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Rage against the Machine - Communism Vs. Capitalism (again!)

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  • Cos there are only so many hours in a day, Kid. 24 of them, to be precise.

    If you spend all day ranting and complaining that you're being exploited, then you're not leaving any time for anything else.

    If you're not leaving time for anything else, then what are you doing?

    Nothing. (well, 'cept ranting and complaining about being exploited)

    -=Vel=-
    The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.

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    • Originally posted by Velociryx
      Cos there are only so many hours in a day, Kid. 24 of them, to be precise.

      If you spend all day ranting and complaining that you're being exploited, then you're not leaving any time for anything else.

      If you're not leaving time for anything else, then what are you doing?

      Nothing. (well, 'cept ranting and complaining about being exploited)

      -=Vel=-
      Hey, what I do with my leisure time is my business. Just because I don't have 4 jobs doesn't mean I'm paralyzed in inactivity pal.
      I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
      - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

      Comment




      • Yep. That's just exactly right.

        What you do with you time (all of your time, actually, unless you "rent it out" to another), is your business.

        Just as it should be.

        Of course, it wouldn't be if your vision of the revolution comes to pass, so enjoy it while you can.

        In the meantime, if you feel that railing against phantoms of exploitation is a good use of your time, and putting you further along the path of accomplishing the goals you have set for yourself, have at it.

        Meanwhile, I'm gonna grab a shower, and get back to packing...

        -=Vel=-
        The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by David Floyd
          Just got back, and it's late, but one quick note:

          Interesting you should use logistics and people skills in your example. I should just bring up that two of the greatest strengths of Dwight D. Eisenhower, CINC Allied Forces in Europe in WW2, and future President of the US, were logistics and people skills. That's right, the CINC wasn't a front-line soldier, nor was he a strategist by any means. He was, as you put it, a glorified secretary. Yet, this "glorified secretary" rightfully deserves a lot of the credit for Allied victories in WW2, in my opinion.
          Logistics is important. Secretaries are important. If I have to file, mail, and photocopy all of my own stuff, I'll have no time to do my actual work. Division of labor is crucial to our society. My point is merely that the job of logistics people should be to free up the creators, workers, and producers to do their jobs.

          CEOs, executives, managers, etc. aren't just the infrastructure though. They decide what is created, what is to be designed, and what will be available to the consumer. Their choices are (ostensibly) based on profitablity. So we have the market, whose sole purpose is to deal with scarcity of resources. Due to scarcity, only so many projects can make use of the limited resources. But what we end up with under our system is profitablity on the market ruling which projects should be supplied with resources. In other words, we've allowed the mechanism for allocating resources to actually dictate how resources are used.

          What we should be doing instead is designing our markets to feed the projects that we pursue, not the other way around. Smart people reading this right now are thinking - but doesn't consumer choice in the market already tell us what projects to pursue based on what people want?

          That's well and good, but here is the rub - most consumers lack the expertise to know how to pursue second order goals. The second order goals are really what the consumer is seeking to maximise. Consumers want things like transpotation, information, recreation, jobs, education, safety, necessities, etc. However, most consumers lack the expertise to determine the best methods to achieve these goals.

          This is why I favor something like a planned economy. The first question we should ask is what is the capacity of the economy. That is, how much labor in various fields is available, what amount of raw materials will be necessary, the limits environmental issues place on the economy, etc. Once we know capacity, we have to determine what values the people want to maximize. This is accomplished both through past market performance and elections. Third, we have to know what methods have to be employed to achieve these goals. We then design the market to accommodate the projects that will best meet these goals. Who determines which projects best meet the goals of the people? The experts in the damn field - that's who! Not some damn CEO looking at the bottom line.

          If you're designing a car, tell the engineers the relevant trade-offs people want to make (safety, features, etc.) the environmental impacts, and the resources available for design and production, then let them get to work. But the engineers are the boss - the logistics people are there to make it so not dictate design choices. Engineers best know how to evaluate such projects - not MBAs. (Or better yet, urban planners and engineers will design clean mass transit in efficiently laid out cities...)

          Moreover, some resources will have to be dedicated to projects which are of the "pure knowledge" variety. The idea being that some will yield important fruit in the future. Physicists will need to have the resources to run their experiments - and let the physicists themselves decide which projects get priority. They are the ones who know how to evaluate physics projects.

          Sure, economists would have a central role to play in determining capacity and distributing resources. But they too have to see themselves as a species of master logistics person. There job is to maximize as many projects as feasible. And they should work with artists, engineers, physicists, etc. to reach consensus on how to distribute resources and with politicians to insure that the spending aligns with what the people want.
          - "A picture may be worth a thousand words, but it still ain't a part number." - Ron Reynolds
          - I went to Zanarkand, and all I got was this lousy aeon!
          - "... over 10 members raised complaints about you... and jerk was one of the nicer things they called you" - Ming

          Comment


          • So...by doing it the "other way" we get a better economy, even IF the economy produces stuff that nobody wants...I mean, hey! The central planning group said that flatulence control pills are for the good of society, so we made six million bottles of them. People should buy them!

            Good luck....

            -=Vel=-
            The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.

            Comment


            • Here's what else you get in a centrally planned economy:

              Everybody needs shoes, so we'll make lots of shoes.

              Our statistics tell us that the average shoe size is....ten (to pull a number out of my arse).

              So we'll make lots of shoes, mostly size ten.

              But I don't want a ten....I want a fourteen!

              A pity for you.....that shoe size fell outsize two standard deviations from our projections....we didn't make any. Wear the smaller and buy some ointment to cure the blisters.

              But, I don't want white shoes! I like black!

              Look, we made you some damned shoes, now get over yourself and wear them!

              Choice.

              A planned economy, no matter how complex, can never take into account the full range of human desire.

              If "least common denominator" is what you prefer, then planned will (sometimes) get the job done (and in that case, I must assume you are all for the global takeover of american culture, as it is oft accused of that same reduction to the least common denominator).

              As for me....I'll take choice, thanks.

              -=Vel=-
              The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Velociryx
                GePap: It (my statement) is not applicable to any "system" capitalist or otherwise. Simply a statement about HUMAN action.

                I can spend all day every day looking over first this shoulder, then that, fretting about who has more, and who's "exploiting" me, or, I can figure out what I want, and go after it.

                You guys can sit there, paralyzed into inactivity by worry over exploitation (imagined or not) all you want....I'm off to accomplish my goals, fulfill my dreams, and make my desires a reality.

                -=Vel=-
                And what informs your desires? You want to be rich..why? Why is finatial security a good thing? is it naturally good? No. You live within a system and for the most part your choices are informed by the system itself. Being finatialy well off is considred Good, and you want to be good, so you aim for that. If yu had lived in 1100 ad, would your choices be the same, given the very same person?
                This is the porbem Vel: you assume that today, here, now, this system, that they are "normal". They aren't. They are artificial: even neolithic hunters live within systems artificialy created by man, systems that are not permament. For all the praise of capitalism, the act is that significant changes in technology ahead of us will orbably mean the end of the capitalist system, if only because they might overthrow many of the basic assumptions needed to justify a system like capitalism.
                If you don't like reality, change it! me
                "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
                "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
                "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

                Comment


                • You keep talking about choices Vel: OK.

                  Lets say you want ice cream. You go to a store to buy it. They have chocolate. (they only have chocolate) Choose.

                  Is the above the example of having no choice? No, you have a choice, chocolate.

                  As for the "poverty" issue. The logic here astounds me. People say that only 9% of the people are poor, so see how great things are! If I said 5% of the population had syphilis, would the reaction be "Yeah! 95% don't"? We have defined what poverty is, we define it as a bad situaion to be in. If we have the resources to have 0% poverty rates without making evryone poor (which we certainly have), then why not do it? Either we think that being poor is OK, which you are free to argue, or you believe poverty is not OK, but people who are poor are aso not OK, which is another valid arguemnt. But it makes no sense to define poverty as a social ill and then let it be.
                  If you don't like reality, change it! me
                  "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
                  "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
                  "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Velociryx
                    So...by doing it the "other way" we get a better economy, even IF the economy produces stuff that nobody wants...I mean, hey! The central planning group said that flatulence control pills are for the good of society, so we made six million bottles of them. People should buy them!

                    Good luck....

                    -=Vel=-
                    The funny thing about what people want is that it is open to heavy manipulation. Our capitalist system produces tons of things nobody wants. Advertisers are then enlisted to use psycholgical means to create a market. Ads link products with sex and status, ads tell us it will make our life better, play on our sense of inferiority, etc.

                    What's the difference between a central planning group creating a gas-guzzling SUV and a corporation creating the same? No one needs it, moreover no one should have it due to the dangers (to other drivers, to the environment, even to infrastructure - a 6K lbs Hummer will wear out roads faster than a Honda). The corporation then links the SUV to masculinity and safety in a concentrated ad campaign and people buy. (There is a great Salon artice on how the automakers design SUVs with focus groups to make them look as militant and agressive as possible to appeal to that sort of driver).

                    My point is that preference formation is itself highly very susceptable to manipulation and is not some fixed quantity or even rational. If prefernce formation were rational, all we would see are so-called "Tombstone" ads with nothing but straight information.

                    Another factor is how our environment is laid out. Why are cars so popular? Probably because we have lots of roads (all the linkage of the automobile to freedom in the US mind would not make a difference if roads were not so good here).

                    But cars aren't just popular because of preference formation and the availablity of roads - the fact that so many cities sprawl out in unplanned ways (think LA, Houston, Dallas) there really is no way to build a reasonable mass transit system. So we are left with the need for a damn car if you live outside the Northeast.

                    So what I want is a function of necessity, possibility, and preference formation which is primarily a function of my social environment and you're complaining about the central planning committee greenlighting stuff nobody wants?

                    Anyway, that's why I say the people must set their own second order values democratically. Let the experts make it so. If the engineers determine the best way to achieve transportation is in small electric cars then take away the gas stations and market the cars as environmentally friendly. The combination of necessity and manipulation of preference formation will create the consumer desirability.

                    And BTW, I'm sure their would be a huge demand for anti-flatulence pills.
                    - "A picture may be worth a thousand words, but it still ain't a part number." - Ron Reynolds
                    - I went to Zanarkand, and all I got was this lousy aeon!
                    - "... over 10 members raised complaints about you... and jerk was one of the nicer things they called you" - Ming

                    Comment


                    • Prices should be used to help measure demand for products and services and prevent shortages.

                      Advertising will not be necessary though
                      I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
                      - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Velociryx

                        Choice.

                        A planned economy, no matter how complex, can never take into account the full range of human desire.

                        If "least common denominator" is what you prefer, then planned will (sometimes) get the job done (and in that case, I must assume you are all for the global takeover of american culture, as it is oft accused of that same reduction to the least common denominator).

                        As for me....I'll take choice, thanks.

                        -=Vel=-
                        OK, I want an operating system for my computer that supports lots of software, has all the good games, installs easily, and works transparently, but is not made by Microsoft.

                        So much for free market choice, comrade. I can choose between Windows NT and Windows XP. Linux fails all of the above criteria except not made by Microsoft. The Mac OS installs easily and works transparently but is lacking on the software and games front (and who knows how much Microsoft contributed). Where is my choice?

                        I want digital music with a high sample rate and that easily copies from stereo, to computer, to iPod like device. iTunes fails on the sample rates. Property control issues create a market failure. Where is my choice?

                        Any system is going to have its barriers to fully maximizing consumer choice. As for the shoes, the solution is to make too many of each size, but minimize the surplus by using consumption data from the previous fiscal period.
                        - "A picture may be worth a thousand words, but it still ain't a part number." - Ron Reynolds
                        - I went to Zanarkand, and all I got was this lousy aeon!
                        - "... over 10 members raised complaints about you... and jerk was one of the nicer things they called you" - Ming

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by The Templar
                          OK, I want an operating system for my computer that supports lots of software, has all the good games, installs easily, and works transparently, but is not made by Microsoft.
                          Get a Mac.
                          I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
                          For those who aspire to live in a high cost, high tax, big government place, our nation and the world offers plenty of options. Vermont, Canada and Venezuela all offer you the opportunity to live in the socialist, big government paradise you long for. –Senator Rubio

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Kidicious
                            Prices should be used to help measure demand for products and services and prevent shortages.

                            Advertising will not be necessary though
                            Advertising is always necessary in its informational capacity. I need to know what products are available and how well they function.

                            As for preference formation, do you really think those pop out of thin air? Humans are incredibly social creatures, and inherit preferences from their fellows using "messages" about norms and status.
                            - "A picture may be worth a thousand words, but it still ain't a part number." - Ron Reynolds
                            - I went to Zanarkand, and all I got was this lousy aeon!
                            - "... over 10 members raised complaints about you... and jerk was one of the nicer things they called you" - Ming

                            Comment


                            • Not many games for mac. OS, now are there?

                              On the issue of central planning: the internet gives you a great tool for central planning. In theory, if each household was given a simple computer with internet access, the invidiaul could custom order whatever they wanted, and then it could be custom made, with no surplus whatsoever. The amount of different poducst and porduct types available can be decided elsewhere, but with such a system, no need for any surplus (this in thoery would also do wonders for any business who got the ability to do it as well).
                              If you don't like reality, change it! me
                              "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
                              "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
                              "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by DinoDoc
                                Get a Mac.
                                I said it had to run lots of software.
                                Everyone I know with a mac has problems locating software. Although I do really like macs.
                                - "A picture may be worth a thousand words, but it still ain't a part number." - Ron Reynolds
                                - I went to Zanarkand, and all I got was this lousy aeon!
                                - "... over 10 members raised complaints about you... and jerk was one of the nicer things they called you" - Ming

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