I am no fan of Churchill, but I tend to agree with the statement (probably falsely attributed to him and loosely paraphrased) "Democratic capitalism is the worst of all possible systems, apart from all the others". — Janus
I thought I had already said that I don't have a problem with that. When I said that politics is a messy business, best not really be conducted in public, I was also accepting that it was a bribe to voters. All democracies do that - it's an inevitable outcome of the system. Non-democratic governments do it as well. Politicians have to keep their supporters sweet. I'm not even saying it is right, or all right, just that it always happens.We have no disagreement then. People should pay off their own loans that they knowingly agreed to pay. — fishfry
Each country has its own system. In the UK, the "trades" like welding and pipefitting, do get government support - and this is a "right-wing" government. See Skills for careers. Some people regard this as a blatant subsidy for employers, who should be paying. But there are complications.Welders don't have student loans. — fishfry
And because, even if he doesn't have children, he's helping to train up the well taxed caregivers and inventors of helpful products for his old age. — Vera Mont
Churchill does quote it, but doesn't take credit for it. Also, there are various forms of it. See Quote Investigator. — Ludwig V
I thought I had already said that I don't have a problem with that. When I said that politics is a messy business, best not really be conducted in public, I was also accepting that it was a bribe to voters. All democracies do that - it's an inevitable outcome of the system. Non-democratic governments do it as well. Politicians have to keep their supporters sweet. I'm not even saying it is right, or all right, just that it always happens. — Ludwig V
Each country has its own system. In the UK, the "trades" like welding and pipefitting, do get government support - and this is a "right-wing" government. See Skills for careers. Some people regard this as a blatant subsidy for employers, who should be paying. But there are complications.
Higher-level professions depend on degree-level courses, and these get student loans. But these are repaid on a sliding scale, dependent on you income. (Effectively, it's an additional income tax). The Government assumes that 35% to 40% of the total will never be repaid. There's your forgiveness, but sanctioned by Parliament.
Re-training is more of a problem. — Ludwig V
Yes, he did say that. He was also right about that, as well.I believe Churchill also said that the greatest argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with the average voter. — fishfry
H'm. It's true that there is government support for both groups, but many people feel that there is less support for sub-degree programmes and complain about that - with justification in my view. Others complain the employers should pay for these programmes, as the primary beneficiaries - and they do pay for, and are involved in the delivery of, many of them by providing work experience.That's very interesting! I wouldn't mind government subsidies if they're fairly distributed among the college and non-college individuals. — fishfry
The working class should fund the education of the cognitive elite who will vastly out-earn them in their respective lifetimes? Did I understand you correctly? — fishfry
Hardly; they're food source, life insurance and pension plan for your dear Morlocks.Pretty good deal for the Eloi, — fishfry
Profession corresponds strongly to background, expectation, opportunity and the economy. Even the dumbest offspring of CEO's and department store magnates are aimed at university from their gold-plated cradle, through top-flight nursery school through tutors at prep school, and if that doesn't work, their parents can buy a test-stand-in or a department chair. Even the brightest offspring of dock-workers have a hard time getting through high school.Profession correlates strongly with IQ. — Lionino
In a capitalist system, there are no unskewed samples of anything.in an unskewed sample of pipe-fitters, — Lionino
A pipe-fitter can have intelligent children. — Vera Mont
in an unskewed sample of pipe-fitters, most of them will not have intelligent children. — Lionino
Profession corresponds strongly to background, expectation, opportunity and the economy. — Vera Mont
Even the dumbest offspring of CEO's and department store magnates are aimed at university from their gold-plated cradle, through top-flight nursery school through tutors at prep school, and if that doesn't work, their parents can buy a test-stand-in or a department chair — Vera Mont
when that breaks down, the system is in serious danger. (Trump!) — Ludwig V
I suspect a nation of welders would starve to death pretty fast. — Vera Mont
And a debt-driven society will inevitably collapse under the burden. — Vera Mont
Student loans - agreed to by unemployable youth who hope for a future, come at 5-15% interest. They won't earn enough to live on, let alone pay off $50, -100, 000 for years after they graduate, so the interest just keeps on accumulating. — Vera Mont
So the most ambitious and clever of them will vie for the lucrative corporate and money-shuffling jobs that do nothing for the population - because they can't afford to work in low-paid public service or helping professions. — Vera Mont
That welder who'd rather see his taxes go toward militarizing the police is doing his family no favours. — Vera Mont
Sure. But a society needs a variety of skills. And it needs to recognize the need for education, and the need for recognition of talent, in whatever class, whether they can play basketball or not, whether they can afford a huge debt-load or not.The trades are "real work." Tradesmen built the college buildings, they operate the plumbing and the electricity and haul the trash. — fishfry
You're lecturing a communist about the working-class and elitism?A metaphor for the attitude of the elite towards the working class today. — fishfry
On many of the wrong things, because they're bound by old obligations, treaties, contracts, attitudes and fears. Investing in youth is one of the right things it should be spending on.The US is $35T in debt and still spending like a drunken sailor. — fishfry
Don't they always? Then, for about 20 years, the ultra-rich keep their greed in check and their profile low. Then they start buying up politicians and smaller businesses and countries again.When this whole thing crashes everyone's going to go, "Oh how did we let it get this bad?" — fishfry
Of course it isn't. But that's where their taxes go anyway, because the people who have lots of property want it protected at public expense.It's not the welders who have militarized the police. — fishfry
Sure. But a society needs a variety of skills. And it needs to recognize the need for education, and the need for recognition of talent, in whatever class, whether they can play basketball or not, whether they can afford a huge debt-load or not. — Vera Mont
You're lecturing a communist about the working-class and elitism? — Vera Mont
On many of the wrong things, because they're bound by old obligations, treaties, contracts, attitudes and fears. Investing in youth is one of the right things it should be spending on. — Vera Mont
Don't they always? Then, for about 20 years, the ultra-rich keep their greed in check and their profile low. Then they start buying up politicians and smaller businesses and countries again. — Vera Mont
It's not the welders who have militarized the police.
— fishfry
Of course it isn't. But that's where their taxes go anyway, because the people who have lots of property want it protected at public expense. — Vera Mont
Only for people who can't afford it.I don't believe I've said anything to lead you to believe I'm against education. — fishfry
No i didn't. I saidYou said the welders militarized the police. — fishfry
Don't tell me there isn't one single yahoo in the welder's union who wouldn't rather beef up the police than give some pansy a degree in social work. There is. And he's an idiot.That welder who'd rather see his taxes go toward militarizing the police is doing his family no favours. — Vera Mont
No, I'm anti representing all working class people as thinking like you.You're quite anti-worker for a communist. — fishfry
I don't believe I've said anything to lead you to believe I'm against education.
— fishfry
Only for people who can't afford it. — Vera Mont
You said the welders militarized the police.
— fishfry
No i didn't. I said
That welder who'd rather see his taxes go toward militarizing the police is doing his family no favours. — Vera Mont
Don't tell me there isn't one single yahoo in the welder's union who wouldn't rather beef up the police than give some pansy a degree in social work. There is. And he's an idiot. — Vera Mont
No, I'm anti representing all working class people as thinking like you. — Vera Mont
I think you said quite a lot more than that.I said that Congress should pass a law funding college costs if that's what they want. — fishfry
I'm not aware that the elite had been paying for student loans. Citation?I'm surprised to see you cheering on the transfer of billions of dollars in debt from the elite to the working class. — fishfry
Just that one. He probably beats his wife and votes for T***p, too.Trashing the welder. — fishfry
I don't think you've done anything at all.I couldn't actually parse that except that I must have done something bad. — fishfry
I said that Congress should pass a law funding college costs if that's what they want.
— fishfry
I think you said quite a lot more than that. — Vera Mont
I'm not aware that the elite had been paying for student loans. Citation? — Vera Mont
Did we discuss restructuring taxation at all? I have some views on capital gains, shell corporations, off-shore accounts and price-gauging that wouldn't affect most union members. — Vera Mont
Trashing the welder.
— fishfry
Just that one. He probably beats his wife and votes for T***p, too. — Vera Mont
I don't think you've done anything at all. — Vera Mont
I understand. It's probably best not to comment any further. — Ludwig V
'Vastly' is a big word. By quick look-up, the average welder's pay is $22.55/hr, while the average primary school teacher's is $23.44/hr. The teacher starts working life with a $58,000 student loan; the welder gets certification for $475.I am really surprised to see a self-described communist want to burden the working class with the student debt of people who will vastly out-earn them. I wonder if you could address this point. — fishfry
As for transferring the tax burden from the elite to the working class - - - ? I guess it depends what newspaper you're reading.President Biden will announce plans that, if finalized as proposed, would cancel up to $20,000 of the amount a borrower’s balance has grown due to unpaid interest on their loans after entering repayment, regardless of their income. Low and middle-income borrowers enrolled in the SAVE plan or any other income-driven repayment (IDR) plan would be eligible for the entire amount their balance has grown since entering repayment to be canceled under the Administration’s plans. This group of borrowers includes single borrowers who earn $120,000 or less and married borrowers who earn $240,000 or less.
President Biden’s tax cuts cut child poverty in half in 2021 and are saving millions of people an average of about $800 per year in health insurance premiums today. Going forward, in addition to honoring his pledge not to raise taxes on anyone earning less than $400,000 annually, President Biden’s tax plan would cut taxes for middle- and low-income Americans
'Vastly' is a big word. By quick look-up, the average welder's pay is $22.55/hr, while the average primary school teacher's is $23.44/hr. The teacher starts working life with a $58,000 student loan; the welder gets certification for $475. — Vera Mont
You keep saying it's the working class who will be 'burdened' by educating its children, so that they can still work when all the working-class jobs except home renovation and domestic service are automated out of existence. Why do you think poor people's kids shouldn't have a choice of careers? — Vera Mont
President Biden will announce plans that, if finalized as proposed, would cancel up to $20,000 of the amount a borrower’s balance has grown due to unpaid interest on their loans after entering repayment, regardless of their income. — Vera Mont
Low and middle-income borrowers enrolled in the SAVE plan or any other income-driven repayment (IDR) plan would be eligible for the entire amount their balance has grown since entering repayment to be canceled under the Administration’s plans. This group of borrowers includes single borrowers who earn $120,000 or less and married borrowers who earn $240,000 or less. — Vera Mont
As for transferring the tax burden from the elite to the working class - - - ? I guess it depends what newspaper you're reading. — Vera Mont
President Biden’s tax cuts cut child poverty in half in 2021 and are saving millions of people an average of about $800 per year in health insurance premiums today. Going forward, in addition to honoring his pledge not to raise taxes on anyone earning less than $400,000 annually, President Biden’s tax plan would cut taxes for middle- and low-income Americans — Vera Mont
You keep defending that one deluded man, and don't care how his co-workers struggle to give their children a chance in a fucked-up capitalist society. — Vera Mont
I saw a pretty funny sign last night:
"Did anyone think to unplug America and plug it in again?"
The system's been cracking for a long time; all anyone can do, short of smashing it and starting over, is apply patches here and there. — Vera Mont
I can sign up to that. It all went wrong in the 1990's, when the West and capitalism indulged in triumphalism instead of recognizing the need to spread prosperity around the world. (WTO is supposed to help with this, but does not work - at least, not anything like enough.) They should have started with a Marshall Plan for Russia and then similar plans for all the other underdeveloped areas of the world. Very expensive, but cheaper than yet another world war.I'll grant you that Marx's predictions about late-stage capitalism seem to be coming true. We don't actually have much capitalism anymore, we have an oligarchy causing unsustainable inequality leading to a revolution or a cyber totalitarian nightmare. The system's broken. In fact the economy is only being held up by government borrowing and printing at this point. You and I may be in agreement on some things. — fishfry
Life certainly does suck. But I'm not at all sure that genetic determinism is the explanation and even less sure that IQ tests measure it. The most important point is that the validity of IQ tests is controversial and so is the very concept of intelligence or general cognitive ability.As we see from the graph, years of education is just as or less important than intelligence. If intelligence wasn't that important, we would see much higher variation in those less privileged occupations. But it isn't so, most fall under 95, the variation is small.
Such is the reality of genetic determinism, life sucks. — Lionino
The most important point is that the validity of IQ tests is controversial — Ludwig V
For more details, see Wikipedia - Intelligence Quotient — Ludwig V
Which is quite reasonable. Plumbers make about $60,000; a welder's average is $47,000. Still not vast, and they don't start out $50,000 in the hole.Cherry picking teachers is misleading. A quick Google search on "how much to college graduates earn?" said that they make $50k their first year. "Average college graduate salary" yielded $67,786. — fishfry
It's not been easy. But I learned some things.Can you try to focus on the conversation? — fishfry
Student loaninterest forgiveness for low earners.What do Biden's tax cuts have to do with his illegal student loan forgiveness? — fishfry
So long as the workers are being oppressed. Once social justice and balance are established, there are no sides and classes. Everybody shares the resources and contributes to the community. That means, every child has the opportunity to learn as much as he or she is able to and wants to, without penalties. A just society would have no such thing as student debts, or any other kind of debt-load that keeps growing, even while you're paying. A just society would outlaw compound interest and 90% of the other financial legerdemain on Wall street.But still, you said you're a communist. Aren't communists supposed to be on the side of the workers? — fishfry
That is the inevitable outcome, every cycle. Boom, growth, consolidation, wealth concentration, political corruption, bust, depression, protest, repression or revolution.We don't actually have much capitalism anymore, we have an oligarchy causing unsustainable inequality leading to a revolution or a cyber totalitarian nightmare. — fishfry
I can sign up to that. It all went wrong in the 1990's, when the West and capitalism indulged in triumphalism instead of recognizing the need to spread prosperity around the world. — Ludwig V
(WTO is supposed to help with this, but does not work - at least, not anything like enough.) They should have started with a Marshall Plan for Russia and then similar plans for all the other underdeveloped areas of the world. Very expensive, but cheaper than yet another world war. — Ludwig V
I mention this because it is a case of the general problem posed for this thread and to have an excuse for promoting the argument for enlightened self-interest as a way of breaking through the reluctance of the wealthy to share their wealth (beyond charity, which they remain in control of). — Ludwig V
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.