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Author Topic: Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread  (Read 1244377 times)

Gantolandon

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3345 on: September 30, 2012, 06:02:30 am »

Quote from: Flying Dice
It's rather funny that you say that about libertarians not finding the late 1800s to be ideal; what's not to like? You've got a free market, weak government, taxes are low, and practically everything useful that gets done is done so by small groups of people with no other choice.

While I agree with your post, there is one thing you got wrong - the governments in late 1800s were anything but weak. Even if you don't count still existing near-absolute monarchies (like Russia or Austria-Hungary), business and politics often intermarried. The Suez Canal, for example, couldn't be built without using de Lesseps connections obtained when he was a French diplomat and forced labor supplied by Egyptian government. Vanity projects, like The Great Exhibition, were more common than today - the state would organize a grandioze ceremony or build a great monument just to show its greatness, funneling huge amount of money to private contractors. There were many occasions where the governments would artificially try to create new markets or protect them from outside influence - in Prussia, for example, people were forbidden from gathering anything from privately-owned forests without their owners' permission, including sticks, berries or mushrooms, to force them to buy these goods instead.

It is somewhat hilarious that libertarians frequently use the word "capitalism" to describe their perfect, free from governmental influence, market. This term was first-used in the modern sense by socialists Blanc and Proudhon, then popularized by Marx and Engels. And what they meant, was the system of mostly private ownership of the means of production, with legal framework and physical infrastructure provided by the state.
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10ebbor10

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3346 on: September 30, 2012, 06:44:09 am »

The 1800's American Governement was weak though. Europe was going strong at that time, it's the time of imperialism after all.

It is worth noting, however, that American citizens have notably more purchasing power and more expendable income than most Europeans.

On paper, perhaps, but not in practice. Most Europeans don't have to put aside huge amounts of money for healthcare and their children's education.
Couldn't find any numbers on it, but I do know that, in Belgium, wages are automatically adjusted to preserve purchasing power. It's a pretty much unique system, and while it does work, it causes inflation to jump through the roof.

Also, on topic of Health and education costs. Health costs are lower in Belgium(while the quality of the health service seems better) and education costs are certainly lower.
The lower tiers are always free(Governement abolished fees) and university/colleges registration fees are fixed and indexed. At most you'll be paying €500.40 and €567.80/ year. (Note: Seems to be outdated. New costs are 800-900). That is if you don't apply for any benefits, which reduce things to as low as €50-100 a year.

Quote from: author=scriver link=topic=103213.msg3651706#msg3651706 date=1348965042
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Who's going to take a road covered in potholes, or that charges extortionate fees? It would go out of business rather fast, especially considering the fact that roads aren't the only kind of transportation.

Everybody who has to go anywhere without making long detours? Or do you envision some sort intrastructural landscape where several roads, owned by different road companies, that all go to the same places, lie right next to one another? Because that would never happen.
Monopolies are mean.
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GreatJustice

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3347 on: September 30, 2012, 10:35:00 am »

On paper, perhaps, but not in practice. Most Europeans don't have to put aside huge amounts of money for healthcare and their children's education.

Healthcare is more expensive in the US, but practically speaking, the average American's healthcare is already paid for by their employer through insurance, so it doesn't much affect them as an expense. It's still absurdly expensive because of the gigantic mess of a regulatory system that governs American medicine, but that absurd expense only actually reaches Americans when they have to pay out of pocket for whatever reason and aren't friends with a non-Medicare using doctor.

American education actually is already paid for in taxes, so that wouldn't count towards disposable income unless they were paying for private school as well. It is also terrible in quality and has actually decreased literacy of Americans over the years.

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Everybody who has to go anywhere without making long detours? Or do you envision some sort intrastructural landscape where several roads, owned by different road companies, that all go to the same places, lie right next to one another? Because that would never happen.

Hardly. Most of the time, road owners would have little incentive to gouge, not in the least because after a certain point no one would bother driving on them. People might actually build another road (though it would probably take a different route), or they might leave town or find another method of transportation. Whatever the case, the road owner would end up losing all his money.

It's also worth noting that a lot of roads wouldn't necessarily even be for profit. Some would be to encourage movement to an area (IIRC this was the case in Brooklyn) or to keep commercial trucks and so on going without delay.

But you just said that America is not libertarian at all so the failings inherent in its systems can't be used against it (even for this 19th century paradise you keep going on about)!  It's like it's an example of a libertarian country only when you want it to be.

So what? Certain aspects are libertarian, certain are not, same as any other country. I doubt you have any "perfect" country to point to as an example of progressivism working completely.


Couldn't find any numbers on it, but I do know that, in Belgium, wages are automatically adjusted to preserve purchasing power. It's a pretty much unique system, and while it does work, it causes inflation to jump through the roof.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_average_wage

The "disposable income" list is a bit different and doesn't include Belgium, but at any rate going by this the average Belgian has about half the purchasing power of the average American.

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Monopolies are mean.

Nothing about roads makes them much more monopolistic than, say, electricity, gas, or telecom, all of which were extremely competitive before being effectively nationalized.

Mid-19th century is not modern by any stretch of the imagination.  I think I explained this to you before.  Not least because there was no mass automobile use.


Shifting the goalposts. Again, we don't have an example because the government started to take things over in the early 20th century.

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Nice original research I guess?  These examples are so vague I can't even google them.  Also not modern.

I haven't noticed you placing citations beside your claims, either. Besides that, "not modern" is meaningless in this context. We still use electricity, gas, and telecom last I checked, and most are used as examples of "natural monopolies".
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Give me a time period and country that was close to this "ideal" then.

Closest would probably be the Icelandic Commonwealth, which existed in the medieval ages.

Back to the main point, "it's never happened before" is not an argument. At varying points in history, neither did republics, paper currency, or "nations" (in the modern, post-1812 sense).


They were also relatively insignificant and small-scale affairs; turnpikes of the 1800s are hardly comparable to, say, the interstate highway system (which would almost certainly never existed without a national government). I've also heard it put best like this: During that period of time, the corporate form had a much different ethos, one oriented more on serving the community rather than generating profits. In other words, almost exactly the opposite of corporations (and markets as a whole) in the modern world. Incidentally, that is one of the main roles of government.

What, so the government taking over charitable/community focused activities crowded out the alternatives? Whowuddathunk?

This also isn't an argument. Libertarians don't want "great profitsssssss", they want voluntary exchange. Under present laws, you can't form a corporation that exists for the sake of assisting a community or what have you. Under libertarianism, what a corporation could be formed for would only be limited by what the people involved were willing to agree to.


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Steamers were actually in use a decent length of time before commercial railroads really came into their own, and were arguably a more important form of transportation up until around the 1830s. Incidentally, I don't see how government is to blame for inefficiencies and corruption caused by the absurdly large influence of the business magnates and trusts of the era. Do note that pretty much as soon as the government was out of the hands of the wealthy businessmen, it (in no small part thanks to Teddy Roosevelt) went about instituting progressive reforms and breaking up the monopolies that had allowed such an incredible degree of corruption in American business.

Government is only as good as the people controlling it; when the people controlling it are the same people abusing both it and the market for their own gain, it naturally follows that it isn't much good at all.

Steamers were noticeably less subsidized and controlled than railways, though, and weren't really part of the topic at hand, though.

The government is to blame because it was responsible for giving such magnates and trusts power in the first place. Rather blatantly, too.

Roosevelt actually didn't "destroy" the monopolies and trusts, he just changed the ways in which they are formed. Of those he "broke up", none were out and out private sector monopolies. Furthermore, he created the new method of forming "monopolies", which was to lobby the government to either impose heavy regulations on an industry (the method of huge companies that could absorb extra expenses) or to use antitrust against large companies (the method of smaller companies that weren't doing so well). Just look at the meat packing industry: the largest companies lobbied for "safety regulations", which Roosevelt promptly created. The small companies went out of business and the large ones just used the increased revenue from fallen competitors to cover increased costs.

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Saying something is so doesn't make it so. Trying to pretend that a single person of average wealth has comparable market strength to a single multimillionaire is absolutely absurd. The market is not monolithic simply because there is no single individual with the vast majority of the wealth in the system. What it is, however, is a plutocracy. When the vast majority of the wealth is concentrated in the hands of a small group of individuals, the market tends towards things which benefit one of those few individuals. Misinterpreting one of those market actions that coincidentally benefits some "normal" people as the market functioning properly is akin to claiming that there is a plague because someone in the city angered Zeus.

Once again, you are approaching things from the attitude that the entire world is composed of tiny, insular communities connected by nebulous agents of the free market who provide funding for worthy projects. Maybe you were right three hundred or four hundred years ago. Today? Not so much. You can clap your hands as much as you want, but that won't make Ayn Rand right, either rationally or ethically.

How do such individuals make their wealth, then? If they aren't robbing people in some way, then they make it through satisfying the needs and wants of others. They would hardly have a reason to create a rich kids club excluding everyone else.

Besides that, this argument can just as easily be turned around against the present system. After all, the exceptionally rich of today (Bildebergers) are actually LESS limited in their power, since they have large, centralized organizations called governments that they need only indirectly control to exert coercive influence, whereas the exceptionally rich of libertaland would have to create large centralized organizations from the ground up, would ALL need to be in on it, and would need to have a way to prevent smaller competitors from stealing their niche and replacing them.

Also, you're still strawmanning by putting Rand in the picture. Rand was an objectivist and completely believed in the existence of government. Try Rothbard instead.
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Social mobility is the load of crap that has been used to justify exploitation of the working class for as long as it has existed. I normally don't lean this far towards Marx, but geez. Do you know why poor, white sustenance farmers in the antebellum South supported slavery, despite not being able to afford slaves? Because the plantation owners instilled false hope that someday they would be able to buy a slave and live an easier life. The rich leading the poor on with promises that they, too can make it big is as old as the shift from noble/serf to business magnate/factory worker. Every generation you have one or two people who do genuinely make it big, usually through some latent talent. The vast majority of the wealthy people in the world were born to wealthy families. Most of the most prominent self-made million- and billionaires tend to be the ones who do the most charitable work.

Nirvana fallacy. Obviously the number of Andrew Carnegies is exceptionally few even in the best of circumstances. There aren't many people that are dirt poor who will become absurdly rich over the course of their lifetime.

However, you would find that a disproportionate number of early industrialists and entrepreneurs were not, in fact, landed aristocrats but people from the middle class. In Britain, the aristocracy was very much against industrialization because it devalued their land, moving the illiterate English peasants into the cities to become factory workers for a mixture of former merchants/burghers and former peasants themselves. In the US, the most powerful of the rich were generally not born exceptionally rich, they were born in the middle classes, as was the case of Vanderbilt and Rockefeller.

Meanwhile, the American poor began to move into the middle class as the standard of living improved drastically. It wasn't uncommon for an unskilled worker to work at the same company for his entire life, moving up positions until he ultimately was making enough to leave his family reasonably well off afterwards.

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In short, social mobility would be a worthy thing if it wasn't largely a load of crap invented to pacify the working class. The bottom line is that in any closed system (such as our world) there is a limited amount of wealth, a limited number of resources. The wider the disparity between the resource distribution, the fewer people who can improve their condition. It is criminal that some people are more wealthy than some nations and that they waste that wealth on utterly trivial things. Not legally criminal, but ethically and morally evil. Come back to me when every person in the world has a roof over their head and food in their stomach, then maybe we can talk about social mobility. Until then, every bit of Smithian and Randian propaganda only exists to preserve the wealth and power of those who already possess it.

There is no such thing as a limited amount of wealth. The economy is not a pie.

Yes, there is a fixed amount of resources on Earth (ignoring space for the moment). That doesn't mean it is impossible to use new resources for different things, to use current resources more efficiently, or to find new things to use resources for. A hunk of iron and a pile of wood is basically useless in their unmodified forms, but they can be used to make axes, saws, farming equipment, and plenty of other things as well. So long as these things have a price, everyone has a reason to want to use the most efficient method (cheapness vs quality) or make the best of what they have.

Through the price system, people then can tell what people want and what is currently being provided. Thus, if there is a shortage of, say, pants, then anyone who wants to make some money goes out and sets up a pants factory, or else gets together with other people to make a pants factory.

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It would, after all, be much better to cut out the private contractors altogether and do things properly. Government is a representation of every individual it governs, and as such has the welfare of each of those individuals as its first and most important goal. Any government acting in a way that is not in accordance with this is a flawed one. Things done by private individuals and companies are inherently flawed as they are driven by profit; government at least has the potential to be driven by the interests of its constituents. And for a final note, please don't start in on that BS about equating philanthropy to corporations rather than noblesse oblige, or worse yet trying to suggest it as a workable substitute for government.

tl;dr: Government is flawed, certainly, but has far more potential than private enterprise in terms of promoting the well-being of society as a whole and the individuals which compose it. As if that was a surprise.

Government is a representation of the people who control it, which is generally extremely powerful bankers, bureaucrats, and lobbyists. What "the people" want is irrelevant when those interests are threatened.

Even assuming it is a representation of the people, that ignores the fact that each person has his or her own desires and wants. Under the best of circumstances, the government can't satisfy the needs or wants of everyone, so it has to make sweeping, clumsy attempts to satisfy the needs and wants of certain people. There are certain wants it can't satisfy, and there are certain wants it can satisfy for some at the expense of others.

Above all else, though, government exists to propagate itself. Try seceding from the government or not paying your taxes and see what happens. It puts its own existence above that of the people it supposedly represents often, such as when it drafts them to go die in a war they have no part in, or arrests them for a "crime" that hurts no one.
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The person supporting regenerating health, when asked why you can see when shot in the eye justified it as 'you put on an eyepatch'. When asked what happens when you are then shot in the other eye, he said that you put an eyepatch on that eye. When asked how you'd be able to see, he said that your first eye would have healed by then.

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Leafsnail

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3348 on: September 30, 2012, 10:52:08 am »

Shifting the goalposts. Again, we don't have an example because the government started to take things over in the early 20th century.
And this just happened to coincide with the US becoming an actually prosperous nation.

So what? Certain aspects are libertarian, certain are not, same as any other country. I doubt you have any "perfect" country to point to as an example of progressivism working completely.
That's not the problem.  Whenever there's a good thing about the US you're claiming that's due to the magic of libertarianism, but whenever there's a bad thing you say it's down to that pesky government without basis, and that the US isn't really libertarian anyway.  I can point to Scandinavian countries as examples of progressive economic policies working well, and socialized healthcare systems all over the world as effective.  I can point to the economic crash of 1929 and the fact that government intervention was clearly required to save the economy.  I can point to Iceland and Ireland, who were great examples of libertarian policies working until their economies crashed and burnt dramatically even by world standards (Ireland for instance is likely to need a bailout from the UK, and Iceland is likely to need some kind of debt write off).
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scriver

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3349 on: September 30, 2012, 10:54:49 am »

On paper, perhaps, but not in practice. Most Europeans don't have to put aside huge amounts of money for healthcare and their children's education.

Healthcare is more expensive in the US, but practically speaking, the average American's healthcare is already paid for by their employer through insurance, so it doesn't much affect them as an expense. It's still absurdly expensive because of the gigantic mess of a regulatory system that governs American medicine, but that absurd expense only actually reaches Americans when they have to pay out of pocket for whatever reason and aren't friends with a non-Medicare using doctor.

American education actually is already paid for in taxes, so that wouldn't count towards disposable income unless they were paying for private school as well. It is also terrible in quality and has actually decreased literacy of Americans over the years.

Education includes College and University, you know. It's free as well over here.
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Truean

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3350 on: September 30, 2012, 11:41:58 am »

Shifting the goalposts. Again, we don't have an example because the government started to take things over in the early 20th century.
And this just happened to coincide with the US becoming an actually prosperous nation.

So what? Certain aspects are libertarian, certain are not, same as any other country. I doubt you have any "perfect" country to point to as an example of progressivism working completely.
That's not the problem.  Whenever there's a good thing about the US you're claiming that's due to the magic of libertarianism, but whenever there's a bad thing you say it's down to that pesky government without basis, and that the US isn't really libertarian anyway.  I can point to Scandinavian countries as examples of progressive economic policies working well, and socialized healthcare systems all over the world as effective.  I can point to the economic crash of 1929 and the fact that government intervention was clearly required to save the economy.  I can point to Iceland and Ireland, who were great examples of libertarian policies working until their economies crashed and burnt dramatically even by world standards (Ireland for instance is likely to need a bailout from the UK, and Iceland is likely to need some kind of debt write off).

Basically yes, libertarianism does try to take credit for all the good points of it and none of the bad ones. We don't mention that child labor wasn't ended by the free market but by government decree. There isn't poison in your water, because of the government. Somebody had to sue the companies to make sure we didn't have another Love Canal, because as we found out with asbestos and a host of other health concerns, companies will gleefully poison you for profit.

The notion that "everything would be just fine on the playground without the teachers butting in" works until the bullies figure it out and ruin the place, because they can.

Shifting the goalposts. Again, we don't have an example because the government started to take things over in the early 20th century.
And this just happened to coincide with the US becoming an actually prosperous nation.[/quote]

That's a heck of a coincidence isn't it? "Just happened to coincide...."

So even if those regulations didn't CAUSE America's prosperity (they certainly helped), they didn't hamper it too much.

Every time we propose a sensible regulation, the business being regulated cries that the sky will fall, and so far the sky is still right up there. 8 hour workday?!?! We'd have to put on 3 shifts instead of 2!!! It'll raise our labor costs and we'll never be able to afford it. Nothing bad happened. Not a damn thing, even though the business labor costs rose by 150% by adding on an entirely new shift. The notion that massive businesses are so fragile that they can't pay anything or it will have catastrophic consequences is not founded in the real world, but a desire to pay for nothing and keep everything.
« Last Edit: September 30, 2012, 11:47:35 am by Truean »
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GreatJustice

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3351 on: September 30, 2012, 02:39:04 pm »

And this just happened to coincide with the US becoming an actually prosperous nation.

[CITATION NEEDED]

What do you call prosperous? People weren't significantly better off between 1900 and 1913, or even 1900 to 1930.  People's lives were better because of the spread of new inventions, but not by gigantic leaps and bounds and certainly not compared to the jump from 1870 to 1900.

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That's not the problem.  Whenever there's a good thing about the US you're claiming that's due to the magic of libertarianism, but whenever there's a bad thing you say it's down to that pesky government without basis, and that the US isn't really libertarian anyway.

So what? The US isn't libertarian, and that's just that. It does have and has had examples of it being so in some ways, however.
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I can point to Scandinavian countries as examples of progressive economic policies working well, and socialized healthcare systems all over the world as effective.

Well, Norway has a gigantic oil reserve that it can use to fund whatever it needs (similar to Gaddafi-era Libya or Saudi Arabia), Sweden has significant levels of unemployment and very little actual money or growth, and Denmark is a country in which a third of the population receives less than nine years of education. Hardly examples of success.

Socialized healthcare systems are only effective when you compare them to other socialized healthcare systems, or pseudo-corporatist systems like in the US. When you compare more socialized (Canada, Sweden, UK) with less socialized (Singapore, Hong Kong, Switzerland) you generally find the less socialized ones do a bit better.
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I can point to the economic crash of 1929 and the fact that government intervention was clearly required to save the economy. 

You mean the one that lasted up until 1946 and featured strong government intervention the whole way through? The one which lasted far longer than the one in 1920, where the government did nothing but cut spending/taxes, and its equivalent in Britain, which ended within a few years? THAT economic crash?

Ha! Ha! Ha!
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I can point to Iceland and Ireland, who were great examples of libertarian policies working until their economies crashed and burnt dramatically even by world standards (Ireland for instance is likely to need a bailout from the UK, and Iceland is likely to need some kind of debt write off).

Ireland had a sizable welfare state, lots of government spending, and ran up a huge deficit, all things a libertarian country wouldn't do. Not to mention it bailed out its banks and strongly intervened once recession struck.

Iceland had a lot of similar problems, especially so far as taxes went, and their initial response was similar. They have handled things somewhat better since, though.

Education includes College and University, you know. It's free as well over here.

It isn't quite THAT much more expensive in the US, though, and you aren't getting educated over the entire course of your life. Plus, generally speaking, the more education you get, the higher of a paying job you will end up with. So even if you pay ~$300,000 in education costs for medical school, you'll make that up pretty quickly working as a doctor, especially one from the sort of school that would cost that much.

We don't mention that child labor wasn't ended by the free market but by government decree.

[CITATION NEEDED]

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There isn't poison in your water, because of the government.

[CITATION NEEDED]
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Somebody had to sue the companies to make sure we didn't have another Love Canal

Last I checked, Love Canal was the result of the (local) government completely ignoring repeated warnings of Hooker Chemical that what they were doing was retarded, and that they shouldn't go ahead. They even refused to sell for quite a while. But if you think it was somehow different, then please enlighten me.
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because as we found out with asbestos and a host of other health concerns, companies will gleefully poison you for profit.

[CITATION NEEDED]

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So even if those regulations didn't CAUSE America's prosperity (they certainly helped), they didn't hamper it too much.

[CITATION NEEDED]

Quote

Every time we propose a sensible regulation, the business being regulated cries that the sky will fall, and so far the sky is still right up there. 8 hour workday?!?! We'd have to put on 3 shifts instead of 2!!! It'll raise our labor costs and we'll never be able to afford it. Nothing bad happened. Not a damn thing, even though the business labor costs rose by 150% by adding on an entirely new shift. The notion that massive businesses are so fragile that they can't pay anything or it will have catastrophic consequences is not founded in the real world, but a desire to pay for nothing and keep everything.

Last I checked, US industry was moving to countries like Honduras and China in droves. Massive businesses aren't fragile because increased regulations generally hurt their smaller competitors more than them, and they get indirect bonuses from the government regularly.
« Last Edit: September 30, 2012, 02:47:06 pm by GreatJustice »
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The person supporting regenerating health, when asked why you can see when shot in the eye justified it as 'you put on an eyepatch'. When asked what happens when you are then shot in the other eye, he said that you put an eyepatch on that eye. When asked how you'd be able to see, he said that your first eye would have healed by then.

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Truean

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3352 on: September 30, 2012, 04:30:05 pm »

...?

Really? So you have little if any citation in your posts but I've gotta cite everything in mine? Honestly some of it is blatantly obvious. Especially:

"because as we found out with asbestos and a host of other health concerns, companies will gleefully poison you for profit. "

.... Asbestos? Really? You're going to challenge asbestos as anything other than corporations condemning people to a slow, painful death for money? The billions of dollars in lawsuits, the people who have died from asbestosis, the fact that it's one of the largest legal areas to this day and has been for decades....

My God, just the Johns Manville company alone did so much damage that it wasn't even funny. The otherwise healthy company then filed for bankruptcy protection to try to avoid the MASSIVE litigation it knew was coming its way.... The companies knew the asbestos was deadly; they knew it'd take 30 years to kill you.

If you're not going to even admit companies willfully harmed people for money with asbestos, then I don't even know what to say.
« Last Edit: September 30, 2012, 04:33:36 pm by Truean »
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The kinda human wreckage that you love

Current Spare Time Fiction Project: (C) 2010 http://www.bay12forums.com/smf/index.php?topic=63660.0
Disclaimer: I never take cases online for ethical reasons. If you require an attorney; you need to find one licensed to practice in your jurisdiction. Never take anything online as legal advice, because each case is different and one size does not fit all. Wants nothing at all to do with law.

Please don't quote me.

GreatJustice

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3353 on: September 30, 2012, 04:56:01 pm »

...?

Really? So you have little if any citation in your posts but I've gotta cite everything in mine? Honestly some of it is blatantly obvious. Especially:

"because as we found out with asbestos and a host of other health concerns, companies will gleefully poison you for profit. "

.... Asbestos? Really? You're going to challenge asbestos as anything other than corporations condemning people to a slow, painful death for money? The billions of dollars in lawsuits, the people who have died from asbestosis, the fact that it's one of the largest legal areas to this day and has been for decades....

My God, just the Johns Manville company alone did so much damage that it wasn't even funny. The otherwise healthy company then filed for bankruptcy protection to try to avoid the MASSIVE litigation it knew was coming its way.... The companies knew the asbestos was deadly; they knew it'd take 30 years to kill you.

If you're not going to even admit companies willfully harmed people for money with asbestos, then I don't even know what to say.

I can provide sources if you want, and (most of) the statements I've made can be double checked with google. Yours seem to involve a lot of "correlation = causation".

Also, http://mondediplo.com/2000/07/15asbestos

Those noble, selfless regulators have a tendency to actually make things worse, by moving responsibility from the individual and companies involved to the government, creating both a false sense of security and helping crooks get away with things even worse than what they would get away with otherwise (See: the US Government and lead in gasoline)
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The person supporting regenerating health, when asked why you can see when shot in the eye justified it as 'you put on an eyepatch'. When asked what happens when you are then shot in the other eye, he said that you put an eyepatch on that eye. When asked how you'd be able to see, he said that your first eye would have healed by then.

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lemon10

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3354 on: September 30, 2012, 05:53:57 pm »

...?

Really? So you have little if any citation in your posts but I've gotta cite everything in mine? Honestly some of it is blatantly obvious. Especially:

"because as we found out with asbestos and a host of other health concerns, companies will gleefully poison you for profit. "

.... Asbestos? Really? You're going to challenge asbestos as anything other than corporations condemning people to a slow, painful death for money? The billions of dollars in lawsuits, the people who have died from asbestosis, the fact that it's one of the largest legal areas to this day and has been for decades....

My God, just the Johns Manville company alone did so much damage that it wasn't even funny. The otherwise healthy company then filed for bankruptcy protection to try to avoid the MASSIVE litigation it knew was coming its way.... The companies knew the asbestos was deadly; they knew it'd take 30 years to kill you.

If you're not going to even admit companies willfully harmed people for money with asbestos, then I don't even know what to say.

I can provide sources if you want, and (most of) the statements I've made can be double checked with google. Yours seem to involve a lot of "correlation = causation".

Also, http://mondediplo.com/2000/07/15asbestos

Those noble, selfless regulators have a tendency to actually make things worse, by moving responsibility from the individual and companies involved to the government, creating both a false sense of security and helping crooks get away with things even worse than what they would get away with otherwise (See: the US Government and lead in gasoline)
Did you even read that article?
It was saying that companies were perfectly happy using abestos, and even went to the extent of hiring scientists and trying to make everyone think abestos was perfectly fine and wasn't very bad at all.
If anything that article just proves Truean's point that companies will do anything they can get away with, and in the absence of a strong government willing to regulate and enforce laws they can get away with pretty much anything.
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And with a mighty leap, the evil Conservative flies through the window, escaping our heroes once again!
Because the solution to not being able to control your dakka is MOAR DAKKA.

That's it. We've finally crossed over and become the nation of Da Orky Boyz.

MetalSlimeHunt

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Quote from: Thomas Paine
To argue with a man who has renounced the use and authority of reason, and whose philosophy consists in holding humanity in contempt, is like administering medicine to the dead, or endeavoring to convert an atheist by scripture.
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No Gods, No Masters.

FearfulJesuit

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3356 on: September 30, 2012, 07:33:53 pm »

Hurrah for California!
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@Footjob, you can microwave most grains I've tried pretty easily through the microwave, even if they aren't packaged for it.

Fenrir

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3357 on: September 30, 2012, 07:36:29 pm »

I did not even know that was legal.
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MetalSlimeHunt

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3358 on: September 30, 2012, 07:42:49 pm »

That is indeed legal. Or rather, legal in 49/50, now. Legally, US parental rights tend to operate under the assumption that if the law does not specifically prohibit it, it is allowed.
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Quote from: Thomas Paine
To argue with a man who has renounced the use and authority of reason, and whose philosophy consists in holding humanity in contempt, is like administering medicine to the dead, or endeavoring to convert an atheist by scripture.
Quote
No Gods, No Masters.

Fenrir

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Re: PoH's Calm and Cool Progressive Discussion Thread
« Reply #3359 on: September 30, 2012, 07:44:09 pm »

Well, my praise to California for taking the lead. Let us hope other states follow.
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