BenMcLean
ssu
Libertarianism is an political philosophy, while obviously the global economy we have now isn't at all libertarian. The global economy is basically dominated by Oligopolistic competition (in every field there's a few large corporations which dominate the market and thus create an Oligopoly). Now the Oligarchs might publicly champion libertarian values and talk that kind of bullshit, but in truth what they value is the oligarchy that they are part of.Seeing this is actually one of the things that has made me decide I have to explicitly reject libertarianism. If libertarianism was true, then the free market would naturally correct this by bringing more suppliers into the consumer computer hardware market to meet the high demand indicated by this massive price spike. — BenMcLean
This ought to be important.And this isn't about open source either -- this is about open platforms and individual private property ownership vs enclosure and rent-seeking. This should concern everyone, not just open source advocates. — BenMcLean
BenMcLean
jgill
BenMcLean
ssu
Basically European social democracy attempts to run exactly like that: these "socialist" understand that market capitalism does work, but the excesses have to be cut. Then the question simply becomes just what is "excess" and when has capitalism gone "too far". Issues that people can have differences.Anti-liberal wokeness isn't just inherently wrong in itself -- although it totally is -- but is also a distraction from what having a left wing should be good for: being suspicious of capitalism. Keeping megacororate power in check. The Left should have listened to Bernie Sanders. — BenMcLean
BenMcLean
My instinct for most of my life has been to categorically dismiss any contemporary economic idea from Europe, not only out of a doctrinaire devotion to free market ideals which I've now (recently) grown out of, but also because Europe fundamentally does not pay for its own military defense. It isn't completely devoid of military spending and is improving in this area but Europe is still heavily dependent on the United States for security its taxes do not pay for and ours do. As long as that is the case, all of Europe's economic ideas appear to be luxury beliefs for which our economic system is footing the bill to make possible.Basically European social democracy attempts to run exactly like that: these "socialist" understand that market capitalism does work, but the excesses have to be cut. Then the question simply becomes just what is "excess" and when has capitalism gone "too far". Issues that people can have differences. — ssu
Joshs
Europe fundamentally does not pay for its own military defense. It isn't completely devoid of military spending and is improving in this area but Europe is still heavily dependent on the United States for security its taxes do not pay for and ours do. — BenMcLean
BenMcLean
As I undersatnd it, the major explicit policy goal of the Pax Americana was to undermine international Communism. The policy could have been argued to make sense until the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. That's when it stopped making sense and everybody knew it. Where before, there was a clear case of, "We're defending you in order to defend ourselves against the Soviets", 1991 changed this to an unresolved question of, "Why exactly are we doing this?" which didn't have as clear of a rationally self-interested geopolitical answer.You can thank the U.S. for coming up with the idea of that arrangement. After World War II, the United States did not reluctantly assume responsibility for European security because Europeans refused to pay for it. The arrangement emerged because Washington actively wanted to control the terms of European rearmament and, initially, to prevent it altogether. Demilitarization, especially of Germany, was a central American objective. — Joshs
You'd have to prove this: in particular to prove that the lack of the economic burden of defense wasn't necessary to make that whole system possible.Furthermore, the claim that European welfare states would have been unaffordable or impossible without U.S. military spending is not supported by historical evidence and collapses once you look at cases like Britain, France, or Sweden. Europe built welfare because it prioritized social insurance, labor protection, and decommodification in ways the U.S. did not, not because it was freed from defense obligations. — Joshs
L'éléphant
So servers will become obsolete?What scares me is that "AI" being based on a subscription model accelerates a trend which was happening long before it -- cloud computing not just supplementing but totally replacing local compute. — BenMcLean
I truly don't understand the sentiment here because upgrades are available.What we've seen happen recently isn't just the death of Moore's Law but a clear technological regression -- the baseline requirement for the computer gaming market has actually reduced its specification for the first time in history, from 16 GB RAM back down to 8 GB RAM. This is totally unprecedented and the implication is really disturbing. — BenMcLean
BenMcLean
The oncoming industry trend I'm afraid of is for all local compute -- including all on-premises servers -- to be considered a legacy technology fundamentally and not continued. Your company will go on the cloud because it will find that replacement parts for the kind of machines they need to not be on the cloud are simply no longer made or sold anywhere at any price.So servers will become obsolete?
Big companies use a hybrid of their own servers and public cloud. — L'éléphant
Maybe you haven't been following recent news in the computer hardware market?I truly don't understand the sentiment here because upgrades are available. — L'éléphant
L'éléphant
Do tell.Maybe you haven't been following recent news in the computer hardware market? — BenMcLean
BenMcLean
Do tell. — L'éléphant
Ludwig V
A lot depends on what you consider socialism to be, and opiniions differ on that.What are your thoughts on that? Do you think that a socialist or quasi-socialist system could actually pay for itself without turning into Soviet style tyranny the way the libertarians assume? — BenMcLean
In domestic policy, Bismarck pursued a conservative state-building strategy designed to make ordinary Germans—not just his own Junker elite—more loyal to the throne and empire, implementing the modern welfare state in Germany in the 1880s. According to Kees van Kersbergen and Barbara Vis, his strategy was:
granting social rights to enhance the integration of a hierarchical society, to forge a bond between workers and the state so as to strengthen the latter, to maintain traditional relations of authority between social and status groups, and to provide a countervailing power against the modernist forces of liberalism and socialism. — Wikipedia - entry on Otto von Bismarck
The welfare state can be a judicious combination of realpoitik (enlightened self-interest) and Chirstianity, designed to frustrate liberalism and socialism. It is not even necessary to frame it as taxation. It can perfectly well be framed as insurance - (state subsidized if it is politically necessary).The whole problem is rooted in the question: does the state have the responsibility to care for its helpless fellow citizens, or does it not? I maintain that it does have this duty, and to be sure, not simply the Christian state, as I once permitted myself to allude to with the words "practical Christianity", but rather every state by its very nature. ... There are objectives that only the state in its totality can fulfil. [...] Among the last mentioned objectives [of the state] belong national defence [and] the general system of transportation. [...] To these belong also the help of persons in distress and the prevention of such justified complaints as in fact provide excellent material for exploitation by the Social Democrats. That is the responsibility of the state from which the state will not be able to withdraw in the long run. — Bismarck's Reichstag Speech on the Law for Workmen's Compensation March 15, 1884 See Wikipedia - Otto von Bismarck
Thanks for the rest of your post. You add to my general alarm about the way the world is going. But it isn't true that nothing can be done. Capitalism can be regulated, and it is already regulated in many ways. One of the regulations is about monopoly and competition. If there was a political will, all those moves could be countered.This is clearly very, very bad but nothing in libertarianism can explain why it's bad or can prescribe any remedy for it, because as long as "it's a private company", nothing can be done. — BenMcLean
BenMcLean
Absolutely and this is a point I am consciously very confused about right now. I know I've gone way too far to the Right on economics my entire life and need a radical change on this to move to the Left on economics -- apparently to become what is these days called "postliberal" -- but I have not yet worked out how far I have to take this. I also know there's some truth to the historical liberal critique of the Soviet Union and that America's Founding Fathers did have significant (although not infallible) political wisdom and I do not yet see how to fit all these facts together, other than to recognize that there does need to be some limiting principle on how far to the economic Left I need to go in order to avoid Soviet style tyranny. My position is very unstable right now!A lot depends on what you consider socialism to be, and opiniions differ on that. — Ludwig V
In context, I was explaining the unacceptable doctrinal implications of libertarian orthodoxy in policymaking. Certainly something can and should be done, but doing anything whatsoever which would actually address this problem requires abandoning the Cold War era Baby Boomer libertarianism on economics which has been a core part of the self-identity of the Republican party for nearly half a century.But it isn't true that nothing can be done. — Ludwig V
Ludwig V
Isn't that a moral and political question, rather than a strictly economic issue?there does need to be some limiting principle on how far to the economic Left I need to go in order to avoid Soviet style tyranny. — BenMcLean
Yes. I was taking an opportunity to smuggle in a hobby-horse of mind. It seems paradoxical, but look at it this way. Society and the state define the limits of individual freedom. Within the scope of the freedoms that are allowed, each individual is (supposed) to be free to do whatever they wish. That means that they have total authority to determine what happens within the scope of those freedoms. Clearly, someone who owns more property, of whatever kind, has authority over that property - and pretty much unrestricted authority at that. Money effectively enables people to acquire and control resources of all sorts and so, the more money you have, the more resources you command.In context, I was explaining the doctrinal implications of libertarian orthodoxy in policymaking. — BenMcLean
Yes. I expect they will move when the electorate does.doing anything whatsoever which would actually address this problem requires abandoning the Cold War era Baby Boomer libertarianism on economics which has been a core part of the self-identity of the Republican party for nearly half a century. — BenMcLean
ssu
This is a bit off the topic, but I come from a country that has now only for three of years "enjoyed" US defense protection, but the whole Cold War and until the 2020's, we were totally on our own.also because Europe fundamentally does not pay for its own military defense. It isn't completely devoid of military spending and is improving in this area but Europe is still heavily dependent on the United States for security its taxes do not pay for and ours do. — BenMcLean
You should understand that the actual rent you have gotten is from your currency being the reserve currency. That has been a political decision. And thus you have been able to take on debt without any problems. That has been a quite large rent to you.The United States should have started charging some kind of rent for reliance on its defense network at that point, not because we don't want to be generous, but simply because no system, no matter how strong, can survive a permanent downward trend. — BenMcLean
Never underestimate just how similar in reality European system is to the American one. You spend just like European countries on Health Care and social security, with the exception that you don't have universal health care or free higher education. Yet somehow you pay a lot more per capita than European countries (even Norway with it's vast oil revenues spends less on health care than the US).Do you think that a socialist or quasi-socialist system could actually pay for itself without turning into Soviet style tyranny the way the libertarians assume? — BenMcLean
Ludwig V
Quite so. I think there may be people who think that things will get better once Trump's term ends. We'll see. But even if they did get better, I can't see that anyone with any sense would trust it/them again - not for decades into the future.Now it's obvious that your current administration is outright hostile to Europe, and Europe cannot at all rely on the US or it's military industrial complex. — ssu
That's true. I was mainly interested in the question of principle and especially the point that it is possible for a right-wing government to embrace the principle - i.e. the labelling of welfare as inherently "socialist" or "left wing" is a mistake.Never underestimate just how similar in reality European system is to the American one. — ssu
BC
The Left are to blame for this because they prioritized corporate controlled identitarian politics, to make everybody fake and gay, over their older anti-corporate economic policy. All genuinely anti-corporate thought has been pushed out of the American Left ever since it was discovered how easily identitarian politics could transform dangerous left wing movements into becoming financially non-threatening. — BenMcLean
there does need to be some limiting principle on how far to the economic Left I need to go in order to avoid Soviet style tyranny — BenMcLean
ssu
Here's the real tragedy in all of this.Quite so. I think there may be people who think that things will get better once Trump's term ends. We'll see. — Ludwig V
Ludwig V
I can see that moving towards subscriptions and rents is better business than selling people copies of software. That seems to need continuous updating anyway, so what's the point of owning it?I think the OP is still a very interesting topic to debate. I don't see it as a political thing, but more of an economic and commercial development that can be seen in many things. — ssu
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