26 (edited by V.Kemp 05-Jul-2012 07:33:17)

Re: 'civil'ization

You mean when production of home-building materials and homes goes up 9000% and everyone has a home? Achieved my magical robot technology from aliens?

Hell, we GIVE housing, food, and money for clothing away to millions of people. We don't even require they do any work for it. The biggest crime against humanity I see is people taking others' productivity for granted and not laboring in return. Government enabling this is, perhaps, tied for the #1 spot.

Please be more specific. Please share with us specific, preferably personal (and not anecdotal nor fictional), accounts of the injustice you decry. What exploitation and coercion have you experienced and witnessed? What, specifically, are you objecting to here?

You haven't named a single concrete thing that you're objecting to. It's kind-of hard to follow.

Is the free market the problem? It's not fair enough? Government interference with that market? Not enough government interference with that market? We can't even answer these simple questions from what you've said.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

27 (edited by xeno syndicated 05-Jul-2012 10:06:01)

Re: 'civil'ization

"Please share with us specific, preferably personal (and not anecdotal nor fictional), accounts of the injustice you decry."

Personally, I have been victim to the systemic injustice inherent in civilization in every purchase of every product I have ever made, and so too has every single person who ever purchased anything also been a victim to the same injustice, for built into the cost of every good or service associated with every purchase anyone has every made, EVERYWHERE, are regressive taxes, fees, charges, etc..  These are values which are BOTH actually and relatively cheaper for the rich than they are for the poor, and together, these regressive charges act as a system of taxation upon the poor BY the rich, which make the poor poorer and allow the rich to get richer, a process of civilization itself which propagates various forms of indentured servitude.  It is a system which has always been with us and has never been transcended.
 
Take 'renting' as an example: the cost of rent is incurred as a loss each month by the renter.  The land-owner, in contrast, over the long-term, almost always collects a capital gain rather than a loss.  Thus, over say 20 years, while the poor renter has paid the equivalent of $300,000 in rental fees, the rich home-owner has gained the equivalent or more in capital gains.  In this way, over the long-term, cost of living is ACTUALLY higher for the poor renter than it is for the owner.

Additionally, take the landlord who rents-out a property and who passes the costs of regressive taxes associated with the property to the renter, be they the sales taxes on the original purchase or the annual property taxes.  In this case, the renter not only pays a higher cost of living than the landlord (as the landlord also incurs a capital gain over the long term), but the landlord also makes additional gains in the amount of the regressive taxes which are in effect paid by the renter, for the landlord has factored the cost of the taxes into their monthly income profit margins.

These are examples of how the cost of fulfilling the basic need of housing is ACTUALLY more expensive for the poor than for the wealthy, but I also us it to help illustrate of the inherent systemic injustice  not only by renters but by all purchasers of any product, anywhere not only housing.  For in the same way a renter experiences a loss while the owner experiences gain, every person who purchases any product  from a corporation or business can be likened to either the poor perpetual renter who rents from the landlord:  the cost of EVERY product is ultimately higher the poorer you are because there is factored into ALL profit margins in every sale EVERYWHERE the costs of the inevitable regressive 'taxes' (some of which I've already mentioned).  You have property taxes on the factories or the lands from which the resources are harvested, carbon taxes manufacturers must pay, and an actual sales tax topped on to all of this.  The list goes on and on.  Like the landlord who profits regardless of the cost of taxes factored into the rental fee, the corporation likewise ultimately profits by the sale of its product because the regressive costs associated with its production are also factored into the corporation's profit margins; like the perpetual renter, the purchaser ALWAYS suffers the loss in the exchange, and the POORER the purchaser is, the greater the loss incurred: it is either that the wealthier purchaser spends more money and is able to get more items at a better price per item or the wealthier person is less concerned with the price and thus spends more than the poorer person is willing or able to pay, which, in turn, drives up the cost for the poor.  In either case, the poorer one is, the greater the ACTUAL cost and thus the loss they incur in every purchase.

In addition to the actual price often being higher, the subjective cost of the product higher still: a crumb is like gold to one with an empty stomach, but garbage to one with a full stomach. In other words, like the home owner who has paid off their mortgage, it is 'relatively' cheaper for them to live than a home owner who has to make mortgage payments or the renter who just can't seem to save up enough money for a down-payment because he caught in the cycle of having to suffer the loss of paying rent every month.  It thus easier for one who has already attained a lot of fulfillment of their basic needs than one who has not.

This systemic injustice in the cost of fulfilling basic human needs being actually AND subjectively more expensive for the poor than it is for the rich is inherent in every purchase everyone ever makes. It is built into the system of civilization itself, a system propagates indentured servitude of the majority to an elite.  It is a cyclical process by which civilization itself forms; it IS civilization, and it is anything but 'civil'.  It is essentially unjust.

One day, one civilization somewhere, sometime will somehow transcend this cycle, and historians of that era will look back on ours in astonishment that ours operated this way, for, ultimately, in all likelihood, the solution is probably so simple that it boggles the mind to even begin to fathom it as the solution.

And, well, hell if I know what it is...

28 (edited by V.Kemp 05-Jul-2012 10:02:25)

Re: 'civil'ization

So you're against high tax rates.

And you equate this with natural economic inequality.

With no notice of the fact that people democratically get suckered, like idiots, into electing governments which overtax them. With no notice of the fact that this is not inherently related to natural economic inequality, which is not a bad thing.

"Second concept:  systems of regressive taxes, fees, charges which result in systems whereby the rich tend to get richer and the poor poorer are an inevitable result of capitalistic activity."

That's just an ignorant and overly simplistic understanding of economics and free markets. You are aware that relatively free markets have made Americans the richest people on earth and skyrocketed their standard of living in a very brief period of time? You do understand that your standard of living is finite and can be measured by the things you have an can afford, and is not somehow magically diminished by the fact that others work harder than you, are smarter than you, and have acquired more wealth than you?

You're raping the crap out of the word "regressive" when you use it to describe taxes. You're using it to describe "anything that doesn't inherently redistribute wealth to the poor." If a rich man pays 6% tax on his taco and a poor man pays 6% tax on his taco, you describe this as "regressive." Even if the rich man tends to buy more expensive tacos and, in actuality, pays more taxes. You rape the crap out of the word so much that you describe the rich paying the same percentage and a higher dollar amount as "regressive."

"Take 'renting' as an example: the cost of rent is incurred as a loss each month by the renter.  The land-owner, in contrast, over the long-term, almost always collects a capital gain.  Thus, over say 20 years, while the poor renter has paid the equivalent of $300,000 in rental fees, the rich home-owner has gained the equivalent or more in capital gains in the value of the property.  In this way, over the long-term, cost of living is higher for the poor renter than it is for the owner, who actually accumulates a gain over the long term."

So you're against the private ownership of property? So it's capitalism at fault? Many renters become owners. Owners who rent are offering a service, which required they make a substantial investment of their own wealth to be able to do, in exchange for a fee. This is called capitalism. It rewards hard work and good decisions. You should read about it sometime. It's done great things for standards of living around the world, especially for the poor!

"This is an example of how the cost of fulfilling basic need, housing, is more expensive for the poor than for the wealthy,"

You just completely ignore the cost of the property, which the owner had to first acquire and then give up in exchange for the property. By just ignoring the cost to the wealthy entirely, you could claim that housing is more expensive for the poor if it's $5/month. That's just stupid, misleading, and ignorant.

If someone saved up $300,000 over decades and bought a property, you're here saying [cluck] them they're unjust to make any profit out of renting it out. You just completely ignore that the asset has value, or that they had to earn $300,000 by being a productive human being in order to reward themself with the asset in the first place.

This is exactly the ignorant speech I've pointed out many times is Communist. Here you're arguing against private property and free markets. Whereas capitalists see money as something to be earned and used to purchase rewards for one's productivity, you see it as evil because everyone should just share everything. The renter, you argue, has as much right to the property as the owner, who payed for it with money that they earned. We have a name for the ideology you're describing. It's called communism.

"Thus, over say 20 years, while the poor renter has paid the equivalent of $300,000 in rental fees, the rich home-owner has gained the equivalent or more in capital gains in the value of the property."

Maybe the poor renter shouldn't rent a property for 20 years which does not allow for enough savings to purchase a property of his own. How do you propose we save idiots from their own bad decisions? I'm eagerly awaiting your response.

"In this way, over the long-term, cost of living is higher for the poor renter than it is for the owner, who actually accumulates a gain over the long term."

That's up to the poor renter and his decision making process. You're implying that owners should rent properties out for no profit. How exactly do you propose that would work? Why would people buy property, build on it, and rent it out in return for nothing? That would be a huge waste of money. Are you proposing we all live in communes? In case the obvious again escapes you, that's communism.

I'm with you on our tax rates being exorbitant and it rising to the level of crime. But to equate this with income inequality, as if it's anything NEAR that simple, is just silly and ignorant. You go far beyond arguing against oppressive taxation. You're arguing for owners to rent property for no profit? That doesn't make any sense.

Have you put any thought into this at all? Free markets work because they reward productivity and responsible decisions. If you just tell everyone they deserve 2 loafs of bread and some cheese, you quickly find they don't produce shit and everyone has less. That's why communism fails. That's why your ideas fail.

If you tell someone he can't plan to make a profit off of renting his property in a decade or few (or, so it doesn't make NO sense, let's presume a tiiiiny profit over a huuuuge period of time), you end up with less rental properties built. You end up with lower quality rental properties. That's BAD for the poor renter. That's why communism fails. That's why your ideas fail.

You didn't even suggest a mechanism by which anything you proposed would work. The owner should make nothing? Explain why he'll own. Explain why he'll earn the money to purchase to begin with.

"One day, one civilization somewhere, sometime will somehow transcend this cycle, and historians of that era will look back on ours in astonishment that ours operated this way, for, ultimately, in all likelihood, the solution is probably so simple that it boggles the mind to even begin to fathom it as the solution.
And, well, hell if I know what it is..."

We know. It's communism.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: 'civil'ization

if I see an ipad at X euros and decide I want it and buy it (don't worry I won't buy an ipad), how am I being swindled exactly?

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sdffdgjfhjdfhgjhsfsdfqgsbsthzgflqkcgjhkgfjnbkmzghkmqrghqmskdghqkmsghnvhdf
qmkjghqmksdjqlskhqkmsdhqmskfhjqmskjdfhqkmsdfjhqmskfhjqkmsjdfhqkm
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Re: 'civil'ization

East,

Its not that you are getting swindled; its that by your purchase you are contributing to the systemic injustice inherent in our civilization.

Understand that there are regressive costs associated with the production of any product or provision of any service.  These regressive costs are those which are inherently cheaper both actually and relatively for the wealthier person and more expensive actually and relatively for the poorer person.  Therefore, the nature of the systemic injustice is that the purchase of any good or service results in the re-distribution of wealth from the poor to the wealthy.

First, consider the macro effect: when a poor person buys any product, a certain amount of their money goes to government in the form of various regressive taxes the producer factored into their profit margins, and the larger producer pay less proportionately than the smaller producer: corporate taxes paid will be less per unit produced simply because they produce more, property taxes of factories and distribution centers rent or leases stores or warehouses will be less because the larger producer has more of them,  freight charges will be less because the larger company ships more than the smaller producer.  It's based on the inherrent tendency for someone to get better deal per unit when they buy more units.  Thus, the larger the company, the lower the actual cost of production per unit, making it more difficult for the smaller company to compete.

Second, consider the micro effect:  when a poor person buys a product, like an i-pad, for instance, they have saved up their money to do so over a long period of time.  Inflation has eaten away these savings much more than it has the rich person, who was able to save up the money for the same purchase in a shorter amount of time.  Also, the poor person will probably only be buying one ipad, whereas the wealthier person will probably be buying an i-pad, a laptop, and a smart TV the same purchase and will thus be able to work out a better deal with the salesperson for the price of the ipad.  The wealthier consumer is like the larger company paying less for the cost of production relative to a smaller producer.  Also, consider how in any provision of a good or service, certain amount the purchaser spends goes to pay the employees involved in the different stages in the production and distribution process the shareholders, and the government.  When these parties who have profited somehow by your purchase in turn buy the same product (and often do so for cheaper because they do so in volume or at reduced insider prices), their purchase is in effect subsidized by yours.

There is much more to this than I have shown above... don't have time to explain it all.  Think about it, though: its a system by which the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.  It's always been this way, everywhere, in every civilization.  It's antithetical to the value systems of liberal-democratic countries which strives to mitigate the effects of this inherrent injustice, but which, sadly, all too often fail to do so.

Re: 'civil'ization

"These regressive costs are those which are inherently cheaper both actually and relatively for the wealthier person and more expensive actually and relatively for the poorer person. "

How the hell can you pay an absolute wage to the factory worker - who is not rich - and then make the price 'relative' to the income of a poor person?

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: 'civil'ization

"Welcome to McDonald's, how can I help you?"
"I'd like a big mac meal."
"Would you like that large?"
"Oh, what the heck.  Alright."
"Anything else?"
"No."
"Please bring your income tax records to the auditor at the next window to determine the cost of your order.  Thank you, have a nice day!"

Make Eyes Great Again!

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

Re: 'civil'ization

"make the price 'relative' to the income of a poor person?"  That wouldn't be the solution, I don't think.

I was thinking this today, though:

Eventually, as the tendency for the rich to get richer and the poor poorer continues long enough, there will come a time when virtually all wealth in the world (I'm talking like 99% of it) would be concentrated in the hands of a single corporation or individual.  This is the end result of the process of civilization such as ours if it, somehow, miraculously, does not collapse.  In this event where one, single corporation or individual has ownership of 99% of the world's wealth, essentially, everyone else would be in debt to that person or corporation, having to borrow funds to purchase everything to fulfill their basic human needs.  Such a corporation or individual could be benevolent and charge low interest, or, ideally, no interest at all.  But what are the chances such a corporation or indiividual would be benevolent?  If not benevolent, conflict, and collapse is the result.

Thus, if left to its own devices, then, our current system of civilization inevitably results in benevolent dictatorship or collapse.  What if, then, before it gets to the point where virtually all wealth is held in the hands of a single entity, governments were to jum ahead in time and start implementing a system whereby human beings could simply borrow at no interest so as to fulfill their basic human needs?

Re: 'civil'ization

Xeno,

You are assuming that wealth is limited. Capitalism creates wealth. Sure, the majority of created wealth goes to the entrepreneurs, but at the same time everyone becomes wealthier.

Re: 'civil'ization

Xeno's argument: A Testerosa is to expensive, make it so all can afford it with a few hours pay.

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: 'civil'ization

> Einstein wrote:

> Xeno's argument: A Testerosa is to expensive, make it so all can afford it with a few hours pay.

No, Einstein.  My argument is that a home, and basic needs goods necessary to provide for a low-stress home environment to raise children is too expensive, and it is immoral for the privileged to profit from the artificially induced scarcity of basic needs goods.

Re: 'civil'ization

Portland Oregon disagrees. Homes should be difficult to own, small apartments are better.

Or why would they have an urban growth boundary?

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: 'civil'ization

An apartment is a home. I think you confuse house and home.

Re: 'civil'ization

He's arguing that capitalism just ISN'T FAIR ENOUGH. He's arguing for communism, while refusing to address what he's actually advocating. It's all vague bullshit. You can't have a conversation about communism with a small child. tongue

That's why his posts are riddled with logical fallacies and laughable ignorance. And that's why he refuses to address points which raise obvious questions, like "How would that work, with all motivation to produce it removed?"

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: 'civil'ization

Interestingly, in Norway some fines (e.g. driving related) are based as a percentage of your annual income. As a stick it's got merits; as a carrot basing cost on income has no great merit.

Re: 'civil'ization

That's messed up.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: 'civil'ization

> Einstein wrote:

> Portland Oregon disagrees. Homes should be difficult to own, small apartments are better.

Or why would they have an urban growth boundary?

Wow.  are you that out of touch; that ignorant of the way of life of the vast majority of humans on the planet?

small apartments are their homes

Re: 'civil'ization

> Mace wrote:

> Interestingly, in Norway some fines (e.g. driving related) are based as a percentage of your annual income. As a stick it's got merits; as a carrot basing cost on income has no great merit.

Finally, a country with some common sense.

In most countries, Richy-rich drives his Testicularossa 400kph above speed limit, and he pays the same fine a pizza delivery driver pays double parking for 5 min.  Makes me @#!$-ing sick...

Re: 'civil'ization

". He's arguing for communism"

More SLANDER from the Kemp.  This is going to be a great lawsuit.  So much evidence collected against him and Einstein. Lol

45 (edited by V.Kemp 07-Jul-2012 05:12:35)

Re: 'civil'ization

"In most countries, Richy-rich drives his Testicularossa 400kph above speed limit, and he pays the same fine a pizza delivery driver pays double parking for 5 min.  Makes me @#!$-ing sick..."

Such a rate of speed results in jail time and charges above and beyond "speeding." You are factually wrong.

"More SLANDER from the Kemp.  This is going to be a great lawsuit.  So much evidence collected against him and Einstein. Lol"

You very clearly argue for communism in this thread. I raised simple, legitimate, logical questions previously. You ignored them. You protested the fact that owners profit from renting. I asked why anybody would build, buy, or rent without the motivation for profit. You drooled on yourself and said nothing. Yet you have the nerve to say stupid things like this, after ignoring many legitimate points I made and questions I raised.

I don't disrespect you for disagreeing with me, I mock you for childishly ignoring all of the discussion going on and then crying like a baby and accusing me of nonsense like this. I'm discussing the facts of what you posted. You're ignoring everything I've said (for months) and crying like a baby.

This is a concession that, if any libel has occurred, it has been on your part.

Again, FYI, slander is spoken. Libel is written.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: 'civil'ization

"Such a rate of speed results in jail time and charges above and beyond "speeding." You are factually wrong."

Wow.  Twity, you are clueless as to how the sorts of societies in which the majority of humanity lives, aren't you?

Re: 'civil'ization

Yeah sue me. I would laugh as I countersued for harrassment suit and made 25% of your income mine for life.

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: 'civil'ization

"Wow.  Twity, you are clueless as to how the sorts of societies in which the majority of humanity lives, aren't you?"

I'm sorry, I live in America. Where do you live? I was only speaking for how it is here.

Continue ignoring 90% of what I said. We don't want you to be in danger of actually thinking.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]

Re: 'civil'ization

Is he serious about this lawsuit thing? What a joke.

Caution Wake Turbulence

50 (edited by V.Kemp 08-Jul-2012 00:22:23)

Re: 'civil'ization

As serious as he is about the self-replicating robot technology given to our wealthy by aliens which SHOULD be doing 100% of labor for mankind.

You can't make this shit up.

[I wish I could obey forum rules]