apophenia wrote:Meh. So bloody typical. People don't like the message, so they take aim at the messenger. And I don't know what Seth's deal is — he seems to be talking out of a six-sided mouth: economies don't have to be fair, but they DO have to be fair to the Japanese who don't want to spend and respect their wishes — Seth, do you even realize the internally inconsistent nature of your argument?
There's nothing inconsistent in my statement. Economies are not sentient creatures. They don't plan, they don't execute plans, they simply react to market forces and consumer demand. Governments, on the other hand, constantly try to meddle with economies, usually to the detriment of the people whose transactions make up the economy.
I think probably the most perceptive comment on Krugman was the following:
dave_dave wrote:I believe the faulty assumption in the original example is that each coupon has to be for a fixed time frame, regardless of how low the scrip supply dips. A truly perceptive individual in the coop would see this and say, "hey, for one scrip ill babysit for two nights as opposed to one, because i really need those coupons". Another person may see this and say, "iill give you an even better deal!". At this point the individuals are free to bargain over the babysitting time each coupon is worth. Each would approach the "hoarder" and offer their babysitting deal, now the hoarder can get more worth out of each scrip than he put in, making them more likely to spend scrip again.
Eventually, through bargaining, the amount of babysitting time per scrip should settle on a value that may be different than the original, say two nights, rather than one, but this would have the benefit of keeping scrip in circulation with out having to issue more of it.
Correct. Or, someone might say, "I'll fix dinner for you and your wife at your home in return for a unit of babysitting next Friday night." That's how free markets react to shortages and surpluses. They come up with new products and services to fulfill new needs and demands while the old ones fade away. Eventually, the elderly couple who has no children stores up babysitting credits by loaning out their driver and limo to couples wanting to go to dinner in luxury in order to trade them to the younger folks for toilet cleaning and vacuuming services.
Which of course is the eternal debate between Keynesians and Hayekians, market regulation versus free markets.
Indeed. And Hayekians always win out, because Keynesian economics never work in the long term.
What I think gets over-looked in the rather soft sciences of economics and political theory is that most arguments center around a pair of conflicting but mutually necessary values. Those are the values of fairness (the bulk of capitalistic rhetoric) and the value of charity (socialism).
Wrong. Socialism is not a charitable value because socialism doesn't say "from each according to their altruistic and charitable instincts, to each according to their polite requests for voluntary assistance" (that's Libertarianism), it says "from each according to their ability, to each according to their need," with "ability" and "need" both being defined by government, which is, as everyone knows, nothing but pure force. Therefore, Socialism is actually not the "value of charity," it's the value of slavery to the collective, which is not, as you try to suggest, a "mutually necessary value."
The conservative makes the mistake in believing that if we can arrive at the proper formula which takes fairness into account in the proper way, then charity need not be attended to.
Absolutely untrue. Nothing in conservatism suggests that charity is not a proper component part of society. You are improperly assuming that socialism is "charity" when in fact, as I've explained, it's nothing at all like charity, it's slavery and naked government force.
This is false. This is false because, as a species, our evolutionary success depended on a synthesis between these competing values. They are both necessary — at a genetic level — for us to flourish and prosper as a species.
Your argument has failed on your first false premise: that conservatism does not value charity as a necessary component of a functioning society. This is completely untrue of both conservatism and Libertarianism, both of which place very high value on voluntary associations, voluntary actions, and altruistic impulses. More so, in fact, than Socialism, which is about "enforced charity" which is not charity at all, but is nothing less or more than slavery to the needs and desires of the collective, as Marx himself said in his famous quote, "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need."
Any politic which neglects one for the other, or tries to account for one with the other, will fail.
Which is why Socialism ALWAYS fails.
And with it, perhaps the entire species. Many pie-eyed liberals expect science and human goodness to prevail in our war against impending climate catastrophe. I think they are naively deluded. We face a potential extinction event of the first order, which will probably put an end to the dominance of the human species, to be replaced by something else. Sacrificing one or the other value, for petty political purposes, pushes us, as a species, that much closer to extinction. We are no longer fighting for "more take home pay" or "a lower tax rate". We are fighting for the survival of the species. And both sides are on the wrong side.
Meh. A little global warming ain't going to be that much of a problem, if we'd get off our asses and start trying to adapt to it rather than trying to prevent something that's going to happen no matter what we do in a panic today. The earth has been much hotter in the past, and it's been much colder. Of the two, I prefer tropical vegetation at the North Pole (which is how it used to be, based on recovery of fossils from the seabed) to mile-thick ice sheets covering everything north of Latitude 30 degrees North. So we won't have any ski slopes. So what? Big deal. Humans can adapt quite nicely to a warmer climate because we already have. As for polar bears, well, they evolved from non-polar bears, so they can adapt or die just like millions of species before them have done, and millions of species after them will do.
Adapt or die. Me, I'm going to stock up on sunscreen and little pink umbrellas for my Mohitos and wait to dabble my toes in the surf about five miles inland from where the surf is right now. If you don't want to get your feet wet, I suggest you move in and up a bit. Do it now, while there's still time...after all, you've only got about 100 years before the sea level rises, so don't dilly-dally and shilly-shally about.
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