No, I am simply suggesting that deciding how much value someone has provided isn't a matter of common sense, it's something that has to be carefully analysed to determine.I don't need to do that. Someone with greater expertise can do that. And I don't need to rely on gut feeling and prejudice. Anyone with common sense can, from observation, rightly conclude that a building has collapsed. But you'd need an expert to assess with due precision what exactly caused the building to collapse. Are you suggesting that you do not possess this common sense? — Sapientia
Why is it only possible in a selfish and greedy framework? There are millions of people who want to watch him play and who love him.Then you must think that he has earned that amount. How is that possible? It's only possible within a selfish and greedy framework. — Sapientia
Right, well I am against private banking pretty much anyway. Providing money at super high-interest rates isn't providing value to anyone.And making a whip of cords, he drove them all out of the temple, with the sheep and oxen. And he poured out the coins of the money-changers and overturned their tables.
It's not as simple as that. If you don't give those idiots you mention something to watch - games - circus as the Romans said, then they will cause problems through society. Romans invented the notion of bread and circus to control the masses, and they were right. If those people don't have that outlet, they will cause other, much more serious damage to society. Indeed, if we close such outlets, we will lose a lot more lives than we save by increasing pay to paramedics.I have thought about that. Here are my thoughts: a footballer is considered valuable insofar as you enjoy watching, or making money out of, men or women playing a game which involves kicking around a ball on a field whilst lots of people stare at this on a screen or in the stands and moronically cheer, jeer, chant, and gesticulate. This is nowhere near as valuable as protecting the public and saving lives. — Sapientia
Because he's rich. People who are rich and successful are often despised by those who are jealous of them and their success.Why is Phillip Green so despised? — Sapientia
>:OAnd making a whip of cords, he stood back and did nothing. They all remained in the temple, with the sheep and oxen. The coins remained in the money-changers and the tables stayed exactly where they were. Business carried on as usual,
with no disturbances. — Trump 2:15
And making a whip of cords, he stood back and whipped them screaming "Faster, work faster you scoundrels!" They all remained in the temple, with the sheep and oxen. The coins started flowing like tremendous rivers of gold and the money-changers and their tables stayed exactly where they were. Business was tremendous that day. — Trump 2:15
Well right, no - of course not, because, to begin with, not every worker adds as much value as the next. — Agustino
What about costs with marketing and advertising, probably the single most important aspect of business? — Agustino
So the cars sell by themselves right? :s — Agustino
How much should this person get paid?
Sure, but assembly line workers are not all that is required to run the factory.Workers on an assembly line generally get paid without respect to the value of the part they are adding. They are all doing essentially the same task. — Bitter Crank
Why?In a socialist economy, marketing and advertising are less important. — Bitter Crank
Sure, but you still have to let people know "Yo, we have a new car here guys". You still need to secure big contracts with other businesses, etc.Where production for need, rather than production for profit prevails, whipping up enthusiasm for new cars, new can openers, new whatever, would not be practiced. — Bitter Crank
:s - I think this is a huge mistake. From my experience, no product, no matter how good it is and how needed it is can do without sales effort. Sales effort is the ABSOLUTE key ingredient in business, without this even the greatest product will fail. Most businesses fail for precisely this reason in fact. Neglect of the importance of sales. Sales don't come to you - you have to go out there and get them.Products for which there is a clear need do not require a lot of sales efforts. — Bitter Crank
Yeah, I would agree with some of the other principles, but not here. Usually, companies find out that a large share of their revenue comes from relatively few customers (unless they are something like retail supermarkets). In my case last year, 80% of my revenue came from like 15% of clients. In the case of big factories it's the same. A single big contract will account for a large share of the revenue. The key person who secures that contract is absolutely important to the functioning of the business. So yeah, there may be a sales team, but those salesmen are all going out to try to secure contracts. They work relatively independently apart from the overall product strategy.I would imagine distribution would be handled by a work group much like the one that made the cars in the first place. Distribution and sale completion are important, but in a socialist economy, maximizing sales isn't the point, so the rewards for this work group would be determined by the work group themselves. — Bitter Crank
... then those people who don't produce just for need will outgrow everyone else...
I say why make people go through the economic "realities" in the first place? — schopenhauer1
Relax. It's merely an exercise to annoy Agustino who still believes in natalism. — Bitter Crank
My computer knows what you wrote, but I cannot mention it because Baden will whip me if I do. Suffice to say that "fair" trials of the "ruthless" entrepreneur in the heart of Siberia are something long-gone :D .not deleted, never written. — Bitter Crank
Sometimes phrases shapeshift too... Well, suffice to say that I wouldn't much like living in such a regimented economy. I much prefer as much economic freedom as possible, much like Tolkien's Shire. Which is why I prefer distributism. Everyone should be free to produce as they wish, and then seek to sell their produce. Why? Because, at least for me, a significant portion of my enjoyment of life comes from the useful work I freely choose to do for other people in the economy. I can't much imagine life without this, it would be quite grim.No, they won't grow at all because outside of Council Coordination, you will find no supplies, space, energy, markets, or anything else. Those who persist in trying to subvert council coordination will not be looked upon kindly. — Bitter Crank
Right, but then such utopian critiques certainly incorporate some dystopian features themselves.I don't expect that my design for a utopian economy in a utopian society will ever exist, not even remotely, because the conditions required to establish a de novo utopian economy will never exist.
I don't like regimentation either, whether it is within a large corporation or small group. Utopian systems have hidden regimentation built in -- everyone would have to conform, whatever the shape of the utopia. Universal peace and contentment has the same problem: the only way to keep it going is for everyone to be in a strait-jacket of peace and contentment regimentation.
So why bother talking about utopian schemes in the first place? It's a way of highlighting the dystopian features of reality. — Bitter Crank
Tolkien would definitely have been familiar with Chesterton - he was part of the Inklings, including C.S. Lewis and Owen Barfield, all who were influenced by these Christian thinkers. In fact, for C.S. Lewis, Chesterton's book The Everlasting Man played a central role in his own conversion. He also called it the best book of popular apologetics. Ironic that his own book Mere Christianity is now better known.I don't know whether Tolkien was familiar with Chesterton and Belloc -- two of the English Catholic promoters of distributivism. — Bitter Crank
I agree with that. That's largely due to the existence of an octopus formed largely of the financial industry. Hedge fund managers, board of directors of multinationals, CEOs, etc. They form part of a class of people I detest, which is the hierarchy climbing "politician" who cannot actually do anything practical, but has a nice smile and is willing to get into bed with whoever it takes to rise to the top. These people don't actually do anything productive, they merely appropriate what others do, while being servile to those higher than them. That's what the whole field of managers, etc. are doing.huge, regimented, military-industrial multinational complexity, — Bitter Crank
Sounds interesting. Lenin had an interesting life.I have been reading a biography of Lenin: The Man, The Dictator, and the Master of Terror by Victor Sebestyen, and at least under the Tzars, Siberian exile wasn't always that bad. Lenin lived modestly with his wife in a small but adequate cabin, was free to go hiking and hunting (he never succeeding in bagging any game), could correspond -- as long as what he had to say got past the Okhrana censors, and so on. Lenin happened to land in one of the pleasant circles of hell. Jews, for instance, were sent to places far to the north, near the Arctic Circle, where exile tended to start at wretched and go downhill to fatal. — Bitter Crank
Oh yes, I had quite a few encounters with the NHS. When I first got there it was still okay, it was quite good, excellent, and entirely free. But over the years it degraded a lot...You lived in England... don't know whether you ever availed yourself of the National Health Service... I just read This Is Going To Hurt, an account of young doctor Kay's experience there. He praises the quality of care delivered, but working in the service was something of a nightmare. He's very sarcastic about the stupidity of both patients and institution, so it's quite enjoyable. — Bitter Crank
I see, yeah, at the time I left there was basically no "urgent care", except running to the pharmacy and figuring it out yourself with the pharmacist, or calling the ambulance, or waiting like 2 weeks for an appointment.Many hospitals in the US have walk-in urgent care clinics. "Urgent care" is a couple of steps below emergency room care; however, since it is in the hospital a patient can be diverted from urgent to ER care easily. — Bitter Crank
In the UK it was all free, and the private ones were just exorbitantly expensive, and really not affordable, nor worth it.All that helps avoid the higher charge and maybe longer wait to see a doctor in clinic. — Bitter Crank
Generally, I do go for just any doctor anyways, I'm personally not very fussy about doctors :PBut the U of Minnesota medical service offers same day clinic appointments with a doctor -- probably not the doctor you want to see, but... can't have everything. — Bitter Crank
Wrong.Fact: The GDP of the world is $16,100. This means that if all the resources of the world were divided equally for every citizen of the world, they'd only get $16,100, and most of that isn't even cold hard cash, but is tied up in property and commodities. — Harry Hindu
Mmmmkay, I wonder how production isn't related to resources as you can't produce anything without resources.Gross Domestic Product measures very crudely production, not existing resources. It's basically a very flawed measure (invented By Keynes, if I remember correctly). The flaws of the GDP as a measure of prosperity are evident from the fact that World GDP rose quite spectacularly during WW2, during the greatest slaughter and destruction seen ever during the history of mankind.
And btw you are talking about GDP per capita. — ssu
Uh, you seem to be making my argument AGAINST making everyone get paid equally for different work, the only problem with this example is how can anyone pay more for goods and services on a black market when they make the same as everyone else?And what you are otherwise saying could be said in another way: if income would be divided equally, not only would be the incentives for studying/learning for a more demanding job be squashed, but also the process would simply wreck totally the price mechanism for the supply and demand of the workforce. Not only would this be a huge hindrance to the functioning of the economy, but would likely create a black market and rampant corruption (for those jobs and services in high demand where people are willing to pay far more for the services than the average pay). — ssu
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.