be a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. So how do I just take government out of my life? I am government! "

http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/04302010/transcript5.html

Perhaps it's time to re-claim it.

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a disease"

drew013 wrote 17 weeks 5 days ago

Austro-Libertarian wrote: Why

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

Why haven't I been banned yet? Were the other libertarians rude or something?

A lot of the actual libertarians that have quit posting here did so out of their own frustration over ideology.  Most of them weren't what I would call "rude"; many of them ( like you seem to be) simply stood firm in their beliefs and others stood firm in theirs.  Most of the "trolls" here are more like hard right ideologues that don't really know what they are saying.  A number of them get banned because their rhetoric goes over the top, they become annoying in their efforts to make a childish word game out of an otherwise intelligent conversation, et cetera.  As long as you make an honest effort at actual exchange of ideas while being polite (for the most part, anyway), you'll never have to worry about being banned.

slabmaster wrote 17 weeks 5 days ago

drew013 wrote:  A lot of the

drew013 wrote:

 A lot of the actual libertarians that have quit posting here did so out of their own frustration over ideology.  Most of them weren't what I would call "rude"; many of them ( like you seem to be) simply stood firm in their beliefs and others stood firm in theirs.

"A lot"? Name two. 99% were banned. 

Quote:
Most of the "trolls" here are more like hard right ideologues that don't really know what they are saying.  A number of them get banned because their rhetoric goes over the top, they become annoying in their efforts to make a childish word game out of an otherwise intelligent conversation, et cetera.  As long as you make an honest effort at actual exchange of ideas while being polite (for the most part, anyway), you'll never have to worry about being banned.

Tell that to Sawdust. His crime was to insult politician Jimmy Carter. The era of groupthink is upon us.

slabmaster wrote 17 weeks 5 days ago

Austro-Libertarian

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

 Why haven't I been banned yet? Were the other libertarians rude or something?

 

The day is young.

polycarp2 wrote 17 weeks 5 days ago

Slabmaster wrote re:

Slabmaster wrote re: banning:

"Tell that to Sawdust. His crime was to insult politician Jimmy Carter. The era of groupthink is upon us."

--------

Hardly. I've diced up every Pres. except FDR...I'll probably get around to him sooner or later...they all have/had their screw ups.

Rules of the Board: http://www.thomhartmann.com/forum/2010/04/message-board-and-chatroom-rules They call for remaining civil, not derailing threads with emotion baiting or repeated intentional diversions.... and not twisting what another poster has said. 

You can denounce actions of any president/politician...including the current twit residing in the White House. The one who appointed the engineers of the current meltdown to head his economic team.

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a ;disease"

 

:

drew013 wrote 17 weeks 5 days ago

I'll defer to Poly. P.S. 

I'll defer to Poly.

P.S.  Slab:  One rhetorical question: You're still here, aren't you?

slabmaster wrote 17 weeks 5 days ago

polycarp2 wrote: Slabmaster

polycarp2 wrote:

Slabmaster wrote re: banning:

"Tell that to Sawdust. His crime was to insult politician Jimmy Carter. The era of groupthink is upon us."

--------

Hardly. I've diced up every Pres. except FDR...I'll probably get around to him sooner or later...they all have/had their screw ups.

Rules of the Board: http://www.thomhartmann.com/forum/2010/04/message-board-and-chatroom-rules They call for remaining civil, not derailing threads with emotion baiting or repeated intentional diversions.... and not twisting what another poster has said. 

You can denounce actions of any president/politician...including the current twit residing in the White House. The one who appointed the engineers of the current meltdown to head his economic team.

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a ;disease"

 

Poly, you and I disagree on plenty, but the current corrupt baffoon in the WhiteHouse may be the countries undoing, and I think we agree on that.

I don't recall Sawdust derailing, baiting, diverting, or changing threads. He mearly called Carter a tottering fool. Presidents get critisized when they do stupid things. 

polycarp2 wrote 17 weeks 5 days ago

It probably had more to do

It probably had more to do with dissing  entire posts by focusing on one  sentence...sometimes taken out of context, rather than calling Carter a tottering fool. That sort of thing derails threads...blunts discussion. He didn't used to do that.

In some respects Carter was a tottering fool...what Pres isn't? They aren't infallible Gods. In other respects Carter was brilliantly prophetic, particularly in regards to energy.

Carter was a gentlemanly statesman...that isn't condusive to dealing with corrupt Congressional twits serving their special interests in a manner slightly above the level of the Mafia.

Carter's failure to extricate U.S. hostages from Iran was a military failure. Carter took the fall for their failed attempt. Perhaps he should have taken the treasonous route...and offered Iran (who we were in a technical state of war with) missiles for them as Reagan did. The right would have touted him as a hero...just as they did Reagan...a tottering, treasonous fool.

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a disease"

DRC wrote 17 weeks 4 days ago

Thanks Poly.  The trashing of

Thanks Poly.  The trashing of Carter does not mean that he did everything right.  He was deeply betrayed by a very disloyal opposition, and that is the point that matters.

It still does.  We do not have a loyal opposition today because the GOP Cult believes that only its "God ordained" mission is American.  It treats the rest of us as "traitors" if only in a latent sense.  

Describing Obama as a "corrupt baffoon" is also provocative without any supporting evidence.  It is the personal attacks without the evidence to back up more than a coincidental or contextually structural case that anyone in the White House must deal with electoral and legislative politics without being able to change the game unilaterally that make them empty.

Of course Obama must deal with Wall St. and the Pentagon rather than taking them down with his Mighty Army of Progressives.  The only candidates who can get through the gatekeepers will not be progressive or fiscal conservatives either.  Is that your measure of corrupt?

And whatever else you believe, calling Obama any disrespectful name associated with incompetence is incredible.  We have not had a person of his skill and character in public leadership for a long time.  I can disagree with him without thinking of him as a bad person.  He is an intellectual, and even Mr. Rhodes Scholar Clinton did not use any intellectual skills out of the box.  He just played the game better than the Republican emperors while the GOP witch-hunted him.

When I described Bush as lazy and incurious George, I was right about him.  Calling Cheney a paranoid is justified by his words and actions.  Neither of these tragic failures is just another example of the typical American President.  They took it to deeper and darker places and had us wondering whether it could all be incompetence instead of criminal intent.

I watch Obama try to find a way to a bipartisan healing while he gets nothing in return.  Is it a Purple Haze going round his brain or a smart political assessment of the fragility of the Union?  Lincoln thought he was holding things together until it could not be held together but by war.  Obama may be doing something similar, and events may determine what he does more than his hopes for smooth and cooperative change.

I forget the historian who linked Obama to Frederick Douglas as an educated black man who "crossed over" from racialist to statesman.  The "crossover" is in our minds more than his, as it was for Douglas.  Being the "exotic" who is also sort of "one of us" gave Douglas the chance to be heard as well as speak.  Obama gets a hearing when he speaks, and he has something to say.  It is rarely partisan, but it is rarely irrelevant or unimportant either.  We are not ready yet.  Only those afraid of losing their narrative to the truth really need to demean Obama.

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 2 days ago

polycarp2: Quote: Austro-Libe

polycarp2:

Quote:

Austro-Libertrian wrote: I've never read Ricardo or Smith. Who said I did?

But I'm familiar with their arguments. The argument basically states that if there are proportional inequalities between the productive capacities of two nations along alternate lines of production, national productivity can be increased by specializing in the line which the nation is absolutely or comparatively more efficient and trading.

--------

Perhaps you should read Ricardo before interpreting his theory.

So, I finally found the time to skim through On the Priciples of Political Economy and Taxation. Essentially, I had correctly interpretted his theory and going back and skimming through his work was a waste of time.

Ricardo (http://www.econlib.org/library/Ricardo/ricP2a.html#Ch.7,%20On%20Foreign%...):

Quote:

The quantity of wine which she shall give in exchange for the cloth of England, is not determined by the respective quantities of labour devoted to the production of each, as it would be, if both commodities were manufactured in England, or both in Portugal.

7.15

England may be so circumstanced, that to produce the cloth may require the labour of 100 men for one year; and if she attempted to make the wine, it might require the labour of 120 men for the same time. England would therefore find it her interest to import wine, and to purchase it by the exportation of cloth.

7.16

To produce the wine in Portugal, might require only the labour of 80 men for one year, and to produce the cloth in the same country, might require the labour of 90 men for the same time. It would therefore be advantageous for her to export wine in exchange for cloth. This exchange might even take place, notwithstanding that the commodity imported by Portugal could be produced there with less labour than in England. Though she could make the cloth with the labour of 90 men, she would import it from a country where it required the labour of 100 men to produce it, because it would be advantageous to her rather to employ her capital in the production of wine, for which she would obtain more cloth from England, than she could produce by diverting a portion of her capital from the cultivation of vines to the manufacture of cloth.

7.17

Thus England would give the produce of the labour of 100 men, for the produce of the labour of 80. Such an exchange could not take place between the individuals of the same country. The labour of 100 Englishmen cannot be given for that of 80 Englishmen, but the produce of the labour of 100 Englishmen may be given for the produce of the labour of 80 Portuguese, 60 Russians, or 120 East Indians. The difference in this respect, between a single country and many, is easily accounted for, by considering the difficulty with which capital moves from one country to another, to seek a more profitable employment, and the activity with which it invariably passes from one province to another in the same country.

Quote:

I'd suggest reading Ricardo before disconting his warnings on outsourcing labor or capital.

You're going to have to provide a source, because I couldn't find anything on this. Also, he wouldn't have used a term such as outsourcing, so maybe it's just someone paraphrasing him.

I've humoured your suggestions. Now can you explain to me how outsourcing impoverishes a nation? Also, maybe you should state all defintions you are using and the assumptions you are making so that we are on the same page.

Quote:

The U.S. population isn't getting richer...it's going broke and the nation, without an international reserve currency, couldn't so much as import an apple. The dollar is increasingly being excluded from international trade agreements including the new China/S.E. Asia pacts and the pacts between Brazil/Russia/China...where the dollar is deemed  unacceptable.

When the U.S. printing press breaks down....the country is done.

And it will have been the printing press that finished it, not free trade. The population is going broke because of capital consumption. Everyone's living beyond their means and mortgaging not only their own futures but that of future generations as well.

Art wrote 17 weeks 2 days ago

Quote:Now can you explain to

Quote:
Now can you explain to me how outsourcing impoverishes a nation?
I'm just going to break in here to offer my opinion as to how globalization, and outsourcing in particular, impoverishes a nation.

A nation becomes poorer when its treasury becomes poorer. Its treasury becomes poorer when fewer people pay less in taxes. Fewer people pay taxes when fewer people are employed in that nation. A nation's treasury also becomes poorer when a higher percentage of the aggregate wealth belongs to owners of those corporations which do not pay taxes in that nation and who pay a diminished percentage of their earnings in that nation. A nation becomes poorer when a higher percentage of the aggregate wealth resides in the stock market, which cannot be considered a national asset in any meaningful sense.

 

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 2 days ago

Quote: austro and other right

Quote:

austro and other right wingers.

If free markets outsourcing and deregulation are so wonderful. Why were we not all prospering during the bush years?

The markets and borders were more transparent than ever.

Bush was hardly free market. He created two wars, increase inflation (monetary expansion), increase social spending across the board. If there were a relatively free market under Bush, there would have been a dramatic increase in prosperity. Bush, however, was just a big socialist.

Quote:

Let me guess, If we would have allowed the system to burn down completely and reset to the new libertarian ideal then we would all be swimming in buckets of money today. Right?

Funny, you should say that. Pretty soon, the system is going to burn down completely and you all will be swimming in buckets of money. And it will take a bucket of money to buy anything at all. And it will have been Greenspan/Bernake/Bush/Obama that will have been responsible. I'm not that optimistic about the whole reset part. I think the U.S. will just become a second world country and still be highly socialist.

Quote:

The new right wants it all, they are greedy little children.

They want the freedom to cheat grandma out of her life savings but they want the protection of the limited government for their personal property.

They want the power to dictate what is moral for others but retain the freedom to interpret the rules differently for themselves.

Do as I say not as i do.

Sounds right to me. Sounds like the new left as well.

Quote:

The fundamental difference is simple, the new right (fascists) believe in the doctrine that government should protect the business man from the people not the people from the business man.

Nobody has that doctrine. Nobody believes in that. That's just a cheap smear.

Quote:

A thriving business atmosphere is critical for America's survival as a sovereign nation. Border less free trade that is focused on enriching a very few is what has brought down the world economy. We know that now.

I'd like you to explain how. The way I see it, American empire has brought down the world economy. By regulating trade through the WTO and coordinating global monetary expansion through the IMF, utilizing its position as sole military superpower, it has made boom/bust cycles a global phenomenon. And the boom/bust cycles are the result of artificially lowering the interest rates on the credit market through monetary expansion. International free trade is nothing more than a lack of restrictions and regulations and tariffs on trade between. How this is the cause of a global meltdown, considering we haven't really had free trade in a long time, is beyond me.

Quote:

There will always be a few greedy unethical con men that will fight for a wild west lawless economic jungle where most of us are nothing but profit centers for their picking.

We need to protect ourselves from these economic predators. If we need to be more like the heard beasts that overwhelm the lions and jackals with shear numbers, so be it. Cattle can defend themselves from attack if they stick together.

We need to call the new fascism what it is, Predatory economics. It is an economics based on taking advantage of the weakness of the economic pray. And like the predators of the wild, the most effective means of attack is to isolate an individual from the heard.

So we hear allot of talk about our freedom to make personal choices and how we can make better decisions for ourselves than as a community and community organizations are somehow not working for our interests but for some hidden cause. Government is bad, less government is better and no government is best.

Without a government focused on the best interests of the majority, we may as well be animals on the plains waiting to be picked off by hyenas, jackals, and lions.

What is predation? What exactly are you talking about?

A free market is characterized by voluntary transactions. Someone makes you an offer. You can take it or leave it. So long as private property rights are upheld, the very characteristic of a free market, no one is victimized. And all voluntary transactions are mutually beneficial in the ex ante sense. We know, a priori, that if A voluntarily exchanges good x for good y with B, they both expect that the transaction will make them better off otherwise they would have refused the transaction.

On the other hand, we know that coercive transactions make one party better off and the other worse off. If A forces B to give him good y in exchange for good x, or no good at all, A expects that the transaction will make him better off while B expects that it will make him worse off. B had to be compelled into the exchange because he didn't value the good that A offered him more than the one he already possessed. Whereas, A valued the good in B's possession more than his good and so compelled him to make a transaction using force.

So, which is really predatory, the market or the state?

Kerry wrote 17 weeks 2 days ago

Is there really a 'free

Is there really a 'free market' devoid of any and all compelling or forced activity that ALWAYS ends up 'making some better off and others less so'?  Where?  I don't see that ever happening in any situation that involves 'institutions'--ie. those structures of grouping behavior that are set to implement an action despite any individual's 'will'.  And, today's  'free market' is run by the 'institutions' of corporations--NOT, as Austro-Libertarian implies, 'two traders trading without outside influence'. 

In fact, that's one of the first discussions that I got into with sawdust on thomland's forums:  What constitutes a 'free market'?  sawdust claimed it's all about 'lack of government interference'.  I contended that that doesn't address any and all other possible forms of 'interference' that compels the process--particularly corporate interference.  My definition of 'free market' was just that--'two traders trading without outside influence'--but, then, isn't even just a price tag established from some office far away from the direct transaction a form of 'outside influence' I asked sawdust.  I still believe it is.  In the modern world, there is NO SUCH THING AS A 'FREE MARKET' in that manner.  And, until everything implodes and we all go back to bartering, there won't be.....the 'free market' is just another 'religious-type myth' used by the 'real believers'....

Now, can 'government' be that 'institution' that interferes?  Certainly.  But, then, what other choice do you have when corporate interference is a problem when it comes to 'two traders trading without outside influence'?  That's why I believe that a government that acts under the specific guise of 'endorsing individual rights' (and expressing to be doing so or explaining why not) is the best 'institution' of all.... 

polycarp2 wrote 17 weeks 2 days ago

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

Austro-Libertarian wrote: "And it will have been the printing press that finished it, not free trade. The population is going broke because of capital consumption. Everyone's living beyond their means and mortgaging not only their own futures but that of future generations as well."

----

Well, Soros carried it a bit further..."Americans are is buying more than than produce. You see, for the last 25 years the world economy, the motor of the world economy that has been driving it was consumption by the American consumer who has been spending more than he has been saving, all right? Than he's been producing. So that motor is now switched off. It's finished. It's run out of — can't continue. You need a new motor. "

http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/10102008/transcript1.html

He also notes in the same interview that the market fundamentalism B.S. is just another failed ideology.

Retired Monk "Ideology is a disease"

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 2 days ago

Quote: He also notes in the

Quote:

He also notes in the same interview that the market fundamentalism B.S. is just another failed ideology.

Failed in what respect?

Quote:

Well, Soros carried it a bit further..."Americans are is buying more than than produce. You see, for the last 25 years the world economy, the motor of the world economy that has been driving it was consumption by the American consumer who has been spending more than he has been saving, all right? Than he's been producing. So that motor is now switched off. It's finished. It's run out of — can't continue. You need a new motor. "

From Peter Schiff, Crash Proof 2.0 pg.14:

"The world no more depends on U.S. consumption than midieval serfs depended on the consumption of their lords, who typically took 25 percent of what they produced. What a disaster it would have been for the serfs had their lords had their lords not exacted this tribute. Think of all the unemployment the serfs would have suffered had they not had to toil so hard for the benefit of their lords. What would they have done with all that extra free time."

And he continues on with a second analogy.

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 2 days ago

@ Kerry The free market is

@ Kerry

The free market is defined as a market free of government intervention. This stands in contrast to a hampered market which is hampered by government intervention.

There are essentially two forms of intervention: taxation and regulation.

Now, in a free market there isn't a complete absense of coercion, as there will always be crime. However, it is possible, in theory at least, to have an absense of any socially accepted institutionalized, systematic coercion, i.e. government intervention.

Also, there is nothing inherently coercive about coorporations. They are just another form of business ownership.

polycarp2 wrote 17 weeks 2 days ago

Austro-Libertarian

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

Quote:

He also notes in the same interview that the market fundamentalism B.S. is just another failed ideology.

Failed in what respect?

Quote:

Well, Soros carried it a bit further..."Americans are is buying more than than produce. You see, for the last 25 years the world economy, the motor of the world economy that has been driving it was consumption by the American consumer who has been spending more than he has been saving, all right? Than he's been producing. So that motor is now switched off. It's finished. It's run out of — can't continue. You need a new motor. "

From Peter Schiff, Crash Proof 2.0 pg.14:

"The world no more depends on U.S. consumption than midieval serfs depended on the consumption of their lords, who typically took 25 percent of what they produced. What a disaster it would have been for the serfs had their lords had their lords not exacted this tribute. Think of all the unemployment the serfs would have suffered had they not had to toil so hard for the benefit of their lords. What would they have done with all that extra free time."

And he continues on with a second analogy.

Pretty bad analogy by Schiff. The 25% of the production the Lords took was a tax. The economy didn't depend on the Lord's taking a tax. It was pretty much a subsistence sort of affair.

The U.S. was a driver of the world's economy. That's over.

If you'd like to know why George Soros called U.S. market fundamentalism just another failed Ideology, read the interview link posted above. This isn't the place to post a several page disertation.

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a disease"

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

Schiff's point is that the

Schiff's point is that the rest of the world doesn't need the U.S. to consume their products, for them to be able to produce them. The world could consume it's own products and be richer for it. Soros is way of base. And this whole point is so simple and obvious it shouldn't even need to be stated.

Kerry wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

The free market is defined as

The free market is defined as a market free of government intervention.--Austro-Libertarian

How does that correlate with your previous statement on what characterizes a 'free market' here:

A free market is characterized by voluntary transactions.--Austro-Libertarian

And, how does a 'market transaction' around a price tag (most of the time remotely determined by those NOT involved in the immediate transaction) connote a 'voluntary transaction' in the 'A voluntarily exchanges good x for good y with B' manner you describe above?   That sounds like 'A' and 'B' are directly negotiating the deal--but, that doesn't happen with a pre-set 'price tag' (determined by those NOT involved in the immediate transaction), does it?  So, how does that connote a 'free market' in the manner you previously suggested?  I don't think it does--and it has NOTHING to do with 'government intervention'--but, it does have something to do with someone 'skewing the trade'....away from 'A' and 'B' getting to do it.....

 

 

Kerry wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

Now, in a free market there

Now, in a free market there isn't a complete absense of coercion, as there will always be crime. However, it is possible, in theory at least...--Austro-Libertarian

'In theory'.  'In theory', pigs can fly.  'In theory', two plane impacts can cause three large buildings to completely implode like buildings have never done before.  'In theory', anything can happen--as long as those theories don't have to be confirmed by the facts....

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

Quote: The free market is

Quote:

The free market is defined as a market free of government intervention.--Austro-Libertarian

How does that correlate with your previous statement on what characterizes a 'free market' here:

A free market is characterized by voluntary transactions.--Austro-Libertarian

Government intervention is coercive and compulsory. Non-coercive interaction is voluntary. Does that clear it up?

Quote:

And, how does a 'market transaction' around a price tag (most of the time remotely determined by those NOT involved in the immediate transaction) connote a 'voluntary transaction' in the 'A voluntarily exchanges good x for good y with B' manner you describe above?   That sounds like 'A' and 'B' are directly negotiating the deal--but, that doesn't happen with a pre-set 'price tag' (determined by those NOT involved in the immediate transaction), does it?  So, how does that connote a 'free market' in the manner you previously suggested?  I don't think it does--and it has NOTHING to do with 'government intervention'--but, it does have something to do with someone 'skewing the trade'....away from 'A' and 'B' getting to do it.....

If a retailer offers merchandise at a set price and customers puchase it at that price, the transaction is voluntary. The retailer prefers a certain amount of money to the merchandise and the customer prefers the merchandise to the money he pays for it. The analytics remain the same.

Quote:

Now, in a free market there isn't a complete absense of coercion, as there will always be crime. However, it is possible, in theory at least...--Austro-Libertarian

'In theory'.  'In theory', pigs can fly.  'In theory', two plane impacts can cause three large buildings to completely implode like buildings have never done before.  'In theory', anything can happen--as long as those theories don't have to be confirmed by the facts....

It is realizable. It is not a practical impossiblity such as producing a square circle.

Kerry wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

It (the 'free market'..) is

It (the 'free market'..) is realizable.--Austro-Libertarian

How 'realizable' is it?  And, what amount (if any) of 'government interference' is OK for it still to be called a 'free market'.  Let's take this statement of yours as a case in point:

Now, in a free market there isn't a complete absense of coercion, as there will always be crime.--Austro-Libertarian

'There will always be crime'.   Two points come to mind concerning this position that the 'free market' involves no 'government intervention'.  First off, since that statement says 'always', that form of 'coercion' will always be present.  So, how can a 'free market' devoid of coercion ever be 'realizable'?  Secondly, while you claim that 'government intervention' comes in two forms (taxation and regulation), you've actually introduced another 'government intervention':  Who gets to determine what a 'crime' is if not 'the government'?  And, in being able to determine what a 'crime' is, is that not, in itself, a 'governmental intervention'? 

Now, what happens between party 'A's' and party 'B's'  'freedom' in their 'market transaction' if what they are 'transacting' is determined to be 'criminal'?  And, what happens to party 'A's' and party 'B's' 'freedom' if they don't agree that what they are doing is 'criminal' even as it 'benefits both'?  What did 'voluntarism' go in this instance?   

If a retailer offers merchandise at a set price and customers puchase it at that price, the transaction is voluntary. The retailer prefers a certain amount of money to the merchandise and the customer prefers the merchandise to the money he pays for it. The analytics remain the same.--Austro-Libertarian

Is it?  Let's say that party 'A' and party 'B' believe that the 'price tag' set in that remote office is wrong.  But, true to corporate markets, they have no way to negotiate that without doing something 'criminal'.  Where's the 'voluntarism' in that? 

You sound like a 'free market apologist', Austro-Libertarian.  But, like every 'believer in a belief-system', the reason why you have to be an apologist is that it doesn't fit all the facts...not even your 'facts' if there is always crime hindering a 'truly free market'....

 

 

polycarp2 wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

Austro-Libertarian

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

Schiff's point is that the rest of the world doesn't need the U.S. to consume their products, for them to be able to produce them. The world could consume it's own products and be richer for it. Soros is way of base. And this whole point is so simple and obvious it shouldn't even need to be stated.

Of course the world doesn't need the U.S. to consume their products for them. All they have to do is pay their own workers enough to buy them. All Soros did was say the model of the U.S. consumer being the driver of the global economy .was done.... and that a new model was needed.

After taking a hit with the U.S. consumer meltdown, Asia is recovering nicely with new economic models minus the U.S. The new Chinese/S.E. Asia trade agreements, for example, exlude the U.S. and its undesireable dollar.

Retired Monk  - "Ideology is a disease"

DRC wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

AL, your courteous exchanges,

AL, your courteous exchanges, even though they tend to repeat the same fundamentalism about the Austrian School as the Gospel, are welcome.  If you want to appreciate the difference between your style and insults or rants that became disruptive, congratulations on getting it on style.

BTW, if Sawdust could get out of the rant and rhetorical edge, he was not a problem for me.  It was not my call anyway.  Bring him back if he can get the AL vibe.

That said, I think the ideological speculation about voluntary societies and "free markets" of voluntary exchange begs every question of politics.  It is a dream world, not something that can happen in the real world.  Who enforces the prices and contracts?  Who keeps the freedom fair and balanced instead of the Woody Allen image of lions and lambs "sleeping together" where the lions get the better night's sleep?

You talk of hiring private security, so it does come down to landlords and warlords, along with some loan sharks and others.  Why not stone killers who just take what they want and defy anyone to take it away?  Who pays the law to enforce which side of the power games?

Sorry, buying into "the rules of the game" is not coercion in the unjust sense.  Being obligated to respecting "liberty and justice for all" is not something I want left to individual will at any particular moment.  There are no free markets in nature, and removing government makes certain there will be no fairness nor Main St. freedom or real innovation spurred by market investors.  Robber Barons are the product of not constraining their predation.  They did not build America, they stole from those who did.  Their capital formation was gang collusion and warfare, not the market efficiency promised by competition.

We have seen this stuff, of course not the idealized vision of voluntary society and "free market" equality among independent actors.  We have not seen mutuality in international trade either.  Ricardo is all about mutuality as was Smith's market posited in a just society of common bonds.  As I have said, I appreciate your intellectual exploration, but the problem with knowing a lot of economics is that you learn a load of crap along with some smart thinking.  So did Greenspan, and so do most of the White House advisors.  The illusion of freedom in free markets is as false as the idea of cheap or free in junk and fast food.

Your posts have been consistent in their support for an economic ideology of closed, dogmatic certainty.  Economic ideologies are likely to be very skillfully constructed and argued, but the "brightest and best" also tend to be the easiest to tempt with narcissistic nonsense about their ability to do what's never been done.  Believe me, the intellectuals at Stanford Biz were very bright even when they were very wrong.  The problem was, as usual, what they knew for certain was true, but was wrong.  Getting them to question themselves was next to impossible.  What could smart asses like me know?  Wish I had been wrong.

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

Quote: How 'realizable' is

Quote:

How 'realizable' is it?

All I meant was that it is possible to implement such a system.

Quote:

And, what amount (if any) of 'government interference' is OK for it still to be called a 'free market'.

To have a pure free market, none.

Quote:

'There will always be crime'.   Two points come to mind concerning this position that the 'free market' involves no 'government intervention'.  First off, since that statement says 'always', that form of 'coercion' will always be present.

Crime is sporatic and random. It is not institutionalized or socially accepted. That is the big difference between the coercion of private criminals and the compulsion of the state. The crime of criminals is not considered a part of the economic system. The compulsion of the government, is. Crime is not part of the market as an institution. The governments interventions are considered part of the econonmic system.

So the two statements that there will always be crime, since human beings are not angels, and that there is no coercion in a free market, are not contradictory statements.

Quote:

Who gets to determine what a 'crime' is if not 'the government'?

I think justice is an exact science which is discovered through human reason. Government can no more decide what the difference is between right and wrong than it can decide what the physical laws of the universe are.

Quote:

And, in being able to determine what a 'crime' is, is that not, in itself, a 'governmental intervention'?

Yep, it sure is. It would actually be more accurate to say that it is the ultimate arbitrator in all cases of conflict including conflicts involving itself. That is the first defining characteristic of a state.

Quote:

Now, what happens between party 'A's' and party 'B's'  'freedom' in their 'market transaction' if what they are 'transacting' is determined to be 'criminal'?  And, what happens to party 'A's' and party 'B's' 'freedom' if they don't agree that what they are doing is 'criminal' even as it 'benefits both'?  What did 'voluntarism' go in this instance?  

That sounds to me like a triangular intervention, where some third party is coercively preventing them from trading. Some examples of this are grants of monopolistic privilege, liscensing restrictions, and prohibition.

Quote:

If a retailer offers merchandise at a set price and customers puchase it at that price, the transaction is voluntary. The retailer prefers a certain amount of money to the merchandise and the customer prefers the merchandise to the money he pays for it. The analytics remain the same.--Austro-Libertarian

Is it?  Let's say that party 'A' and party 'B' believe that the 'price tag' set in that remote office is wrong.  But, true to corporate markets, they have no way to negotiate that without doing something 'criminal'.  Where's the 'voluntarism' in that?

 

Sorry, but this example is too obscure to decide either way. You seem to have added a third party in without making it clear what the exact contractual arrangements are between the third party and A and B.

Quote:

You sound like a 'free market apologist', Austro-Libertarian.  But, like every 'believer in a belief-system', the reason why you have to be an apologist is that it doesn't fit all the facts...not even your 'facts' if there is always crime hindering a 'truly free market'....

 

I prefer free-market defender. There is nothing to apologize for. I'm not sure what you mean by 'it doesn't fit all the facts...'. There are no contradictions in my overall position or definitions. I'm also not sure what you mean by 'believer in a belief-system.' I defend truth and justice as best as I can. You can call it whatever you want.

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

polycarp2

polycarp2 wrote:

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

Schiff's point is that the rest of the world doesn't need the U.S. to consume their products, for them to be able to produce them. The world could consume it's own products and be richer for it. Soros is way of base. And this whole point is so simple and obvious it shouldn't even need to be stated.

Of course the world doesn't need the U.S. to consume their products for them. All they have to do is pay their own workers enough to buy them. All Soros did was say the model of the U.S. consumer being the driver of the global economy .was done.... and that a new model was needed.

After taking a hit with the U.S. consumer meltdown, Asia is recovering nicely with new economic models minus the U.S. The new Chinese/S.E. Asia trade agreements, for example, exlude the U.S. and its undesireable dollar.

Retired Monk  - "Ideology is a disease"

The U.S. is not the motor driving the world economy. It's the caboose holding it back (or at least it has been).

polycarp2 wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

Austro-Libertarian wrote:

Austro-Libertarian wrote: "The U.S. is not the motor driving the world economy. It's the caboose holding it back (or at least it has been)."

------

That's what Soros said...using different words. The U.S. is no longer the driver of the global economy. That's  "done, finished".

Retired Monk - "Ideology is a disease".

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

Quote: If you want to

Quote:

If you want to appreciate the difference between your style and insults or rants that became disruptive, congratulations on getting it on style.

Why, thank you.

Quote:

even though they tend to repeat the same fundamentalism about the Austrian School as the Gospel

Speaking of insults...

Quote:

That said, I think the ideological speculation about voluntary societies and "free markets" of voluntary exchange begs every question of politics.

nk. I always try to get to the root of everything. That's what separates me from the intellectual sloth that is 99% of the human race.

Quote:

It is a dream world, not something that can happen in the real world.

Proove it. Show me the money.

I see no reason why it is impossible.

Quote:

You talk of hiring private security, so it does come down to landlords and warlords, along with some loan sharks and others.  Why not stone killers who just take what they want and defy anyone to take it away?  Who pays the law to enforce which side of the power games?

Monopolies, defined as restricted entry into a market, are always bad from the viewpoint of consumers. When there is free entry into a market, producers must sell products at the lowest production cost for consumers. If they sell above the lowest production cost, competitors can enter into the market and outcompete them. When there is restricted entry into a market, the producer has an incentive to raise the price, and lower the quality of the product. Now security is probably the most important good which can be produced. Why do we need to have a monopoly provider for this good.

Security can be provided on an open market just like any other good. There is nothing exceptional about it. Private producers already to a limited extent do provide security and could do a much better job at it if they weren't hampered by government regulations. Insurance companies would get more involved because they have an economic incentive to reduce crime because it reduces the rate at which they must indemnify their clients. Private individuals can do a much better job protecting themselves from violent crime with a concealed handgun than the police can. A $50 pistol in the cockpit would have done what $400 billion in defence spending couldn't do (and in fact contributed to), prevent 9/11 from occuring.

Quote:

Sorry, buying into "the rules of the game" is not coercion in the unjust sense.  Being obligated to respecting "liberty and justice for all" is not something I want left to individual will at any particular moment.  There are no free markets in nature, and removing government makes certain there will be no fairness nor Main St. freedom or real innovation spurred by market investors.  Robber Barons are the product of not constraining their predation.  They did not build America, they stole from those who did.  Their capital formation was gang collusion and warfare, not the market efficiency promised by competition.

Who bailed out the bankers. Was it the bankers themselves, or was it the government.

Also, it's hardly just if one party decides all the rules for everybody including themselves. Justice is always reciprocal and has no double standards.

Quote:

We have seen this stuff, of course not the idealized vision of voluntary society and "free market" equality among independent actors.  We have not seen mutuality in international trade either.  Ricardo is all about mutuality as was Smith's market posited in a just society of common bonds.  As I have said, I appreciate your intellectual exploration, but the problem with knowing a lot of economics is that you learn a load of crap along with some smart thinking.  So did Greenspan, and so do most of the White House advisors.  The illusion of freedom in free markets is as false as the idea of cheap or free in junk and fast food.

Your posts have been consistent in their support for an economic ideology of closed, dogmatic certainty.  Economic ideologies are likely to be very skillfully constructed and argued, but the "brightest and best" also tend to be the easiest to tempt with narcissistic nonsense about their ability to do what's never been done.  Believe me, the intellectuals at Stanford Biz were very bright even when they were very wrong.  The problem was, as usual, what they knew for certain was true, but was wrong.  Getting them to question themselves was next to impossible.  What could smart asses like me know?  Wish I had been wrong.

Until you start refuting some of this 'crap', speak for yourself. In fact, why don't you start by explaining what you think the correct epistemological foundations are for all sciences in general before you start making unsupported judgements about my base of knowledge.

Austro-Libertarian wrote 17 weeks 1 day ago

@ polycarp2 I have yet to

@ polycarp2

I have yet to hear an answer from you on free trade. I think you owe me one since you grilled me for not reading Ricardo. Since you're such an expert on the subject, would you care to explain how it can impoverish a nation?

chronix wrote 17 weeks 22 hours ago

Government is neccessary for

Government is neccessary for the exsitence of a large society.  A large society is necessary for the mass production and trade of goods.  Your ideas on a near-anarchy system like communism is only capable of working on a tribal scale at this point in our evolutionary development. A system of laws is neccessary for the existance of a truly free market.  If there were no laws consolidation into one entity would enevitably occour as demonstrated by standard oil before laws were made governing it and the other monopolies.

The other point i'd like to make is that our recent troubles were clearly not caused by overregulation of the market by government but by overregulation of government by market.  Remember, here in america the people are supposed to be the government. Atleast I, as an individual have some control over that, as for a corporation i only have control if i own enough shares to have an influence over policy. 

The choice for us is not weather to have government, thats inevitable.  Its who do we want controlling it.  the top 10% or the bottom 90%.  I for one want my share of control back please.

Dont ask me what book I read this in either, my ideas are my own.

kwikfix wrote 17 weeks 19 hours ago

slabmaster wrote: He mearly

slabmaster wrote:

He mearly called Carter a tottering fool. Presidents get critisized when they do stupid things. 

I will never forget what a living hell the Carter years were.

Gas was fifty cents a gallon and America was at peace with the world.

It was hell!

It was hell!

It was hell!

It was hell!

It was hell!

It was hell!

 

Kerry wrote 17 weeks 18 hours ago

"How 'realizable' is

"How 'realizable' is it?"--me

All I meant was that it is possible to implement such a system.--Austro-Libertarian

"And, what amount (if any) of 'government interference' is OK for it still to be called a 'free market'."--me

To have a pure free market, none.--Austro-Libertarian

That begs another question for me to understand your positioin, Austro-Libertarian:  What 'implements such a system' involving a 'pure free market' if it's not 'governmental intervention'--or, something acting like 'governmental intervention'? 

I see myself as a form of 'libertarian' in that I emphasize 'individual rights' in my concept of appropriate political set-ups.  I consider myself a 'leftist libertarian' in that I don't see that happening without government.  I do NOT see a 'free market system'--especially based on something other than each individual on his or her own (such as what a 'corporate-based market system' IS AGAINST..)--as being one that emphasizes 'individual rights' in that system.   So, if your 'free market' requires a 'systems implementer', I believe we have a better chance of that 'system' being based on 'individual rights' using 'government' than we do using 'corporations'. 

Your 'pure free market' operating in some form of 'system' that is 'implemented' doesn't actually go through just exactly how you see that 'implementation' being done without something acting as the 'implementer'.  In your 'market system' devoid of 'all governmental interventions' to make it 'free', what is going to be that 'implementer'?   Money on its own?  As has been the obvious case recently with our debacle between the financial markets and government (and, by the way, all your examples are concerning the 'production market'--does all that 'freedom' also go for the 'financial markets'?), 'the markets' don't really guarantee the value of the money--for that money to have value, the government does (and it uses the taxpayer to do so)--it's no other entities interest to have to do so if 'the trade' is to their advantage to devalue 'money'.....

Crime is sporatic and random. It is not institutionalized or socially accepted--Austro-Libertarian

That depends upon the semantics you use in defining 'crime'--as well as depending upon whether you can see entities being used to implement such 'crimes' and what entity can be used to judge it as a 'crime'.  In your definition above, you imply that all 'crimes' seem to be done on an individual scale in a manner that any 'system' you implement to carry the 'free market' somehow 'reasonably excludes'--yet, you haven't said exactly how that 'free market' does so through such 'systems implementations' that you say is 'realizable' without 'government intervention'.  If that's the case, then I guess you don't believe there is such a thing as 'organized crime'--in corporations as well as government.

So, you have yet to actually say what 'crime' is, you have yet to say how that is determined to be a 'crime', and you have yet to say how such a 'systems implementer' is to resolve such 'crimes'--especially in an 'all voluntary system' without 'government intervention' like you propose this 'free market system' to be.  And, then, you wonder why I call you a 'free market apologist'....it's because your 'belief' doesn't fit all the facts of 'reality'....

 

 

 

Kerry wrote 17 weeks 16 hours ago

The crime of criminals is not

The crime of criminals is not considered a part of the economic system.--Austro-Libertarian

Again, that depends more on who gets to determine what a 'crime' is in this 'system being implemented'--and how you define 'crime' to begin with.  For instance, if I, as a 'free market believer' using your description of a 'free market transaction' as being 'mutually beneficial', believe that any 'transaction' that is NOT 'mutually beneficial' is a 'crime', I'm already up against some difficulty in reasoning out that concept much less adhering to ANY 'systems implementer' to 'do it for me'...especially, excluding all 'organizations' as being 'exempt from the crime' by you suggesting that all crime is 'individualized' and  'sporadic and random' as your description of 'crime'.  In the context of 'mutually beneficial transaction', some workers may (and have) argued that they are not getting their complete share of the 'beneficial transaction' as they see 'corporate implementers' getting more than what they may consider fair with respect to 'mutually beneficial transaction'.  To those workers, that may be considered a 'crime'--and they may be appealing to some 'systems implementer' (as 'government'..) to correct it.  Lots of difficulty in applying your concepts to the real world when you don't clarify what you are saying as you 'apologize' your way to confirming your 'free market' belief....

Crime is not part of the market as an institution.--Austro-Libertarian

You do keep saying that--but is it really true?  You don't believe in such a thing as 'organized crime'?  Or, is it to you that the only 'organization that is criminal' is 'government'?  Is that it?  But, isn't any other entity acting as a 'systems implementer' in your 'free market system' just 'replacing government' and calling it something else?  Or, is your 'free market systems implementer' some sort of a 'seamless entity' that 'implements' without stepping on someone's 'voluntarism' in doing so?  If not (and I see no 'reasonable' way it can be), then, again, you are an apologist for the 'free market system'--and it doesn't address every aspect of reality in your claim (which was my point in calling you an 'apologist' to begin with).

I think justice is an exact science which is discovered through human reason--Austro-Libertarian

I believe you to a point in 'using reason to determine justice'--but, I wouldn't qualify it as an 'exact' science.  If that is the case, what is the specific premise upon which you base this 'science' on?  If it's 'mutually beneficial', consider my example with workers not thinking that get their share of 'mutual benefit' and tell me how your 'implementer' is going to 'exactly' resolve it....

Government can no more decide what the difference is between right and wrong than it can decide what the physical laws of the universe are.--Austro-Libertarian

Well, since you are into the 'exact' science of reasoning, tell me 'exactly' what part of 'government' does the 'reasoning' to 'decide what the difference is between right and wrong'.  And, then, tell me how any 'systems implementer' under any other name doesn't act 'exactly' like 'government' in making any 'decision of the difference between right and wrong'--and how it can implement such a decision against anyone's will and NOT be 'exactly' like 'government'.  Or, have you envisioned a 'systems implementer' in this 'free market' that doesn't act against someone's will in some way?  That's about as likely as every transaction concerning the market as being seen as being 'mutually beneficial' in every circumstance.  Who gets to judge that and in what manner are they able to 'implement' that justly in any system you envision?  You say you 'envision' it but you don't say exactly what that 'vision' is....other than the platitudes you claim in this 'free market' that, to date, I don't see you giving a real world example of....besides in the minds of apologists like yourself, where is it?

"And, in being able to determine what a 'crime' is, is that not, in itself, a 'governmental intervention'?"--me

Yep, it sure is. It would actually be more accurate to say that it is the ultimate arbitrator in all cases of conflict including conflicts involving itself. That is the first defining characteristic of a state.--Austro-Libertarian

Now, you seem to be contradicting yourself.  If government 'can't decide what the difference is between right and wrong', how does it determine what a 'crime' is or not?  And, you seem to imply that there isn't a set-up like 'government' to play as the 'arbitrator of conflict' in this 'systems implementer' of the 'free market' that you suggest is 'without government interference'.  How does the 'systems implementer' in this 'free market system' of yours do that without acting 'exactly' like 'government'?  Government always was the 'structure of reasonable transactions' as the actors in that structure are to 'provide the reason'--but, sometimes, actors don't act 'reasonably'....then what?

Apologists don't address all the 'conflicts involving themselves' when it comes to reasonably and realistically defining their beliefs through what can be found in reality.  That, again, is what makes them 'apologists'.  Yet, now, you are stating that that's 'exactly' what 'government' should do--and I agree.  However, you also imply that government, as not being able to 'determine what is right and wrong',  can't do it.  And, you see THAT as 'reasonable'? 

So, now, why isn't there a role in your 'market' for 'government'?  And, if there isn't, what is to take its place?  And, if nothing is to do so, what 'arbiter of reason' do you have in this 'free market system'--more specifically, what 'arbiter of reason' do you have in the 'systems implementer' of this 'free market system' if it's not 'government'--or something acting like it?  Those are reasonable questions that I don't see that you have answered, yet...

"Now, what happens between party 'A's' and party 'B's'  'freedom' in their 'market transaction' if what they are 'transacting' is determined to be 'criminal'?  And, what happens to party 'A's' and party 'B's' 'freedom' if they don't agree that what they are doing is 'criminal' even as it 'benefits both'?  What did 'voluntarism' go in this instance?"--me 

That sounds to me like a triangular intervention, where some third party is coercively preventing them from trading. Some examples of this are grants of monopolistic privilege, liscensing restrictions, and prohibition.--Austro-Libertarian

No, the concept that I'm trying to get across is not the third party 'coercively preventing them from trading', the concept that I'm trying to get across is that, in the corporate world, around the predetermined price tag done in a remote corporate office, the immediate 'traders' don't have the say-so on what amount to determine the value of their trade.  That's been set as a price tag in a remote corporate office--so, that 'organization' has already taken away the 'freedom' of the two immediate traders in determining the value of the trade between themselves.  If you want to use your jargon, then all corporate trade is a 'triangular intervention' between the freedom of the immediate traders being able to decide that among themselves since they both have to act around a price tag (determined by a remote corporate office) in 'negotiating the trade'--and their 'choices' are also so limited...and, since the practical aspect of all freedom is determined by the 'number of choices' you have, that, also, limits their freedom....so, how is a 'corporate market' exactly 'free'? 

You seem to have added a third party in without making it clear what the exact contractual arrangements are between the third party and A and B.--Austro-Libertarian

What difference does that make if the 'contractual arrangements' limit the choices party 'A' and party 'B' have in negotiating the trade that they have at hand right now?  Are you saying that the 'freedom' in the 'free market' stops at a contract--a 'pre-arranged contract'?  While I would agree with the nature of the obligation in assuring the commitment to the deal, I don't agree with how you describe it as 'free' in any way.   Why even use the word 'free' exactly in adhering to this myth you call the 'free market' when it's based on 'contractual obligations' to work--and a government (or something acting like it) to see to it that such obligations are met?  And, since 'contractual obligations' require the intervention of government (or something acting like it) to regulate and assure implementation of such obligations, then, how is your 'free market' EVER devoid of 'governmental intervention' in 'implementing it'?  And, since it's never free of governmental intervention to assure the compliance of contractual obligations, why do you keep claiming that a 'free market' is defined by 'lack of governmental intervention'?  Other than being an apologist ignoring aspects of reality from a reasonable perspective, I don't think that you can....

I prefer free-market defender. There is nothing to apologize for.--Austro-Libertarian

But, there's a whole lot that you don't account for that your claim about 'free market systems' and such 'implementations' such a system would have to use that you don't address nor clarify--which makes you an apologist that has to ignore them (not 'self-reflect' on them like you say a 'government' does...).  And, if we ignore the facts of reality in our 'reason', and we don't specify the premises upon which we are to judge those facts, then, 'anything' can look like 'the truth'....and 'reason' has nothing to do with it....

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