Napoleon Ier wrote:If they have no concept of property, I'm not taking anything away from them. I am however, giving to them Civilization and the Gospel.
Also eating disorders and diseases.
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Napoleon Ier wrote:If they have no concept of property, I'm not taking anything away from them. I am however, giving to them Civilization and the Gospel.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
MeDeFe wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:If they have no concept of property, I'm not taking anything away from them. I am however, giving to them Civilization and the Gospel.
Also eating disorders and diseases.
Napoleon Ier wrote:got tonkaed wrote:Id also tenatively add that property rights are not so easily and neatly understood in much of the world, thus making the positive claim napoleon makes about compensating negative externalities a bit more theoretical than practical.
In which case, colonize those parts of the world and make them your property.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:Which is why any reasonable proponent of free markets will also advocate compensation for negative externalities, (for Player's benefit, that means when evil nasty capitalist entrepreneurs ravage a forest or dump pollution...)
As opposed to, say, those plain crazy, weaping Liberals?
Names, stupidity, out of the way ... now for the issues:
For the record, I have never used the word "evil" except in very specific and intentional situations (the Lehman brothers executives who took their own bonuses and refused to pay the UK secretaries and janitors their earned wages, for example).Napoleon Ier wrote:since the external damage represents a violation of the property rights at the heart of the system of free enterprise. Continue using google to research the Soviet Union, as I suggested to you earlier: you'll see how well their system of the State owning and using blunt legislative tools for protection of the environment turned out.
Big jump here! Since when did you decide that my property rights supercede the right of the company next door to operate and make money? (you argued the reverse pretty strongly before). Besides, your claim that "any free market advocate" supports limits of externalities is just plain silly. They may on paper, but only until you tell them that THEY have to cut emissions from THEIR stacks because the scientific evidence shows the chemicals cause harm to neighborhood kids. Then its "what research? ... faulty data .. funded by liberal patsies with agendas"... etc. ("greenhouse gases.. poppycock theory!). The truth is that scientific evidence, particular environmental and health effects is difficult and takes a very long time to assess definitively. A business man says "I won't change until I get ABSOLUTE proof". A mom is more likely to say "if there is a chance it will harm my kid ... get rid of it!". As a scientist, I fall a bit in between. However, when it comes to the irreplaceable, such as much of our environement truly is, I do believe in erring on the side of caution. It is far less COSTLY to everyone to stop damage than it is to correct damage that has already occured ...even if it does mean temporarily putting limits on certain types of business and production as precaution, without fully firm evidence.
(in other words, if I told you that one of the 1000 seats in an auditorium has a tack you cannot see, but will feel when you sit .. you will likely risk it. But, if I told you there was a trigger to a shotgun that would be aimed at your head, would that 1 in 1000 chance seem such a slim chance? In this case, I know enough to see the gun ... many others do not.)
As for the Soviet Union ... Communism is a big leap from basic socialism. I know you are fully aware of the differance. The Soviet union was (and is moving back toward) a fully controlled economy. Why try to pretend they are the same?
Anyway, I specifically said in my earlier post that free market works well for some things. It just happens that my field of expertise is not an area where the free market readily applies.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:got tonkaed wrote:Id also tenatively add that property rights are not so easily and neatly understood in much of the world, thus making the positive claim napoleon makes about compensating negative externalities a bit more theoretical than practical.
In which case, colonize those parts of the world and make them your property.
Sorry, timber companies beat you to it .. and that is partially why certain timber prices have been so low, more US timber companies have gone out of business.
Napoleon Ier wrote:
Well, when it comes to whether the free market or the State damages the environment, I'd rather it were the free market: that way, you can at least get legal representation and fight your battle against offending individuals in the context of the judiciary branch of government. And if a nuclear waste company stacks glowing barrels up near your kids' school or whatever it was you were blabbing about, fair enough, I'm sure any judge would find in your favor.
In a State system, you'd have one executive arm you can't argue against. In Soviet Russia, State sue YOU!
So clearly, ultimately, a system of free enterprise predicated on a philosophy of free individuals being endowed with inalienable rights is better positioned to care for environmental safety than one based on coercive legislation from a faceless government executive. In theory anyway.
As for the empirical evidence... it speaks for itself.
Theory backed up by empirical evidence. There you are... the nuts and bolts of what I call "Science", and when I use that word, I make it mean something.
Napoleon Ier wrote:Well... define "culture"... I mean, do Chimpanzees have "culture"?
Napoleon Ier wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:got tonkaed wrote:Id also tenatively add that property rights are not so easily and neatly understood in much of the world, thus making the positive claim napoleon makes about compensating negative externalities a bit more theoretical than practical.
In which case, colonize those parts of the world and make them your property.
Sorry, timber companies beat you to it .. and that is partially why certain timber prices have been so low, more US timber companies have gone out of business.
So, let me guess... gigantic protectionist tariffs, import quotas, and government money-printing to decrease real value of their debt is the solution to the problem of the timber companies and all the other starving Americans on the Main Street Dust Bowl?
Napoleon Ier wrote:I'm not denying the State can't be sued, I'm saying thank God it can: because it couldn't under socialism.
Napoleon Ier wrote:So, no. Theory, as I outlined and you made bugger all effort to rebutt, and empirical evidence, as China and the ex-Soviet bloc countries all attest, support my view
Napoleon Ier wrote:As for the rest of your concerns, you've brought up specific cases of largely legislative (in the case of mining law) rulings emanating from a government institution. So, no. Theory, as I outlined and you made bugger all effort to rebutt, and empirical evidence, as China and the ex-Soviet bloc countries all attest, support my view.
Napoleon Ier wrote:The fact that a mining company is digging for uranium under your house or whatever it was is clearly a problem, but not one caused by free-market ideology.
China and the old Soviet Union were COMMUNIST, not socialist. Very differant! And your confusion on this point is very telling
Laws that came about because mining companies want them .. i.e. capitalism and free market
Snorri1234 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:Well... define "culture"... I mean, do Chimpanzees have "culture"?
For someone who claims he isn't racist you sure do sound like one.
Napoleon Ier wrote:
China and the old Soviet Union were COMMUNIST, not socialist. Very differant! And your confusion on this point is very telling
USSR stands for Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Read Marx. There has yet to be (and I contend cannot be) a Communist system, since Communism in the historical dialectic is an anarchist utopia following the dictatorship of the Proletariat, which is in other words, "Socialism", the post-Bourgeois state. It is what every crudely called "Communist" nation has implemented. No good Marxist will claim that these nations were Communist.
Now, these days, many parties call themselves "socialist" because of the post-Soviet stigmatization of the word "Communist", leading people like you to think you're clever by drawing a distinction.
[/quote]So, yes, very "differant", but not in the way you posit.
As for the idea that "socialistic" countries in Scandinavia provide an example... utter bollocks. This is where there's a "diffarance" in ideology. They're social-democratic, not Socialist, (as for that matter was the French PS in the 1980s, or Labour in the 70s). And no, if the State by legislative decree proclaims something you don't like, you can't sue: those countries operate on a body of Code Law, not an Anglo-Saxon Common Law system.
Sadly, you just end up looking very silly to anyone with a clue.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:
China and the old Soviet Union were COMMUNIST, not socialist. Very differant! And your confusion on this point is very telling
USSR stands for Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Read Marx. There has yet to be (and I contend cannot be) a Communist system, since Communism in the historical dialectic is an anarchist utopia following the dictatorship of the Proletariat, which is in other words, "Socialism", the post-Bourgeois state. It is what every crudely called "Communist" nation has implemented. No good Marxist will claim that these nations were Communist.
Yes, we all know they refer to themselves as "Socialist", but they WERE Communist, albiet not the "pure" communism you refer to in Marx. In fact, the Scandinavian countries are much more like the economic Marxist ideal than Russia (or China or even Cuba) ever were.Now, these days, many parties call themselves "socialist" because of the post-Soviet stigmatization of the word "Communist", leading people like you to think you're clever by drawing a distinction.
No, leading people now talk of a "Planned economy" versus a "free market" or "demand" economy, among other terms. "Communism" and "Socialism" are generally used for political systems not economic ones ... and have been for some time.So, yes, very "differant", but not in the way you posit.
As for the idea that "socialistic" countries in Scandinavia provide an example... utter bollocks. This is where there's a "diffarance" in ideology. They're social-democratic, not Socialist, (as for that matter was the French PS in the 1980s, or Labour in the 70s). And no, if the State by legislative decree proclaims something you don't like, you can't sue: those countries operate on a body of Code Law, not an Anglo-Saxon Common Law system.
Sadly, you just end up looking very silly to anyone with a clue.
Napoleon Ier wrote:
No, you don't happen to be correct, because Communism is still an anarchist utopic stage in a historical dialectic posited by Karl Marx that has yet to be reached by any society,.
Oh, and by the way, no. Scandinavian Countries aren't Marxist. There's a "diffarance" between high % GDP public sector spending and Dictatorship of the Proletariat.
You just don't know of what you speak. No company was favored over another. He who had the money and went out to seek the claim got them .. i.e. private ownership. Most of this was decided long before I was born, so I was excluded, but in the same way I am "excluded" from buying prime realistate in Manhattan. That is, if I had the money and the owner wanted to sell, I could buy ... but I don't. The problem is that those "private property rights" never took into account surface issues, because they were not in the radar back then. They REMAIN off the radar screen because we have had 8 years of "deregulate everything to get this economy booming". (unless, of course its against Al Quaeda..)and because mining law favoring certain companies over others is still an element of paleo-corporatist political philosophy, not free (i.e, hic, legislation minimizing) market capitalism.
Try Lennin on for size
You just don't know of what you speak. No company was favored over another. He who had the money and went out to seek the claim got them .. i.e. private ownership. Most of this was decided long before I was born, so I was excluded, but in the same way I am "excluded" from buying prime realistate in Manhattan. That is, if I had the money and the owner wanted to sell, I could buy ... but I don't. The problem is that those "private property rights" never took into account surface issues, because they were not in the radar back then. They REMAIN off the radar screen because we have had 8 years of "deregulate everything to get this economy booming". (unless, of course its against Al Quaeda..)
but this is already far afield from the thread topic, so if you want to debate this further, it will have to be in another thread.
The differance in the standard of living between the "rich" and the "poor" in Scandinavia is pretty narrow. Economically, they are much closer to the Marxist ideal than the Soviet Union ever was.
You mix politics and economics and try to switch definitions to suit yourself. Stick to one and stick to the RECOGNIZED definitions.
Napoleon Ier wrote:
China and the old Soviet Union were COMMUNIST, not socialist. Very differant! And your confusion on this point is very telling
USSR stands for Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Read Marx.
Snorri1234 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:
China and the old Soviet Union were COMMUNIST, not socialist. Very differant! And your confusion on this point is very telling
USSR stands for Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Read Marx.
Ah shit nappy. I thought you were smarter than others who use the "they call themselves socialist so they are"-argument.
Napoleon Ier wrote:Try Lennin on for size
Oh, so I presume you've read him on his Theory of Empiriocriticism and have an elaborate justification for your crackpot theory on how Lenin somehow posited socialism as different from communism in the sense of the latter being the actual dialectic stage to succeed Bourgeois capitalism.
(For snorri's benefit, no I don't presume that's the case, especially given the fact she 's had the gall to misspell his fucking name whilst pretending to lecture me on Marxist historical materialism, I was being ironically rhetorical).
You just don't know of what you speak. No company was favored over another. He who had the money and went out to seek the claim got them .. i.e. private ownership. Most of this was decided long before I was born, so I was excluded, but in the same way I am "excluded" from buying prime realistate in Manhattan. That is, if I had the money and the owner wanted to sell, I could buy ... but I don't. The problem is that those "private property rights" never took into account surface issues, because they were not in the radar back then. They REMAIN off the radar screen because we have had 8 years of "deregulate everything to get this economy booming". (unless, of course its against Al Quaeda..)
but this is already far afield from the thread topic, so if you want to debate this further, it will have to be in another thread.
Which is why an independent judiciary dealing with complex property issues and maximally respecting individual rights on both sides is better equipped to deal with these issues.
Those don't exist in Socialist States, where there is no property, and hence no property law, and hence no end of shit when it comes to attempt to protect the environment.
As evidenced by Socialist failures in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and Maoist China.
The differance in the standard of living between the "rich" and the "poor" in Scandinavia is pretty narrow. Economically, they are much closer to the Marxist ideal than the Soviet Union ever was.
You mix politics and economics and try to switch definitions to suit yourself. Stick to one and stick to the RECOGNIZED definitions.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:Try Lennin on for size
Oh, so I presume you've read him on his Theory of Empiriocriticism and have an elaborate justification for your crackpot theory on how Lenin somehow posited socialism as different from communism in the sense of the latter being the actual dialectic stage to succeed Bourgeois capitalism.
(For snorri's benefit, no I don't presume that's the case, especially given the fact she 's had the gall to misspell his fucking name whilst pretending to lecture me on Marxist historical materialism, I was being ironically rhetorical).
The reference is because Soviet Union borrows far more from Lenin than Marx ...as you obviously know, being the expert that you are. And is all the more reason your comparisons to Marx are silly. But then, this used to be a pretty common topic of debate amongst University Professors over beer. It is a bit passe now.
An independent judiciary dealing with complex property issues and maximally respecting individual rights on both sides is better equipped to deal with these issues.
Those don't exist in Socialist States, where there is no property, and hence no property law, and hence no end of shit when it comes to attempt to protect the environment.
Socialism means some things are run by the government. Communism is where the state owns everything. At least on this side of the pond. And actually an independent judiciary can exist quite well under Socialism. Theoretically, it could under Communism, but of course it has not.
Again, you mix terms.
The differance in the standard of living between the "rich" and the "poor" in Scandinavia is pretty narrow. Economically, they are much closer to the Marxist ideal than the Soviet Union ever was.
Right. Well, lovely thought that may for you, you haven't demonstrated how that has anything to do with you absurd hypothesis that the existence mining rights being an example of why Marxism is a preferable system of allocating resources in a society.
Probably because I never said it was, nor would I EVER. I simply said that the free market does not fix such problems, which was your ridiculous assertion.
I said it take government oversight, which it does.
You mix politics and economics and try to switch definitions to suit yourself. Stick to one and stick to the RECOGNIZED definitions.
Economics and politics do tend to overlap. If a simultaneous discussion of both in relation to MArxism-Leninism is too intellectually daunting, I refer you to a number of good introductory guides on the subject, which you will find do contain definitions recognized by pretty much every serious academic rather than you and the population of mediocre Bachelor's degree holding (read: just about literate) Americans.
Try reading a good dictionary first. Right now, you switch definitions and draw in irrelevant facts and ideas to suit.
I have no trouble debating honestly. What you are trotting out is idiocy in some misguided and arrogant attempt to seem superior. And, you don't even realize you do just the opposit.
PLAYER57832 wrote: The reference is because Soviet Union borrows far more from Lenin than Marx ...as you obviously know, being the expert that you are. And is all the more reason your comparisons to Marx are silly. But then, this used to be a pretty common topic of debate amongst University Professors over beer. It is a bit passe now.
Napoleon Ier wrote:
More Communism/Socialism are distinct ideologies bollocks. Only for the sake of modern convenience, where democratic socialist has been substituted as a term for Marxists who deny the possibility of a Communist stage.
I refer you to the source: read the Communist Manifesto. Everywhere, Socialism is referred to as theories for a system of social organization to complete a transitional stage toward Communist utopia.
But I've already explained to you that Socialism and Communism aren't ideologies, they're historical stages in the Marxist (and Marxist-Leninist) dialectic, and you answer with the usual no! no! no they're not because I always hear CNN and my inept and barely literate friends product of the crumbling American undergraduate educational system refer to them as different, so I must be right!. Then everyone who's read their Kolakowski laughs.
GabonX wrote:We have seen the progression of communism and socialism and know that it has failed.