BigBallinStalin wrote:Slavery, huh?
Subsidizing poverty through heavy welfare programs is a form of slavery (keep people bound and chained to rely on government handouts to get by in the long-run).
I agree, but note that I am talking about WORKING PEOPLE. That is the stupid irony of today..the wealthy get tax breaks, the poor get subsidized. Its mostly the middle class bearing the burdens.. and getting the least.
And, meanwhile we are told that removing all regulations is the answer.
BP gets to destroy the income, lives of MILLIONS of people, all but destroy not one, but several ecosystems ( and they are STILL very much underplaying the full damage!). The banks get to offer loans to people who obviously cannot afford them, then turn around and foreclose on homes they don't even own ..and yet deregulation is supposed to make things better!
BigBallinStalin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:When all those things are offered free for those who don't work.. it is skewed. BUT, we don't need to go back to the days where no one had any chance at much of anything, where people were willing to work 15 hours and more a day in unhealthy conditions, even kids. Yet, that is exactly what the right wing is slowly moving us toward.
"back to the days where no one had any chance at much of anything" = ????? (or whatever time Player wishes to change to)
Scratch that.. there was a chance. If you could manage to get a piece of land, then you could farm, you could do for yourself. Problem is.. those lands are now taken away, too. Either owned by huge agribusiness that operate barely healthy or outright unhealthy operations, that pollute as bad as any factory (sometimes worse) and that are managed by people who live far away.
Water used to be available for most people in rural areas. Now, more often it is poisoned or there are rules preventing access. (note, not talking sensible rules to protect habitat, I mean that legislation is turning the greatest truly public resource we have had into something private)
BigBallinStalin wrote:Nevertheless, increases in labor productivity led to increases in one's real income. In turn, this reduced the need to work 15 hours a day. Technological improvements (partly in the field of labor productivity) showed the benefits and became cheap enough to use in order to improve working conditions, and it even reduced the need for child labor.
Ever read the rat race?
Anyway, I am not a luddite. However, you cannot simply say "more productivity is always good" or more technology is always good. More often now, its not more productivity, its "efficiency". "Efficiency" that means fewer people working.. fewer people buying things. Maybe efficient for the company, but not the nation. Worse, its not even efficiency increases we see most often, its going overseas to cut costs... So, the big companies get tax breaks on the theory of creating jobs, but instead the jobs they create are all overseas. Then they cut wages here, under (again) the theory of preserving profits, but in fact wind up cutting the purchasing power of Americans through those lower wages (with the exception of the very wealthy, of course), so the economy gets driven even more into the tank.
BigBallinStalin wrote: If anything, one would want to encourage growth in labor productivity and innovation and to discourage backwards incentives through long-term rewards for people who continue to choose not to produce any further income (since the welfare income they receive plus the <40 or <30 hours of work a week is sufficient to remain content enough).
WAIT A MINUTE... you are talking about people who are working 30 and 40 hours a week who are on welfare?????
NO..that is the problem! Anyone who is working fulltime should be paid enough to not need welfare.. if they are getting so little that they still earn subsidies ,t hen the company is stealing from taxpayers.. pretending to pay wages, when, in fact, they are pushing people off onto taxpayers to support so they can take more profits!
Second, the almight "god" of growth cannot continue. We need sustainability, not growth. Growth requires new resources, generally exploitation of another area. I realize that a lot of big business folks are happy making the US their newest colony, but the American people are not.. well, should not be, except they keep believing the pablum they are fed.
BigBallinStalin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Worse, they are even taking away any options to find out about other ways of living, of succeeding. It is no mistake that all these "freedom fighters" are simulaneously cutting education, cutting internet freedoms, cutting fre media outlets, and even libraries. Dumb people are much easier to control.
I wouldn't be cynical enough to claim that the government cuts education to foster a higher population of idiots to control for two reasons:
1) People, who are "dumb" and "educated" alike, are
already dumb enough to be swayed by the same political tactics and rhetoric
No, highly educated people still tend to be liberal.. not always, but very often. However, you have to be educated in something other than big business to see that impact. That is, after all why we have the myth of the "liberal elite".
BigBallinStalin wrote:2) The education budget is very easy to cut through political means because the immediate costs are very little and the long-term costs will be more significant at a later time where it becomes unclear which politicians were responsible for which unintended consequences, thus saving their political careers.
consequences are intended.
BigBallinStalin wrote:
You say "right wing does this" and "right wing does that," but what really is the "right-wing"?
The right-wing is simply anyone that the left-wing opposes.
No, and particularly not the far right.
The right wing are the ones that want to hand control over to private entities... both big business and then ultimately dictators. Gvoernment is the entity that can control the big guys and protect the masses, when the masses have a say in the government.
Big businesses find ways to have their say in dictators.. until they get too dictatorial and then they do kill business, but those dictatorships tend not to last.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Yet those of the right-wing are vastly different from one another: monarchists, neo-cons, conservatives, free market advocates, totalitarians, fascists, national socialists, non-socialist anarchists, etc.
No, ocnservatives are not in the far right, nor are many of those others, until they get into extremes. When they get into extremes, they all pretty much look like one another.
A monarchist wants to cede control to a monarchy, a totalitarian to a dictator, and fascists to the most powerful (under the guise of something else)... the result is all the same. A few people get to control what everyone else gets to do. That even works for a while, like Machiavelli predicts. As long as the masses are appeased "just enough", things stay relatively calm. Of course, what he failed to mention was the business class. They are the "new nobles", essentially, they have to be greatly appeased if the power wants to stay in power.
But anyway.. no, you speak of distinctions without a difference.
BigBallinStalin wrote:All you're doing is arbitrarily drawing lines with which you demonize your opponents. It's a good strategy in verbal gymnastics, but it's still not at all a proper argument.
No, I am speaking of specific very, very bad ideas and plans. I address each and every point, sometimes referring to the far right or conservatives (this is NOT conservativism, though!) at the end.