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Is profit different from unfair tax? Part 2

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  • We've been over this. People with property have more choices than people without property in a capitalist system. The result is that the system rewards people with property more. It's simple to me. If you don't see it that way then fine. I will have to accept the fact that I can't change your mind. I'm going to do a bit of studying now.


    You aren't working from the ground up, Kid... just explain to me where my proof goes wrong. That means you don't look outside the proof - if everything inside it is correct, the entire thing is correct.

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    • Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Is profit different from unfair tax? Part 2

      Originally posted by Kidicious
      So you assume they make choices that are not in their best self-interest. You assume they are not rational. My friend you just contradicted your assumptions.
      Best self-interest doesn't exist exclusively in the realm of "income." I know people who are priests and teacher and artists, none of which are maximizing their potential incomes, but are nonetheless conscious choices, because these people are doing things important to them. Of course they could make more money in other fields, but that is neither their exclusive nor even their primary criteria.

      You only perceive a contradiction because you're far too linear and self-constraining in your thinking.

      Remember talking about the labor market and you said that higher wages atract workers to the particular job skill? That is the Law of Supply. The Law of Supply is based on the assumption that people are rational. That is they work for more money not less. That is that they make the best choice for themselves.
      That is correct. Higher wages will attract more workers. Not all workers, because you're dealing with millions of individuals who have millions of independent sets of criteria (of which income is one) of varying personal importance to themselves. As one example, I could make a lot of money in expert witness work in a number of energy issues. I've done some of it, I don't like it.
      Therefore, given that I generally make enough doing other things, I don't pursue expert witness work. Decisionmaking in action.


      You have no base for your argument. You are just bull****ing. You can't even keep your story straight. You lose.

      Shove your attitude up your ass. If you want to debate or discuss, fine. If you want to play games and spin and distort other peoples statements, and then get insulting over your own strawment, then too bad, nobody's likely to play with you.
      When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

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      • Originally posted by Kidicious


        We've been over this. People with property have more choices than people without property in a capitalist system. The result is that the system rewards people with property more. It's simple to me. If you don't see it that way then fine. I will have to accept the fact that I can't change your mind. I'm going to do a bit of studying now.
        IF you freeze the state of everyone and everything to a single moment in time, you're correct. Bill Gates has more opportunities than I do. 25 years ago, that wasn't necessarily the case. Ten years from now, I'm sure he'll still have a hell of a lot more than I have, but does that limit me? Not at all. In fact, thanks to being "exploited" by Bill and his Evil Operating System Monopoly, and some of his other toys, I'm making a ton of money. Moreso than I would, and with less headaches and time, than if I was playing with Java in a mixed Linux, Unix and Windows environment.

        The fact the someone else has more opportunities or more economic power doesn't mean that you have none, or that you have no chance to increase what you do have. Hence, the system is a fair one.

        What is unfair is a system like feudalism, where the right to own property is limited to a particular class, the right to practice certain profession is licensed to certain owners (the guilds for various trades) and you have a sel-perpetuating power mechanism (royalty) which decrees who has what economic rights and who doesn't.
        When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

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        • Originally posted by Kidicious


          It does matter. If you worked in government or you knew people who did you would probably feel different. I was in the US Navy and I found it to be as efficient as any business and I have friends and family who work for both the US and California govt.
          Damn, no wonder you have such a dim view of capitalism, if the only examples of business you've seen are as bad as the Navy and the Cali government.
          When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

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          • Originally posted by skywalker
            We've been over this. People with property have more choices than people without property in a capitalist system. The result is that the system rewards people with property more. It's simple to me. If you don't see it that way then fine. I will have to accept the fact that I can't change your mind. I'm going to do a bit of studying now.


            You aren't working from the ground up, Kid... just explain to me where my proof goes wrong. That means you don't look outside the proof - if everything inside it is correct, the entire thing is correct.
            You have a right to your property, and we have a right to our property.
            I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
            - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

            Comment


            • Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Is profit different from unfair tax? Part 2

              Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
              Shove your attitude up your ass. If you want to debate or discuss, fine. If you want to play games and spin and distort other peoples statements, and then get insulting over your own strawment, then too bad, nobody's likely to play with you.
              You're the sore loser here, not me. You're trying to twist your own argument.

              Look, just because I choose to do a certain job doesn't mean that I choose to be exploited. I have no choice in the matter. You are trying to argue that I have a choice to do the job that I want to do and not be exploited doing it.

              The fact is that most people don't have a choice of what work to do. They do the work that pays the most, because they don't have a choice. If you make 50,000 instead of 60,000 because you don't like the job that pays 60,000 then you are lucky to have that choice. Most people don't make anything close to that so they have to choose either the job that pays the most or the only job that they can get. There are 9 year old boys rumaging through trash for recyclable material in Indonesia. They aren't choosing to do that instead of expert witness work. Sorry. You're argument is no longer functioning. You lost your base.
              I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
              - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

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              • Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
                IF you freeze the state of everyone and everything to a single moment in time, you're correct. Bill Gates has more opportunities than I do. 25 years ago, that wasn't necessarily the case. Ten years from now, I'm sure he'll still have a hell of a lot more than I have, but does that limit me? Not at all.
                It certainly does limit you. You are limited by the property that you own or don't own in my case. Don't you make that point here?
                Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
                In fact, thanks to being "exploited" by Bill and his Evil Operating System Monopoly, and some of his other toys, I'm making a ton of money. Moreso than I would, and with less headaches and time, than if I was playing with Java in a mixed Linux, Unix and Windows environment.
                Yes we benefit from the computer and the software that goes along with it. Most of us missed out on all the wealth that was created from it though. I'm sitting here using Windows right now. I need it to post here and to do my school work. That doesn't mean that I'm treated equally by the system. I'm still poor.
                Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
                The fact the someone else has more opportunities or more economic power doesn't mean that you have none, or that you have no chance to increase what you do have. Hence, the system is a fair one.
                So if I have 1 opportunity and I MAY have 2 opportunities in the fulture that makes the system fair, even though Bill Gates has many more opportunities, and I'm poor?
                Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
                What is unfair is a system like feudalism, where the right to own property is limited to a particular class, the right to practice certain profession is licensed to certain owners (the guilds for various trades) and you have a sel-perpetuating power mechanism (royalty) which decrees who has what economic rights and who doesn't.
                And it's also unfair when you have a system which does the same thing in effect.
                I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
                - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

                Comment


                • There are 9 year old boys rumaging through trash for recyclable material in Indonesia.

                  You know, when I brought up the 9 year-old boys in the last thread, you whined that there was nothing that you can do to help them.

                  Given that your admitted level of compassion for these children goes only as far as you can make use of their miserable existence to score points in online debates, I'm not too sure if you should be throwing rocks on this issue.

                  Comment


                  • That doesn't mean that I'm treated equally by the system. I'm still poor.


                    Wahhhh. Tell me Kid, how are you able to say that with a straight face just one post after talking about Indonesian children rummaging through the trash.

                    Have you no ?

                    Comment


                    • Re: Re: Is profit different from unfair tax? Part 2

                      Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat


                      You're right, it's absolutely unfair. The worker is guaranteed certain things by law, like getting paid, and the worker is free to go at any time to any competing job without notice. The poor capitalist owner is the one who sucks it up if there's financial problems, so he might go without pay if he needs the worker's services, or he loses his ass if the business goes under, while the worker just goes to another job.

                      The owner is the one who spends uncompensated time doing overhead tasks that don't produce revenue, and he's not guaranteed a profit by anyone, while the worker has contract rights to his wages while he works - the owner doesn't even have that, necessarily.

                      So damn straight the owner should make more for the additional time, effort and risk he puts in.
                      The rich man's burden huh? Just like the white man's burden. High school students have difficulty grasping the way that whites have tried to justify imperialism. If you understand capitalism it's not that hard. Capitalism has been around longer than imperialism and capitalists have been trying to justify it since the beginning. Capitalists justify capitalism by claiming that it is the burden of the rich man to exploit workers the same way that the imperialists (often one in the same) justified imperialism by claiming that it was the white man's burden to conquer the native peoples and exploit them.

                      It is no burden for imperialists to conquer and exploit because they benefit from it. If it were a burden it would cost them something, but it doesn't. It is no burden for capitalists to exploit workers because it benefits them. Again, if it were a burden it would cost them something. Capitalism doesn't cost the capitalists anything. It is their system, because it benefits them. They're the ones who defend it. It is the workers burden, because they are the ones who pay the cost. All we are proposing is that capitalists no longer have to worry about owning the means of production.
                      I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
                      - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by JohnT

                        You know, when I brought up the 9 year-old boys in the last thread, you whined that there was nothing that you can do to help them.
                        You are terribly mistaken. I have a plan to help them, and I intend to pursue that plan. Don't stand in my way.
                        I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
                        - Justice Brett Kavanaugh

                        Comment


                        • Re: Re: Re: Is profit different from unfair tax? Part 2

                          Originally posted by Kidicious
                          It is no burden for imperialists to conquer and exploit because they benefit from it. If it were a burden it would cost them something, but it doesn't. It is no burden for capitalists to exploit workers because it benefits them. Again, if it were a burden it would cost them something. Capitalism doesn't cost the capitalists anything. It is their system, because it benefits them. They're the ones who defend it. It is the workers burden, because they are the ones who pay the cost. All we are proposing is that capitalists no longer have to worry about owning the means of production.
                          Well that made absolutely no sense. But then, why am I not surprised.

                          Back to choice.
                          What choice does a communist have when the planners decide they need ditch diggers and you have to become one? Or are you saying that you will still have the choice not to be a ditch digger?
                          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

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                          • ECE4 to base: rah has re-engaged. Repeat rah has re-engaged.



                            -Arrian
                            grog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!

                            The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.

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                            • ou are terribly mistaken. I have a plan to help them, and I intend to pursue that plan. Don't stand in my way.
                              Step 1: Set up a communist system and get thugs to steal our money.

                              Step 2: .....

                              Step 3: Eliminate poverty.
                              Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DaveDaDouche
                              Read my seldom updated blog where I talk to myself: http://davedadouche.blogspot.com/

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                              • This is just unbelievable. Kid, what benefits did Bill Gates have in highschool that you don't now? As far as I can see, you are complaining that you don't have the wealth he has, despite the fact that you have not put in any of the work or taken any of the risks he did.

                                Sitting doing nothing and complaining that life isn't fair is pathetic. How about inventing a new operating system, working for 20-30 years to make this the world standard and then retire on your billions? Or is that just too much hard work?

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