Tate         
         Is it? There is a great deal of unresolved disagreement: We cannot even agree on the status of moral principles let alone what they are. — Fooloso4
They are not aristocrats. They are plutocrats. — Fooloso4
Fooloso4         
         They are not aristocrats. They are plutocrats.
— Fooloso4
Pretty much the same thing. — Tate
Tate         
         And yet in practice many are ignored. — Fooloso4
Similar in that the few are in power — Fooloso4
Fooloso4         
         Therefore we have a lot of them. — Tate
Name a culture that didn't have its version of one percenters (or there abouts). — Tate
Tate         
         is not a matter of some "therefore". People have always had different opinions about their obligations to others. — Fooloso4
Name a culture that didn't have its version of one percenters (or there abouts).
— Tate
Is it something we want to eliminate? — Fooloso4
Tate         
         You only own property if we say you do. — Banno
Fooloso4         
         Doesn't this have some impact on the kinds of societies we build? — Tate
Is it something we want to eliminate?
— Fooloso4
I don't know. What do you think? — Tate
Banno         
         Now I think there is the potential for more voices to be heard. — Fooloso4
Banno         
         
Agent Smith         
         How can you be sure that it isn't like organized crime in that there is a active conspiracy among certain wealthy people to undermine those that are either poor and/or the working class. I'm not an expert in US history but there has been times when certain business/corporate interests have mobilized much like a small military to undermine those that work and have actively harassed/killed those that have tried to do things like form unions/take actions for worker rights.
West Virginia coal wars
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Virginia_coal_wars — dclements
Agent Smith         
         I disagree. One of the easiest (if not THE MOST EASIEST) to make money today is to find a way to exploit others. By either making others feel like they are not worth anything (or in some way a substandard citizen or human being), one is able to make them live/work in conditions that they would not be willing to deal with otherwise. And even if you can't make them believe as you want them to you can always either violence or the threat of violence in order to make them behave the way you want them to.
It has been going on since the beginning of civilization and will likely continue to go on for the foreseeable future. Western civilization has been built on the backs of the poor and disenfranchised and it will continue to be that way since it seems to be the easiest/profitable way for those in power to run things. — dclements
NOS4A2         
         You're missing a premise from which you can then derive the conclusion that you therefore have the legal and/or moral right to that pre-tax income.
Benkei         
         
Isaac         
         You don't want to argue that we can't make mistakes and dispossess people immorally. — Tate
Isaac         
         The question was about whether the state, the guarantor if property rights, can be guilty of theft (as NOS4A2 accused).
The answer is: yes. — Tate
Tate         
         
Isaac         
         
Agent Smith         
         The market mechanism does not value moral outcomes — Benkei
Isaac         
         There was a Thai-based company which was blacklisted for using coconuts picked by monkeys — Agent Smith
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