Without FRL, the economy would collapse. For better or worse, FRL is a central engine of capitalism, as it facilitates investment and makes it cheaper (via inflation). — Echarmion
Horribly being the key word here, not "corrupt". The idea of the free market is that the interests of the business are the same as the interests of the human being who happens to run it. They are meant to be tied. Any divergence of those two by people who espouse the ideal is a corruption. The problem is far more fundamental. — Kenosha Kid
MMT in total might work, — Benkei
If the aim is simply to make money, it doesn't matter much what it is you make, if anything. Production is much more abstract than it is for, say, a farmer. — Kenosha Kid
It is quintessentially capitalist that production itself becomes a dummy variable. — Kenosha Kid
People in power care about one thing and one thing only...can they do business with you! You really think they could care less about all the other nonsense. These are the scum of the earth...all of them!That's why "they" hated Trump. He wasn't for sale.
— synthesis
No, they hated Trump because they couldn't trust him to sit the right way round on a toilet, let alone run a country. — Isaac
"They can actually figure things out and don't really need any more experts to screw things up.
— synthesis
So you think ordinary people can figure out climate science, agricultural subsidies, interest rates... Let's see. As an ordinary person, without looking anything up or consulting an expert in any way, what do you think we should alter the fiscal
mandate to reduce cyclically adjusted public sector net borrowing to? What do you think we should do about talik methane emissions? — "Isaac
Nobody is forcing anybody to do anything.
— synthesis
You seem to be in an odd admixture of simultaneously arguing for and against choice. Total freedom is great, as long as it's exactly the amount of freedom people currently have now. — Kenosha Kid
The bigger the group, the more standardized the solutions. Not so great.
— synthesis
People didn't come up with unified governance for a laugh. They came up with it to resolve conflicting individual solutions, so you're simplistic conclusion that standardized solutions are less well-adapted to each individual is just trivially true, and irrelevant unless you tackle the problem of conflict between the solutions of particular individuals with regards to shared or disputed resources - which is all government is ever about anyway. — Isaac
"If everybody pretty much takes care of themselves, you don't have to worry about taking care of the needs of a future generation.
— synthesis
Again, this simply doesn't follow. You've provided no evidence at all that this is the case. what is it about everybody currently living taking care of themselves which somehow magically takes care of the needs of generations yet to come?
If you just be polite and clean up after ourselves, future generations will take care of themselves. Leaving them with our debt is the ultimate douche-bag move.
— "Isaac
"Do you really believe that you know what's better for everybody else?
— synthesis
Yes. Within my field of expertise, anyway. What makes you think individuals have some sort of clairvoyance telling them what's best for them in the future. I'm genuinely baffled as to how you might think, for example, that a theatre director knows what taxation regime best promotes sustainable growth, or an accountant knows what fuel ratio produces the least long-term change in the earth's atmospheric conditions. Why on earth would they? — "Isaac
Distribution of ownership is all about how to allocate the proceeds. If the people broadly own the means of production (socialism) the proceeds of production are allocated to them broadly. If only a small fraction own everything (capitalism) then all the proceeds go to them and only further entrench their stranglehold on the market.
Capitalism is not a free market. — Pfhorrest
The Democratic Party of the 1930s was a busload of wise men. Roosevelt politics was to the left of Bernie Sanders: "He put tens of millions of people to work through “alphabetical agencies” such as the Civilian Conservation Corps, the National Industrial Recovery Act, and the Works Progress Administration. He imposed FDIC requirements on banks and insured investor’ deposits. He separated commercial banking from investment banking and created unemployment insurance and Social Security." — Miguel Hernández
Responding to your question and not your post, yes, absolutely. Extreme, perhaps, isn't quite the right word, as the really are very few political terrorists in the world, but, there are fanatics within every political faction, most certainly including, but not especially limited to the Left. — thewonder
The best chance we seem to have is in allowing people the opportunity to do the best they can for themselves and their families.
— synthesis
Which necessitates allowing people to choose security over short-term profit. Removing their ability to choose by limiting their choices to the worst possible does not chime with the above sentiment. — Kenosha Kid
Sorry, I meant to say that each unit of time "can" and only exists for zero seconds. — elucid
It's a common misconception that if something has only existed for zero seconds, it has not existed at all. — elucid
As mentioned above, I bet the people in Reykjavík are a little more careful these days when doing their banking. This is a wonderful thing. I know that people in the U.S. could seem to care less who they bank with...not such a good thing.
— synthesis
Well, giving people a choice between caution and recklessness is what I'm arguing for. There's no point people being careful if they don't have much choice. Either way, Iceland is an example of how bad things can get when the system is left to its own devices, not how robust the system is. — Kenosha Kid
It is the government interfering in the markets that makes capitalism inefficient. If nothing else, and despite the fact that is human beings at the controls, it is a very efficient system.
— synthesis
That ideology was presumably what your Iceland example was supposed to demonstrate. That didn't work.
The alternative is to make the remaining population so stupid that they'll keep buying the same shit over and over again with the increased wages they're getting form a better employment market... — Kenosha Kid
The idea is that you want to simplify processes, that is, individualize them
— synthesis
Nope, still missing a link I'm afraid. Simplify, yes. Indiviualise...? That's neither the same as simplify, nor does is relate in any way that I can see to 'simplify' Making each individual person solve the problem for themselves might simplify a problem or it might not, it really has no intrinsic bearing at all of the complexity of the problem solving task. — Isaac
Joe Blow is in a much better position to ascertain the needs for himself and his family than is a politician attempting to make the same decisions for a million of his closest friends and neighbors.
— synthesis
Maybe (though I wouldn't always agree), but we're talking about the needs of a future generation here, not Joe Blow and his wife. Why would he be any better judge of that than the (hopefully well-informed) politician? — Isaac
The depositors would have been bailed-out, the debt written-off (what needs to happen!!),
— synthesis
By whom, if not the state? — Kenosha Kid
You should read Robert Freeman: — Miguel Hernández
I feel that the battle between capitalism vs socialism needs to be transformed altogether to meet the needs of humanity in the widest possible sense. — Jack Cummins
The idea that all would have been well had the banks been allowed to fail is, in your parlance, total bullshit.
Banks used to fail all the time (and good riddance to them).
— synthesis
When they were small enough to insure, to fail, and for insurers to be able to pay out the odd failure, yes. Insurers would no better have weathered the collapse of the entire sector. — Kenosha Kid
Agreed.My point was that when one side thinks that they can cancel the other side's thinking, this likely has the opposite effect. — ssu
The banks should have been allowed to fail in 2008.
— synthesis
But the consequences of not bailing out the banks would have been catastrophic, not just for the market, but for the entire country. And that of course was the scam. Banks provide an essential public service, and so cannot be allowed to fail. — Kenosha Kid
What I'm arguing for is an environment in which banks can be allowed to fail, properly, and people can choose (freeeeeedom!) between trusting capitalist banks and risking failure or underwritten, regulated banks which will not perform as well in the short term but will abide such catastrophes. — Kenosha Kid
Does that clarify at all? — Isaac
The point is that society is based on an infinite number of things going on at the same time. Nobody can understand this kind of complexity, yet proscribe solutions for it.
— synthesis
I'm arguing that the state should create an environment in which capitalism runs things more sustainably. — Kenosha Kid
State intervention prevented the market from cleaning-up much some the problem. Capitalism (like everything else) sucks when you massive corruption coupled with state intervention.
— synthesis
Although actually this is worth treating. When the financial sector self-destructed this century (due entirely to its own practices, and from which it was unable to react constructively), the affected nations faced two alternatives:
1. take capitalism seriously and let the banks fall, bringing down every saver, every mortgage payer, every business depending on provision of loans with them.
2. inject taxpayer money into the sector, allowing the banks time to recover and ride out their own wave of destruction.
Neither are good options, but the first was, rightly, seen as the worst.
There was a perfect opportunity to ensure that this never happened again using a pluralistic approach. Ethical banks that followed a more stringent, preservative set of regulations could be guaranteed to be underwritten by the state, just as banks effectively are now, since if they fail again, we must bail them out again).
Meanwhile freer, more reactive (short-termist) banks could carry on as usual, but should they fail, market forces hold without the intervention of the state.
Customers who want security could opt for the state-secured banks; those who don't can risk the casino banks. The latter are free to exemplify capitalist dogma... Until they die, as they should and would. New ones can rise up and take their place, and the people who used them have lost out, but with fair warning.
This to me shows how pluralism, not capitalism, exemplifies choice. Capitalism underwritten by the state is not capitalism at all: it's just a scam to part taxpayers with their money. Capitalism as part of a pluralism can be as free as capitalists pretend capitalism already is, including free to die. — Kenosha Kid
In neither version have you shown how your conclusion follows from your premise. — Isaac
the best path seems to be to allow for each participant to chart his own course (within the context of respecting others' rights to do the same).
— synthesis
This is simply unrealistic.
Those who have more power, more resources can afford not to respect the rights of others and get away with it.
If someone wrongs you and you don't have the money to sue them, you're screwed. — baker
Here's the deal, freedom is ALWAYS the answer, be it in personal matters, matter of the state, or the economy. Allow people to make decisions and take responsibility for themselves.
— synthesis
The problem is that sometimes, when people make their own decision and act freely, this results in difficult situations that they themselves cannot mend, and those negative situations negatively affect other people.
An example of such a difficult situation is consumerism, which, if left unchecked, is on the trajectory to destroy the planet. — baker
If you look at the medium to long term, it seems pretty clear that capitalism (even though it is political corruption that causes most/if not all of the difficulties) is a system that provides the best life for the most people.
— synthesis
I did look at the medium to long term, e.g. the 2008 economic collapse, its obstinate reaction to the climate crisis. The blind faith in capitalism to react is simply not something that can be taken very seriously in light of the evidence. As I said, I didn't raise the question to start a religious war between fervent capitalists and fervent socialists, since I am neither. Facts, evidence, argument based on those... good. Ideology... not helpful. Sorry. No offense meant, just not the sort of discussion I was fishing for. Others might take you up on it though. — Kenosha Kid
The point of the market "being in control" is that it can react much quicker (and with a great deal more accuracy) to the needs of all concerned.
— synthesis
Another, perhaps more pertinent example of capitalism's ability to seed it's own destruction due to its inability to react to long-term problems is the financial crisis of 2008. From a short-termist viewpoint, it obviously made a lot of sense for financiers to carry on with their legalized pyramid scheme. However it was pretty obvious that such a scheme would self-destruct.
In the end, it was state interference which was required to save the day, with the taxpayer bailing out most of the failing banks. In fact, it surprises me that people still tout the reactivity of the markets and ineffectiveness of state intervention when capitalism's inability to react and the necessity of the state to stop the country being brought to bankruptcy is a fresh memory. — Kenosha Kid
Even systems are (and need to) change constantly. The problem with social planning is that it cannot predict what changes will take place and therefore socialist systems accumulate errant plan after errant plan until the whole thing comes crashing down.
— synthesis
As I think I pointed out elsewhere, this isn't obviously the case. Countries with the strongest socialist policies tend to be more reactive to problems. The obvious example is environmental concerns. More progressive countries are even at the stage of buying in waste from other countries for green reuse. This strikes me as a success for the reactivity of the state to emerging crises. The same cannot be said for more capitalist countries which keep kicking the environmental can down the road. — Kenosha Kid
On which:
The point of the market "being in control" is that it can react much quicker (and with a great deal more accuracy) to the needs of all concerned.
— synthesis
That might be the idea but evidence doesn't weigh it out. Capitalism is extremely myopic and, left to its own devices, will pollute indefinitely, poison its own customers, lobby against long-term solutions in the legislature, buy up and bury long-term solutions in the market, all for the sake of maximising profit in the short term.
This is precisely why I think capitalism might destroy itself. The long-term future of capitalism is, by virtue of being long-term, outside of capitalism's area of interest. — Kenosha Kid
Progressives have it right when they see the need for change, but they have it wrong when they believe that they know what the change needs to be.
— synthesis
I'm not seeing a credible alternative on offer. I'd intended the OP to address a specific issue that pluralism might resolve (up for debate). It's not a generic mudslinging against capitalism, nor is it obvious that generic feelings against socialism are going to be enlightening. But if you have something more concrete in mind, I'm sure that would be interesting. — Kenosha Kid
Since those that most espouse the necessity of capitalism (typically conservatives) are those most averse to any hint of state intervention and social welfare, is capitalism about to fuck itself over by driving down the very thing it depends on? — Kenosha Kid
Both sides see each other as extreme because they are extreme.
— synthesis
They are extreme, but that isn't why they see each other as extreme, or else they would see not only the other as extreme, but their own party as extreme as well. It takes a more objective, a-political outlook to see both as extreme. — Harry Hindu
For example, conservatives generally want to keep things the way they are (for obvious reasons including the fact that they are benefiting from the status quo) whereas progressives see the need for change in order to allow more folks to participate/prosper.
— synthesis
Both parties can claim that they are for allowing more folks to participate/prosper, as they both have libertarian tendencies, but they both have authoritarian tendencies as well, so neither one can actually declare that they possess the monopoly on libertarianism.
The Progressives are only such in name only. They are actually authoritarian socialists in libertarian clothes. Once they achieve what they want - which is the same as any political party wants: control over individuals - they become defenders of the status quo and any objectors become the progressives.
True progressives would be those that actually value individualism over collectivism, as collectivism is what we've basically had ever since religions became political. — Harry Hindu
Or at least some conservatives and especially Trump supporters (who I don't think actually are conservatives) themselves think so. — ssu
Saying that they are on the wrong side of history is denying the success that the U.S. has had over the past 244 years.
— synthesis
No, saying that they were on the wrong side of history wrt e.g. civil rights just says they were wrong irrespective of their successes. Success is not a measure of correctness. — Kenosha Kid
Identity politics and intolerance will only lead to further division making the process of debate and compromise difficult, at best.
— synthesis
I think you've been reading extremists and now have an extreme idea of progression. It isn't about identity politics (although there's ample identity politics as well). It's about optimizing the system to work for more people. — Kenosha Kid
"Identity politics" has become a term that extremists use to denounce any idea that seeks to address systematic bias. Real identity politics is about individualism. One can progress in that direction, but there are other, better directions. For instance, "progressive taxation" has nothing to do with identity politics. — Kenosha Kid
I'm not really sure this is about extremism. Conservativism isn't generally about trying to "roll back the clock". While it's generally on the wrong side of history on everything (slavery, civil rights, women's rights, gay rights, etc.), being conservative it tends to affirm its own defeats, for the most part anyway. They're not apt to remove women's right to vote or start slave trading. The extremists aren't e.g. the Republicans, but the Magamaniacs and Brexiteers. Also, saying that if progressives got their way everything would be bad is just saying that progressives are wrong. — Kenosha Kid
It's not a matter of right or wrong because this is intuitive, but it should give pause to consider to what is knowable. That's the real question here.How can we call anyone right or wrong when our justifications reach a dead end? — Darkneos
