Quetzal
New member
I hope so!The next POTUS will be a Democrat, even if it's Trump. There's nothing in the man's history that convinces me otherwise.
I hope so!The next POTUS will be a Democrat, even if it's Trump. There's nothing in the man's history that convinces me otherwise.
Capitalism is a philosophy of the individual; social Darwinism is the state impinging on the will of democracy. the will of the people. They are not the same. Capitalism is a means to liberty, more than a philosophy, as it is rooted in pragmatism.
I think it's rarer to find a president who isn't a scoundrel. Last I can think of would be Ford or Carter and neither of them were particularly effective leaders at the national level.Town Heretic,
It depends on what you mean by "Darwinistic principle"?
From strictly an economic stance, Bill was not so bad, although Hillary has more 'ideas'
What people disliked about Bill is his lack of moral compass.
A pleasure to differ amicably with you at any point. :cheers:I have not slept since noon yesterday, and my thoughts are fuzzy. Maybe I ill be able to address more of this later?
There's little pragmatism in how capitalism is being practiced right now. It's practically elevated markets to a state of infallibility, and lost sight of the fact that the purpose of an economy is to distribute goods and services, and the way that our economy is functioning right now is to transfer all of the wealth to the already wealthy. Capitalism is headed either for a major reform in the short-term or a collapse in the long-term. If things work out, Bernie might just save capitalism from its most pathological form.
Are you feeling the Bern ?
I can't see myself voting for him, but he'd never be allowed to wreck the system.
There's little pragmatism in how capitalism is being practiced right now. It's practically elevated markets to a state of infallibility, and lost sight of the fact that the purpose of an economy is to distribute goods and services, and the way that our economy is functioning right now is to transfer all of the wealth to the already wealthy. Capitalism is headed either for a major reform in the short-term or a collapse in the long-term. If things work out, Bernie might just save capitalism from its most pathological form.
I love how you actually think markets are free right now. LOL!
That's a pretty common excuse by libertarians. But it's hard for me to see how a market that already does what it wants, and often flaunts the law openly would be less horrible if only we took away what restraints remains. You're going to have to do better than vague hand-waving.
It's like saying "Oh, you have diabetes? The problem is that you don't eat enough candy!"
I'm not a libertarian,...
... but there's a huge problem in this country with government using its power to stuff small businesses and letting bigger ones get away with real crime...
... not to mention going bankrupt and not paying the consequences, etc. We also have way too many irrelevant laws.
I agree. But the reason for it, it seems to me, is that we've allowed big business too much freedom to manipulate the system in their favor, not too little.
.I'm a lot more worried about the too-big-to-fail for-profit businesses. They essentially have a free hand to place extremely risky bets, knowing that if it doesn't work out, the taxpayer is going to have to bail them out or risk a major economic crisis. At least bankruptcy is a regularized system. At least it's open to anyone who qualifies. At least we aren't wasting a bunch of tax money on it, usually
The problem is that so many citizens want to blame only the government for this, and completely ignore the oligarchs that are controlling nearly every decision the government makes. At this point the government is nothing more than a collection of middle-managers working for a very wealthy and powerful elite investor class. A class made up of only a few hundred people, none of whom have ever been elected, and none of whom have the best interests of the American people as their agenda.I'd say its less the analogy you gave and more like "hey, society sucks because there's too much poison in it, let's take out the poison instad of adding a different type of poison and thinking that will help."
Our government currently is corporatist pure and simple.
The problem is that so many citizens want to blame only the government for this, and completely ignore the oligarchs that are controlling nearly every decision the government makes. At this point the government is nothing more than a collection of middle-managers working for a very wealthy and powerful elite investor class. A class made up of only a few hundred people, none of whom have ever been elected.
This is absurdly vague criticism. Who is "the rich"?I'm not as familiar with the details on this, but I've no doubt that this is true. It wouldn't surprise me in the slightest. And I bet a lot of libertarians (of which I do not consider myself one... I'm way too theocratic at this point) would agree with you too.
The problem comes in when some liberals start blaming "the rich" as a group, many of whom earned their money quite legitimately through providing goods and services that people want, rather than blaming the unjust use of political power. That's my point, The issue is political power, not money in and of itself.
Many of them, like the members of the Walmart clan, inherited billions of dollars simply because of their name ....
This is absurdly vague criticism. Who is "the rich"?
I am referring to a handful of multi-billionaires, a few hundred multi-multi-millionaires and their very wealthy corporations, that use their wealth to control the legislators of both the state and federal government. NONE of these people "earned" that much money, because no human on Earth could possibly contribute to the well being of humanity to the degree to which these few men have been paid. Many of them, like the members of the Walmart clan, inherited billions of dollars simply because of their name, and yet are still so insanely greedy that instead of paying their employees a living wage, which they could very easily afford to do, they spend millions bribing legislators to rig the system so that they can make the taxpayers support their employees needs, instead of doing it, themselves. These are the "innocent rich people" that you think are being so victimized by liberals and democrats who dare to suggest that we make them pay their share of taxes, and use that money to rebuild a crumbling infrastructure and create millions of good-paying jobs in the process.
i believe they inherited their money because their father worked his tail off building up a successful business that people flocked to, and in his will he stated that he wanted his wealth to go to his children