the structure or design of our markets/economy hindering us from developing a better way forward? — Benj96
The eco company has no choice but to accept this charge as they don't find an alternative. Now the price of eco cutlery goes up to maintain profit margins and is now more expensive than plastic cutlery. — Benj96
Is the structure or design of our markets/economy hindering us from developing a better way forward? — Benj96
Market prices reflect the totality of the information in the economy. — frank
This is how economies have always functioned. — Tzeentch
If the eco cutlery producer expected a free lunch, that's their mistake. There is no free lunch. — Tzeentch
If you were out in a forest, and you ate berries, growing on a bush for your lunch, does that count as a free lunch? — universeness
the modern way economies work hinders environmental consideration/sustainability for a fundamental reason - our attitude towards the world as an object to be owned, mined, deforested etc for objective resources. — Benj96
But "stability" is a resource too. — Benj96
Your OP exemplifies the folly of a profit driven free market economy.
Capitalism fully supports and maintains the pernicious global plutocracy that the human race currently suffers under. You can choose to be part of it's support, or you can do what you can to help dismantle it. — universeness
Only if you're gone before the bear family arrives. — Vera Mont
Too late for that. Whatever regulations a government enacts the next one will begin to dismantle; within four election cycles, its effects are completely neutralized and the rush toward the precipice resumes with gusto.Therefore when we say dismantle capitalism.... what it does need is regulation. — Benj96
Should, yes, but never can. However honestly and well-meaningly it begins, government is always suborned by the interests of the most ruthless citizens and the economic system, with all the powerless in it, made to serve them.And government is and should always be about equalising, checks and balances.
Legal occupation and protection from others taking what you and yours NEED, is a different matter. BUT, no-one has a RIGHT to OWN land imo. — universeness
Too late for that. Whatever regulations a government enacts the next one will begin to dismantle; within four election cycles, its effects are completely neutralized and the rush toward the precipice resumes with gusto. — Vera Mont
In the face of capitalism, we need as much as we can get because others will always try to take it from us. If we value the same things, we are in endless competition for them. And the competition itself propagates the fear of losing and thus the behaviour of hoarding. — Benj96
There are no bears in the forests of Scotland. — universeness
Or water or air or trees or animals or even other people.I have yet to hear a valid argument the concept of ANY human OWNING land. — universeness
Shoukld, yes, but never can. However honestly and well-meaningly it begins, government is always suborned by the interests of the most ruthless citizens and the economic system, with all the powerless in it, made to serve them.
It will have to collapse under its own corruption. Just pray that happens soon - before national rivalries, corporate greed, technological irresponsibility and the whirlwinds our predecessors have sown wipe us off this planet. — Vera Mont
The money trick is the bedrock of capitalism, so getting rid of money must become the main goal of everyone who want's a better way for the human race to exist. — universeness
Economies (the flow of resources, goods and services) predates capital - monetary systems. Bartering is another economic system as is simply sharing amongst a small tribal community. — Benj96
As no one wants to be at a financial loss but at the same time value anything healthier and better for their conscience. — Benj96
And that corrupts the innately good idea based on the free lunch (waste products being up cycled or used to make meaningful of valuable products). — Benj96
The only thing any living thing "pays" for lunch is the energy required to capture and digest it. — Benj96
So, do you reject the word 'freedom' as unattainable?Nothing is truly free — Vera Mont
Capitalists, because they only really care about their right to sate their own notions of excess and theists, as they believe, that their true glorification will happen in the next life and not in this one — universeness
You're essentially lamenting the fact that people don't care enough about eco cutlery. — Tzeentch
To suggest that the use of waste products equals a free lunch is wrong. It's a free lunch for the eco cutlery producer, paid for by the guac producer, so not a free lunch after all. — Tzeentch
Then it's not actually free, is it? — Tzeentch
So, do you reject the word 'freedom' as unattainable? — universeness
Money is excellent at standardising the value of all products/goods, services and properties against one another. As before that bartering was tricky. — Benj96
So if money is not evil. It's the behaviour and attitude ues that we have towards it that are - how much we want, and at what cost, what we spend it on and how we get it (thievery, immoral corporation or charitable donations etc).
If the eco cutlery producer cannot produce something equal or greater in value then it simply means his "innately good idea", while perhaps well-intentioned, wasn't very good. — Tzeentch
The amount of goods produced goes up, and as a result of the guac producer's free giving away of their waste product which the eco cutlery producer turns into value, the guac producer's buying power goes down as a result of their charity. — Tzeentch
The only better way is to use less disposable things and use, instead, things that can be used for many years, like stainless steel forks, knives, spoons, mugs, and plates. We need to wean ourselves from throw-away economy.Is the structure or design of our markets/economy hindering us from developing a better way forward? — Benj96
Well if "things" can be assessed in monetary terms, why not resources, land, water, time, work, wildlife and human life? — Vera Mont
. We need to wean ourselves from throw-away economy. — L'éléphant
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