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Hobbit
03-23-2007, 02:52 PM
Ok, so loosecannon has been telling me in the lumber thread about how evil capitalism is and how he (she?) can prove that capitalism is a deeply flawed system that does nothing but harm, so I'm calling him out. I don't want a large string of opinion or anecdotes, either. I want links. I want reputable sources. I want people with econ degrees. I'd also like you to show me one non-capitalistic society that has a better standard of living for the average poor person than the United States of America.

I'll start off:

Capitalism is an economic principle. Economics is the study of how limited resources are used to satisfy unlimited wants. The two main components of how to do this are production and consumption, also known as supply and demand. The ultimate goal of any economic system is to change supply and demand to a level where all production is consumed, with none left wanting. To this end, there are two basic systems.

Socialism: Socialism is based on the power of the state. Under socialism, production and consumption are both controlled by force of law. Individuals must produce certain resources at a certain level to avoid penalization by law. Once the resources are produced, the state determines their distribution based on percieved need. Consumption, in this way, is also controlled by force of law. To consume more than what is assigned by the state also bring penalization under the law.

Capitalism: Capitalism is based on the powr of the individual. Under capitalism, production and consumption are both controlled by individuals. Each individual produces whatever he/she wants to, then barters that production with others for needed commodities (money is just a very simple barter system that introduces a universal trade medium). Production is increased because greater productions means that the producers will have more goods to barter, and thus, more commodities once barter is complete. Consumption is curtailed by the fact that something must be given up to gain access to those resources one wishes to consume.

Pros and Cons (these can be found in most economic textbooks. I will provide links to any pro or con contested by anyone).

Socialism pros:
100% employment: With everyone assigned a job by the state, no person is unemployed.
Few homeless: With everyone granted resources by the state based on need, anybody without food or shelter is without purely by choice, unless the state has expelled that person from the system.

Socialism cons:
Increased government control: Not all may consider this a con, but socialism grants control of almost everything in the country to the state, putting all citizens at the ultimate mercy of what is typically a bureaucratic monolith.
Decrease in quality: Knowing that their allotment of resources will remain constant, only the morally righteous will even attempt to create quality work.
Constant shortages: With no immediate incentive to produce surplus and no penalty for drawing your full allotment of resources, whether you need it or not, socialism causes mass shortages as seen in the Soviet economic system and in states with socialized health care.
Constantly low living conditions: In socialist societies, all individuals not priviledged by the state live in modest conditions, and have no way to better their station other than to endear themselves to those in power in the government.

Capitalism pros:
Individual power: With both production and consumption being controlled by individuals, a great deal of power is given to the individual, rather than the state.
Increase in quality and innovation: Since capitalistic producers must convince others to consume their products, capitalistic producers must constantly improve their products to keep up with their competitors or their businesses will lose money to those who have better ideas.
Self-Imposed triage: Since evey acquisition of resources requires the expenditure of other resources, consumers in a capitalistic society will rarely take more of something than they are capable of using. High prices during shortages means only those who need the resource bad enough to pay the higher price will get them.
Constant opportunity for improvement: Those who increase their production or the value of their production may constantly raise their standard of living. No person living in poverty is doomed by the state to stay there.

Capitalism cons:
Slipping through cracks: With individual production required to gain resources, individuals who do not produce, are only granted resources by the kindness of strangers. An unfortunate few end up homeless and starving, though in a capitalistic society, this is almost exclusively due to the decisions of those people. Only the presense of voluntary charity can alleviate this and maintain capitalism.
When competition goes too far: Some companies will resort to illegal means to increase production. Only through intervention of the state or escalation by other companies can curtail this.

Given those, I would prefer capitalism. If there's another system that is vastly different from these two, feel free to chime in.

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 04:03 PM
Ok, so loosecannon has been telling me in the lumber thread about how evil capitalism is and how he (she?) can prove that capitalism is a deeply flawed system that does nothing but harm, so I'm calling him out.

begining with the begining I didn't say Capitalism was evil. I said Capitalism was designed by banking and the burgoise to reduce common wages to the lowest possible level and to allow the elite to avoid working while they exist by virtue of their capital working for them.

Do you agree or disagree with any of that?

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

Capitalism generally refers to an economic system in which the means of production are mostly privately[1] owned and operated for profit, and in which distribution, production and pricing of goods and services are determined in a largely free market. It is usually considered to involve the right of individuals and groups of individuals acting as "legal persons" or corporations to trade capital goods, labor and money (see finance and credit).

Theories of capitalism first developed in the context of the Industrial Revolution, and, following Karl Marx, were generally used to criticize the concept.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labor_power#Labour_power_as_commodity

Under capitalism, according to Marx, labour-power becomes a commodity – it is sold and bought on the market. A worker tries to sell his or her labour-power to an employer, in exchange for a wage or salary. If successful (the only alternative being unemployment), this exchange involves submitting to the authority of the capitalist for a specific period of time.

During that time, the worker does actual labour, producing goods and services. The capitalist can then sell these and realize a profit – what Marx called surplus value – since the wages paid to the workers are lower than the value of the goods or services they produce for the capitalist.

Karl Marx is the most influential economist of all time. Which qualifies his ideas as definitive in describing econ on a basic level.

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

Wage slavery is a term used to refer to a condition in which a person is legally (de jure) voluntarily employed but practically (de facto) a slave. It is used to express disapproval of a condition where a person feels compelled to work in return for payment of a wage. In colloquial terms, this may refer to people that make a cult of work (the extreme case is death from overwork, known also as karoshi), or those who require one to work to be socially acceptable. In terms used by critics of capitalism, wage slavery is the condition where a person must sell his or her labor power, submitting to the authority of an employer merely to subsist.

Wage Slavery can be described as a lack of rights. The only rights you get are the rights you gain on the labor market. If your children cannot make enough money to survive, they starve. Your choices consist of the workhouse prison, or the labor market. The rich receive protection from the government in the form of corporate welfare subsidizing them while the poor and working people have to be subjected to market discipline.

Wage slavery as a concept is a criticism of capitalism, defined as a condition when a capitalist minority of the population controls all of the necessary non-human components of production (capital and land) that other people (workers) use to produce goods. This sort of criticism is generally associated with socialist criticisms of capitalism, but has also been expressed by some proponents of liberalism, like Henry George ([1]), Silvio Gesell and Thomas Paine

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

the most definitive scholarly dissertation of capitalism ever written

The central motor force of capitalism, according to Marx, was in the exploitation and alienation of labour.

Employers were entitled to appropriate the new output value because of their ownership of the productive capital assets. By producing output as capital for the employers, the workers constantly reproduced the condition of capitalism by their labour.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marx%27s_theory_of_alienation

Marx's theory of alienation (Entfremdung in German), as expressed in the writings of young Karl Marx, refers to the separation of things that naturally belong together, or to antagonism between things that are properly in harmony. In the concept's most important use, it refers to the alienation of people from aspects of their "human nature" (Gattungswesen, usually translated as 'species-essence' or 'species-being'). Marx believes that alienation is a systematic result of capitalism

I wasn't able to find a reference to the subsistence level conditions prefered in a capitalist state, but I will given time.....

MtnBiker
03-23-2007, 04:18 PM
A worker tries to sell his or her labour-power to an employer, in exchange for a wage or salary. If successful (the only alternative being unemployment)



Why is unemployment the only altrenative?

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 04:26 PM
btw, I reject the entire premise your source presents for a number of reasons:

>there is no purely capitalistic system in existence

>socialism exists in part in almost all modern nations, usually to a large degree

>capitalism by definition is free from monopolies

>Most world economies are credit based economies which is a violation of the basic terms of capitalism

>the basic definitions of socialism and capitalism are not as stated in the description you provided

>there are infinite possible systems of econ, society and government that are possible, not just the two presented, in fact at least a hundred combinations of capitalist, credit based, corporatist, socialist states exist today ranging from true democracies to communist states.

>capitalism in any form is only one element of the society in which it exists.

>the defining characteristics of capitalism are the privatized means of production, the commodification of labor, profits claimed by exploiting the value of labor relative to wages in combination with a "monopoly" on the means of production. But inherently free from monopolies of industries disrupting the "free market" aspects of the economy. Additionally basic to capitalism is the inherent definition of two polarized classes; labor class and capital class.

>labor organizing, tarrifs, regulations, monopolies, cartels, nepotism, corporatism, bribery, corruption, organized crime, government assistance and interference, empiricism, nationalism, prejudice, racism all conspire to water down capitalism into other forms that defy any categorizations.

*********
Any discussion of capitalism's merits must therefore be conducted by addressing only the components that are definitive of and unique to capitalism itself.

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 04:30 PM
Why is unemployment the only altrenative?


The only alternative to employment?

Because by definition there are two classes, labor and capital.

Labor can only exist as employed or unemployed.

Self employed are generally included in the capitalist class.

(in reality there are a few more classes that Marx defined such as the lumpen proletarians who include criminals street people, gypsies, musicians and poets, but they exist outside of the capitalist equation. There is at least one other class of merchants and folks whose stations in life are intermediary between burgoise capitalists and proletariat labor but I forget what they were called)

MtnBiker
03-23-2007, 04:35 PM
So an alternative to employment and unemployment is to be an entrepreneur or capitalist?

Is being self employeed a realistic oppurtunity in the US?

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 04:50 PM
So an alternative to employment and unemployment is to be an entrepreneur or capitalist?

Is being self employeed a realistic oppurtunity in the US?

yes for most people.

These are not the only options. These are the options defined within a capitalist system. New options can be invented, like banking. Banking doesn't exist inside the capitalist paradigm. But bankers succesfully invented a system that completely undermined capitalism.

Corporations invented non capitalistic alternatives as well, like monopolies.

There are no limits, you could invent a coop wherein the workers own the means of production (land equipment, intellectual property etc)

Since capitalism is not actually embedded in law there is potential for an unlimited number of posibilities.

Hobbit
03-23-2007, 06:03 PM
begining with the begining I didn't say Capitalism was evil. I said Capitalism was designed by banking and the burgoise to reduce common wages to the lowest possible level and to allow the elite to avoid working while they exist by virtue of their capital working for them.

Do you agree or disagree with any of that?

I disagree with all of that. You may not have said "Capitalism is evil," but the following statement pretty much says that.

Capitalism wasn't designed by 'banking and the burgoise,' it is the natural state of human interaction. You have something I want. I have something you want. We trade. That's capitalism. And while capitalism does drive down wages in many cases, it drives down the price of everything. Thus is the nature of competition.


Capitalism generally refers to an economic system in which the means of production are mostly privately[1] owned and operated for profit, and in which distribution, production and pricing of goods and services are determined in a largely free market. It is usually considered to involve the right of individuals and groups of individuals acting as "legal persons" or corporations to trade capital goods, labor and money (see finance and credit).

Pretty much what I said, paraphased into my own words.


Under capitalism, according to Marx, labour-power becomes a commodity – it is sold and bought on the market. A worker tries to sell his or her labour-power to an employer, in exchange for a wage or salary. If successful (the only alternative being unemployment), this exchange involves submitting to the authority of the capitalist for a specific period of time.

During that time, the worker does actual labour, producing goods and services. The capitalist can then sell these and realize a profit – what Marx called surplus value – since the wages paid to the workers are lower than the value of the goods or services they produce for the capitalist.

Labor is as commodity, bought and sold on the free market. Different types of labor have different values, and it is not wrong to turn that labor into a profit. Companies that turn labor into profit have invested millions, if not billions of dollars in equipment that the individual could not acquire himself. If that was not to be turned into a profit, it would either a) never happen, leaving people with no jobs and no goods or b) it would be controlled by the state, which is horrendously inefficient. To buy low and sell high is the nature of the entepreneurial spirit and is what drives the economy onward. The buying of labor and the selling of its fruits is a good thing.


Wage slavery is a term used to refer to a condition in which a person is legally (de jure) voluntarily employed but practically (de facto) a slave. It is used to express disapproval of a condition where a person feels compelled to work in return for payment of a wage. In colloquial terms, this may refer to people that make a cult of work (the extreme case is death from overwork, known also as karoshi), or those who require one to work to be socially acceptable. In terms used by critics of capitalism, wage slavery is the condition where a person must sell his or her labor power, submitting to the authority of an employer merely to subsist.

Wage Slavery can be described as a lack of rights. The only rights you get are the rights you gain on the labor market. If your children cannot make enough money to survive, they starve. Your choices consist of the workhouse prison, or the labor market. The rich receive protection from the government in the form of corporate welfare subsidizing them while the poor and working people have to be subjected to market discipline.

Wage slavery as a concept is a criticism of capitalism, defined as a condition when a capitalist minority of the population controls all of the necessary non-human components of production (capital and land) that other people (workers) use to produce goods. This sort of criticism is generally associated with socialist criticisms of capitalism, but has also been expressed by some proponents of liberalism, like Henry George ([1]), Silvio Gesell and Thomas Paine

Wage slavery is a myth. Nobody is forcing you to work for anyone. You can always pack up your labor and go work for someone else or start your own business. Only in communistic societies, where you are assigned a job, is there wage slavery. I'd also like to know what kind of government welfare you think protects the rich from the forces of the economy. It seems the opposite here in America.

I also reject the use of the word 'exploitation' in the context given. If a company that pays its workers at a rate agreed upon by both parties in exchange for their labor, then uses that labor to produce goods and services which may be sold for a profit is exploitation, then picking an apple to eat it is exploitation of the environment and using a screwdriver to fix some shelves is exploitation of tools.

The crux of Marx's idiotic argument, and that of any modern socialist, is that those who have, have because they are lucky, and in an effort to keep what they have, they ensure that people who don't have are always poor and destitute. The idea that the rich don't work for their money (other than celebrities and heirs) is a ludicrous one. The truth is that the rich are rich because they were willing to do what it took to become rich and the poor are poor because they were not. Anybody who applies himself to any field can make a six figure salary, and anybody with financial responsibility can retire a millionare.

There's also this bit of damning evidence:

http://www.freetheworld.com/

Take a look at the economic freedom report. You'll notice that the most capitalistic societies in the world also have the highest minimum standard of living and the fewest poor. Speaking of which, did you know that the standard of living for the average American living below the poverty line is higher than the standard of living for the average European? If socialism is supposed to raise the standard of living for the poor, then how come the average poor person in America has multiple TVs, a computer, internet access, and a multi-bedroom dwelling while the average European, in a much more socialist country, does not?

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 06:45 PM
You have something I want. I have something you want. We trade. That's capitalism.

No it actually isn't that is trade, or barter. Capitalism is a much more complex idea based on CAPITAL being invested in the means of production, employing LABOR to add value and then operating at a PROFIT.

All three of those elements are absent in your simplistic trade.

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 06:50 PM
Labor is as commodity, bought and sold on the free market. Different types of labor have different values, and it is not wrong to turn that labor into a profit. Companies that turn labor into profit have invested millions, if not billions of dollars in equipment that the individual could not acquire himself. If that was not to be turned into a profit, it would either a) never happen, leaving people with no jobs and no goods or b) it would be controlled by the state, which is horrendously inefficient. To buy low and sell high is the nature of the entepreneurial spirit and is what drives the economy onward. The buying of labor and the selling of its fruits is a good thing.

It is also entirely not dependent on the buying of labor or of a capitalist class.

For example the workers themselves or a coop of locals could own the means of production and do all of the same without an elite class of capitalists who do not work.

Capitalism is not the process of running a business, it is the top down division of classes in which LABOR is purchased and an elite CAPITAL class privately owns the means of production then exploits the labor of wage earners for it's own profit

MtnBiker
03-23-2007, 07:03 PM
Capitalism is not the process of running a business, it is the top down division of classes in which LABOR is purchased and an elite CAPITAL class privately owns the means of production then exploits the labor of wage earners for it's own profit.

Do not labours mutually benifit from wages of employment? If not could they not seek out employment that is beneificial to them or as was pointed out earlier become an entrepreneur to their own benifit.

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 07:05 PM
and anybody with financial responsibility can retire a millionare.

False, not enough money on earth for that to happen, in fact the net worth of the earth divided by the number of persons is more like $10,000 each. So in a perfect world everyone could retire with about $30,000 saved.

Wage slavery is a myth. Nobody is forcing you to work for anyone.

That doesn't make wage slavery a myth. Everybody can not say no to employment because the means of production, including food and water are owned by a few.

Free markets are a myth. Capitalism is a myth.




I'd also like to know what kind of government welfare you think protects the rich from the forces of the economy.

OK, how bout bankruptcy protection and government bailouts? Subsidied, tavx incentives? Do those work? How about Government contracts? Privatization of government assets?


I also reject the use of the word 'exploitation' in the context given. If a company that pays its workers at a rate agreed upon by both parties in exchange for their labor, then uses that labor to produce goods and services which may be sold for a profit is exploitation, then picking an apple to eat it is exploitation of the environment

Yes it is if you do not pay the full costs of producing that apple. If you avoid the costs of pesticide pollution, benefits not paid to illegal field workers, and retirements for the few employees who are on the tax rolls then you are not paying the full price of the labor or the real costs of that apple. You are defering those cosats onto somebody else, while you keep the profits. That is the capitalist exploitive tactic in a nutshell. Reap without sowing, receive full benefits while avoiding paying the full price. The diffeence is your profit.





The crux of Marx's idiotic argument, and that of any modern socialist

No Marx wasn't a socialist and you have absolutely no idea what Marx's thesis is. And you sure as hell don't know what the crux is.

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 07:08 PM
Do not labours mutually benifit from wages of employment? If not could they not seek out employment that is beneificial to them or as was pointed out earlier become an entrepreneur to their own benifit.

If one person sets themselves up to receive the profits, surplus value of 1000 laborers...

that is not the same thing as 1000 people setting themselves up to divide the profits, surplus value from the exact same business activity

Those two explain the difference from a random business and capitalist enterprise.

Capitalism is business organized explicitly so that it creates a small wealthy class and a large poverty class. Or middle class under the best circumstances.

But the exact same business could exist without capitalism.

Hobbit
03-23-2007, 09:55 PM
We can dance around each other all year, but the point is this. Your entire argument is based on the gross fallacy that business owners do not work for their money. It was a fallacy when Marx said it. It's a fallacy now. It will be a fallacy for the rest of time. Business owners work hard for their money. They've earned it, and it's not the government's place to say they didn't and give it to some guy who didn't even have the gumption to get promoted past fry cook at age 55.

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 10:06 PM
We can dance around each other all year, but the point is this. Your entire argument is based on the gross fallacy that business owners do not work for their money. It was a fallacy when Marx said it. It's a fallacy now. It will be a fallacy for the rest of time. Business owners work hard for their money. They've earned it, and it's not the government's place to say they didn't and give it to some guy who didn't even have the gumption to get promoted past fry cook at age 55.


No my premise is not at all based on "the gross fallacy that business owners do not work for their money ".

My premise is this: The very definition of capitalism is not a form of business like trading shells for horns or building autos. That is NOT necessarily capitalism.

Capitalism by definition requires a CAPITALIZED class to exploit a LABOR Class and by virtue of that exploitation derive a profit.

Capitalism is a two class economic paradigm. It is designed to fortify the belief that an elite class and a lower, poorer class are the optimum social arrangement.

Capitalism began right at the point when democracies were sprouting and the "rights of kings" were being rejected. The elite royal class invented a new paradigm that espoused the same BS that had been used to justify the rights of kings.

They declared that capitalism, exploitation and a two tier society, was the optimum social arrangement that provided the best living standard for all.

That thesis however is utterly false. Capitalism is designed to create wealth for a very small class of elite and create poverty for the masses.

There are several more fatal flaws in capitalism, but you will never be able to comprehend them until you come to terms with what capitalism is.

LiberalNation
03-23-2007, 10:13 PM
Marx, tried to read him but it seemed over my head and economy isn't a subject I'm to interested in. Reading this debate though, might learn something.

Hobbit
03-23-2007, 10:30 PM
No my premise is not at all based on "the gross fallacy that business owners do not work for their money ".

My premise is this: The very definition of capitalism is not a form of business like trading shells for horns or building autos. That is NOT necessarily capitalism.

Capitalism by definition requires a CAPITALIZED class to exploit a LABOR Class and by virtue of that exploitation derive a profit.

Capitalism is a two class economic paradigm. It is designed to fortify the belief that an elite class and a lower, poorer class are the optimum social arrangement.

Capitalism began right at the point when democracies were sprouting and the "rights of kings" were being rejected. The elite royal class invented a new paradigm that espoused the same BS that had been used to justify the rights of kings.

They declared that capitalism, exploitation and a two tier society, was the optimum social arrangement that provided the best living standard for all.

That thesis however is utterly false. Capitalism is designed to create wealth for a very small class of elite and create poverty for the masses.

There are several more fatal flaws in capitalism, but you will never be able to comprehend them until you come to terms with what capitalism is.

You're describing feudalism. Capitalism does not require a capitalist class. Capitalism in its purest form is classless. You'll never be able to grasp the blessing of true economic freedom until YOU come to terms with what capitalism is.

Gaffer
03-23-2007, 11:09 PM
You're describing feudalism. Capitalism does not require a capitalist class. Capitalism in its purest form is classless. You'll never be able to grasp the blessing of true economic freedom until YOU come to terms with what capitalism is.

He can't grasp true economic freedom because he's a communist. He can deny it all he wants but all his posts point to it.

loosecannon
03-23-2007, 11:27 PM
You're describing feudalism. Capitalism does not require a capitalist class. Capitalism in its purest form is classless. You'll never be able to grasp the blessing of true economic freedom until YOU come to terms with what capitalism is.

Sorry dude but they don't call it CAPITALism for no reason.

Capitalism is not business activity, it IS the two tier structure of capitalists and labor in an economic paradigm that rewards a few and condemns the majority to relative poverty via exploitation of labor.

That is a fact jack.

If you wanna talk about commerce and business and economies without the two tier structure ditch the word capitalism.

Capitalism's main component is the two tier structure, and it evolved exactly while feudalism and the "right of kings" was collapsing.

NOT a coincidence. Capitalism was designed to be the new feudalism.

But we don't live in a capitalistic system.

So you wanna learn more, far more than you ever imagined about economics? I can blow your mind if you are able to listen and offer critical thinking instead of ignorant refutation of things you don't really understand in the first place.

I can change the whole basis for your beliefs if you really want to understand the realities.

Example: what IS a credit based economy?

What is the actual value of money?

What IS monetarism? (and why should I care soooo much more about monetarism than capitalism that doesn't exist anyway?)

How did bankers design our economy and why does the US government pay interest on money that is issued under it's authority?

Why are ANY of us paying federal taxes when it is entirely unnecessary?

Why is federal debt cancerous?

Why are unfunded liabilities destroying our future?

Why is social security and even pension/retirement funds dreams of folly that can not possibly endure? (because capitalism has many hidden flaws that lie beneath the surface)

Why is capitalsim dying?

What is the carry trade?

Can you explain derivatives, hedge funds, gold, the stock market so I can understand them?

The answers to all of these questions and many more are all within reach if you want to learn instead of arguing about positions that you do not even understand.

Hobbit
03-24-2007, 11:29 AM
Once again, you cannot carry on an intelligent discussion about capitalism because your views on the subject are limited solely to the definitions given by Marx, rather than examining the writings of far more knowledgable and reputable economists, such as Adam Smith and John Maynard Keynes. The entire crux of your argument lies in a fallacious definition of capitalism designed to make it look worse than it actually is. It's like trying to argue that pizza tastes like crap by defining it as an italian dish where the cook urinates on a crust. I mean, how else can you explain why they pronounce it peezza.

The reason capitalism is derived from the word capital is because in a capitalist system, the means of production, also known as capital, is privately owned and is easily bought and sold by investors, rather than owned by society, as in socialism, or owned by a small community, as in communism. Before you keep this rant about your idiotic definition of capitalism, why don't you go look it up in the Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Here, I'll save you the trouble.

Main Entry: cap·i·tal·ism
Pronunciation: 'ka-p&-t&-"liz-&m, 'kap-t&-, Brit also k&-'pi-t&-
Function: noun
: an economic system characterized by private or corporate ownership of capital goods, by investments that are determined by private decision, and by prices, production, and the distribution of goods that are determined mainly by competition in a free market

Hmm, this is the definitive American dictionary, and I see nothing in the definition about a capitalist class or a two-tiered system. No, I see exactly what I described initially. Could it be because Marx was full of crap when he defined capitalism? Well, maybe Oxford, the definitive English dictionary has a different definition.

capitalism

• noun an economic and political system in which a country’s trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.

Nope. Same thing. Marx was full of crap. by sticking solely to his definition, you are handicapping yourself in any intelligent conversation. You also obviously know far less about economics than you think you do, and it all stems from your refusal to reject Marxist ideas.

loosecannon
03-24-2007, 12:41 PM
Once again, you cannot carry on an intelligent discussion about capitalism because your views on the subject are limited solely to the definitions given by Marx, rather than examining the writings of far more knowledgable and reputable economists, such as Adam Smith and John Maynard Keynes. The entire crux of your argument lies in a fallacious definition of capitalism designed to make it look worse than it actually is. It's like trying to argue that pizza tastes like crap by defining it as an italian dish where the cook urinates on a crust. I mean, how else can you explain why they pronounce it peezza.

Capitalism is not just any form of commerce.

It is commerce conducted by accumulated capital purchasing the means of production and making a profit by exploiting the labor involved in the business enterprise.

THAT is it's definition defined by the guy who invented most of our basic ecoon.

Keynes wasn't even alive for another 50 years. Adam Smith was clearly an apologist for the burgoise and crafted his definitions of capitalism to justify the two class system(ACCORDING TO JOHN MANARD KEYNES).


The reason capitalism is derived from the word capital is because in a capitalist system, the means of production, also known as capital, is privately owned and is easily bought and sold by investors, rather than owned by society, as in socialism, or owned by a small community, as in communism. Before you keep this rant about your idiotic definition of capitalism, why don't you go look it up in the Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Here, I'll save you the trouble.

Main Entry: cap·i·tal·ism
Pronunciation: 'ka-p&-t&-"liz-&m, 'kap-t&-, Brit also k&-'pi-t&-
Function: noun
: an economic system characterized by private or corporate ownership of capital goods, by investments that are determined by private decision, and by prices, production, and the distribution of goods that are determined mainly by competition in a free market

OK, so you are willing to accept ALL the tenets of my definition including the spelling Marx used in DAS KAPITAL except the item of labor exploitation.

BUT you are willing to accept Marx's definition of socialism, he coined the term and invented the concept.


If you want to talk about business and commerce other than capitalism then roll with it.

If you wanna talk about capitalism then accept the definition of it's founders and not a definition imposed a hundred years after the fact.

Capitalism was invented as the royal class were declining and democracy movements were taking hold.

Capitalism was designed specifically to justify the rights of a new ruling class.

Those who have Capital, and those who do not, who are therefore forced to seek employment because the means of production (including food) are owned by the ruling class of CAPITALISTS.

If this resembles feudalism, that is NOT an accident.

And once again, since there are NO free markets there exists NO capitalism. Your own definitions clearly describe free markets as conditions of capitalism.

loosecannon
03-24-2007, 12:43 PM
Oh yeah,

Pee is not the root word in Pizza

Capital IS the root word in Capitalism.

Capital, capitalist, capitalism all are forms of the same word.

Hobbit
03-24-2007, 12:51 PM
Oh yeah,

Pee is not the root word in Pizza

Capital IS the root word in Capitalism.

Capital, capitalist, capitalism all are forms of the same word.

And you don't know the meaning of any of those words.

loosecannon
03-24-2007, 02:27 PM
And you don't know the meaning of any of those words.

sure I do

pee:n.
1)the substance that trickles down onto the heads of LABOR as a by product of reaganomics tax cuts.

2)The waste product secreted by the kidneys that in mammals is a yellow to amber-colored, slightly acid fluid discharged from the body through the urethra.

[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin ūrīna.]

You don't know the definition of capitalism.

Hobbit
03-24-2007, 02:34 PM
sure I do

pee:n.
1)the substance that trickles down onto the heads of LABOR as a by product of reaganomics tax cuts.

2)The waste product secreted by the kidneys that in mammals is a yellow to amber-colored, slightly acid fluid discharged from the body through the urethra.

[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin ūrīna.]

You don't know the definition of capitalism.

Ok, I'll give you that one, but you're 100% clueless on capitalism and capital. Your 'expertise' in economics seems to be limited entirely to the Communist Manifesto.

loosecannon
03-24-2007, 02:51 PM
Ok, I'll give you that one, but you're 100% clueless on capitalism and capital. Your 'expertise' in economics seems to be limited entirely to the Communist Manifesto.

Hardly son, hardly.

Capitalism doesn't exist. Neither does socialism, or communism, or monetarism.

I understand the definitions of all of em plenty well to run circles around you for eons.

If you want to talk about the realities of economics, and our economy great, jump in.

If you wanna pretend that the forces and characteristics of the economy are other than they are then the conversation serves no purpose. It is an argument about theories that don't exist. Nobody can learn much from such a discussion.

For example a pretty meaningful discussion can be had by addressing the fact that the new deal made a promise to Americans that was impossible to keep.

It promised that the American middle class could become capitalists AND labor at the same time.

FDR thought this was possible because the monetarists theories of Keynes influenced him into accepting three contradictions that can not in fact exist simultaneously.

Therefore social security, middle class pensions and medicare were all doomed to fail.

Is any of that interesting to you?

well you can't understand it until you accept what capitalism is, why it came into existence and what it's boundaries are.

Then you need to understand monetarism, what it is, why it came into existence and what it's boundaries are.

Then you need to synthesize those ideas into a new idea according to the formula of the dialectic of Hegel.

maybe begin reading about Hegel's dialectic.....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialectic#Hegelian_dialectic

and just for shits and grins an example

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master-slave_dialectic

Hobbit
03-24-2007, 03:10 PM
Hardly son, hardly.

Capitalism doesn't exist. Neither does socialism, or communism, or monetarism.

I understand the definitions of all of em plenty well to run circles around you for eons.

If you want to talk about the realities of economics, and our economy great, jump in.

If you wanna pretend that the forces and characteristics of the economy are other than they are then the conversation serves no purpose. It is an argument about theories that don't exist. Nobody can learn much from such a discussion.

For example a pretty meaningful discussion can be had by addressing the fact that the new deal made a promise to Americans that was impossible to keep.

It promised that the American middle class could become capitalists AND labor at the same time.

FDR thought this was possible because the monetarists theories of Keynes influenced him into accepting three contradictions that can not in fact exist simultaneously.

Therefore social security, middle class pensions and medicare were all doomed to fail.

Is any of that interesting to you?

well you can't understand it until you accept what capitalism is, why it came into existence and what it's boundaries are.

Then you need to understand monetarism, what it is, why it came into existence and what it's boundaries are.

Then you need to synthesize those ideas into a new idea according to the formula of the dialectic of Hegel.

maybe begin reading about Hegel's dialectic.....

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialectic#Hegelian_dialectic

and just for shits and grins an example

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master-slave_dialectic

You speak nonsense. You contradict every economist even worth the salt in his body. Captialism doesn't exist? Oh please. Capitalism as you have defined it doesn't exist, but actual capitalism is what drives our current economy. The "capitalism" you describe is a nonsensical conspiracy theory with even less credibility than the one that the WTC was brought down by explosives rather than a pair of planes. You're trying to sound intellectual, hoping your confidence in your point and your allusion to your massive ability to talk circles around people will get them to accept your fallacious premises. If you could talk circles around me in an actual debate, you would have done so by now. What you're trying to do is redefine the terms of the discussion to your specifications, and I'm not buying it. Go read Wealth of Nations, take principles of macroeconomics from somebody who isn't a socialist or a communist, who has read Wealth of Nations, and who doesn't draw all of his 'facts' from the tried and failed Communist Manifesto. You have no truth, only truthiness. You have no facts, only factoids. The only things you've said that are even remotely true is that the people you quote probably did say those things.

Anyway, with that being said, I'm done with you. Your narrow view on economics has no chance of ever being widened, and your paranoid view of what you call the 'capitalist class' is just a paranoid delusion thought up by poor losers who couldn't accept the fact that they made themselves poor.

loosecannon
03-24-2007, 03:33 PM
but actual capitalism is what drives our current economy.

Nope, in fact nonsense.

Capitalism is dependent of free markets, your own definitions said so. Free markets do not exist.

Capitalism can not exist if monopolies dominate industries. Adam Smith said that in "the Wealth of nations". Monopolies dominate most industries today.

Capitalism has been deeply undermined by monetarism which a completely different economic paradigm than capitalism. And monetarism is so advanced that it dominates the worlds economies.

Capitalism as it exists today bears no resemblence to the capitalism that Adam Smith described. It only exists at all as theoretical element underpinning our economies.

Capitalism exists only as theory.

Our world economy is a monetarist, corporatism, empirical, mercantilist, socialist, fascist amalgum based of fiat currencies and featuring monoplies as the primary business entities. More powerful than governments in fact.

It is anything but capitalistic.

Even FDR"s new deal destroyed capitalistism.

Little-Acorn
03-26-2007, 12:12 PM
Capitalism is merely a situation where people transact freely with each other without hindrance by government or other outside entities. It has nothing to do with the existence of large amounts of money, though such large amounts do sometimes accumulate.

Sort of like saying that sailing is the passage of wind-driven boats over water. Those who say that vast quantities of water are necessary, are mistaken, though such vast quantities are around and are used in sailing when appropriate.

Capitalism in its purest form, is simply free trade. If people want to give each other written promises to fulfill their end of the bargain at a later date, they can, and that's part of capitalism too. Such written priomises evolved into "money", and serve to lubricate direct trade.

Government's only function in capitalism, is to make sure people keep their promises and don't coerce each other outside of their own agreements. In pure capitalism, government has no other function.

No country on earth practices pure capitalism. Hong Kong came fairly close until the PRC took over, now it's going the way of all other societies, with encroaching socialism and government intrusion.

A few societies in the U.S. still come fairly close to pure capitalism, though they are not perfect either (no society comprised of imperfect humans ever will be). Several religious societies in the eastern and midwestern states grow or make most everything they need, trade among themselves, do without the things they can't produce themselves, help their neighbors (by choice, not thru govt compulsion) and deliberately stay disconnected from outside societies. They are among the most peaceful and economically stable societies on earth, as a direct result, though none is perfectly so.

theHawk
03-26-2007, 01:32 PM
If socialism is supposed to raise the standard of living for the poor, then how come the average poor person in America has multiple TVs, a computer, internet access, and a multi-bedroom dwelling while the average European, in a much more socialist country, does not?


And why does Loosecannon refuse to answer this question?

glockmail
03-26-2007, 01:53 PM
....

Self employed are generally included in the capitalist class..... I love being a capitalist then!

glockmail
03-26-2007, 01:54 PM
And why does Loosecannon refuse to answer this question?
No fair, man. We want theory, not reality. :rolleyes:

loosecannon
03-26-2007, 02:14 PM
Capitalism is merely a situation where people transact freely with each other without hindrance by government or other outside entities.

Capitalism in its purest form, is simply free trade.

The problem is that that simply isn't true. And the choice of the word itself implies what capitalism represents.

Trade is trade, monetary exchange is monetary exchange, subsidy is subsidy, gold standard is gold standard.

Capitalism is the mere exchange of free transactions in the same way that all governments are democracies or all animals are humans.

loosecannon
03-26-2007, 02:15 PM
And why does Loosecannon refuse to answer this question?

Oh probably just because I haven't been discussing socialism, at all.

Have you stopped beating your wife yet?

theHawk
03-26-2007, 03:04 PM
Oh probably just because I haven't been discussing socialism, at all.

In other words you're dodging the question, like a good little lib.:coffee:

Little-Acorn
03-26-2007, 03:04 PM
One of the nice things about capitalism - that is, free trade unrestricted by government - is that monopolies cannot exist. Or, if someone tries to create one, it can't last. IF, of course, government does its job and prevents goons from Company A from breaking the kneecaps of people who try to patronize Company B.

Some company can try cutting prices way down, to levels the other companies can't compete with, and drive them out of business. But that company can't keep that up forever. And when they raise their prices to take advantage of their "monopoly", others can start companies to compete with them again.

No government intrusion, except for police action and contract enforcement. No subsidies etc. And no monopoly can endure without government intrusion or neglect of its duty.

glockmail
03-26-2007, 03:10 PM
One of the nice things about capitalism - that is, free trade unrestricted by government - is that monopolies cannot exist. .....


What about Ma Bell? And local utilities?

Hobbit
03-26-2007, 03:14 PM
What about Ma Bell? And local utilities?

Government intrusion or neglect of duty. Most utilities are city-owned, and those that aren't have competition. Ma Bell was government supported. Nobody was allowed to compete with them. In fact, until the break-up of the Bell system, it was illegal to use an answering machine.

glockmail
03-26-2007, 03:21 PM
Government intrusion or neglect of duty. Most utilities are city-owned, and those that aren't have competition. Ma Bell was government supported. Nobody was allowed to compete with them. In fact, until the break-up of the Bell system, it was illegal to use an answering machine. I think you're right. I remember when we had to rent our phones. Friggin' dark ages.

Little-Acorn
03-26-2007, 03:23 PM
Government still makes it illegal to have competition in cable TV, electric utilities, and several other things in many areas.

As I said, nowhere in the US is pure capitalism practiced. Government bureaucrats just can't resist the temptation to monkey with the marketplace. And, of course, to charge us for the privilege.

But as I pointed out, monopolies cannot endure without government intrusion or neglect of govt duties.

Gaffer
03-26-2007, 04:07 PM
In other words you're dodging the question, like a good little lib.:coffee:

He ALWAYS dodges the question. He also sings, dances and changes the topic when it gets too hot for him. And I don't call him comrade for nothin.

loosecannon
03-26-2007, 04:28 PM
In other words you're dodging the question, like a good little lib.:coffee:

No, wrong again.

Wanna try for a tri fecta?

If you wanna start a thread about what socialism is, or about socialism, go for it. I am not shy.

loosecannon
03-26-2007, 04:29 PM
One of the nice things about capitalism - that is, free trade unrestricted by government - is that monopolies cannot exist. Or, if someone tries to create one, it can't last. IF, of course, government does its job and prevents goons from Company A from breaking the kneecaps of people who try to patronize Company B.

Some company can try cutting prices way down, to levels the other companies can't compete with, and drive them out of business. But that company can't keep that up forever. And when they raise their prices to take advantage of their "monopoly", others can start companies to compete with them again.

No government intrusion, except for police action and contract enforcement. No subsidies etc. And no monopoly can endure without government intrusion or neglect of its duty.

all true

loosecannon
03-26-2007, 04:31 PM
He ALWAYS dodges the question. He also sings, dances and changes the topic when it gets too hot for him. And I don't call him comrade for nothin.

It never gets too hot for me.

You call me comrade because you are easily confused. Own it.

Little-Acorn
03-27-2007, 11:57 AM
Remember the old saying, never more true than now:

"When politicians control buying and selling, the first things bought and sold are politicians."

Politicians are people who can FORCE others to do things against their own better judgement, by passing laws. Sometimes that judgement isn't "better"; there SHOULD be laws against theft, murder etc. But when politicians (i.e. government) are allowed to force people to change their buying and selling decisions, the politicians become prime targets for unscrupulous people (there are always some around) to try to influence into forcing a situation giving them unfair or undeserved advantage. No other such opportunities can exist for those unscrupulous ones: If buyers and sellers are left to go by their own interests and judgement, they won't give any unnecessary advantage to the unscrupulous ones, more than anyone else.

Keep in mind that economic activity is the largest single bloc of human effort. People spend the vast majority of their waking hours, trying to make enough money to buy food, shelter, clothing, transportation, etc. When they're not at their at-least-eight-hour-a-day jobs, they also spend long hours of their "free" time doing accounting, paying bills, shopping etc. Unscrupulous people who want to take unfair advantage of the largesse of society, usually concentrate on economic activity, and finding ways to twist or coerce it to their own advantage. That's where the real treasure is, and so that's naturally where most crooks go to try to cash in.

A government that starts telling its citizens what they can or can't buy or sell, is a golden opportunity for the unscrupulous people: finally they can start pushing their fellow citizens around, by bribing or threatening politicians to make laws favoring them. And the citizens can't call the cops on them, because the politicians ARE the cops.

Only where there are ironclad laws against government having anything to do with buying and selling (such as our Constitution has, laws regularly ignored), along with ironclad laws compelling govt to police contract enforcement, criminal behavior etc., can pure capitalism thrive. Once a govt takes on the authority to control buying and selling, the bad guys swing into action and start bribing and influencing the politicians - the old saying is VERY accurate. And society suffers accordingly.

There is no perfect system, and there never will be, as long as society is made up of imperfect humans. But capitalism has positive ways of weeding out the mistakes, passions, and bad decisions, better than any other system found so far. Systems that rely on government control of buying and selling, ENCOURAGE those bad decisions and attendant bad results, by allowing in corruption and influence-peddling, and PREVENTING their reduction.