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  • Originally posted by Kidicious

    You guys really don't think things through well. Of course people will not train to be doctors unless they are compensated for doing so. It's really not the problem that you guys are making it out to be.
    Then who decides proper compensation? I'd much prefer the market deciding that then a government. You seem to put a lot of faith in the government. I know of very few (if any) governments that lacked corruption. I'll put my faith in the market because then the individual gets the freedom to choose. I've worked many different careers ranging from construction to corporate management. I have always been free to judge if compensation was adequate to the amount of training and effort put in.

    If the govenment decides, then how is inovation compensated. It won't be. Without inovation we'd all be wearing functional burlap sacs and driving Yugos.
    It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
    RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Kidicious

      Only world communism works.
      Global dictatorship and oppression, cool. I'm sure glad you think you can do better under a system where you're going to put yourself in direct competition with that average Burkina Fasoan goatherd. Oh, you're not, that's right, you're going to be one of the party elite who tries to put me in competition with that average Burkina Fasoan goatherd.

      Sure you can. You just reduce the work week. Then you determine were the shortages are and proceed accordingly.
      Sure, and keep wages the same despite lowered individual production. Employ more people and pay them more to do less, and this system will sustain itself how, exactly?

      Capitalism seems incapable of doing this. Probably because of the class system.
      More likely because it's suicidally counterproductive and will result in an ultimate erosion of standards of living AND capital returns.

      What good is it to blame the individuals as a whole.
      I don't blame them as a whole. I blame them individually. Actually, I don't "blame" them at all - I just take the position that they're responsible for the choices they make and the results they achieve.


      How can a govt justify it's existance when it is based on individual initiative but there aren't enough opportunities for individuals. This doesn't seem strange to you?
      I'm not a real big fan of government anyway. And opportunities for individuals are created by individuals.

      You're missing the point. I could acquire a 'real' skill, but that skill may not be worth **** after I get my training. I have no control over that.
      Sure you do. You have control in the quality of research you do about the susceptibility of that skill to economic forces (such as foreign outsourcing, obsolescence, the business cycles for the relevant industries, etc.) and at assessing early on how good you are at the particular field, based on your general aptitudes and inclinations.
      When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

      Comment


      • Rent...

        As an ex-landlord, let me tell you a bit about rent...

        Back in 1996 my wife and I had a pretty good idea - why not buy a duplex in the NE Atlanta area and live in one half while the other pays the mortgage.

        So we did. And we were pretty good landlords, as one would have to be living next to the tenant. One night early in our relationship their heater broke (it was a shivering 48 degrees that night) and they demanded that my wife find a repairman to come fix it - they refused proffered blankets as if affronted by the loss of their "right" to heat. So my wife, with a sprained arm, woozy from pain killers and disrupted sleep, and all by herself (I was on the road working) had to call one 24-hour heater guy after the other, finally shelling out over $300 to replace a ****in' broken fuse.

        They freakin' destroyed the place, despite our admonishments and letters; just a nasty, ugly redneck couple whose combined IQ's literally might match Sophies. They had moved in just a month before (before they got the cats) so their place wasn't so bad that you couldn't clean it up for the new landlord by then; seeing that, Laura and I re-did the lease thinking they were going to be good tenants. And at least they weren't loud or disruptive - they were just a couple of the dumbest, slobbiest hicks you find this side of NE Georgia. That woman was the laziest person, and the man kept on bragging somehow about his money problems, i.e., he honestly thought his landlord would just enjoy the story about the bad check he purposely wrote at the strip joint.

        We didn't go in there for about 8 months, no inspections, nothing. Then one day I needed to borrow something and OH MY GOD WHAT IS THAT SMELL!?!?!?!

        Cat urine and feces... old, moldy pizza... motor oil and inscence... dirty dishes and dirty toilets... combined it was a nasal experience of devastating proportions, where your eyes water and your stomach heaves.

        Laura and I (in writing and pointing to the appropriate clauses in our four-page, font-size 8 lease agreement) immediately ordered them to clean up and to expect an inspection within a week.

        The place was devastated. The carpet had to be replaced, some paneling was broken, the pantry door had a hole in the interior part, the smell of cats, cats, CATS was everywhere. Hell, to clean it up for another tenant would be to sustain costs of up to $5,000 - this on a duplex where my yearly (and evil! Let's not forget evil!) rents totalled $7,500. We could've gotten $2,500 more, but we were being nice to this poor couple - exactly like you want, you see.

        We decided to just go ahead and sell the house, and let the new landlord deal with it. Luckily we bought cheap in one of the three hottest housing markets of the mid-late 1990s, the NE Atlanta market (the "Platinum Triangle" as it was called by local realtors). When we put the house back up for sale, we ignored the damage and asked for as much as we thought we could get - $119,900 (we paid $92,000). 6 hours after it was listed, we had an offer matching our price from yet another greedy capitalist looking to allow these people to trash their property.

        Moral of the story, Kid: Some people just aren't even worth the rent they pay.

        Comment




        • This topic again! I LOVE IT!

          Kid, IMO, the problem is that you fail to comprehend that the market DOES provide fair (without quotes) compensation for work performed.

          That compensation is based upon it's relative value to those who make use of whatever service you're providing. (ie - if you charge me 40k to mow my lawn, I'll do it myself...on the other hand, if I need brain surgery, I'll pay 40k for that service...it is more valuable to me than having you mow my lawn for that same price).

          That valuation is not arbitrary and cannot be set by some centralized body. That's why it's left to the market. Those who value service X at price Y buy. Those who don't...don't. The power to decide is thus in the hands of the individual.

          You also fail to realize that you ARE paid fairly for your work.

          You make shoes in a shoe factory. The factory owner pays you. Does he pay you the full value of the shoe? Nope, cos you didn't put the full value of the shoe INTO it. The machines he owns helped you, so he keeps a cut for himself.

          The shoes aren't as valuable sitting at your workbench as they are in Wal-Mart, so they guy who TAKES them to Wal-Mart won't pay you full price for them either, cos he gets a cut by adding value to the shoes, in the form of taking them to where the customers are (cos they ain't at your workbench).

          -=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 MichaeltheGreat
            Sure, and keep wages the same despite lowered individual production. Employ more people and pay them more to do less, and this system will sustain itself how, exactly?
            Production is the same. I didn't say anything about less total compensation so you figure it out.
            Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
            More likely because it's suicidally counterproductive and will result in an ultimate erosion of standards of living AND capital returns.
            The fact that capitalism doesn't provide jobs for everyone is erosive to living standards, but you don't see that.
            Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
            I don't blame them as a whole. I blame them individually. Actually, I don't "blame" them at all - I just take the position that they're responsible for the choices they make and the results they achieve.
            Well we aren't talking about individuals individually. We are talking about them as a group. We are talking about a system. Yes! capitalism is an economic system, like it or not.
            Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
            I'm not a real big fan of government anyway. And opportunities for individuals are created by individuals.
            Convenient for you to let the govt off the hook like that, but it's not going to cut it.
            Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
            Sure you do. You have control in the quality of research you do about the susceptibility of that skill to economic forces (such as foreign outsourcing, obsolescence, the business cycles for the relevant industries, etc.) and at assessing early on how good you are at the particular field, based on your general aptitudes and inclinations.
            I only have control over myself and the decisions that I make. I have no control over others and no knowledge of the decisions that they will make. I only know that most of them will make bad decisions because they don't know anymore than I do. That's chaos. There is no order. If I have plenty of resources it doesn't really matter, but if I'm poor and I make a bad decision I'm screwed.
            I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
            - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Velociryx
              You also fail to realize that you ARE paid fairly for your work.
              So says you. I'll decide that for myself. I don't know how many people who work at Wal-Mart would agree with you. Not too many I guess.
              I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
              - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

              Comment


              • Re: Rent...

                Originally posted by JohnT
                As an ex-landlord, let me tell you a bit about rent...

                Back in 1996 my wife and I had a pretty good idea - why not buy a duplex in the NE Atlanta area and live in one half while the other pays the mortgage.

                So we did. And we were pretty good landlords, as one would have to be living next to the tenant. One night early in our relationship their heater broke (it was a shivering 48 degrees that night) and they demanded that my wife find a repairman to come fix it - they refused proffered blankets as if affronted by the loss of their "right" to heat. So my wife, with a sprained arm, woozy from pain killers and disrupted sleep, and all by herself (I was on the road working) had to call one 24-hour heater guy after the other, finally shelling out over $300 to replace a ****in' broken fuse.

                They freakin' destroyed the place, despite our admonishments and letters; just a nasty, ugly redneck couple whose combined IQ's literally might match Sophies. They had moved in just a month before (before they got the cats) so their place wasn't so bad that you couldn't clean it up for the new landlord by then; seeing that, Laura and I re-did the lease thinking they were going to be good tenants. And at least they weren't loud or disruptive - they were just a couple of the dumbest, slobbiest hicks you find this side of NE Georgia. That woman was the laziest person, and the man kept on bragging somehow about his money problems, i.e., he honestly thought his landlord would just enjoy the story about the bad check he purposely wrote at the strip joint.

                We didn't go in there for about 8 months, no inspections, nothing. Then one day I needed to borrow something and OH MY GOD WHAT IS THAT SMELL!?!?!?!

                Cat urine and feces... old, moldy pizza... motor oil and inscence... dirty dishes and dirty toilets... combined it was a nasal experience of devastating proportions, where your eyes water and your stomach heaves.

                Laura and I (in writing and pointing to the appropriate clauses in our four-page, font-size 8 lease agreement) immediately ordered them to clean up and to expect an inspection within a week.

                The place was devastated. The carpet had to be replaced, some paneling was broken, the pantry door had a hole in the interior part, the smell of cats, cats, CATS was everywhere. Hell, to clean it up for another tenant would be to sustain costs of up to $5,000 - this on a duplex where my yearly (and evil! Let's not forget evil!) rents totalled $7,500. We could've gotten $2,500 more, but we were being nice to this poor couple - exactly like you want, you see.

                We decided to just go ahead and sell the house, and let the new landlord deal with it. Luckily we bought cheap in one of the three hottest housing markets of the mid-late 1990s, the NE Atlanta market (the "Platinum Triangle" as it was called by local realtors). When we put the house back up for sale, we ignored the damage and asked for as much as we thought we could get - $119,900 (we paid $92,000). 6 hours after it was listed, we had an offer matching our price from yet another greedy capitalist looking to allow these people to trash their property.

                Moral of the story, Kid: Some people just aren't even worth the rent they pay.
                I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
                - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

                Comment


                • Originally posted by rah


                  Then who decides proper compensation? I'd much prefer the market deciding that then a government. You seem to put a lot of faith in the government. I know of very few (if any) governments that lacked corruption. I'll put my faith in the market because then the individual gets the freedom to choose. I've worked many different careers ranging from construction to corporate management. I have always been free to judge if compensation was adequate to the amount of training and effort put in.

                  If the govenment decides, then how is inovation compensated. It won't be. Without inovation we'd all be wearing functional burlap sacs and driving Yugos.
                  The people really do determine what they will be paid for their work. They make laws which determine that. That's where the govt comes in. Lots of people think they will be the next Bill Gates so they like things the way they are. I just think people make the wrong decision.
                  I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
                  - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

                  Comment


                  • actually, Kid, no you won't decide that for yourself.

                    Try it.

                    Go offer to mow someone's lawn for forty thousand dollars, or whatever it is you think you are worth.

                    And do let me know how many takers you get! I'll be MOST curious to see how your experiment of determining your own "fair wage" is!

                    The fact is, that if nobody wants the service you are offering at the price you are offering it, nobody will pay your price. Thus, you WON'T set your own "fair wage" standard.

                    -=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
                      actually, Kid, no you won't decide that for yourself.

                      Try it.

                      Go offer to mow someone's lawn for forty thousand dollars, or whatever it is you think you are worth.

                      And do let me know how many takers you get! I'll be MOST curious to see how your experiment of determining your own "fair wage" is!

                      The fact is, that if nobody wants the service you are offering at the price you are offering it, nobody will pay your price. Thus, you WON'T set your own "fair wage" standard.

                      -=Vel=-
                      If I mow someones lawn I do get a fair wage, assuming that I own the lawnmower. I don't expect to get 40,000 dollars for it. I don't know how you got that idea.
                      I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
                      - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

                      Comment


                      • Well, cos it's all about equality, you know? It's so unfair and exploitive if the brain surgeon is getting 40k for two freakin' little hours of work and you go out there sweating and struggling to mow a big lawn that takes THREE hours and don't make the same money! ::gasp!:: That's just criminal! Right?

                        -=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
                          Well, cos it's all about equality, you know? It's so unfair and exploitive if the brain surgeon is getting 40k for two freakin' little hours of work and you go out there sweating and struggling to mow a big lawn that takes THREE hours and don't make the same money! ::gasp!:: That's just criminal! Right?

                          -=Vel=-
                          Can't really make too much money mowing lawns anyway. People should mow their own lawns. I guess if I have to go and mow lawns because I was out of work for so long that would be horrible. The fact is that people do have to do a lot of weird stuff to make ends meet because our economic system is so disfunctional. Is that what you are talking about?
                          I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
                          - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

                          Comment


                          • Nope. I'm talking about the FACT that all work is not equal.

                            "Equality" is a big thing for you. A day's wage for a day's work, and everybody has to be nice and equal.

                            Therefore, it follows that the two hours you spend mowing lawns should be equal, in dollar value, to the two hours the brain surgeon spends at an operation.

                            So....by your own definition then, the lawn mowing guy needs to be compensated 40k.

                            -=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
                              Nope. I'm talking about the FACT that all work is not equal.

                              "Equality" is a big thing for you. A day's wage for a day's work, and everybody has to be nice and equal.

                              Therefore, it follows that the two hours you spend mowing lawns should be equal, in dollar value, to the two hours the brain surgeon spends at an operation.

                              So....by your own definition then, the lawn mowing guy needs to be compensated 40k.

                              -=Vel=-
                              First I said that people should mow their own lawns. I did not say that people should be paid 40k for doing it.

                              Yes I'm into equality. I guess you aren't because you recieve priviledged treatmeant.
                              I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
                              - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

                              Comment


                              • Who are you to tell people that they should arbitrarily mow their own lawns?! Is that not work? I mean, is not the act of mowing a lawn work? And if so, then it falls under the EXACT same "equality yardstick" as every other kind of work

                                Thus, per your definition, if someone is mowing lawns and making less per hour than the brain surgeon, that person is being exploited, is he, or is he not?

                                -=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

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