Politics How do you feel now that Obamacare was ruled constitutional? (Read 9955 times)

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That's a good example of a false dilemma. The factories ran just fine during the 1930s Spanish anarchist experiment. In fact, the whole society ran quite well, despite the fact they were doing something extremely novel and on a very large scale. It only ended when it got crushed by force.


No it is not, and that doesn't have anything to do with what I said, at all


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The black plague killed about two thirds of the population of Europe. Yeah, we could have another scenario just like that, with the Earth becoming so polluted that entire continents get plagued by food crises which leads to a massive increase in global inequality as well as instability. It has a very real chance of happening, and one good way of ensuring it is taking the laissez-faire route and letting corporations do whatever they want. As I mentioned before, their organizational structures prohibit any kind of real action on their part.


They'll take real action when it becomes profitable, like China is doing by investing on "green" energy. We survived an ice age with nothing but primitive tools. We can handle global warming.


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I honestly don't get what this entire paragraph means. "Popularity contest"? "Give him massive power over everything"? Who's "him"? Why are you acting like I'm giving you an advice on whether to buy a car or not? The point of the part that you quoted is to show you there are tertiary effects to a business transaction. Those effects are called externalities.


Do you think I'm pro-totalitarianism? If you do, you shouldn't make assumptions.


Representative democracy is a popularity contest where if you don't like the results you can hold a sign up chanting slogans and hope everyone else agrees with you or something happens by magic.  There are tertiary effects to everything, even actions that are founded on seemingly good intentions. I'm showing you that you don't need to consult everyone else in order to do something. If it causes damage to others they'll be pissed off and rectify you, unless they've become completely passive due to trusting the state to take care of their problems. If not they won't really bother.


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It puzzles me that you agree with me they're essentially getting free money (which eventually, society will have to pay for, as happened during the bailout; either a bailout occurs, or the following systemic failure is so massive that the consequences are immediate and terrifying), yet you just don't seem to care or think it's such a big problem.


They're getting free money from each other, from their dividends, from short selling, whatever. None of that affects you at all.


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State-instituted protectionism is still one of the prime reasons for why the rich countries are rich and the poor countries are exploited. That's not over, and never going to be. That's why you don't see the business elites pouring money into Ron Paul's campaign.


Exactly as I said, banks have a role in a state-capitalist society: to take unused money and use it to fund useful things that better society. But the reason why banks take such massive risks is foremost because they can, and it took a very long time and a lot of lobbying and money to get to this point, and also because they can expect to receive a taxpayer bailout when things turn sour, which they ultimately always will. It's really a new stage in capitalist excess: the point where self-destruction is more profitable than a sustainable path.


And how is that capitalism? That's being a nanny state for banks. That's manipulating a bunch of numbers to give the impression of economic growth. That's expanding credit to "help" poor people consume (buy things they shouldn't with money they can't produce). That's just mal-allocating capital to stupid purposes, which is completely anti-capitalistic.


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Europe is bad as well, but we can't ignore the fact that the US is the one taking steps backwards. They used to say they'd be on board with serious action on climate change as long as the BRIC countries are on board. Well, they are now. The US responded by saying "well, let's just wait a bit longer." The only major change the US lobby managed to accomplish in the field of climate change legislation in the run-up to Durban is a larger role for the free market in any action that takes place. That shows you who's in charge of the situation.


The US is important in this regard because that's where power lies, and that's where the major propaganda efforts are focused on.


You're talking about US, Europe, BRIC like they're persons. "Hey, US isn't behaving, we must punish him!" except that you can't do that. I bet you'll never see any real action take place, instead you'll see green washing everywhere, companies doing stuff like "Hey I'll just lower my emissions by 1%, that is ok by the rules, laws and treaties!", while the developing world doesn't care about it at all, and instead of a global catastrophe that will decimate all life you'll just witness the establishment of a new equilibrum. Legislation will serve no purpose other than make people feel less guilty.


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That's baseless cynicism. Most popular movements since the 18th century have been progressive and left-libertarian in nature. If you look at the laborers, the "99%", and investigate their political inclinations and the popular movements that have sprung from it, you'll find the same thing. There's an extremely big drive towards a more social society. Maybe I'm naive, that's very possible, but I don't agree with the notion that people are serial backstabbers by nature. I think they're social creatures who help each other not because their cognitive faculties tell them there's something in it for them, but because it feels right to do so.


Because the "left" ideologies are good at exploiting their feelings, their envy, their anger. There's always a discourse involving a victim, a oppressor, and the notion that putting the leftist leaders in power will make their troubles go away and free the victim from oppression. This is what all of them promise. But the part where the victim is freed from oppression never happens. Instead you see the concession of privileges to some interest groups (a measure that takes no effort at all on the part of their leaders) in order to retain popularity. People might not be serial backstabbers by nature, but they're incredibly vulnerable to them, and this is why "true socialism never happened, lol".


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Yes, there's a massive group of people that favor sharp inequality and a society based on the slave/master principle, but they're in the minority. They're the so-called 1% and their foot soldiers. That's what we have to fight.


Guess who else favors sharp inequalities? People who promise to make it go away.


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I just explained the institutional structure. A capitalist society works according to certain rules that guarantee inequality.


And yes, inequality is a bad thing. For one thing because the inequality is astonishingly large, so large there are no valid adjectives to describe it. It's slaves and masters. And yeah, some people are smarter than me, and some people work harder than me. But you're not going to convince me a single mother working overtime with no benefits and poor health-safety regulations is literally millions of times less useful to society than a financial company's CEO. The poorest people are so absurdly poor despite working so hard that I have a hard time seeing how you could miss this.


You're romanticizing a factory worker. You're applying the noble savage rationale to them, you're trying to make an appeal to emotion. "Look at this inequality. Look at her, she's such a pathetic creature, why don't you feel pity for her? Why don't you free her from oppression? I'll make it all go away if you put me in charge of your life!". That's a discourse that preceeded countless totalitarian regimes that ended the lives of millions. Poverty is the natural state of human being. All you have to do to be poor is nothing. Refuse to learn any skill but basic repetitive actions. That's a sure way to remain a factory worker forever.


Also, do you think a leftist leader has more or less social value than Warren Buffett or Bill Gates, who accumulated wealth by "doing nothing" and now are redistributing it voluntarily?


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Ironically, what you just wrote is exactly what armchair revolutionaries are all about: coming up with insane, unworkable plans for quickly overthrowing the state.


It works and takes zero effort to accomplish. See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_strike#History


Alternatively you could have a system that is so poorly thought that it will collapse by itself, like what happened in Greece and is likely going to happen next in Portugal, Spain and Italy.




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The US is structurally an extremely undemocratic place. You've got "two" parties, and a vote for either of them doesn't get you what you want. Compare the US public's opinions on individual policy points with party platforms sometime, it's very illuminating. Then there's the massive propaganda machine built specifically to sustain this system.


It should be obvious that the people don't have the structural tools to enact what they want. Healthcare reform is a great example. Look at the specifics of what people want out of their healthcare system and compare it with Obamacare: it falls pathetically short. And it's been like that for decades. It's one of the best examples of the failure of US democracy I can think of. Recently it was pointed out that while half of US citizens support the legalization of marijuana, it's only 0-1% among elected officials. That's a failed democracy if I ever saw one.


People really just don't have a say in how society is organized in any significant sense.


Well, they have easy access to guns. If lefties dislike the system so much, why don't they buy high powered sniper rifles and change it by force? Are they too afraid of the power vacuum? Do they value their own personal comfort over "change"? That is the case. They'll never have a say in what goes on, what will happen instead is that they'll ask for privileges which maybe will be provided by their leaders in order to remain popular. "I'm fine with going to war with Iran as long as I get free health care! Everything should be free and social!"




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A global catastrophe may well be on its way, and it will be game over when it happens. Saying we need it is pessimism and lazyism. It's the equivalent of shrugging your shoulders.


I can think of very few justifications for letting a major catastrophe or disaster occur as a way of teaching a state (or its people) a lesson. In some cases it's justified, such as the major military defeats Germany suffered near the end of the WWII. They needed to suffer a major defeat to be shocked back into being a just nation. What we're talking about here is different, though. The consequences of global warming aren't going to be restricted to just a few extra degrees centigrade. When the major food-producing sectors in the world dry up, we're not going to be protected just because we live in the rich West.


Guess what?







There is no way back.


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If you remove the state, ceteris paribus, the result is a power vacuum. If you don't have anything to fill that vacuum, the corporate world will. The results of that would be catastrophic. It would essentially mean the end of democracy, and a new era of fascism and complete opacity of power.


Or it could actually make things better because now you don't have an entity that can force you to shoot other people overseas, because now you don't have an entity that can redirect the products of your labor to useless pursuits like bank bailouts, because now you don't have an entity that you can just point your finger at and say it's not your fault, because now there will be no corporate safety net. The responsibility will be removed from a failed instutition and placed on your own hands. Whatever reasons there were in the past for the existence of a state aren't there anymore. We have internet now, that takes care of any problem caused by a lack of access to information which could be a reason for centralized governments in the past. Only with the absence of state will we have true democracy instead of cute little popularity contests.


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The state doesn't need to fail before something can take its place. That would do nothing but create massive poverty and give the corporate sector a chance to properly abuse its powers. What exactly can take its place, I don't know, but it will probably have to be in the form of a massively organized, rich, powerful network of cooperatives and community organizations and worker-controlled industries. When you have that framework in place, then maybe you can talk about eliminating the state, but that's like looking a thousand miles away. It's something that will require a lot of work.
Yes it does, there is no other way.


Also, if cooperatives are so good, why do most workers prefer to work for the EVIL CORPORASHUNZ instead when they are free not to? Think about it.

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did you happen to miss that drug delivery and drug manufacture were really really high on that sourceless jpeg of a list from 2009 and that pharmaceuticals are kind of a big reason why healthcare costs so much in the US? jesus bruh, part of the answer is sitting right in front of your face but you still want to keep harping on this "it's the regulations!" narrative like some 'analyst' in a cheap suit brought on some shitty news program to chime in.


I know drugs have very large profit margins. AND WHY IS THAT? Because there are intellectual property laws (which are not regulations. at all. they're good and "social").



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why do they have to be mutually exclusive processes? Seems like one would require the other and vice versa, don't be such a debbie downer it's more within our reach than it ever has been in history. Seize The Time™ comrade! Lets communize everything while getting rid of the state!
I don't know if they have to be mutually exclusive. Probably not, but as long as you chop off the right limbs at the right time. This is just a really difficult question to me, something I can't really answer very easily. But I don't think it would be a good thing if the entire state was abolished ceteris paribus tomorrow, from social security to funding of military contractors. There has to be something to fall back on for people. If you do it in the form of a coup or revolution, there'd better be a people-based collective at the end of it that doesn't sell out at the first opportunity. If those systems were in place to begin with it would seem like a much safer bet, as well as easier.
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I know drugs have very large profit margins. AND WHY IS THAT? Because there are intellectual property laws (which are not regulations. at all. they're good and "social").





y are those laws in existence? who lobbies for these laws? why would they do that? could it be.... capitalists chasing profits???????????

:-O
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I don't know if they have to be mutually exclusive. Probably not, but as long as you chop off the right limbs at the right time. This is just a really difficult question to me, something I can't really answer very easily. But I don't think it would be a good thing if the entire state was abolished ceteris paribus tomorrow, from social security to funding of military contractors. There has to be something to fall back on for people. If you do it in the form of a coup or revolution, there'd better be a people-based collective at the end of it that doesn't sell out at the first opportunity. If those systems were in place to begin with it would seem like a much safer bet, as well as easier.
just go with the flow, we'll figure it out along the way
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y are those laws in existence? who lobbies for these laws? why would they do that? could it be.... capitalists chasing profits? ??? ??? ??? ?

:-O


They only go into effect because......... SOMEONE PROMISED CHANGE? And everyone fell for it?
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They only go into effect because......... SOMEONE PROMISED CHANGE? And everyone fell for it?

that's a very naive and dumb way to understand that shit dude.
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Yeah, everything was going along perfectly until those evil capitalists started oppressin' us! I demand privileges! I demand a permanent state of revolution!
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naw things were pretty shitty before capitalism too. but yea i do want a permanent state of revolution
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i want to destroy privilege too
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& mow down every m'fucka who gets in the way
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No it is not, and that doesn't have anything to do with what I said, at all
You literally questioned whether someone would still consent to work in the mines if he's mostly helping other people rather than himself with it, and proposed that as "the collectivist utilitarian" viewpoint, which you say would only work if people are forced to do it at gunpoint. Well, that's just silly to anyone who's done even the most rudimentary research on these things.

As I mentioned in my example, people were perfectly happy working in the factories during the '30s Spanish collectivist-anarchistic society, which has everything to do with your assertion that it wouldn't work unless you force people at gunpoint.

They'll take real action when it becomes profitable, like China is doing by investing on "green" energy. We survived an ice age with nothing but primitive tools. We can handle global warming.
China is mostly an assembly line for Western green projects.

See, this is why I don't like talking to you. You don't use arguments that make sense. We'll survive global warming "because we survived an ice age with primitive tools"? None of this makes any sense at all. There's no thought process behind any of it.

Your assertion that we'll survive because it'll eventually become profitable to do something about global warming doesn't take into account the fact that it already is extremely profitable to do something about it right now, but only if you look into the distant future. Every year we wait, we're getting closer to irreversible, self-sustaining, catastrophic warming. Some climate scientists say we're already in it. The damages future generations will inherit, if they can even be expressed in a number, will be unfathomably higher the longer we wait. Yet absolutely nothing is happening, because the corporate system doesn't care about the damages future generations will incur. They're externalities. Your grandchildren's interests have no bearing whatsoever on the corporate goal of maximizing profit.

They're getting free money from each other, from their dividends, from short selling, whatever. None of that affects you at all.
The global financial crises that occurred all over the world and are occurring even right now as we speak beg to disagree with you. So would all the people in the US who lost their homes. They were purposely pushed by the banking industry to take out those loans despite the risks, because they knew they'd be able to make profit off of them even if the house of cards came down. It takes a genius not to see how this kind of grand-scale financial malpractice affects me and you.

And how is that capitalism? That's being a nanny state for banks. That's manipulating a bunch of numbers to give the impression of economic growth. That's expanding credit to "help" poor people consume (buy things they shouldn't with money they can't produce). That's just mal-allocating capital to stupid purposes, which is completely anti-capitalistic.
I agree, it has nothing to do with capitalism. Under a capitalist system, all of those banks would die. But theory is not practice. With capitalism comes inequality, and with inequality comes concentration of resources and power, and with power, one calls the shots. To put it simple, the banks call the shots.

You're talking about US, Europe, BRIC like they're persons. "Hey, US isn't behaving, we must punish him!" except that you can't do that. I bet you'll never see any real action take place, instead you'll see green washing everywhere, companies doing stuff like "Hey I'll just lower my emissions by 1%, that is ok by the rules, laws and treaties!", while the developing world doesn't care about it at all, and instead of a global catastrophe that will decimate all life you'll just witness the establishment of a new equilibrum. Legislation will serve no purpose other than make people feel less guilty.
It's not about "punishing" the US. It's just as simple as I told you: the US is stalling global efforts to do something about this, but you refuse to even say it. The scenario you describe can be avoided, and the first step is to stop being apathetic.

Because the "left" ideologies are good at exploiting their feelings, their envy, their anger. There's always a discourse involving a victim, a oppressor, and the notion that putting the leftist leaders in power will make their troubles go away and free the victim from oppression.
I'm simplifying here, but it's because the further you go towards the left side of the spectrum, the smaller inequality becomes. The left movements are the only true people's movements. No popular movement is ever going to exist on the notion of giving away the fruits of one's hard labor to a wealthy upper class, except if you indoctrinate people into believing magic like "trickle-down". But keep in mind here that I only used the word "left-libertarian" to set it apart from what people tend to call "libertarian" these days, which is complete and total fascism. The fact that these movements have popular support stems from the fact that they are direct responses to the oppression of the people. That has nothing to do with the charisma of a few leaders. Popular movements grow through popular support, because the values they espouse are already latently supported by huge swaths of the population.

Guess who else favors sharp inequalities? People who promise to make it go away.
There are plenty of liars around. Doesn't mean everybody is a liar, or that you should never trust anyone.

You're romanticizing a factory worker. You're applying the noble savage rationale to them, you're trying to make an appeal to emotion. "Look at this inequality. Look at her, she's such a pathetic creature, why don't you feel pity for her? Why don't you free her from oppression? I'll make it all go away if you put me in charge of your life!". That's a discourse that preceeded countless totalitarian regimes that ended the lives of millions.
I knew this would happen.

Sooner or later, when you're in a discussion about socialism with someone as disingenuous as yourself, the equation of socialism with totalitarianism will be made. Forget the fact I even explicitly told you I'm against that, and so is every serious socialist or anarchist. I'm not asking to be put in charge of anyone's life.

It's ironic that, again, you're ascribing irrationality to me whilst perpetrating it yourself. You say I'm just trying to appeal to emotion. Your response to that is to equate what I'm saying with totalitarianism, without rational basis. It's literally "what you say sounds like socialism, and the Soviet Union was socialist and became totalitarian, so therefore you support totalitarianism". Again, I wouldn't have to make this point if you did rudimentary research. The Soviet Union, particularly later on in its development, had very little to do with socialism. The foundational principle behind socialism is worker control over the means of production.

Also, do you think a leftist leader has more or less social value than Warren Buffett or Bill Gates, who accumulated wealth by "doing nothing" and now are redistributing it voluntarily?
Rich people who give money to charity are nice, and I'm sure Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are nice people who like to do good things for others, but I don't see what that has to do with anything or why I'm forced to pick sides between them and a nameless, faceless, undescribed "leftist leader". There also aren't many people like Bill Gates and Warren Buffett around, and even after they finish redistributing the amount of money they can do without, they'll still be absurdly, disproportionately rich.

Guess what?

[stupid ron paul pic]

There is no way back.
Fine, if you'd rather curl up into fetal position and wait for it all to end, be my guest. Just make sure to roll out of the way of other people who aren't that apathetic.

Or it could actually make things better because now you don't have an entity that can force you to shoot other people overseas, because now you don't have an entity that can redirect the products of your labor to useless pursuits like bank bailouts, because now you don't have an entity that you can just point your finger at and say it's not your fault, because now there will be no corporate safety net. The responsibility will be removed from a failed instutition and placed on your own hands.
I don't think it would lead to anything except putting my fate in the hands of now unconstrained corporate tyranny. Along with the complete destruction of public health, education, the social safety net and a ton of other things. Remember that I said ceteris paribus, meaning all other things left unchanged. There has to be at least a serious progress towards a socialized society before you can just wipe out everything.

Also, if cooperatives are so good, why do most workers prefer to work for the EVIL CORPORASHUNZ instead when they are free not to? Think about it.
This is why I think you're disingenuous. This is similar to the "vote with your money" argument, or letting the planet get destroyed to teach stupid people a lesson. The reason why people prefer to work in the current corporate system is because that's literally the only way to provide yourself and your family with a decent living. That doesn't mean people wouldn't prefer cooperatives. I'm a firm believer in people's right to happiness. Saying that people should just massively quit their jobs, and if they don't, that must mean they support the corporate system, completely ignores the obvious barriers that exist. I'm not saying that a revolt should come without a price tag (that's impossible), but you shouldn't see people as a herd of animals.

Ask yourself if you'd carry out your own tactic of quitting your job as a way of ending the state, which you say you're in favor of. When you're forced to say no, does that mean you prefer having a state? Of course not. It's a disingenuous, juvenile thing to say.
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Dada and Barrack are basically crushing your arguments with rationality. (well, most of the work is being done by Dada, but still)

I see issues in your arguments that even an moron could see.

Namely that you've listed Tesla, Gates, and Buffet as examples of the idea that unregulated capitalism is a positive thing, when Tesla was largely screwed over by people utilizing the lack of control that capitalism allows (bad) but has contributed vastly useful things for humanity/society as a whole (extremely good), Gates largely became rich using other peoples ideas (not good) and once he became rich decided to redistribute his wealth (very good). etc. (I don't know much about buffet other than he is a rich person that likes to redistribute his own wealth to help the world, and wants other rich people to do the same)

But then you fail to mention the VERY numerous rich assholes that constantly overpower these few fringe friendly rich (intellectually or financially) guys effects on society as a whole.

And you fail to mention that a global catastrophe would hardly teach us anything at all considering we'd all be (eventually) dead. And that negative effects on the world in its entirety do not happen immediately. Its like shoveling thousands of tons of snow onto an avalanche-prone mountain on a constant basis and because its not immediately killing everyone at the bottom saying that we might as well continue shoveling because their is no direct proof that it'll do anything harmful, because it hasn't happened yet.

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Namely that you've listed Tesla, Gates, and Buffet as examples of the idea that unregulated capitalism is a positive thing, when Tesla was largely screwed over by people utilizing the lack of control that capitalism allows (bad) but has contributed vastly useful things for humanity/society as a whole (extremely good), Gates largely became rich using other peoples ideas (not good) and once he became rich decided to redistribute his wealth (very good). etc. (I don't know much about buffet other than he is a rich person that likes to redistribute his own wealth to help the world, and wants other rich people to do the same)

But then you fail to mention the VERY numerous rich assholes that constantly overpower these few fringe friendly rich (intellectually or financially) guys effects on society as a whole.
Yeah, the thing about mentioning all of these "beneficial rich guys", like Buffett or Gates, is: what's the point? Is it to suggest that rich people are a force for good in the world? If that's the case, make a real argument that involves looking at rich people in general instead of just a few that happen to be giving away all of their money. And if you do that, you'll fall flat on your face because then you'd have to argue that the current situation is better than under a more equal system, in which money is much more evenly distributed. Remember that that same rich business class is responsible for driving hundreds of millions of farmers out of the farmlands and into the cities where they work for subsistence wages (if that) with no benefits, rights or health-safety standards through the invention of globalism, as well as a bitter class war domestically.

And you fail to mention that a global catastrophe would hardly teach us anything at all considering we'd all be (eventually) dead.
Yeah, he's pretty alone on this. Even the entire global warming denier industry (of which Ron Paul is a proud member, by the way) is focused on proving that it's untrue (to be more precise, they're focused on putting as much conflicting information out there to give people the idea that the science is inconclusive, because that has the same effect and is much easier). Absolutely nobody is saying that it is happening but that we might as well do nothing, because maybe then people will "learn something". Except maybe fans of Ron Paul who understand more about the science than he does.
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libtard thanks for helping me continue to shake out of a year long emotional and political slumber by holding up the mirror
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instead of worrying ourselves with the distribution of money lets just destroy money as the universal equivalent all together, then recreate our lives outside of the realm of monetary mediation

we can do it!
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Dada and Barrack are basically crushing your arguments with rationality. (well, most of the work is being done by Dada, but still)


No they're not, all Dada is doing is spouting inane leftist slogans like "inequality, inequality, the workers should decide" which I will address later




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I see issues in your arguments that even an moron could see.

Namely that you've listed Tesla


I listed Tesla as an example of someone NOT BEING AN EQUAL TO YOU, read it again. Also: are racists your equals? You've experienced cognitive dissonance just by reading that phrase.


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, Gates, and Buffet as examples of the idea that unregulated capitalism is a positive thing


Nope, I merely questioned whether Gates and Buffet, typical EVIL CAPITALIST PIGZ, who "contribute to society" through voluntary actions are more or less valuable to the society than a leftist leader, who produces nothing basically and uses other people's time and effort to (supposedly) accomplish goals (poorly) through coercion but has a heart touching discourse.




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, when Tesla was largely screwed over by people utilizing the lack of control that capitalism allows (bad) but has contributed vastly useful things for humanity/society as a whole (extremely good), Gates largely became rich using other peoples ideas (not good) and once he became rich decided to redistribute his wealth (very good). etc. (I don't know much about buffet other than he is a rich person that likes to redistribute his own wealth to help the world, and wants other rich people to do the same)


You know what would be even funnier? If someone tried to make Tesla and every other outlier more equal, i.e: putting them in a factory with other equals, putting him through egualitarian education that made him more equal to his peers. We'd still be living in caves so I'm not sure if factories would even exist.



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But then you fail to mention the VERY numerous rich assholes that constantly overpower these few fringe friendly rich (intellectually or financially) guys effects on society as a whole.


No, I didn't, actually I pointed out that leftist leaders enjoy carefree lifestyles compatible with being rich without earning any of it so I guess being evil is not exclusive to those evil capitalists

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And you fail to mention that a global catastrophe would hardly teach us anything at all considering we'd all be (eventually) dead. And that negative effects on the world in its entirety do not happen immediately. Its like shoveling thousands of tons of snow onto an avalanche-prone mountain on a constant basis and because its not immediately killing everyone at the bottom saying that we might as well continue shoveling because their is no direct proof that it'll do anything harmful, because it hasn't happened yet.


Why would I mention that when it wasn't even part of my point to begin with?




Also it's dumb as hell to write this kind of "OH I DIDN'T SAY THAT I ACTUALLY MEANT THIS" post, so don't make me
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instead of worrying ourselves with the distribution of money lets just destroy money as the universal equivalent all together, then recreate our lives outside of the realm of monetary mediation

we can do it!


WOULD YOU TRADE TWENTY KILO TONS OF SAND FOR A HIPPO?


Yes/No/mayb????
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No they're not, all Dada is doing is spouting inane leftist slogans like "inequality, inequality, the workers should decide" which I will address later
"From each according to his ability, to each according to his need."

Actually, they're not slogans. It's much worse than that. They're actual, literal viewpoints. And that one happens to be pretty popular with people when they don't know the source.

I listed Tesla as an example of someone NOT BEING AN EQUAL TO YOU, read it again. Also: are racists your equals? You've experienced cognitive dissonance just by reading that phrase.
This is just another illogical argument. Of course not everybody is "equal". There are lots of ways you can measure differences between people, and you could even ascribe value to them. But that doesn't matter. You mentioned Tesla and Buffett and Gates, supposedly, as examples of why society should not give the same rewards to everybody. And now you mention racists: as another example? Do you believe racists should be paid less for the same work? Because that's what it comes down to for Gates: he gets paid more, far more, supposedly because he's not equal to the rest, he's far better. The amount of effort he puts in is disproportionate to the rewards he reaps.

What I'm proposing is simple. Get rid of inequality on the basis of capital. Remember the juxtaposition of the single mother working three jobs to support her family and the financial corporation CEO? It should be obvious who's the hardest worker and who gets paid the most. That's unjust. It's a very simple position.

Nope, I merely questioned whether Gates and Buffet, typical EVIL CAPITALIST PIGZ, who "contribute to society" through voluntary actions are more or less valuable to the society than a leftist leader, who produces nothing basically and uses other people's time and effort to (supposedly) accomplish goals (poorly) through coercion but has a heart touching discourse.
Based on this explanation, I guess you asked me to compare them to your caricature of a leftist leader. Did you expect me to have the exact same image and description of the undefined term "leftist leader" as you?

You know what would be even funnier? If someone tried to make Tesla and every other outlier more equal, i.e: putting them in a factory with other equals, putting him through egualitarian education that made him more equal to his peers. We'd still be living in caves so I'm not sure if factories would even exist.
Go back to the quote at the top and make note of the "from each according to his ability" part.

Another thing to take note of is the fact that the prime characteristic of socialism is worker control over the means of production. If that's the case, there's nobody to "put Tesla in a factory". That has absolutely nothing to do with socialism.

No, I didn't, actually I pointed out that leftist leaders enjoy carefree lifestyles compatible with being rich without earning any of it so I guess being evil is not exclusive to those evil capitalists
What you attempted to do is exactly what you tried with Buffett and Gates: paint a self-serving picture by failing to make an honest analysis. Yes, there are left-wing world leaders who enjoy cushy lifestyles. There are also right-wing world leaders who enjoy cushy lifestyles. In fact, although I haven't made a head count, I'm pretty sure the overwhelming majority of world leaders actually have nothing whatsoever to do with socialism, or anarchism, or the communist creed at the top of my post, and are actually extremely beholden to the extreme right-wing state-capitalist system.

Also it's dumb as hell to write this kind of "OH I DIDN'T SAY THAT I ACTUALLY MEANT THIS" post, so don't make me
You have to be more precise and tone down the rhetoric because I'm having a hard time following you too for most part.
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WOULD YOU TRADE TWENTY KILO TONS OF SAND FOR A HIPPO?

Yes/No/mayb? ???
In the anarchist society in Spain in the '30s, people traded vouchers counting for one hour of labor.