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Originally posted by Velociryx
Oh that's right...we're not allowed to talk about individual successes. It's the "whole group" that matters.
I have no idea how successfull you are. And one point you tell me you are successfull, and at another point you tell me you aren't. I think you just give me unvarifiable information when it suits your needs. Whether it's true or not it doesn't mean crap. What matters is that most people work hard while some one else gets rich, usually people who are already rich.
I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
Originally posted by Kramerman
what fairy tales? All sides of my family were poor immigrants to America at some point. Within one generation all sides of my family had themselves established.
There was a lot of tough luck with my mother, and her socio-economic status fell terriblly, after trying to raise two young boys on her own. After a decade she was firmly reestablished in the middle class, on her OWN merit. Thats the key word right there. We are a society based ideally on MERIT (tho it doesnt always turn out this way), not handouts. That is why we are so succesful.
Oh christ not the poor immigrants turn into the next Bill Gates stories again. It's unvarifiable. A thousand immigrants come to the US and work just as hard, and they end up poor in the end and worked hard the whole way.
I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
Originally posted by Kramerman
hmm... Templar... if you did not have to worry about making that buck, my friend, you WOULD NOT WORK NEARLY AS HARD! its that necessity of making a buck that drives people to work HARD.
I've never really had to worry about making a buck. I've always made enough to live OK. My goal is mastery of what I do and to help the community at large while doing so. If you gave me a million dollars a month to sit on my ass or living wage to do something I love, I'll take the living wage. I'll be having too much fun to notice. I haven't had to take a job I didn't love since working summers in undergrad.
its called incentive, without it, you, me, Vel, Kid, and most everyone except fantically passionate people for the state would slack off as much as possible.
Its called status. In our society, money = status. If expertise = status, there would be your incentive to excel. Sure, I do what I do because I want to be the best and help my community, but I can feel the societal pull of money = status in the mainstream of society.
this would make the system terriblly inefficient, thus you have the crap states of vietnam, NK, cuba, and the collapse of the soviet union. Even china, with an ever increasing bastard system of communism is not nearly anywhere as efficient as your Germany ( very socialist, granted), Japan, USA, etc
I'd put Scandinavia above the US any day in many categories. The most important being quality of life of the average person. Who cares if I have the opportunity to make ****loads of money, if my quality of life sucks. They are also better in terms of medical care, and to some extent penetration of technology in society in general. As for Germany, well a mandatory six month vacation would probably be a very welcome improvement in the US once introduced. Even workaholics like me need to be pushed out the door from time to time to stay fresh.
- "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
Originally posted by Velociryx There is tons of research to be done and discoveries to be made. Capitalism just doesn't foster the right motivations to emphasize doing this.
The problem here is evidence is not on your side.
Capitalist-oriented nations have been innovating relentlessly. 'bout the only innovation we've seen in communist utopias came by pointing a gun at the researcher or his family and mandating that he create, and, while that IS a perfectly valid motivational tool, I hardly think it better than the system we operate under here.
-=Vel=-
History is always moving. Feudalism didn't last forever, nor did merchantalism, nor will capitalism. Things change. The problem is capitalism will eventually make demands that run contrary to innovation. RCA stifling the development of television is a good example, as is the lack of private investment in vaccines. NASA, the National Institute of Health, the military, and the Universities using federal funds are responsible for most of our modern technology. These have of course been seized upon by private industry, but the thing to remember is that private industry is driven by profit and risk.
Now given that the Soviet Union required only decades to achieve what took us centuries (and excelled us at space technology for quite some time), I have to be a bit suspicious that capitalism hasn't slowed our progress. Now I'm not so naive as to think playing catch-up is as difficult as innovating, but the history of the cold war leads me to believe that much of the "capitalism is ideal for innovation" canard is merely dogma. Again, capitalism seeks to achieve innovation only as a byproduct of the profit motive. An indirect approach seems to me to be non-optimal.
Which is not to say that the Soviet Union model would be optimal. In fact, history has show that it was not. What I am advocating is some new system designed to directly achieve innovation across all worthwhile human endeavors - therby optimizing innovation by seeking inovation directly.
- "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
Templar - 1) Labor and first come first serve are not separable when determining moral authority. In your gold ore/statue scenario, the miner's labor cannot be separated from his "first come first serve" status. So we know who had the moral claim to the ore and the labor to extract it even after it was stolen and given to a third party. Maybe Locke did realize this (I certainly do) and the confusion is on your end...
2) Now, why did you mention efficiency? Are we debating all the options or are we dealing with what is and what is not moral?
3) The principle being debated is moral authority wrt to labor, and the key is property. I said labor has to be tied to property when determining moral authority, that's when you introduced stolen property into the debate and then acted as if this new factor destroyed my position. But you keep ignoring my response...
But the statue apart from the gold is the property of the sculptor (the fact the the sculptor was ignorant obviates arguments that the sculptor admixed his labor in bad faith. Now if you have a way to separate the statue from the gold, let's hear it.
The sculptor cannot lose his interest in the statue considered apart from the gold. That's the whole point.
The statue and the gold are ontologically distinct. (If you don't think the two are separable consider the following. (1) you can destroy the statue by melting the gold but the gold remains. (2) You can create an image of the statue without creating an image of the gold). The miner has no claim on the statue - yet his claim to the gold interferes with the sculptor's labor claim. I don't care about the sculptor's interest in the gold - only the statue.
I'll repeat what I said in the other thread (you know, the argument you claimed to have shot down )
If the statue maker wants to, he has the moral authority to melt the statue down before the rightful owner takes possession. But he doesn't have the moral authority to keep the statue because he'd be keeping the ore used to make it.
But you are also saying that labor + property = moral claim? I thought labor was the grounds for making a moral claim to property.
Just adding labor to something doesn't create moral authority, property is part of the equation. When labor is added to property, i.e., legitimate ownership as in the miner and the ore, the gold belongs to the miner, not the statue maker.
Are you now saying two ingredients, labor and property, are required for the moral claim? So now you have to ground property without recourse to labor. You're just making a circular argument.
Labor + property = moral authority. Labor = effort. Property = material owned by the person making the effort. Combining these tells us who has the moral authority to the end product. How is that circular?
It will depend on case law (common law states) and statutes. But it won't be based purely on labor + first-come.
"Purely"? Are there other legitimate factors that negate labor and property claims?
Labor + first-come is underdeterminative of property. See above. An exploded theory.
"Underdeterminative" doesn't tell me anything. And ignoring what I've been saying by dragging someone else's "labor theory" into this to debate is getting us no where.
This started because Vel again appealed to labor theory, and I am tired of repeating these arguments over an over.
This started in a previous thread when we were debating labor, property, and moral authority. You said you shot down my arguments and now it is quite obvious you don't even know what I said.
You can keep arguing labor theory, but nobody in law or philosophy is going to take you seriously.
YOU keep arguing labor theory, I didn't bring it up.
(Even Nozick - the formost libertarian thinker - says Locke's labor theory is fundamentally flawed).
That's nice, but I could care less. Can you deal with what I've said instead of repeatedly dragging others into it? You didn't enter this thread to announce how you shot down Locke's arguments, you said you shot down mine and I'm still waiting for the proof.
And DF....the crux of your argument seems to be that people are....people.
No, my argument that "I don't want stupid people in charge" is my argument against democracy, not the crux of my argument in general. Although people are, for the most part, stupid.
To that...all I can say is...D'uh! Yes, people are flawed. They make mistakes. Sometimes our elected officials serve their own interests and to hell with the people who got them elected. It should be noted, however, that unless they keep the voting public happy, they'll likely NOT get re-elected, which rather short-circuits your argument.
Since when have I advocated elected officials putting laws into place just because the majority wants those laws? Actually, haven't I been supporting the opposite position?
Besides that, how would adherance to YOUR (rather unique, actually) political ideology magically make people more than they are?
"Make people more than they are"? Eh?
And you STILL haven't adequately addressed any of my specific points. For starters, my point about Conscientious Objectors. Got an answer to that one, yet?
I've never really had to worry about making a buck. I've always made enough to live OK. My goal is mastery of what I do and to help the community at large while doing so. If you gave me a million dollars a month to sit on my ass or living wage to do something I love, I'll take the living wage. I'll be having too much fun to notice. I haven't had to take a job I didn't love since working summers in undergrad.
and that is an admirable quality. It is people like you our system depends on for when the social aspects of our society fail, which is all to often.
Its called status. In our society, money = status. If expertise = status, there would be your incentive to excel. Sure, I do what I do because I want to be the best and help my community, but I can feel the societal pull of money = status in the mainstream of society.
so, call it what you will. I say its greed, but whatever. The want of more is what drives our system, and we often depend on regulations and laws to keep people from cheating the system so they can get EVEN more. so what. most other people see its not worth the risk, and try and get more the honost way. IN the end it is very productive. This system often fails, but often succeds as well. In the end however, it must work well, or else te US wouldnt be here at least how we know it today.
I'd put Scandinavia above the US any day in many categories. The most important being quality of life of the average person. Who cares if I have the opportunity to make ****loads of money, if my quality of life sucks. They are also better in terms of medical care, and to some extent penetration of technology in society in general. As for Germany, well a mandatory six month vacation would probably be a very welcome improvement in the US once introduced. Even workaholics like me need to be pushed out the door from time to time to stay fresh.
I dont care. this isnt anything relevent to the point i was trying to make. norway is very socialist, but none the less, it isnt anywhere in the catagory of Vietnam or North Korea. I was just trying to show the relative contrast in the success of capitalism/socialism (sometime a little heavier on the socialism) and with communism
Think it through all the way down the chain. Yes, a great many of our innovations have come from government-funded labs and such (NASA, to name but one).
....and the money the government used to fund those projects came from where? (taxation of market-driven innovation)
....which led to the discovery of? (more product ideas that were injected to the market, generating more taxable wealth, and creating a bigger base to fund additional long-term research).
So yes. Government plays a role in long-range research in this country, but the ability to perform such research stems *directly* from the capitalist system. Without the tax monies recieved from the profitable use of existing technology, and the relentless drive to enhance and change it via continuing innovation, there would be no funds for NASA at all, unless other government programs (the ones that help pay medical costs for the poor, or provide food and low-cost housing, for example) were cut to the bone to free up sufficient funds.
DF, I've answered your CO question repeatedly. In short, it works against your argument. The draft (our version of conscription) IS on the books in this country. It has a built-in out in the form of CO. We do not punish, hunt down, or mistreat CO's. If you don't want to go, claim so on the grounds of CO, and stay home. Our society allows for that, just as it allows for the draft in the first place. But IF you turn in your draft card, then don't b*itch about it if/when you get called to serve. And IF society decided to pursue punishments for those who buck the system, vote against it if you like, but if you lose....well, we're back to those four choices mentioned previously.
As to the "people are stupid" comment....I disagree, but even supposing you are right...my what a nation all those "stupid" people have built for you to enjoy....
To Kid: I'll give you any sort of verification you desire. No, I'm not Gates-wealthy, but I'm heads and shoulders above where I was, and 100% of that progress came about from hard, smart work. Personal effort, not a government handout. What's so hard to fathom about that?
-=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.
Originally posted by Berzerker Templar - 1) Labor and first come first serve are not separable when determining moral authority. In your gold ore/statue scenario, the miner's labor cannot be separated from his "first come first serve" status. So we know who had the moral claim to the ore and the labor to extract it even after it was stolen and given to a third party. Maybe Locke did realize this (I certainly do) and the confusion is on your end...
This is a purely conclusory statement. Moral Authority (or right) is the position you are trying to prove. You have two legs for this moral authority to stand on: labor and first come. Labor is a fairly strong leg, and I, you and most reasonable people grant it creates a moral interest in the fruits of the labor. Fine. First come, however is not at all straightforward.
Hypothetical: lets assume you come into possession of the world's oil supply via labor. There are two things oil is really good for (or says a chemical engineer friend of mine): production of advanced polymers and fuel. You decide to burn all of the oil for fuel. This is your desire. My friend points out that there are alternative fuels to oil but no readily available alternatives for polymer production. Suppose the community at large demands both energy and polymers. Under first come, you can frustrate the community's desire for both, and inefficiently burn the oil. On the other hand, the community might impose a system whereby the community calculates the amount of energy your oil will generate, gives you an equal energy share in natural gas, and takes your oil for polymers (ignore transaction costs for the example). You might even be religiously opposed to polymers (it will bring about the rapture!). but the community extinguishes your interest in the oil while, by giving you the equivalent energy in natural gas, respects your labor claim in terms of reparation.
Clearly, if you do not want the oil used for polymers this is a violation of your moral interest in the oil based on labor and first come. However, I also think this is the right outcome - even though it does not respect first come. See? First come is not at all obvious.
2) Now, why did you mention efficiency? Are we debating all the options or are we dealing with what is and what is not moral?
I brought up efficiency to show that labor theory is separable from first come first serve. Since they are separable they require independent justification as moral principles.
3) The principle being debated is moral authority wrt to labor, and the key is property. I said labor has to be tied to property when determining moral authority, that's when you introduced stolen property into the debate and then acted as if this new factor destroyed my position. But you keep ignoring my response...
The stolen property is the gold, not the statue.
If the statue maker wants to, he has the moral authority to melt the statue down before the rightful owner takes possession. But he doesn't have the moral authority to keep the statue because he'd be keeping the ore used to make it.
Under the labor theory + first come, the miner has no right to the statue considered apart from the gold. And that is the problem. The miner, under ONLY labor + first come has no right to the statue in itself and this creates a problem vis-a-vis the miner's rights with respect to the gold. You are not keeping the statue and gold distinct. The fact that one entity (the statue) depends entirely on another entity (the gold) creates the problem - it does not solve the problem (as you seem to argue). (This sort of problem -where does one thing end and another begin - rears its ugly head all the time in intellectual property, BTW.) If you think the gold and the statue are not separate entities argue that point. But once you do, you will be adding a third principle besides labor and first come to your moral theory of property.
Contemporary property theory recognizes that property is a creature of the community (or state or nation or whatever). In fact, as lawyers often point out, property is really a sort of bundle of rights that a person has with respect to a thing (property is not the thing itself). Just property systems take into account competing moral interests like labor, efficiency, first come, and so forth and try to balance these various interests into a fair and stable system.
Labor + property = moral authority. Labor = effort. Property = material owned by the person making the effort. Combining these tells us who has the moral authority to the end product. How is that circular?
First, see above. Property is not a material thing, it is a relationship between a person and a thing.
Second, this is circular. What you want to say is that property itself is moral authority over a thing. Fine. You're in good company so far. But that means you are looking for an argument that jumps from labor and material (incl. intellectual "material" I presume) to moral authority of a person over that admixture of labor and material. Again, fine. That's is exactly what you should be thinking about. However, to immediately say that the material labor is being mixed with is property (i.e. "Property = material owned by the person making the effort.") is to assume that the laborer has a proprietary interest to the material before any labor is admixed with the material. But admixture, you say, is the key to the moral authority that constitutes property. Thus you assume proprietary interest in the material as a starting point, and add labor to to prove that there is a proprietary interest in the material. That's circular.
"Underdeterminative" doesn't tell me anything. And ignoring what I've been saying by dragging someone else's "labor theory" into this to debate is getting us no where.
Underdetermination means that labor and first come alone are insufficient to determine all conflicts that will arise under a property system. Ergo, you need more than these principles to fully explain any comprehensive property system.
That's nice, but I could care less. Can you deal with what I've said instead of repeatedly dragging others into it? You didn't enter this thread to announce how you shot down Locke's arguments, you said you shot down mine and I'm still waiting for the proof.
Your argument is essentially Locke's, whether you are aware of this or not. Thus all of the standard objections to Locke apply. The proof here is in all of my posts. The proof in the world is that property theory has moved beyond Locke, and your own Lockean reasoning.
- "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
You did no such thing. My point was that if conscription is a duty, a social contract built into the country, and if people's individual moral beliefs on the subject don't matter, then why do we let COs get out of it?
You replied with, basically, "that's how our draft system works", but that ignores the point that allowing for COs is inconsistent with the assertion that it is our duty and a fulfillment of our social contract to serve in the military when the government says so. It also is inconsistent with the argument that individual morality doesn't matter when society's interests are at stake.
Sure it does. Your individual rights and beliefs do matter. In many cases, your individual rights and beliefs matter more than the societal ones....at least in THIS particular society, because we value the individual.
There are, however, some times and conditions where the state demands its due. Doesn't mean that your rights and beliefs are no longer important, it just means that there may be conditions under which they are no longer held as high as they usually are.
The draft is one of those times.
You're a member of a really big club. It's called the United States of America.
There are membership dues and responsibilities to being a member of the club.
If you don't like the club rules, you can either seek to have them changed, or you can join a different club that IS more to your liking.
To answer your question (again) regarding CO's.....we don't punish them because we, as a democratic society have decided to give those who do not wish to fulfill their duties to this country an easy out. We decided that using the same process that we decided to make the draft a possibility. That's why they both exist.
-=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.
Originally posted by Velociryx
To Kid: I'll give you any sort of verification you desire. No, I'm not Gates-wealthy, but I'm heads and shoulders above where I was, and 100% of that progress came about from hard, smart work. Personal effort, not a government handout. What's so hard to fathom about that?
-=Vel=-
You've already told me that you recieved govt subsidies. You must have made a mistake there and told me something about you that didn't argue your case.
I don't know your story Vel, and I never will, even if I tried. I'm not interested anyway, because as I've already stated, it doesn't mean squat.
I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
Sure it does. Your individual rights and beliefs do matter. In many cases, your individual rights and beliefs matter more than the societal ones....at least in THIS particular society, because we value the individual.
Then I guess you weren't trying to make that argument. Sorry, got you mixed up with someone else.
There are, however, some times and conditions where the state demands its due.
But this you still have to back up. Why is military service "the state's due"? Why would I owe that to the state? Where in our society is a social contract or duty set out?
The draft is one of those times.
You're a member of a really big club. It's called the United States of America.
There are membership dues and responsibilities to being a member of the club.
If you don't like the club rules, you can either seek to have them changed, or you can join a different club that IS more to your liking.
None of this justifies a social contract, it just states that there IS one.
To answer your question (again) regarding CO's.....we don't punish them because we, as a democratic society have decided to give those who do not wish to fulfill their duties to this country an easy out. We decided that using the same process that we decided to make the draft a possibility. That's why they both exist.
OK, that's fine - I take issue with the argument of "duty", but since you didn't originally make the argument that society's interests always outweigh individual rights and morality.
A question, though, would be whether or not you think COs are violating what you believe is their duty/social contract.
Are we still talking about conscription? If we are, I'd like to point out that a person who volunteers generally makes a better soldier than a person who was drafted.
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
That's just exactly right, Kid...if it stands counter to what you're arguing for, it obviously means squat, doesn't it? Cos we can't have arguments that run counter to the communist ideal....that just wouldn't do!
You're a fun one...I'll give you that....determined to stay with the sinking ship till the bitter end, no matter how overwhelming the evidence to the contrary might be. You have to admire that level of stick-with-it-ness! Now, if you'd apply that single-minded determination to something that mattered, you'd really go places!
-=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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