Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

""Starvation rations and 1 smelly loincloth"

really, yell.  Do you really think that is indicative of all that the average "slave" in Ancient Greece had?"

Yes. Not only were many forced to work in mines, but when you look at the helots of the Spartans, they didn't even have guarantees of this much.  You know how "300" shows the brave boy-king hunting a wolf? They didn't hunt wolves.  Their coming of age mission was to hunt down a helot, to prove they were fit to rule helots, and also to keep the helots in check.  the average slave was denied the robes of a citizen or soldier.  Many had the one garment and got issued a replacement.  Their food was a ration.  Maybe a rich man's personal slave didn't stink and had a change of simple clothes.  The average slave didn't.  In no way were classical slaves comparable to Chinese imperial eunuchs of the latter dynasties.

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

The vast number of slaves--and the fact that they were not willingly _slaves_--was a large part of the reason for Sparta's militaristic society. They had to be superb warriors to keep their massive number of helot slaves in check.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

53 (edited by xeno syndicated 29-Mar-2012 16:00:47)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

I am right.  Instead of seeing this and trying to have a constructive discussion about how to remedy this situation, you continue in your self-delusion that having the majority of wealth in the hands of the minority acceptable.  This is completely insane, for it is anything but acceptable.  Not only does it subvert democracy, but it also subverts the free market system.  The market system works when the majority have the most real political influence by, in essence, voting with their wallets on a daily basis.  This is the true influence of the middle class, by how they spend their money, not by how they vote at the ballot box.  When the majority of wealth is in the hands of the minority, the majority lose their political influence in this regard, and the free hand of the market no longer works.

http://www.businessinsider.com/15-charts-about-wealth-and-inequality-in-america-2010-4#the-gap-between-the-top-1-and-everyone-else-hasnt-been-this-bad-since-the-roaring-twenties-1

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

See... he is fixated that he is right, even when his first effort failed.




Xeno... the rich were merely deluding us that we have purchasing power! They plan to hoard it all! Run away! /sarcasm

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

If you want to continue arguing about how Greece wasn't very good in other regards like slavery, you can go ahead.  It only helps my argument that our societies should be have surpassed their levels of prominence of their middle class.  Studies that show that it was because of the prominence of their middle class that their society was able to continue flourishing in the arts, sciences, etc. for so long; that we do not have as egalitarian a wealth distribution as they did means we could expect fewer advancements in our age.

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

Yeah that 5% that made up the Middle class sure had it great compared to the 90% that made up the slave and lower class groups!

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

um dunno about europe but in America we're more open to tech advances than ever

Your notions of wealth distribution don't really fit; Bill Gates by owning 50% of Microsoft is able to receive more money than a burger flipper, and he can borrow more than a salesman; but he cannot fully sell out at one time because the government would stop him "dumping" his shares of a publicly traded company.  They could even "claw back" sales he already made.  So that portion of his wealth is not comparable to pure liquid cash.

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

> xeno syndicated wrote:

> First, I want to say, Zarf, that your skirting the issue here (the FACT that we have not improved, but, rather, deteriorated in our levels of egalitarian wealth distribution from ancient times) I find disingenuous.  From my perspective, since this is clearly the case, clearly we should be discussing what really matters here: how to grow the prominence of the middle class in our societies to make up for our shameful shortcomings in this regard, rather than argue about things that really don't make much difference at all. 



No, I'm not skirting the issue.  It isn't "skirting the issue" to say "your issue is unimportant," and "your method of analyzing the issue is bad."   I'm probably the person best giving your argument due justice, in that I'm considering the issue (albeit rejecting both the accuracy of your comment and the validity of it as a standard for progress).  By your same logic, if I started a thread asking for the best way to improve the world through the establishment of a new fascist order, it would be considered "skirting the issue" to say "maybe fascism's... bad?"



> "You are equating "Athens" to "Ancient Greece."

From my understanding, Athens was sometimes the more egalitarian or had the most wealth distributed among the middle class compared to other city states, and sometimes it didn't.  Some smaller states were just as wealthy per capita as Athens was and had just as prominent a middle class per capita as Athens did, and some didn't.  Perhaps Athens was at a 37 gini coefficient while Sparta was on average a 38?  Perhaps another city state - the Minoans as an example - were 30? If you'd like, you could present the gini coefficient levels for each of the city states and find the average for Ancient Greece, then?  If not, for the sake of brevity, and getting back to the important issue here: the lower than expected prominence of our middle classes.



Nuh uh.  You're definitely skirting the issue here.  V. Kemp is starting to get into the issue of living conditions in each nation.

You don't get the right to generalize one study on a microcosm of the nation you're using by example, then say "well, to make the debate simple, let's assume I'm right unless you have alternate evidence."  You are very clearly making up what the study represents, to a much greater degree than even the writer of the study.  And now you're placing the burden of proof on me to disprove not just your Athens argument (which I am willing to concede... for ATHENS), but also for the generalization of Athens as Ancient Greece, with absolutely no justification?  That's bullshit.  It's on you to prove their wealth distribution if you want to make it an argument, not me.


>  "You assume that the #1 goal of a nation is establishing a big middle class."

I don't think this is an assumption.  I think this is a fact.  Whether it is the western democracies or the communists, the fascists or the anarchists, whether it is the republican or the democrat, the socialist or conservative, the Leninist or the Maoist, they ALL claim as their main purpose to increase the standard of living of the majority - THE MIDDLE CLASS.  The problem is they tend to argue about how to go about it, have wars over it, and, ultimately, the majority never get what they were promised by any of them.  I, for one, am SICK TO DEATH of seeing it happen again and again in history, each generation, none of them, it seems, learning anything from horrors of their cyclical, seemingly endless bickering.



Oooh, oooh, I see the flaw!  "they ALL claim as their main purpose to increase the standard of living of the majority - THE MIDDLE CLASS."  This will be addressed at the end of this post... easy way to cram this stuff together.  However, note that your sentence said the claim was to increase "the standard of living" of the majority, not necessarily the wealth distribution.



> "Economists rarely argue that technology is a tool to expand the middle class."

I know economists don't think about that.  Usually it is sociologists or philosophers who do.  This doesn't make it an assumption simply because economists don't think about that.



It kind of does.  Economists are the ones who actually know and study the fundamental economic models upon which arguments of standard of living are based.  That's kind of like going and getting a first opinion from a podiatrist for your heart medication.




> That technology should be used for the benefit of the people who use it is a given, since if it weren't for the benefit of people, it wouldn't be used.  That technology should benefit the majority of society by its use is also a given.  Philosophers would argue that it is not morally acceptable for the elite to use a technology for their advantage only.   I can see, though why you wouldn't, for if you don't see that all political systems have as their main intention to maintain and have the majority of their populations thrive, you could not see that technology should be used to maintain and / or increase the distribution of wealth to the middle class.


Okay... I'm going to hold off on this point because it's dependent on something else.  I'll get back to this, though.



> Standards of living.
For me, standards of living relate to how well Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs are fulfilled in a population.  I would say that standard of living does not have anything to do with technology level.  For example, whether a home is heated by electricity or a wood-burning fireplace makes no difference.  All that's important is that there is a home.  Do you own yours outright?  Or do you have a mortgage?



Before I get into this question, I need an explanation.  How does a lower income gap increase one's ability to achieve each level of the hierarchy of needs?  You can go one level at a time or address them all together.

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Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

> Einstein wrote:

> Yeah that 5% that made up the Middle class sure had it great compared to the 90% that made up the slave and lower class groups!

"Slaves" if you insist on calling them that, made up 30% of the population, the majority of them themselves considered middle class.  Do you dispute this?  If so, use sources.

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

By the way... for the record, the definition of "assumption:" something taken for granted; a supposition: a correct assumption. Synonyms: presupposition; hypothesis, conjecture, guess, postulate, theory.

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/assumption


In the context of my prior post, it simply means that you have yet, as of that argument, to make the case that the statement is true.  It does not mean you blindly follow said statement.  It simply means that issue needs to be addressed in order to evaluate the validity claim of an overall argument.

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61 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 29-Mar-2012 16:42:20)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

Actually, one more argument here (one which was not addressed from previously).

How does a new technology decrease the income gap in a society?

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62 (edited by xeno syndicated 29-Mar-2012 16:57:41)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

Interesting points from this article:  http://www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html

"most Americans (high income or low income, female or male, young or old, Republican or Democrat) have no idea just how concentrated the wealth distribution actually is."

Ever hear it said to poor and downtrodden person. "Go get a job, you lazy bum"?  This phrase is probably better redirected to the rich person:

"(But it's important to note that for the rich, most of that income does not come from "working": in 2008, only 19% of the income reported by the 13,480 individuals or families making over $10 million came from wages and salaries. See Norris, 2010, for more details.)"

I have been wondering why the most recent gini coefficient available for Greece is over 7 years old.  How long does it take for the World Bank to do a study?  What are they doing everyday?  Are they relying on data that is 7 years old in constructing their policies?  I don't think so.  Why aren't they publishing more recent economic data.  Will we have to way decades to find out how bad things really are now since the housing-bubble bust of 2008? 

"the effects of the Great Recession on the wealth distribution. They suggest that average Americans have been hit much harder than wealthy Americans. [...] there has been an "astounding" 36.1% drop in the wealth (marketable assets) of the median household since the peak of the housing bubble in 2007. By contrast, the wealth of the top 1% of households dropped by far less: just 11.1%. So as of April 2010, it looks like the wealth distribution is even more unequal than it was in 2007. (See Wolff, 2010 for more details.)

"Center for Economic and Policy Research (2011) concludes that the decade from 2000 to 2010 was a "lost decade" for most Americans"

Who is going to pay for all these bailouts to the banks?  Not the rich:  "And the top 1% of income earners actually pay a smaller percentage of their incomes to taxes than the 9% just below them. "

It's been argued that America has a more prominent middle class than any Ancient Greek city state ever did.  Ludicrous, when the facts are presented:
"As of 2007, the top 1% of households (the upper class) owned 34.6% of all privately held wealth [...] and the next 19% (the managerial, professional, and small business stratum) had 50.5%, which means that just 20% of the people owned a remarkable 85%"

Let's compare this to Athens, late 4th c. BC income distribution models.:

Optimistic:
% of TOTAL INCOME:
1.1% of income "earned" by Elite Class
57.8 % earned by Middle Class
41.1% earned Subsistence


Pessimistic:
% of TOTAL
1.1 Elite
42.2 Middle
56.6 Subsistence

Source: http://www.princeton.edu/~pswpc/pdfs/ober/051001.pdf (page 27)

The purpose of this thread was not to compare the US inequality to Ancient Greece's, but rather Ancient Greece's inequality to its present day wealth inequality.  I suppose we'll have to wait a decade for the World Bank to publish a gini-coefficient for present-day Greece, though.  Unless someone can find it?

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

"How does a new technology decrease the income gap in a society?"

Thank you for the question Zarf.  This is where I want to go in this thread. 

Perhaps we could try and think of a technology which helped bridge the income divide in the past?

Surely there must be an example of one in human history SOMEWHERE... thoughts?

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

I hope you were planning on answering more of my arguments than just that.  hmm

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65 (edited by xeno syndicated 29-Mar-2012 17:25:48)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

> Zarf BeebleBrix wrote:

> I hope you were planning on answering more of my arguments than just that.  hmm

You want to argue issues that detract from the what's most important and most pressing about this discussion.

"generalization of Athens as Ancient Greece"  I am going to say this once more and that is it.  Give evidence that wealth distribution of Athens was NOT indicative of what we could expect of the wealth distribution levels of the rest of Greece at the time, or concede that the rest of Greece would have been somewhere in the same neighborhood on average, perhaps a gini coefficient for Ancient Greece at the time of say 40, then.  Even at that level, it was still better off than EVERY current U.S. state:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_income_equality

Do you or do you not see that Greece had BY FAR a more prominent middle class relative to its elite than we do today?

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

You've... gotta be kidding me.

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

67 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 29-Mar-2012 18:50:14)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

You don't get your truth claim if you don't answer the assumptions behind it because an indictment of the assumptions is an indictment of the premise of your argument.  If I make a thread that said "how should we best cause a new global genocide," and you say "why would we want to cause a new global genocide," my refusal to answer that underlying assumption would logically mean it is a bad choice to cause a new global genocide... thus, my claim falls due to a flawed assumption.

You're doing the exact same thing.  One last chance before I give up on this thread having any sort of educational value (and hopefully, a few others join with me and ignore this thread).  Want to rectify the problem by answering my arguments previously mentioned?

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

No, it didn't.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

69 (edited by ~Wornstrum~ 02-Apr-2012 10:59:08)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

[play nice]

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

70 (edited by The Yell 29-Mar-2012 20:15:11)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

I doubt it had a "middle class" except to communists who assume it had a middle upper and lower class and by History they will find one

it had citizens and noncitizens and slaves.  The political rights of citizens were superior to other groups regardless of wealth.  These political powers were separate of pure economic wealth, though they saw the sense in combining them at the highest levels.

In America, technology boosts wealth CREATION by enabling technicians to provide the service of technological integration as owner/operators rather than wage-earners (computer repair shops instead of an IT dept)  also people can offer to sell equipment to people seeking to participate in the new technology as owners, earning more wealth (Robert Dell of Dell computers vs commissioned IBM salesmen)  also new inventive uses for the technology will benefit inventors and innovators (bill gates and steve jobs)


as new wealth opportunities are created the balance of wealth accumulation is altered.  This is not technically "distribution".   Bill Gates $50 billion was not "distributed" from IBM and Atari.  He just grew beside them, and beyond them.

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

I base it on relative death rates.

Go study it.

Everything bad in the economy is now Obama's fault. Every job lost, all the debt, all the lost retirement funds. All Obama. Are you happy now? We all get to blame Obama!
Kemp currently not being responded to until he makes CONCISE posts.
Avogardo and Noir ignored by me for life so people know why I do not respond to them. (Informational)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

Dude it's a FACT that ancient Greeks had more equality than us! We're like regressing in social progress dude! Hit this!

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

", technology boosts wealth CREATION "

Yes, but for WHOM?  What segment of the society?  The elite, the middle class, or the poor?  The ELITE, because they are the ones who tend to have time (they don't work), the money, and, obviously, the opportunity to create more wealth, whereas the poor and middle class have NONE of that, because they MUST work, they don't have the money, and they don't have the same access to opportunities to create wealth that the elite have.

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

> Zarf BeebleBrix wrote:

> You don't get your truth claim if you don't answer the assumptions behind it because an indictment of the assumptions is an indictment of the premise of your argument.  If I make a thread that said "how should we best cause a new global genocide," and you say "why would we want to cause a new global genocide," my refusal to answer that underlying assumption would logically mean it is a bad choice to cause a new global genocide... thus, my claim falls due to a flawed assumption.

You're doing the exact same thing.  One last chance before I give up on this thread having any sort of educational value (and hopefully, a few others join with me and ignore this thread).  Want to rectify the problem by answering my arguments previously mentioned?


Again, Zarf, the only underlying problematic assumption here is what Ancient Greece's gini coefficient was.  And it isn't even mine!  I have provided sources that indicate it was around the 35 - 40 mark.

Have you provided any sources to the contrary?  If it wasn't between 35 - 40, give me a source that says otherwise.  I would ask that you don't hijack this thread and detract the discussion away from the pressing issue at the moment which is what technology can do about what is clearly increasing wealth inequalities in our societies.

75 (edited by xeno syndicated 29-Mar-2012 22:32:24)

Re: Ancient Greece: more or less egalitarian

Technology should AT LEAST level the playing field if not tilt it in the poor and middle class's favor so as to provide AT LEAST the same opportunity to garner wealth that the rich do.  Can we say this about our societies today?  No.