I'm not sure what you mean when you say I've classified people in black and white. Could you be more specific as to which part of my (many lol) arguments you are referring to with this?
Giving this a second sober thought
bigjoint
, I'm actually not sure this is the case with you, so I'm willing to retract this statement. I was getting the feeling in reading through your arguments that you were thinking too much in terms of rich and poor while ignoring the shades of gray. I assume we both understand there are shades of gray. I also think we both recognize a widening gap between the rich and the poor. However, you seem to attribute the creation of wealth to government controlled capitalism, and the increasing poverty levels to the unrestrained free market's tendency towards greed.
We are looking at the same crime scene and reasoning to different conclusions.
Absolutely, YES. Capitalism is not a new concept. This system of trade and property rights has been in place longer than humans have been recording history. In each and every example, capitalism has eventually created a skewed distribution of wealth and an elite class of people with financial stranglehold on the masses. It is not until multiple generations of increasingly worse abuse that violent revolution takes place- overthrowing the wealthy aristocrats- and thereby starting over the cycle of capitalism.
You seem to be describing the rise of government powers and eventual collapse or overthrow of every government in human history. The free market is simply the free exchange of money for goods and services. When left to its natural process, the outcome is always the creation of wealth. Anytime wealth is created, that territory's government has swollen to capture a portion of that wealth. Its justification for this confiscation (I'm not free style rapping, I promise) is always the "need" to provide essential services to the public and to regulate the free market.
The problem is, once the government starts regulating, irregularities and barriers are added to the mix which creates market failures. Statists (those that consider government essential) look at these failures and blame the market instead of looking at the first cause. The conclusion they come to is that more regulation is needed. This is the catch 22 that eventually leads to socialism or a bloated government's collapse.
Think "pharoh's and slaves"... "serfs and lords"... "Nobles and servants". The significant difference between virtually every capitalism preceding ours and the one we have now, is a mechanism that gives power to every citizen regardless of wealth or class. I think the founding fathers put this in place intending to provide a tool for the masses to ensure fair play in this game we call life.
The problem in every historical example is force and violence, not the free market. The government is FAR more prone to violence than the free market, which is extremely accountable to the consumer when there are no forced market barriers. Governments are FAR less accountable to its "customers" than Pizza Hut or Walmart. It has taken us 60 plus years to even
begin reversing the completely destructive marijuana prohibition laws.
What our founding fathers did was attempt to take the government and religion out of the free exchange of goods and services. The result was a massive explosion in technology and wealth, and a spike in the average quality of life. Unfortunately, they didn't cut the cancer out completely and it grew to become the largest and most powerful empire the world has ever seen.
Those among us who have amassed great finances will always try to increase the power those finances carry by reducing the power of those in a lower class. They will use their money to sway your vote. They will subvert your power as a consumer. They will bribe YOUR public official to oppose your interest in support of theirs.
Besides adding the caveat that not
all wealthy people attempt to do this, I
completely agree.
Central planning and prohibition were government functions. They subsidized the ghettos and created the environment for violence, and thus the cycle of poverty.
Please elaborate...
Central planning begins when one group of people think they understand what is best for another group of people that they know virtually nothing about. Poverty was in relative decline until the creation of the welfare state. Before the ghetto, while maybe not the prettiest place to live, African American's were living very well in their communities (compared to now). They all knew each other, they attended the same schools and churches, shopped in the same corner stores, and chatted in the barbershop. Was there occasional violence? Absolutely. Was their standard of living lower? Sure, but who are we to assume that everyone wants what we want?
When the government tore the neighborhoods apart and built the projects with the goal of creating affordable subsidized housing in a clean community, and the creation of public parks from confiscated land, they had no idea they were creating the ghetto. These people were literally stacked one on top of each other in government housing complexes.
The subsidized nature of housing cuts out free market competition for lower income people creating a government monopoly on the housing of the lower income class. Whenever a monopoly exists, the consumer gets screwed (as we'd both agree). Properties begin to deteriorate and violence increases. Prohibition of drugs has done nothing to slow the use of drugs, it only relegates the sale to the black market which creates gang violence. As gang violence increases in a community, the police become outnumbered and retreat which fuels more violence. These beautiful public parks that were created on the backs of confiscated land become drug centers and crime scenes.
This was certainly not the government's goal, but I believe the road to hell is built on good intentions.
So has private industry. If you are going to attack govt in favor of industry, you cannot use atrocities commited by both parties throughout all of history as an argument.
Tyranny- I'm your boss, I say do this. DO IT! (with no room for debate)
Genocide- Slave trade
Wars- War for oil companies
Gangs- Please explain how govt is responsible for gangs... how does this relate to the economy?
Bondage- Again... SLAVE TRADE
Tyranny - Your relationship with your boss is only tyrannical when the relationship is not voluntary. In a free market, every relationship is voluntary.
Genocide - The slave trade was a symptom of the evils of the culture at the time. The free market did not create slavery, it was only
used to propogate slavery. The government actually sustained slavery at the time. In a culture where the people value the non-aggression principle, there will be no slaves. If however, mostly everyone believes that black people are inferior, nothing will stop the slave trade including governments or free markets.
Wars - I need you to elaborate on this. Please tell me how the free market has waged a war without the involvement of the government in any way.
Gangs - I covered this above.
Bondage - Each year in the US, government agents put 850,000 americans in chains because they were caught with the wrong kind of green vegetation in their pockets. There has been an estimation of thousands of silent deaths as a result of delayed FDA drug approvals. An estimation of over 100,000 civilians have been killed as a result of US action in Iraq. 650,000 Americans have been killed in battle since the first revolution. This is the same government you are defending.
Actually, interstates, the internet, and portable communication devices would not be possible without government.
The computer was invented by the free market. Even if the internet was created first by a government entity (because they had the greatest demand for it at the time), you cannot tell me that the inter-operability and connectivity/networking with other computers was a novel idea that would have not come about in the absence of government!
Same with roads... The free market produced cars. Just because the government spearheaded the effort to universalize our highway system, does not mean that in the absence of government, people would not have figured out that a system of highways is more efficient than a series of local roads.
You claim competition is a sufficient regulater on its own...
...Then you agree that subversion of that regulator is taking place in industry today (or at least fail to refute my example of it)...
Sorry, what am I not addressing?
Can you at least acknowlege that govt regulation is necessary, and GOOD for everyone if properly applied?
Government is a collection of people that claim the moral right to forcefully rule over other people in a given territory. I cannot advocate for a system I find foundationally unethical and practically unsustainable. Government is not good or preferable in
any circumstance. Govern
ance is fine (and preferable), but only governance based in voluntarism.
Please provide specific examples where govt regulation has a negative impact on society.
Pick an industry at random, and I'll tell you where regulation has negatively affected society. Where there is positive regulation, it could be done more efficiently in the free market.
Once again, my stance is... if the regulation is bad, lets talk about the regulation. Avoiding the issue tells me that person is not being honest about their motives.
Cancer is always bad, even relatively benign cells. The answer is not to address what cancer cells we should improve, but to address how the cancer will be removed completely.
You dont see it a little demanding that they wont do business (at any cost) with me unless I sign a commitment to do more business with them?
No, its demanding for you to require them to sell you things without first signing the extention contract if that is how they choose to run their business. If you are not happy with their service, you should look for another business that also meets your demands. If there isn't sufficient competition, it can only mean one of two things...
1. The government has unwittingly (or wittingly) created a market oligarchy by raising artificial barriers for a competitor to enter the market.
2. There isn't enough demand for the product or service (this is extremely rare). Typically, if one company is profitable with a product, another company could benefit from taking marketshare.
You should
never be able to
force other people to sell you things. That would make you a bully in my book, and actually it would make you a very cowardly bully if you have to get other people to do the enforcing.
I think the insurance industry is LEAST vulnerable to an increase in overhead. Insurance industry is a sham... they produce nothing and have little to no costs.
I agree the insurance companies that exist right now operate and profit very unethically in many situations. This would not happen if other insurance players were allowed to compete, or if the artificial government barriers were stripped away allowing others to profit on the industry.
Insurance is a very real, legitimate business and has a real place in society. Today's insurance construct is wildly out of control though.
The irony is that if a true catastrophe happened, all insured people would bankrupt the insurance company and they would never be able to fulfill the promises they have been basing ALL their income on.
This is just my opinion, but if a catastrophe so large came along that it bankrupted all the insurance companies, I think our coverage would be the last thing we would be concerned about.