Incidentally, I’m not in favor of “big government” or whatever conventional view of current-say liberals you want to ascribe to me. I’m just not fooled by the myths of free markets, individualism, and “liberty” offered by neoliberals as justification for the massive transfer of wealth that’s occurred these last 40 years. — Xtrix
You understand that competition entails using power to compete? — Tzeentch
Same as government's. — Isaac
If you want to keep asking questions in a discussion forum, don’t be surprised when you get answers. — NOS4A2
The government will not let you compete. — Tzeentch
However, the government will not let you do this. It will throw you jail, and punish you for even trying. — Tzeentch
To offer better services at a lower cost, in order to persuade the townsfolk to voluntarily choose their services over the local services. — Tzeentch
This has already been answered. Your miserable lack of success at competing is not the same as the government not letting you compete. — Isaac
That's the competition. If your security force can't compete with the government's that's their weakness. Toughen up! — Isaac
(though curiously never "I see, you're right") — Isaac
This discussion was about the difference between how governments behaved and the free market. In fact, you brought it up. — Tzeentch
I don't think what created this massive transfer of wealth is a result of classical liberal ideas.
It seems to me the result of big business jumping into bed with corrupt, bureaucratic government in an unholy alliance against the common man - crony capitalism. — Tzeentch
Sure— and take a look at the rhetoric. All of it done under the guise of “Government is the problem” and “ the era of big government is over.” We have to shrink the government, because it’s to blame for everything. Deregulate, privatize, cut taxes, etc. We see the results. — Xtrix
OK. What is the difference between Amazon competing for control over internet sales and government competing for control over violence?
You say one is a monopoly, the other isn't.
The government has jurisdiction in a given territory over which it has the supreme and final authority. — NOS4A2
Government spending in the US has been on a steady rise since the early 20th century — Tzeentch
A good state for humanity is that everyone leads a flourishing life and we therefore have less crime, better education and health and generally a better society which needs less intervention from governments. — TheVeryIdea
The vast majority of people will seek to protect their wealth, this includes the very wealthy, so very few people will give up any more than they absolutely have to even though there is an enlightened self interest to do so. If you earn 100k per year, in 10 years you will have earned 1 million of whatever currency you are being paid. It would take you 10,000 years to earn 1 billion, yes that's ten thousand years! No one needs to have 1 billion, even 100 million looks excessive. — TheVeryIdea
It is in everyone's interest to have a stable society and not have wild economic fluctuations, bubbles, wars, market crashes, revolutions. Therefore there needs to be regulation and taxation to create a society that is seen as fair and allows everyone to flourish and to do that by curbing the worst excesses of the most acquisitive. — TheVeryIdea
It is very questionable whether large governments produce these things, and whether large governments will ever cede their power when they become superfluous. — Tzeentch
Judging other people's wealth to be excessive is a very typical thing. Suppose an ascetic came along and started to judge your wealth. They judge that you could do without all of that fancy food, nice-looking clothes, your car, your house, warm showers, etc. After all, they don't need those things so why should you? — Tzeentch
For libertarian or classic liberal ideas to be considered responsible for our current predicament, when the US government hasn't embodied those ideas for a very long time and has essentially moved in the opposite direction uninterrupted. — Tzeentch
Those ideas are mostly nonsense anyway, and would be a disaster if implemented — as all capitalists know. — Xtrix
They seemed to have worked well for the United States and its capitalists in the era between its conception and the second world war in which government expenditure was about 3-5% of GDP. — Tzeentch
They seemed to have worked well for the United States and its capitalists in the era between its conception and the second world war in which government expenditure was about 3-5% of GDP. — Tzeentch
In fairness, I knew he was referring to the era prior to FDR. That’s often how it’s taught, with some merit. — Xtrix
government expenditure was about 3-5% of GDP. — Tzeentch
It did? Check out the 1780s and see how well it worked. The era of true “small government.” Didn’t work so well. — Xtrix
In any case, you’re talking about a state-capitalist system of the 1800s? (Which is all we’ve ever had: state capitalism.) Yes, crash after crash and panic after panic. — Xtrix
There’s a reason for the federal reserve system, anti-trust legislation, and eventually Bretton Woods. — Xtrix
On the other hand, take a look at the New Deal/Bretton Woods era, when the state-capitalist system leaned much more into regulations (“regimented capitalism”). That era — from 40s to early 70s — is what most people mean by America’s golden age. Real wages, GDP growth, etc. And no major crash. Corporations — especially the financial sector — all heavily regulated. No stock buybacks, no Friedman Doctrine. The era of corporate managerialism. What was the result there? Better for the employees and for the companies themselves. Much more egalitarian society — at least for white people. — Xtrix
It no good believing in fantasies of free markets or small government. All it translates to is small government for everyone else except those in power and with wealth. — Xtrix
Where "evils" were perpetrated, you have to show this is the result of government functioning or the result of politics. — Benkei
I think the Dutch system is one of the best - one of my favourites is the easy access for new parties that allow for the introduction of new issues in political discourse that are relevant to society but ignored by mainstream parties. The better the system, the less corruption or "special interest" have a chance to influence decision making. But at the end of the day, to me it's mostly about political culture. — Benkei
I feel that Dutch political parties have become more corrupt than say 20 years ago, with political leaders not taking responsibility for governmental failures, a focus on political symbolism and point-scoring in media. Just look at the toeslagenaffaire, how Pieter Omtzigt was treated and the talk about a new "culture of transparancy" but nobody following it through. Just windowdressing. — Benkei
And this has influence on how ministries are run and act. They are increasingly in the business of keeping elected officials out of trouble. So they avoid taking difficult decisions because the minister is not going to sign off on it any way. — Benkei
Let's keep the conversation honest. The birth of the United States was a period full of conflict and wars against nations that were at that time much more powerful. To just chalk that all up to "small government" is very convenient for you, and in my opinion bereft of any reason. — Tzeentch
Ups and downs is the nature of economics. It's exactly the desire to forcefully stop that fluctuation that makes government interventions so problematic. — Tzeentch
Imperfect man will always need some government, but too often we forget that its the same imperfect man that takes the reigns in government. — Tzeentch
You call it “natural,” but that’s really no excuse. As I mentioned, there were no major crashes during the Bretton Woods era — when the financial sector was actually regulated. — Xtrix
Yes, and reducing human purpose to competition in markets is insane. — Xtrix
However, where we may differ in views is that I do not believe governments are able to resist against this phenomenon, and giving governments further mandates to fight private business will only result in larger, more unaffordable behemoth government, and more mandates that will be in the end abused against the citizen. — Tzeentch
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