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thomas81
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21 Nov 2012, 5:58 pm

I have responded to your link about the mumbai bombings.

The rest of your post is just a strawman not worth acknowledging.



GGPViper
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21 Nov 2012, 6:04 pm

thomas81 wrote:
I have responded to your link about the mumbai bombings.

The rest of your post is just a strawman not worth acknowledging.


Yes, I have noticed how the socialist/communist WP posters try to squirm their way out of debates when I ask for peer-reviewed economic evidence... Perhaps your instinct for self-preservation finally acknowledged that I am vastly more informed on economics than you are?



ruveyn
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21 Nov 2012, 6:09 pm

RushKing wrote:
ruveyn wrote:
marshall wrote:
Seabass wrote:
The title of this thread is correct, there are slaves in this world as we speak. But then you had to ruin it with your biased little rant. My turn, I think socialist principles have caused the bondage of more slaves then true capitalism. Especially since a true, libertarian for of capitalism has never existed. You can try to argue that, but I see no point.

I find it hilarious that market libertarians and socialists do the exact same thing. There has never been "true free-market capitalism" just like there has never been "true communism". In no way do such claims show that your more "pure" ideology will ever actually work in the real world. Come up with real arguments instead of regurgitating things you hear.


Here is a plain fact. Slavery is illegal in the United States and it is NOT illegal in Saudi Arabia. Guess where most of the slavery is?

ruveyn

It's chattel slavery that's illegal.


That is the only kind of slavery. Employment is not slavery because there is no legal compulsion to take a job, nor is physical force or threat thereof used to make any take any particular job. Also anyone holding a job is free to quite.

The existential condition of having to work for one's bread is not slavery. It is the human condition. People have always had to do some kind of labor to receive their sustainance. The fact there we cannot turn inorganic chemicals into food with the aid of sunlight is not slavery. Humans must grow their food, hunt their food or trade their labor or goods for food. That is not slavery. That is reality.

ruveyn



thomas81
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21 Nov 2012, 6:12 pm

GGPViper wrote:
thomas81 wrote:
I have responded to your link about the mumbai bombings.

The rest of your post is just a strawman not worth acknowledging.


Yes, I have noticed how the socialist/communist WP posters try to squirm their way out of debates when I ask for peer-reviewed economic evidence... Perhaps your instinct for self-preservation finally acknowledged that I am vastly more informed on economics than you are?


When you say peer-reviewed economic evidence what you really mean is spun regurgitated rubbish from the mainstream media concocted by whatever hackneyed rentagob is the flavour of the hour.

Sorry, but i have as much distrust for these sources as you do of 'partisan pseudoscience Marxist websites'.

In the words of George Orwell, 'in times of great deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act'.

FYI : I'm not a communist.



thomas81
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21 Nov 2012, 6:15 pm

ruveyn wrote:

The existential condition of having to work for one's bread is not slavery. It is the human condition. People have always had to do some kind of labor to receive their sustainance. The fact there we cannot turn inorganic chemicals into food with the aid of sunlight is not slavery. Humans must grow their food, hunt their food or trade their labor or goods for food. That is not slavery. That is reality.

ruveyn


My grievance isn't with work. Its the concept of work for works sake. Particularly when better means of doing the same job are readilly available. My grievance also lies with the associated adversity-privilege paradigm passed from generation to generation. My grievance lies with otherwise skilled people having to languish in ill paid, mind numbing jobs being robbed of the opportunity to utilise the talents that nature has given them.



ruveyn
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21 Nov 2012, 6:20 pm

thomas81 wrote:
ruveyn wrote:

The existential condition of having to work for one's bread is not slavery. It is the human condition. People have always had to do some kind of labor to receive their sustainance. The fact there we cannot turn inorganic chemicals into food with the aid of sunlight is not slavery. Humans must grow their food, hunt their food or trade their labor or goods for food. That is not slavery. That is reality.

ruveyn


My grievance isn't with work. Its the concept of work for works sake. Particularly when better means of doing the same job are readilly available. My grievance also lies with the associated adversity-privilege paradigm passed from generation to generation. My grievance lies with otherwise skilled people having to languish in ill paid, mind numbing jobs being robbed of the opportunity to utilise the talents that nature has given them.


Then that person could go off and live in the country and pick berries. Or he could figure out something he could do that would be more fun. None of what you are complaining about involves force or the threat of force. The problem here is with social convention. There is a solution. Flout social convention.

ruveyn



GGPViper
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21 Nov 2012, 6:22 pm

thomas81 wrote:
GGPViper wrote:
thomas81 wrote:
I have responded to your link about the mumbai bombings.

The rest of your post is just a strawman not worth acknowledging.


Yes, I have noticed how the socialist/communist WP posters try to squirm their way out of debates when I ask for peer-reviewed economic evidence... Perhaps your instinct for self-preservation finally acknowledged that I am vastly more informed on economics than you are?


When you say peer-reviewed economic evidence what you really mean is spun regurgitated rubbish from the mainstream media concocted by whatever hackneyed rentagob is the flavour of the hour.

Sorry, but i have as much distrust for these sources as you do of 'partisan pseudoscience Marxist websites'.

In the words of George Orwell, 'in times of great deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act'.

FYI : I'm not a communist.


You clearly lack even a rudimentary understanding of the concept of science.

If you believe that a scientific journal has fallen short of the scientific method when accepting an article, then please provide examples. The claim can then be either not rejected or rejected using the method of falsification.



thomas81
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21 Nov 2012, 6:24 pm

ruveyn wrote:
thomas81 wrote:
ruveyn wrote:

The existential condition of having to work for one's bread is not slavery. It is the human condition. People have always had to do some kind of labor to receive their sustainance. The fact there we cannot turn inorganic chemicals into food with the aid of sunlight is not slavery. Humans must grow their food, hunt their food or trade their labor or goods for food. That is not slavery. That is reality.

ruveyn


My grievance isn't with work. Its the concept of work for works sake. Particularly when better means of doing the same job are readilly available. My grievance also lies with the associated adversity-privilege paradigm passed from generation to generation. My grievance lies with otherwise skilled people having to languish in ill paid, mind numbing jobs being robbed of the opportunity to utilise the talents that nature has given them.


Then that person could go off and live in the country and pick berries. Or he could figure out something he could do that would be more fun. None of what you are complaining about involves force or the threat of force. The problem here is with social convention. There is a solution. Flout social convention.

ruveyn

Retreating to the country as a berry picker would be a greater practice in self destruction than participating in the current society. Society can only get better when it realises that united in a capacity of equals it can become greater than the sum of its individual units. That requires the participation of everybody.



thomas81
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21 Nov 2012, 6:27 pm

GGPViper wrote:
thomas81 wrote:
GGPViper wrote:
thomas81 wrote:
I have responded to your link about the mumbai bombings.

The rest of your post is just a strawman not worth acknowledging.


Yes, I have noticed how the socialist/communist WP posters try to squirm their way out of debates when I ask for peer-reviewed economic evidence... Perhaps your instinct for self-preservation finally acknowledged that I am vastly more informed on economics than you are?


When you say peer-reviewed economic evidence what you really mean is spun regurgitated rubbish from the mainstream media concocted by whatever hackneyed rentagob is the flavour of the hour.

Sorry, but i have as much distrust for these sources as you do of 'partisan pseudoscience Marxist websites'.

In the words of George Orwell, 'in times of great deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act'.

FYI : I'm not a communist.


You clearly lack even a rudimentary understanding of the concept of science.

If you believe that a scientific journal has fallen short of the scientific method when accepting an article, then please provide examples. The claim can then be either not rejected or rejected using the method of falsification.


I follow Marxism is as much that i am subscriber of dialetic materialism and that i concur with his theories on the alienation of labour.

I do not care much for the input of the conventional economic community because of their shady motives and their lack of a broader perspective on the social side of their own discipline.

Besides which mainstream economics bores the crap out of me. We need to transfer to a resource based system.



Awesomelyglorious
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21 Nov 2012, 6:28 pm

marshall wrote:
That depends on your definition of anti-capitalism. <snip>

When I say "anti-capitalism", I mean opposition the existence of a capitalist system, and an effort to remove it rather than reform it. Does that clarify things? I get the feeling that everything else you said is pretty close to nullified by that clarification. I mean, I can oppose some aspects of it, but I think it's largely irrelevant.



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21 Nov 2012, 6:37 pm

blackelk wrote:
The problem is that economics is a pseudoscience that is treated like a real science. It is closer to an ideology.

Right, because I'm sure you've spent a lot of time researching it.

Economics is a social science. It's not an ideology, and economists of different ideologies frequently can have meaningful discussions and use similar frameworks for solving some of the same problems.

The Taleb quote is pretty useless for your point, as you're somehow operating on the assumption that most of economics is really macroeconomic predictions, when it really isn't. Because it isn't, referring to failed economic predictions does nothing to discredit the field, especially given that macroeconomics used for predictions is pretty different than the rest of the body of knowledge. So, the meat and bones of economics is really microeconomics, and microeconomics actually has a lot of very good predictive theories.

Also, your comment on Marxism is pretty deeply questionable because of how Marxism has failed in the theory of value, but also generally failed to provide a strong research program. People are Marxists out of ideology, but people are capitalists out of pragmatism given their background knowledge. I mean, we can go into a huge dissection on how all of this stuff works and interrelates, but really, you're just using bare assertions and pretending that economics is a pomo fest rather than a discipline that's actually growing and trying to do what it can.



Awesomelyglorious
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21 Nov 2012, 6:44 pm

thomas81 wrote:
Why would they when afforementioned economists stand to benefit from the existing set up.

So, the entire class of individuals is so enraptured? That's probably not likely, especially given that many of the more important economists are academics, and as academics they'll benefit from *any* set up so long as they are politically relevant. Even further, economists have taken many different ideological positions over history, the strong move towards markets is largely due to the loss of the USSR during the Cold War, and the rise of the neoclassical school.



GGPViper
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21 Nov 2012, 6:45 pm

thomas81 wrote:
GGPViper wrote:
thomas81 wrote:
GGPViper wrote:
thomas81 wrote:
I have responded to your link about the mumbai bombings.

The rest of your post is just a strawman not worth acknowledging.


Yes, I have noticed how the socialist/communist WP posters try to squirm their way out of debates when I ask for peer-reviewed economic evidence... Perhaps your instinct for self-preservation finally acknowledged that I am vastly more informed on economics than you are?


When you say peer-reviewed economic evidence what you really mean is spun regurgitated rubbish from the mainstream media concocted by whatever hackneyed rentagob is the flavour of the hour.

Sorry, but i have as much distrust for these sources as you do of 'partisan pseudoscience Marxist websites'.

In the words of George Orwell, 'in times of great deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act'.

FYI : I'm not a communist.


You clearly lack even a rudimentary understanding of the concept of science.

If you believe that a scientific journal has fallen short of the scientific method when accepting an article, then please provide examples. The claim can then be either not rejected or rejected using the method of falsification.


I follow Marxism is as much that i am subscriber of dialetic materialism and that i concur with his theories on the alienation of labour.

I do not care much for the input of the conventional economic community because of their shady motives and their lack of a broader perspective on the social side of their own discipline.


And I follow the principles laid down by scientific giants like Karl Popper who rejected Marxism (and its BS terms) because of its pseudo-scientific content.

And your perspective on the so-called "lack of a broader perspective on the social side of their own discipline" is probably due to your lack of insight in the actual economic studies, and not a lack of actual economic studies. I recommend Becker, Arrow, Sen and Buchanan...

No one with any respect for science even bothers with the Hegelian-Marxist concept of "dialectical materialism". It is pure BS.



Awesomelyglorious
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21 Nov 2012, 7:02 pm

thomas81 wrote:
I do not care much for the input of the conventional economic community because of their shady motives and their lack of a broader perspective on the social side of their own discipline.

Their shady motives??? I doubt you've even MET an economist, and yet somehow despite that handicap, you can somehow read their minds and tell me what all of them are motivated by. I'm either really really impressed or stunned by the absurdity.

Even further, you haven't refuted their value or their research or anything of that nature. Even the "lack of broader perspective" is just vagueness, but it doesn't refute anything. It certainly doesn't show that they are poor researchers or that they don't use good empirics.

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Besides which mainstream economics bores the crap out of me. We need to transfer to a resource based system.

So, you're incompetent to speak of it, and yet you have the most vocal opinion?

Also, just an FYI, a market-based system isn't a "resource ignorant system". Money's value is largely because it can be converted into resources or processed resources(that's why these strange papers are the things we all strive for), and the interaction of supply and demand is partially an issue in trying to make sure that this system efficiently processes available resources. Why? Because if the processing of a market is inefficient, then there is an incentive by other agents to produce the same good using even lower costs and less resources to make more sales. However, if money doesn't reflect the resources available to the system, then that system breaks down, that's why hyperinflation is a problem. (But nations don't suffer hyperinflation unless somebody is screwing over the money supply)



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21 Nov 2012, 7:28 pm

Jacoby wrote:
marshall wrote:
Seabass wrote:
The title of this thread is correct, there are slaves in this world as we speak. But then you had to ruin it with your biased little rant. My turn, I think socialist principles have caused the bondage of more slaves then true capitalism. Especially since a true, libertarian for of capitalism has never existed. You can try to argue that, but I see no point.

I find it hilarious that market libertarians and socialists do the exact same thing. There has never been "true free-market capitalism" just like there has never been "true communism". In no way do such claims show that your more "pure" ideology will ever actually work in the real world. Come up with real arguments instead of regurgitating things you hear.


And what of your beliefs? How are they working in the real world? Do you even know what you believe?

I don't need to claim I have certainty. "I don't know" should be an acceptable answer when that is the truth. I have more confidence to say that certain systems won't work because instances of moving in that direction in the past had poor results.



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21 Nov 2012, 7:48 pm

ruveyn wrote:
RushKing wrote:
ruveyn wrote:
marshall wrote:
Seabass wrote:
The title of this thread is correct, there are slaves in this world as we speak. But then you had to ruin it with your biased little rant. My turn, I think socialist principles have caused the bondage of more slaves then true capitalism. Especially since a true, libertarian for of capitalism has never existed. You can try to argue that, but I see no point.

I find it hilarious that market libertarians and socialists do the exact same thing. There has never been "true free-market capitalism" just like there has never been "true communism". In no way do such claims show that your more "pure" ideology will ever actually work in the real world. Come up with real arguments instead of regurgitating things you hear.


Here is a plain fact. Slavery is illegal in the United States and it is NOT illegal in Saudi Arabia. Guess where most of the slavery is?

ruveyn

It's chattel slavery that's illegal.


That is the only kind of slavery. Employment is not slavery because there is no legal compulsion to take a job, nor is physical force or threat thereof used to make any take any particular job. Also anyone holding a job is free to quite.

The existential condition of having to work for one's bread is not slavery. It is the human condition. People have always had to do some kind of labor to receive their sustainance. The fact there we cannot turn inorganic chemicals into food with the aid of sunlight is not slavery. Humans must grow their food, hunt their food or trade their labor or goods for food. That is not slavery. That is reality.

ruveyn

Capitalism forces people to work for a boss to survive. I can't even run around and pick berrys because all the land around me has been privatized.



cron