cawck mongler wrote:
Wolverines kill for fun and the reason Lions don't kill hundreds of Gazelle (hyenas are scavengers I believe, they might be able to effectively hunt Gazelle), is because there's nothing in it for them and it would create extra work. A rich landlord still benefits from razing taxes, as there are always better things he can buy with it. If lions got a umbrella that they could lay under for shade for every ten extra Gazelle they killed, they'd kill more Gazelle to get that umbrella.
Do you have a source for that Wolverine thing?
Again, all your examples involve some kind of advantage for those killing others. This is competition.
Competition = Your advantage, others disadvantage.
Greed = No advantage to you, others disadvantage.
cawck mongler wrote:Animals are exactly like humans, in fact, humans are animals, we just developed better and that allowed us to start taking more then we need from the environment, I'm sure that there are other animals with edges over their competition, that also take more then they need. If you can tell me one thing that makes us so different then animals (a logical thing that isn't just pointing out our successes in adapting to our environment, other animals use tools to, they just wern't suited for developing them to the extent that we have), then I'll drop my argument.
Just off the top of my head, I would have to say that the ability to have empathy for strangers, even when it doesn't give an immediate advantage, is one of the major things that seperates us from animals.
If you saw a stranger, injured on the street (and you wern't one of those people who just stood and took pictures) you would go and help, if at all possible. Animals wouldn't do this; if the injured animal wasn't a member of their pack then they would consider it a source of food.
cawck mongler wrote:Let me start of by saying that the social problems created through capitalism are normal, humans are a pack animal and like other animals we have 'alpha males', who get more then the rest of the group. Because of the amount of luxury in our lives, the difference between common people and the elite is greater then in other species.
But shouldn't we be trying it improve humanity in general? Not just saying "Ahh well, we evolved that way. Nothing we can do about it". That type of social structure may be good enough for non-sentient creatures, but once you include higher brain functions in the equation, the entire thing fails.
cawck mongler wrote:Capitalism encourages efficiency and development.
Not really. I would say the exact opposite. Capitalism is like having several people try to climb a mountain by pulling eachother down.
The one who gets to the top first will be the best, but the sheer amount of time and energy wasted will more than make up for this advantage.
cawck mongler wrote:True, we could save resources if we were to switch to communism, but communism would never work, unless the whole world was united under one communist government, because the inefficiency of a communist government would force the ham fisted officials to start sacrificing human life in order to keep pace with the more efficient capitalist governments. I have to stop here, sorry, but I'm not exactly sure what alternative government you're proposing to capitalism, other then one with no competition (communism), which has very drastic flaws and can't be implemented (in which case mixed market, what I'm arguing for, wins). If you're trying to say some kind of variant of communism is better, then explain it, but everyone knows communism is an epic fail and I'm not going to explain why.
I'm not arguing for anything, i'm simply arguing against Capitalim. Since I am not a Social Scientist (or whatever they are called) I cannot make accurate predictions on how well various systems will work, although your mixed market idea does sound as though it has some potential.
cawck mongler wrote:And another thing to argue with your 'animals only take what they need' thing. Billionaires like Bill Gates have higher chances of having sex and passing on their genes then people who just make enough to get by, they also have a higher chance of survival (they can afford better medicine etc.), that means that he still needs it in terms of fulfilling his instincts, sure he's taking it at the expense of others, but people and animals arn't supposed to look after each other, they're supposed to look after themselves. If animals only took as much as they needed, then they'd live live on the edge of starvation, but like humans, if given the chance they'd eat until they're full, because their bodies are telling them to eat more then just enough to survive. You're arguing that it would benefit mankind to implement an impossible economic system and that there's a fixed line on how much is too much and that animals would never cross that line, but humans, for some mysterious reason, would.
Of course having a lot of money gives an advantage. Everyone wants lots of money because this will give them an edge over the competition.
Say, for arguments sake, that Bill Gates has 100 Billion dollars. Now just say he notices a homeless person on the street with a $100 note. If he takes the $100 note, it is greed, since having $100 000 000 100 is barely any improvement over having $100 000 000 000. The amount of advatage Bill Gates gained by taking that $100 is so small it is negligable, but the amount of disadvantage he did to the homeless person is huge.
This is greed.
We own all your helmets, we own all your shoes, we own all your generals. Touch us and you loooose...
The Rogue State!