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Forced into switching to Linux |
Matthew Leverton
Supreme Loser
January 1999
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Jonatan Hedborg said: And this is before taking into account the number of people that would quit their jobs, or at least work less (further increasing the size of the unproductive lower segment). Exactly. Over time, social programs are a downward spiral that cause a large number of people to do the least amount of work for the most personal gain. Since the gain is at other people's expense, it eventually crumbles. The only thing the government should do is provide fundamental services in areas where it is more practical or efficient than the private sector. Most social programs ought to be paid for by non-profit organizations funded by volunteer money. From a practical, real world perspective, capitalism has its problems, but socialism is far, far worse. At least with capitalism, if you want to cheat the system you actually have to build up a monopoly and have some business skills. With socialism all you have to do is sit at home and say you cannot work, and the government just gives you everything you need. Capitalism with some social programs is a good mix, but unfortunately once the gravy train starts passing by eventually everybody starts jumping on board. |
Tobias Dammers
Member #2,604
August 2002
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Jonatan Hedborg said: Your simplified example is faulty, because the assumptions are wrong (I also oppose it on an ethical plane, but that's a different point). The assumptions are deliberately simple. I also stated that by modifying income-dependent tax rates, it is possible to have the resulting incomes roughly match the current situation. And this calculation can be made for any given society, provided a social security system is possible at all. The difference, then, lies in the edge cases; most importantly, the transition between welfare receivers and the working population. In most social security systems, if you have a small income (less than welfare level), payments you receive from the state are reduced so that you end up with the same amount you would have if you didn't have an income - so for example, suppose the welfare level would be $1000 / month, and I'd be offered a job that paid 500; my choices would then be between working for 1000 dollars, or not working for the same 1000 dollars. If, however, you give everyone the basic 1000 dollars, and tax the rest, I'd still see some revenue from the work - not the full 500 dollars, but maybe 250. Matthew Leverton said: From a practical, real world perspective, capitalism has its problems, but socialism is far, far worse. At least with capitalism, if you want to cheat the system you actually have to build up a monopoly and have some business skills. With socialism all you have to do is sit at home and say you cannot work, and the government just gives you everything you need. That's not socialism. Socialism and government are mutually exclusive. If you don't agree, substitute 'socialism' for 'anarchy' - but then other incorrect associations are going to pop up, so there's kind of an impasse there: everytime someone comes up with a nice catchy word for a society where people voluntarily cooperate, someone else takes the word, institutionalizes it, and then uses it as an ideological excuse for yet another oppressive, greed-driven system. And saying that capitalism has 'its problems' is kind of an understatement. --- |
Matthew Leverton
Supreme Loser
January 1999
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You can argue about the semantics, but the meaning of my post is clear. |
Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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Matthew Leverton said: With socialism all you have to do is sit at home and say you cannot work, and the government just gives you everything you need.
Tobias Dammers said: That's not socialism. Karl Marx said: From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs. If you're allowed to state what your abilities are, naturally every little hangnail or bit of tiredness will "reduce your ability", and if Mr. Rich has a 40 inch TV then you need one too. They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
Jonatan Hedborg
Member #4,886
July 2004
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Socialism is based on some weird principle that people would act for the benefit of the collective. This is obviously not the case, nor will it ever be. People are by their very nature selfish. We can be "altruistic" when it will probably benefit us later. Initially this was controlled by reputation, but then it evolved trade and by extension - money. It's a way to detect and limit cheating in a collective, reducing the risk we take when we trust someone (or rather, removing the risk and trust issue altogether). Giving people this resource (trust) without any cheat-detection will fail.
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Polybios
Member #12,293
October 2010
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Jonatan Hedborg said: People are by their very nature selfish.
Long ago, in a society, where being retarded was a norm, a retard said: "All people are by their very nature retards and this will never change." |
Jonatan Hedborg
Member #4,886
July 2004
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Do you have any examples of truly altruistic societies? I sure don't know of any, past or present.
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Polybios
Member #12,293
October 2010
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Well, "truly altruistic society" is probably too general a term, as is your statement about "nature". So no, I don't know any "truly altruistic society". As to your explanation of money: Jonatan Hedborg said: money. It's a way to detect and limit cheating in a collective, reducing the risk we take when we trust someone
Ever heard about credits? I have heard, they are even connected with a financial crisis... |
Jonatan Hedborg
Member #4,886
July 2004
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I'm not saying everyone is 100% selfish. Just that no functioning person is truly altruistic. Polybios said: Ever heard about credits? I have heard, they are even connected with a financial crisis...
Obviously you are trying very hard to misunderstand me. First there were "favors" (spare food, tools, living space). Individuals who did not return favors ("cheats"), did not get further favors. This behavior exists in both humans and animals. Then people realized that they could swap spare "favors" for favors they need, thus limiting the risk and trust required. This is a form of cheat protection. Then money was invented, mostly as a convenience - money being a form of "delayed favor" (which also had several other benefits - ease of transport being the main one). I wasn't placing any value on the concept of money, nor do I say we need more or less of it. Just that it's a logical step for societies. I DO think it's a pretty neat concept, but that's besides the point.
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Matthew Leverton
Supreme Loser
January 1999
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Jonatan Hedborg said: I'm not saying everyone is 100% selfish. Just that no functioning person is truly altruistic. The problem is that while most people are good in that they wouldn't rip off their friends and family, they have no problems taking advantage of a government endorsed social program because in their opinion somebody outside their social circle is paying for it. |
Derezo
Member #1,666
April 2001
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Matthew Leverton said: in their opinion somebody outside their social circle is paying for it. I think it's related to the problem of "everyone else does it". I am extremely bothered by the "everyone else does it" mentality in the people who surround me Everything from smoking and drug use to ripping off the government, businesses and, as you put it, people outside of their social circle. My buddy told me that when he was in South Korea things were totally different. People respected other people. The stories he told seemed so bizarre, like losing a wallet and someone hunting you down and returning it to you with the cash still in it "He who controls the stuffing controls the Universe" |
Matthew Leverton
Supreme Loser
January 1999
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Derezo said: My buddy told me that when he was in South Korea things were totally different There are definitely cultural differences among different countries, but I wouldn't make a sweeping generalization based on one person's story. I know many people here who would return a wallet with cash, and I also know people who wouldn't. But a person who might return a wallet may not mention anything when a cashier accidentally forgets to scan some item they are purchasing. (Yet, they might wait in line for an hour at a service desk to complain if they were overcharged by a penny...) |
Polybios
Member #12,293
October 2010
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Jonatan Hedborg said: First there were "favors" I think we have to imagine communities exchanging their spare-things first and then trading, not single individuals. I think your concept of trust->money is not convincing. You can also turn it the other way round easily: As money became so crucial, trust declined, because everyone thinks everyone else is just after his money. Seems perfectly logical to me and in accordance with everyday experience. And then, there's credits (credit = "believe") and everything. This is, in a way, against your assumptions. But yes, money is a very neat invention, we certainly agree on that. |
Yodhe23
Member #8,726
June 2007
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Every system of governance seems to lead to tyranny. The solution seems to be to educate people to "reject" simplistic and non-factual/linguistic notions such as "isness", the fallacy of aristotelian logic. www.justanotherturn.com |
Michael Faerber
Member #4,800
July 2004
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Derezo said: My buddy told me that when he was in South Korea things were totally different. People respected other people. The stories he told seemed so bizarre, like losing a wallet and someone hunting you down and returning it to you with the cash still in it That's actually what happened to me some weeks ago in Germany: I lost my wallet while riding my bicycle, and after I arrived at my flat, only after about five minutes, somebody was at the door and gave me my wallet. However, it might be interesting to notice that I lost my wallet about 10 cycling minutes away from my flat, so this guy took 10 minutes to come to give me my wallet. Matthew Leverton said: I know many people here who would return a wallet with cash, and I also know people who wouldn't. But a person who might return a wallet may not mention anything when a cashier accidentally forgets to scan some item they are purchasing. (Yet, they might wait in line for an hour at a service desk to complain if they were overcharged by a penny...)
Ah, so if I understand your point correctly (considering your previous posts as well), you see this as an argument that people are "less strict" when exploiting something like a company or the government, than when it comes to exploit a single person. So what can one do about it? As a single person, probably not very much. -- |
Derezo
Member #1,666
April 2001
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Matthew Leverton said: a person who might return a wallet may not mention anything when a cashier accidentally forgets to scan some item they are purchasing I'm guilty of taking advantage of mistakes made by others, both government, corporate and individual alike. Face to face with a cashier I'll point it out, but I've had extra items shipped to my doorstep, multiple credits to my card when only one charge was made, and other small things. However, I've also been screwed over by corporations, so that makes me feel less guilt about it. I do know it's frowned upon by most, but perspective boils down to the attitude of the people who surround you. Given that I do believe in a sort of Karmic force operating through the universe, it would make sense for me to report such mistakes, but the people who surround me would find it so bizarre. Quote: I wouldn't make a sweeping generalization based on one person's story. Of course; there is still crime in South Korea. "He who controls the stuffing controls the Universe" |
Samuel Henderson
Member #3,757
August 2003
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Derezo said: My buddy told me that when he was in South Korea things were totally different. People respected other people. The stories he told seemed so bizarre, like losing a wallet and someone hunting you down and returning it to you with the cash still in it Last summer my wife and I were going for a walk and we found someone's wallet with $50 in it. We used the address on the driver's license to return it, cash and all. It all depends on who finds the lost item... ================================================= |
Derezo
Member #1,666
April 2001
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Alright, perhaps my negative assumptions about people finding wallets are unfounded. It's a good thing. "He who controls the stuffing controls the Universe" |
Elias
Member #358
May 2000
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Someone paid 140€ to my bank account, apparently writing the wrong account number when paying something (it said "EVO water filters" in the reference field). I didn't react to it since I assumed he'd notice the mistake and have the bank re-transfer it. But now it fell out of the 3 months of logs my online banking keeps and I have a hard time even looking it up but still feel bad about having those 140€... :/ -- |
axilmar
Member #1,204
April 2001
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Tobias Dammers said: Apparently, the way most of the so-called 'primitive' societies organize themselves resembles socialism à la Marx (minus the class ideology); many of them don't even have a real concept of personal property. Cooperative societies are the norm, not the exception. I don't want to go back to live my life as a tribe member in Amazon. Primitive economies don't scale. Quote: So let me get this straight; your argument is: there hasn't been a successful large-scale attempt at socialism in recent history ergo socialism doesn't work ergo the status quo is the only possible option No, my argument is:
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J-Gamer
Member #12,491
January 2011
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axilmar said: Actually, the government gives you almost nothing. In the USSR, people had to share their homes with 10 other families, eat meat once in 6 months, use water and electricity a few hours a day, etc. The poorness of those people is still visible, if you visit ex-soviet countries. The USSR wasn't a truly socialist nation, it was a dictatorial state covered by socialism. " There are plenty of wonderful ideas in The Bible, but God isn't one of them." - Derezo |
axilmar
Member #1,204
April 2001
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J-Gamer said: The USSR wasn't a truly socialist nation, it was a dictatorial state covered by socialism. But it started as one. And then some people thought they were more important than others, and the revolution went the way of the dodo (bird). Same thing happened in Cuba and North Korea. |
Arthur Kalliokoski
Second in Command
February 2005
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Under capitalism, man exploits man. They all watch too much MSNBC... they get ideas. |
J-Gamer
Member #12,491
January 2011
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But socialism wasn't the cause of the poverty, a dictatorship was. This means the resources weren't divided properly like in real socialism. You do have a point that there hasn't been a single large-scale socialistic society yet, due to the selfish nature of man. " There are plenty of wonderful ideas in The Bible, but God isn't one of them." - Derezo |
bamccaig
Member #7,536
July 2006
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axilmar said: Markets exist for at least 5,000 years. The ancient Sumerians had trade with neighboring nations. Mankind's huge progress came largely from trade. Imagine a world where basic discoveries like fire and cutting tools required an ongoing payment plan and could only be used in ways authorized by the original discoverer... People make advancements because it betters their lives. You don't need to pay somebody to do that. The betterment is reward enough. axilmar said: Your lack of knowledge of economics is amazing, to say the least. /me gets antsy in anticipation of Bob's appearance. -- acc.js | al4anim - Allegro 4 Animation library | Allegro 5 VS/NuGet Guide | Allegro.cc Mockup | Allegro.cc <code> Tag | Allegro 4 Timer Example (w/ Semaphores) | Allegro 5 "Winpkg" (MSVC readme) | Bambot | Blog | C++ STL Container Flowchart | Castopulence Software | Check Return Values | Derail? | Is This A Discussion? Flow Chart | Filesystem Hierarchy Standard | Clean Code Talks - Global State and Singletons | How To Use Header Files | GNU/Linux (Debian, Fedora, Gentoo) | rot (rot13, rot47, rotN) | Streaming |
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