It is forbidden in many democratic countries to spread hateful lies by way of press. — Olivier5
Ukraine is a democracy, while Russia is not. It makes a difference in my book, and obviously for Ukrainians. — Olivier5
The best commentary I have heard paints Putin as the head of a crime mob who has become stuck in escalation mode by his miscalculations. Partly Ukraine is just about staying domestically popular. But also, he actually does seem to have a personal and irrational hatred of the West’s imposition of a global rules framework, so would be happy to smash it.
Putin may not actually have planned to go further than smash the emergence of such order right on his own doorstep. Maybe Poland, the Baltic States, Finland, could all be left as no kind of real threat to the Russian kleptocratic, fossil fuel, crime syndicate at all. — apokrisis
the whole planet should find Putin worth stopping - but in the context of the degree to which he threatens the world order that we need to construct, rather than the degree that it protects the world order that underpinned a fossil fuel consumption based model of humanity these past 70 years. — apokrisis
If we eliminated the corporate structure, while it would greatly impact the way business operates, solutions would be devised to accomplish the same goal. Loan documents could be created to allow investors to take a share in your personally owned business and indemnity agreements could be devised either through insurance policies or investors to accept liability if it should arise.
Limiting liability isn't something that is only accomplished by corporate structure and investment opportunities can be created without corporate structure. You can as much invest in my lemonade stand and have an agreed upon return structure as you can buy corporate stocks, and I can protect my personal assets should I sell poison lemonade by buying an insurance policy or paying someone to post a bond. — Hanover
That seems a reasonable response to their nonsense claim against you, right? — Hanover
I'm open to arguments that there is something else underwriting the disparity, but the starting point has to be admitting that there is such a disparity and putting the obvious label on it.
Reading the first half or so of Why Nations Fail (before I got bored) convinced me that the data is not really ambiguous here. My son's conclusion was that we ought to treat capitalism like nuclear power — yeah it works, and maybe nothing else works nearly as well so it's our best option, but it's super dangerous and we should carefully contain it. — Srap Tasmaner
When a war is over, there should be NO killings — ssu
What does Putin want...? To de-NATO and de-Nazify...? Hard to tell exactly — jorndoe
there's a reason "conservative" politicians justify corporate giveaways in the name of the corner store, because that business structure is not suspect. — Srap Tasmaner
If we focus on that fundamental structure, we're sort of playing on the conservative's turf. I'm suggesting this is not where the trouble is, but in the financialization of business and in other rent-seeking (rather than just profit-taking) behavior. — Srap Tasmaner
I also think there's an empirical case that business formation, with institutions to support it, raises the standard of living of a community. Look at the success of micro-lending programs, for example. So I need room to consider the corner store blameless, rather than exploitative just because it includes an owner and a few employees. — Srap Tasmaner
Except where Putin has succeeded in gaining a military victory: In Chechnya, the Chechen Republic. — ssu
which strategy is most likely to quickly reduce the scale of war crimes. — Isaac
Where the response to torture is "Yes, everybody does that," there's some moral calibration in order. No, not everybody does that, and those who do are criminals. — frank
Exactly. No need to trivialize war crimes. — Olivier5
And fight. — Olivier5
As if Russians are not known for their ethnic cleansing penchant in the occupied territories: — neomac
which strategy is most likely to quickly reduce the scale of war crimes. — Isaac
They routinely murder and torture folks there. — Olivier5
What evidence do you have that they won't continue after a peace deal? — Olivier5
how would you bring the guilty to justice, after a peace deal? — Olivier5
a peace deal now entrenching Russia's position in Dombass and Crimea would ensure that they can continue their crimes unabated. — Olivier5
How would your argument apply to Hitler? — apokrisis
You’ve said the same thing a hundred times. — apokrisis
No, you are quite right. This is indeed how one wages a war to liberate and denazify a country. What was I thinking! — apokrisis
I think it's valuable to explore the logic of risk and reward, owner and employer, and you've raised some interesting questions, but your analysis is throughout colored by an image of the likes of the board of directors of Exxon Mobil, on the one hand, and the guys and gals working on the oil rig, on the other. — Srap Tasmaner
Google small business employment statistics and you'll find there are many other stories to tell. Something like half of employed Americans work for a company with more than 500 employees, and something like 45% work for a company with fewer than 20, and the bulk of the latter are self-financed businesses. — Srap Tasmaner
The business isn't an abstraction anymore than any term is a conglomerate of various parts. I get that the business isn't simply desks, computers, people, software and the like, but that it's a bunch of stuff holistically, but it's actually a physical thing as much as a university is, a government is, or even an apple is. You can point to the stem, the peel, the seed, whatever, but where is the apple? It's the whole thing. — Hanover
just as I don't have to pay your debts because I am a different person than you, I (personally) don't have to pay the debts of the corporation unless I personally guaranteed it. Just like if I have no money at all, it will do you no good to sue me because I can't pay what I don't have, but if I do have assets, you will be able to collect. What that means is that my million dollar corporation stiffs you, you sue it, and you can garnish its accounts and seize its assets just as if it were a person. — Hanover
The unemployment rate is 3.7%, which is effectively zero when you discount those who don't want to work and those who are temporarily between jobs. Businesses are closing because of lack of workers. I'm not sure what economy you're looking at. — Hanover
I can go online right now, go to the Secretary of State website, and create for me a corporation or an LLC in a matter of minutes. That will not suddenly propel me to great wealth. According to one site, the average small business owner earns between $30,000 and $146,000 per year, with a median of $64,650. When someone tells me they're self employed, that doesn't cause me to think they must be wealthy. — Hanover
If the owner works 100 hours in a week and doesn't sell his product, he earns nothing. That's not a theoretical construct. That occurs all the time. The owner get the profits, and profits are defined as what is left over after expenses. An employee is an expense. What this means is that the owner is paid last with the remainder. That remainder may be zero, it may be debt, it may be riches, and it may be anything in between — Hanover
This is a cartoonization of the real world. Reminds me quite a bit of the propaganda used in WWI. Very dangerous thinking, in my opinion. — Manuel
Russia has seen it's share of defeats (just like the US with Vietnam and Afghanistan — ssu
I didn't ask for your assessment. I think you know why. — frank
It turns out there is no debate. — frank
if I want for there to be plenty of eggs for all our citizens, it does not follow that the best way to assure that is to pay the egg collectors the same as the chicken owners just because they both assume the same risk. — Hanover
You also overlook the ethical value of property ownership, or perhaps you don't, but you just don't think it has any value. I would argue that it does, which means that a large part of the reason I reap larger rewards for the profits gained in my business is precisely because it's mine. That is, they are my eggs because they are my chickens. — Hanover
I also don't follow why greater risk must (as a matter of ethical imperative) precede reward in order for it to be justified. The fact that I have been able to reduce my risk by being prudent and cautious and by implementing all sorts of hazard controls shouldn't result in my having to share more of my profits with others. To suggest otherwise would incentivize recklessness. — Hanover
Since I would suspect most prior business owners had those qualities to some degree, the reason they are not in the soup line is because they were able to go out and get a job. But that they lost their life savings but were able to find a new job doesn't mean they didn't suffer negative consequences. — Hanover
If you don't like your job or find a better one, you quit and take the new one. That's not the same as having the strings attached to a financial obligation, which is what I take risk to be. — Hanover
I think if you stepped into the typical corner restaurant and saw how they were struggling to keep things afloat, I don't know you'd terribly want to be the owner and might find being a server a better gig. — Hanover
incentivizing them is what we want to do, which means offering them the opportunity to make larger profits and the possibility of making nothing or even losing money. — Hanover
No employee goes into a job with the understanding they may owe their employer at the end of the shift, yet that is exactly what an employer signs up knowing could well happen and he could be indebted to the employee, among others. — Hanover
what do you think accounts for the continuing support of the West? — frank
What I see wrong is that a fact is not correct just because it supports someone's values.
Facts about whether you are more likely to die if you take a vaccine or not, is not dependent on your preferences. — PhilosophyRunner
But in order to justify their real "point," they jumped on whatever "facts" that support their values/preferences — PhilosophyRunner
I wrote it down as provocation. — god must be atheist
Instead I would like to inject that while I like this "token" metaphor, I would use, if I were you, a different metaphor, "totem". — god must be atheist
I don't think those who advocated Ukraine's surrender to Russia had any kind of resistance in mind. — frank
if we assume that life in 'independence' would be worse for the people there (a significant assumption), the fact remains that two options are open to us to do something about that
1. Keep fighting wars to keep them under the control of the (marginally) better government.
2. Keep fighting revolutions to make it not matter what government they are under the control of.
The latter has the advantage of freeing millions more from misery and you've presented little by way of clear evidence that the former is somehow so much easier as to commend on the grounds of achievability alone. — Isaac
I also think that because so many people feel like they are foot soldiers in a culture war these days — Tom Storm
Do you think there's a practical way out of our mutually destructive ideological lynch mobs? — Tom Storm
Often with these things if the public were just more discerning... (ie, if they shared my values) everything would improve. — Tom Storm
FaceBook committed to fact checking. — god must be atheist
There are laws against toxic waste, where are the laws against toxic disinformation? — Tom Storm
Say I'm worth x and you're worth 1000x. I wager x/10 and win earning say 5/4 my wager, so my wealth becomes 9x/8. You wager 10x and win, earning 50x/4, so your wealth is now 1012.5x. The ratio of your wealth is to mine is now 900:1, instead of 1000:1. So my hunch about how this would work is *wrong*. By wagering 10 times as much in absolute terms, but one tenth in relative terms, you allowed me to close the ratio gap. On the other hand, you used to have only 999 more dollars than I; now you have 1011.375 more. I've closed the ratio gap, but am further behind absolutely. Interesting. What happens when we go again? — Srap Tasmaner
I also suspect that high rollers needn't limit how much they risk, as I surmised here. — Srap Tasmaner
If you have a point, please make it more explicit. — frank
Isaac is very angry that we would forget what kind of a bully the US has been. We might forget this because it's obvious that Russia is the aggressor here, Ukraine is the victim and the US is aiding Ukraine. Isaac would be extremely angry if now the US would look good as a "white knight in shining armour" coming to help a victim. Because the US is bad. Remember all the children that died in Iraq thanks to the sanctions etc. Even if this is a thread about the war in Ukraine, that doesn't matter. — ssu