I don't believe Walmart is justly acquiring their wealth. They enjoy a protected status being a government construct / corporation. Some of their potential competition has not been allowed to exist since the costs of entry to a retail market have been artificially restricted.This is a good talk on Libertarianism
Specifically the section around 16:35. Earlier, Sandel gives the two main requirements based on Robert Nozick's justification of what makes income distribution just; 1. Justice in Acquisition (initial holdings) & 2. Justice in Transfer (free market)
The problem I have with the discrepancy in income is the justice of acquisition for corporations like Walmart or McDonalds. They're very clearly exploiting their employees labor, the fact that they utilize government welfare programs to survive is the evidence. So @ginwilly or @Rob Roy , according to Nozick's interpretation of libertarianism, why do you believe corporations like the ones in my example are justly acquiring their wealth even though they're exploiting their labor force?
Years ago before Wal-Mart was as big as it is now 60 minutes did a story on then.I don't believe Walmart is justly acquiring their wealth. They enjoy a protected status being a government construct / corporation. Some of their potential competition has not been allowed to exist since the costs of entry to a retail market have been artificially restricted.
They also benefit heavily from the implementation of a distribution system using roads which are forcibly subsidized by people that in many cases aren't allowed to compete with them.
What they pay the people that work their isn't my business or yours though, it should be a mutual agreement made between the two interested parties and not by forcible imposition of an arbitrary authority.
Years ago before Wal-Mart was as big as it is now 60 minutes did a story on then.
In it Wal-Mart was portrayed as good to it's employees.
That was a lie. They have been fucking over employees since the 70s
What difference would that make? You have no examples in all of history of your model working. And you are quite insaneWhy don't you refute what I said then?
You can even use your "little boy" words when the concepts become to complex for you to comprehend.
What difference would that make? You have no examples in all of history of your model working. And you are quite insane
This is the best you can do. Your model has been addressed many times. Your questions have been answered many times.If you could refute what I say, you would. There are at least two things preventing your refutation. One is you personally cannot mount a coherent and consistent argument. Two, the facts reside in my corner, not yours.
Also, I have better teeth than that picture you posted.
Don't forget to brush, that selfie you took tells me you need a better dental hygiene plan.This is the best you can do. Your model has been addressed many times. Your questions have been answered many times.
Addressing your idiocy would be redundant.
In your worldDon't forget to brush, that selfie you took tells me you need a better dental hygiene plan.
In your world
Who should build the roads?
So In other words. Wal-mart should build the roads to the customers? Or vice versa? Should the suppliers build the roads to Wal-mart or vice versa. If these roads are private then only authorized people can use them? They can charge to use these roads and deny people their use for any reason?The people that own them should, or they should make an agreed to contract with other people to build them.
In your world you've insisted that absent government force roads would not exist, where is your evidence of this?
Isn't it possible to fund things based on the idea that people who use them, actually pay for them? That occurs in a free market all the time, so why would roads be exempt from that?
Also, other modes of transportation have been forcibly denied by government bureaucracy and red tape.
It's entirely within technological possibility to have an effective means of travel that doesn't require roads as they presently exist as the main mode of personal transport.
yeah, i'm sure that would excite you, sicko.You can even use your "little boy" words
we already do that.The people that own them should, or they should make an agreed to contract with other people to build them.
No, WE, do not own the roads. Somebody lied to you and you lapped it up like a good little Prohibitionist. WE are forced to subsidize them and must have the correct "travel papers" to use them or possibly be killed for disobedience and failure to comply. I do not own the roads, you do not own the roads and no aggregate of common folk "owns" the roads. You are spouting platitudes, like a duck billed Platitudipuss. Your job is to pay for the roads and obey, slave.So In other words. Wal-mart should build the roads to the customers? Or vice versa? Should the suppliers build the roads to Wal-mart or vice versa. If these roads are private then only authorized people can use them? They can charge to use these roads and deny people their use for any reason?
Should everyone own a helicopter? You really are this bat shit insane.
BTW it's worth noting that WE own the roads
We are the Goverment
Your ability to extract an insult from the context is supreme. Score one for Poopy Pants!!!yeah, i'm sure that would excite you, sicko.
You use the term "contract" incorrectly. A uni-lateral contract is not in any real sense a contract between people engaging in fair exchange. Your affection for government boot leather has addled your perception of the true meanings of words, slave.we already do that.
there is a contract that every time you buy gas, you pay a tax on a percentage of that gas which goes towards building and maintaing the roads.
pedophile.
I dont think you have any comprehension what poverty means in America. It is an arbitrary number determined by the government.This is a good talk on Libertarianism
Specifically the section around 16:35. Earlier, Sandel gives the two main requirements based on Robert Nozick's justification of what makes income distribution just; 1. Justice in Acquisition (initial holdings) & 2. Justice in Transfer (free market)
The problem I have with the discrepancy in income is the justice of acquisition for corporations like Walmart or McDonalds. They're very clearly exploiting their employees labor, the fact that they utilize government welfare programs to survive is the evidence. So @ginwilly or @Rob Roy , according to Nozick's interpretation of libertarianism, why do you believe corporations like the ones in my example are justly acquiring their wealth even though they're exploiting their labor force?