• The Inflation Reduction Act
    Sinema has just signed on to this bill. Crucial step.

    Looks like she’s nixing the carrier interest credit in favor of a buyback excise tax of 1%. Not bad.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/04/us/politics/sinema-inflation-reduction-act.html
  • Antinatalism Arguments
    What should I live for or how should I live?rossii

    That’s a fantastic question, and a highly important one.

    It’s also, perhaps frustratingly, a deeply personal one. No general answer can be given — from me or anyone else. It has to come from you, and one day it may.
  • The Death of Roe v Wade? The birth of a new Liberalism?
    No they don't. They've gotten away with it for decades by making people focus on the culture war.Mr Bee

    Touché.

    I guess for a second I forgot how cynical they really are.
  • Eat the poor.
    If only we could go back to the glory years of feudalism and slavery. No big government regulations and taxes - simply "just" transactions between individuals.

    Ah, the good ol' days.

    Always remember what lies at the foundation of all this whining about taxes and government: narcissism and borderline solipsism. Oh -- I mean "freedom," of course.

    The freedom to be a callous, selfish asshole.
  • Eat the poor.
    Do you really think it is just to take the fruits of someone else’s labor without their consent?NOS4A2

    You do consent, by living in a country with laws. Don't like them? Either leave or try to get them changed. Taxes have a long history. Take it up with the founding fathers and the constitution.
  • The Death of Roe v Wade? The birth of a new Liberalism?
    59 to 41% — in Kansas.

    The GOP have to face reality at some point about the unpopularity of their policies.
  • Whither the Collective?
    Communism explicitly aims to socialize the bourgeoisie, that is to say, repress and steal from the upper middle and rich classes and (supposedly) give to the poor working class.Tzeentch

    That has little to do with communism, in my view. So here it really is a matter of meaning.

    What do you believe?Tzeentch

    I believe power should be legitimate. More specifically, at least in the shorter term, I’m in favor of democracy— including democracy at the workplace, where workers have a role in determining what’s produced, how it's produced, where it's produced, and where the profits go.

    As it stands, we're in the Sociopathic Capitalism era where corporate governance has adopted the Friedman doctrine and wealth inequality has soared to heights not seen since the pyramids. That's 40 years of neoliberalism. We see the effects all around us. I'm against that.
  • Bill Hicks largely ignored, while Joe Rogan is celebrated
    Who is more philosophically significant in the modern world?Bret Bernhoft

    Niether, really. As a comedian, Bill was and is one of my favorites.

    I wouldn't say Rogan is "celebrated," he's just a fairly open guy who talks to anyone (but mostly other comedians), came at a time when podcasting wasn't huge yet, and had some guests do and say some crazy stuff on his show (like Elon Musk). So he's popular, and because he occasionally has ultra conservative guests and says some things about trans people -- and likes cars and is a big guy with tattoos who can kick ass, etc., he appeals to teens and many on the Right. I wouldn't call him philosophically relevant.

    Bill Hicks and Joe Rogan both spoke (at one point or another) about the importance of manifesting one's mind through the use of pragmatism, tools and self-reflection.Bret Bernhoft

    I'm not sure what you mean by any of this.
  • Whither the Collective?
    Those darned advertisers convincing people they need pointless luxuries!Tzeentch

    Yes?

    Wouldn't it be nice if we could take all of that money and instead use it for useful things?Tzeentch

    No.

    your characterization of advertising as a means to sell people things they don't need suggests you both consider people too stupid to make such choices for themselves and yourself an expert on determining what is best for others.Tzeentch

    It’s like arguing people are too stupid to choose between republicans and democrats. That’s really not the point.

    Choices are simply not given. That’s not the fault of the people.

    In terms of creating desires for useless stuff— “fashionable consumption,” etc. — this has a long history, has been studied, documented; not a controversial remark. They admit to it outright.

    The fact that you resist something so obvious has already shown you have no real leg up stand on.

    You may be a closet authoritarian, I'm afraid.Tzeentch

    Whatever you like. Your feelings are irrelevant.

    If you're the hippie commune type I take all of that back,Tzeentch

    You’re free to ask me what I believe directly— this way you don’t have to guess. But you do you. Create whatever fantasy you want.

    Collectivism isn't the same as communism, and China isn't communist (anymore).Tzeentch

    Not the same, but an example.

    And yes, China is communist.

    But if you want to compare the domestic policies of the US with China and suggest they're similar then that is laughable.Tzeentch

    A big mess of repression, surveillance, authoritarianism, genocide, etc.Tzeentch
  • Is refusing to vote a viable political position?
    After your endless displays of Trump boot-licking you would have us believe that you’re some sort of anarchist? I suppose it’s good that you recognize your lack of responsibility though, very Trumpian.praxis

    Bullseye. The hypocrisy is astonishing.

    But please, we should all be encouraging the Trump supporters not to vote. It is absolutely moral to force yourself not to vote for fascists, as much as you may love them.
  • Eat the poor.
    Capitalism did something amazing. It took the old aristocracy out of the picture and made everyone equal under the law.Tate

    :rofl:

    Sorry…but this is amazing.

    A nice fairytale for kids.
  • Whither the Collective?
    In fact the entire advertising industry operates on the complete opposite goal: create desires for things not needed.
    — Xtrix

    Ah, one styles themselves the arbiter of who needs what. Spoken like a true 'collectivist'.
    Tzeentch

    Lol. Food, water, shelter, family, community. I view these as needs, or at least different than a new gadget every 2 years.

    I guess I’m part of a communist conspiracy. Mea culpa.

    A big mess of repression, surveillance, authoritarianism, genocide, etc.Tzeentch

    Yes, the United States has its problems— but we should evaluate as balanced a way as we can.

    ChinaTzeentch

    Oh — oops. :wink:

    Please don't use China as an example for successful collectivism. It's a powerful state.Tzeentch

    I understand collectivism to be a term to describe state policiesTzeentch

    I agree — I don’t think China is an example of communism at all, as I understand it. But I’m using your meaning, not mine.
  • Eat the poor.


    Yes. But don’t expect them to read Mayer. That’ll screw up the very neat “Government is the problem” mantra.
  • Whither the Collective?
    Sure, capitalism is far from perfect, but at least a successful capitalist has to produce something others want to buyTzeentch

    Nonsense. In fact the entire advertising industry operates on the complete opposite goal: create desires for things not needed.

    which is why its many evils also went along with many goods - history's collectivist projects cannot say the same.Tzeentch

    They can’t? China seems to be doing just fine. The Soviets deceased poverty and starvation.

    Sure, if we start with the assumption that “collectivism” (whatever that means) only produces evil, that’s what you’ll see. Or you’ll assign all evils to it— as many do with “governments.”

    Though I understand collectivism to be a term to describe state policies (and in recent times also supranational organisations), and collectivist states to be states that act with collectivism as their goal.Tzeentch

    A strange definition of collectivism, but OK.
  • Whither the Collective?
    That despite having been tried and having produced by far the worst track record of any system in human history,Tzeentch

    No, that would be capitalism. Brutal, inhumane, and reducing everyone and every thing to capital.

    If we go beyond Fox News talking points about Stalin, Mao, and Castro, the reality isn’t so simple.

    The problem with collectivism is simple. It is the outright subjugation of the individual to the ideology of the stateTzeentch

    You can have a collective without a state.
  • Whither the Collective?
    Let's suppose they were all beautifully innocent savages, which they certainly were not. ... What was it that they were fighting for, if they opposed white men on this continent? For their wish to continue a primitive existence, their right to keep part of the earth untouched, unused, and not even as property, but just keep everybody out so that you will live practically like an animal?

    - Ayn Rand

    Yeah, this “individualist” thinking never really appealed to me. Not in my genes. I just can’t view people as “primitive savages.” I guess it appeals to some.
  • Eat the poor.
    Notice the argument is not that one deserves to keep the value of what one produces. That wouldn’t look too good for feudalism or capitalism — so let’s instead whine about taxes, so we can continue the attempt to undermine the one institution that’s potentially democratic.

    I repeat: all of this is, at its core, a hatred of democracy, of social institutions, and of people. The world revolves around me and my self-interests, full stop.

    It’s just more dressed-up Ayn Rand garbage. A sick and silly outlook indeed.
  • Eat the poor.


    And who are against unions because they had a bad experience in one once?

    Yeah, something like that.
  • Eat the poor.
    Except they too often get elected.Banno

    It does seem to be the ruling ideology. But I think that’s changing as the people become angrier with the state of things. Most are lashing out in silly ways, to the point of electing clowns because they say they like them.

    I guess it means we gotta try harder to educate people and listen to them.

    Anyway, I was mostly talking about people in this forum.
  • Eat the poor.


    Anti-social personalities generally view doing anything with others as evil, raising “individualism” to the level of fundamentalist dogma, matched only by their faith in markets. They’ll forever rail against unions and governments while keeping quiet about corporate power, for one reason: they prefer tyranny. Why? They imagine themselves as in charge.

    It’s nothing other than dressed up justification for greed, the hatred of democracy and, generally, human beings. Who knows how or why they acquired this sick outlook — I suspect early experiences and heavy brainwashing.

    Not worth getting too worked up about. Leave them to their pathologies.
  • Eat the poor.


    Class war is very real and very damaging to the world. Don’t pay attention to those who pretend it doesn’t exist — they’re unwitting puppets for pure tyranny. Always have been.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    Someone made this inquiry from the US and the results absolutely horrible.ssu

    One person I know of, which everyone should check out if they haven't already, is Tom Ferguson. His "investment theory of party competition" is worth the time -- the book is Golden Rule.

    The bottom 80% of the country have almost no political power whatsoever. Their interests are simply ignored.
  • The Inflation Reduction Act
    Well, it has been seven months from this exchange. All only a supply chain problem, still?ssu

    I didn’t say “only,” but it’s the main driver in my view. Yes, that still holds— fairly obvious, in fact. You raise this now as if you’ve been vindicated when the money supply has decreased as the Fed has tightened policy. You’d think that would bring inflation down — but hasn’t. It will probably send us into recession— but that’s about it.

    The Fed can do nothing about oil and gas supplies. Nothing. And it’s this that’s driving inflation so high.

    It also does nothing about monopoly power and price gouging, which is also happening. Hence why big oil just posted record profits. Billions of dollars that go from customers being gouged to shareholders’ pockets. There’s absolutely no good reason for that whatsoever. It’s stupidity and greed.

    Of course there are many reasons for the inflation, the effects of the pandemic, the war and both previous fiscal and monetary policy. But as the US is now in recession, it's interesting to see what the Fed will actually do from here onwards.ssu

    The Fed will continue lowering rates until we hit recession. They have only limited options. I imagine inflation will come down a little in the next few months, but overall what happens will largely be contingent on what Russia, China, and the corporate monopolies do.

    Someone showed me a segment the comedian John Oliver did on inflation. A surprisingly good analysis, actually.

  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    Then in terms of wages, benefits, you’ve had what others thought you deserved.NOS4A2

    Nope. But I see why those with anti-social personality disorder may think that.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    Trade unions, if they get powerful in the US, won't change the system. Sorry. They aren't going to be an engine of change.ssu

    They have, and it’s very possible they will again. Your gut feelings aside.

    And along with safety issues and other work related stuff, higher wages are the objectives of trade unions.ssu

    Not always. In fact, I’m not sure even most of the time. What unions fight for, if they haven’t been corrupted, is worker dignity. Sometimes that involves wages. Mostly it involves more involvement in decision making.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    Labor never had the power to do that.Tate

    Read about the 30s. The Wagner Act wasn’t simply a gift from above.

    the tide turned against them and they're gone now.Tate

    They’re not gone.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    The government, in the USA at least, has been mostly anti-labor and pro-capitalist.
    — Moliere

    Since the 1980s, yes. Before that, no.
    Tate

    The government has never been pro-union. Never.

    FDR was somewhat receptive to unions, and with the proper push was able to pass the labor relations act in ‘35. Right away there was pushback, and it was significantly weakened through Taft-Hartley in the 40s.

    Unions have had higher participation rates prior to the neoliberal assault. But the government has never been anything but pro-capitalist— including FDR.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    Have you ever worked for a union?NOS4A2

    Yep.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    setting up a new dynamic that made the labor movement possible.Tate

    The labor movement far predates Roosevelt.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    Yea, it's true.Tate

    No, it’s not close to true. Feel free to pick up literally any book about it. The labor movement far predates any “government backing,” Teddy Roosevelt, or Woodrow Wilson.

    Stop talking nonsense.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    One thing you do need to understand about the American labor movement is that it only existed in the first place due to federal backingTate

    Not remotely true.

    There's no way to return to the days of powerful unions.Tate

    Says who?
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    If unionization is one step away from communism, then that 98% of Finnish active officers belong to a trade union makes me smile. After all, it's just an army that has since it's inception fought and prepared to fight Bolshevism, the Soviet Union and Soviet infiltration until the end of the Cold War and basically has been the only institution where Finlandization didn't happen at all. You really will not find in Finnish officer ranks an officer with political ideas like Hugo Chavez.ssu

    Yeah, it's pretty silly. But again, depends on how we're defining communism and socialism. By how I think of the terms, unions are certainly communist and socialist -- but so what?

    True, it's a bad as labeling yourself a satanist in this country. But that's because of propaganda. Still, not the best marketing strategy.

    Far better example would be the United Kingdom and it's Labour party and politicians like Tony Blair or Gordon Brown (not just Jeremy Corbyn).ssu

    A far better example of what? Blair was a much a neoliberal as anyone.

    The Myth of the Individual in the USA mitigated against the uptake of unions. A Real Man stands on his own, not needing others to help him negotiate his workplace contract.

    Hence the Myth of the Individual helped ceed power to corporations, resulting in the failed democracy that is the modern USA.
    Banno

    Yes indeed. Reagan helped perpetuate this bullshit "cowboy"-type version of the "true" manly American as well. The neoliberal policies that followed are no surprise, using this myth as window dressing. The country, and the world, has payed the price these last 40 years.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    The worst faulty idea about trade unions is that they are a socialist endeavour promoting socialism.ssu

    Depends on what we mean by socialism. According to some, unionization itself is just one step away from communism. The problem isn't whether unions are socialist, it's why socialism has gotten so demonized that it's assumed unions are "bad" by association.

    Union dues was another tax. Shitty workers never got fired or reprimanded so we all just stooped to their level.NOS4A2

    It's like you're living Fox News talking points. This is what came first, which then inevitably leads to:

    I always hated working for a union.NOS4A2

    Anti-social individualist-minded people who constantly feel they're oppressed, and who were heavily brainwashed with Cold War era propaganda, will predictably feel this way -- about any institution, in fact. Not a surprise.

    But your feelings and anecdotes don't really say much about the labor movement. I know plenty of people who had bad union experiences who are very much in favor of union efforts -- they see their importance and stick around to make them better. Disowning and fleeing is an option, of course. Comes down mostly to temperament. As I said, anti-social personalities aren't a good fit anyway.

    I'd say this isn't lost on the majority of union people. I know that my preferred way of looking at unions is as institutions for working people to obtain power over the economy -- that is, a kind of socialismMoliere

    :up:

    Again, just a matter of semantics. But I tend to agree with the underlying definition of socialism you're using here (power to the people), and so unions are indeed socialist by that standard: they help working people build power.
  • The US Labor Movement (General Topic)
    Unions have self-inflicted wounds, certainly, some of them near fatal. But it Is also the case that unions, unionizing, union leadership, union thinking -- all of it has been subject to really sustained attacks by both corporations and government. Legal barriers have been placed in the way of union formation. Unions are restricted in their ability to support each other (no secondary boycotts, for instance). State governments have stood ready to assist in breaking strikes (like, by protecting scabs crossing picket lines). There are companies specializing in anti-union strategies. There is a strong anti-unionization bias in media. ETC.Bitter Crank

    All very important. In terms of the anti-unionization bias, you see it full blown in the UK rail strikes. Mick Lynch has been doing an excellent job in communicating, but look at the spin and slant of the questions he constantly faces. From what I see of the US, they try to ignore strikes and unionization efforts entirely. Now that large companies are being successfully unionized, there's been some renewed interest -- but the slant is still there. You can tell the ideology fairly easily.

    My work history has been mostly in the non-profit sector--an area as in need of unions as any other, but is additionally hobbled by do-good thinking that discourages unions. I was a member of AFSCME while employed at the University. AFSCME didn't seem to be very effective at this location. Some groups at the U were represented by the Teamster Union, which seemed to be a better representative and organizer.Bitter Crank

    We run in similar circles. I was part of a unionization effort in a non-profit as well, in Mass. AFSCME provided some guidance.
  • The Inflation Reduction Act
    Alot of experts still think that this will significantly cut down climate emissions so I'll take it.Mr Bee

    I see that as well...and honestly, as pathetic as this sounds, I just want to be happy about this for a couple days.
  • The ABC Framework of Personal Change
    Do you have any views about what a phenomenological approach to this model might be? In the light of the process of being and becoming and how we are constantly changing and reinventing self - how does this sit alongside your more pragmatic model which seems to rest upon a realist worldview? Does this make sense?Tom Storm

    It would help by defining what you mean by phenomenology. In my view, phenomenology is the awareness of beings, particularly those which are absent. Here I'm influenced by Heidegger. I think this framework I outlined above has very little to say about any of that.

    We're constantly changing, yes. I don't see any problem with this fact and what I said above. Maybe I'm missing something?
  • The Inflation Reduction Act


    A much better synopsis, yes.

    The more I look at it, the less great this bill looks for climate. I'd like to think it's still a win, but if it is it's a small one. The provisions about oil and gas leasing on public lands are just absolutely horrific and morally repugnant.