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For clarification, this means TOTAL taxes and ALL levels of government, from your local town council right up to the fat cats in the national capital. Because there are so many differences internationally between structures in different countries, it would be pointless trying to split the debate into "local", "regional" and "national" levels.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
khazalid wrote:for better or worse, we need worldwide governance
khazalid wrote:for better or worse, we need worldwide governance
Lootifer wrote:Troubles me a little bit that twice the number of people have voted for international security than for education for under 18s...
Phatscotty wrote:Lootifer wrote:Troubles me a little bit that twice the number of people have voted for international security than for education for under 18s...
Why?
For education, I think the more local the better.
chang50 wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Lootifer wrote:Troubles me a little bit that twice the number of people have voted for international security than for education for under 18s...
Why?
For education, I think the more local the better.
Local government is still government as defined in the OP.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Ultimately, the problem is that democratic government, generally understood, will always remain conducive to concentrating the benefits for the more politically organized groups (lobbyism, cronyism--from businesses, unions, elderly, etc.) while dispersing the costs on the less politically organized (generally, the poor, the apathetic, the unrepresented future generations--think: long-term costs of deficit spending).
Phatscotty wrote:chang50 wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Lootifer wrote:Troubles me a little bit that twice the number of people have voted for international security than for education for under 18s...
Why?
For education, I think the more local the better.
Local government is still government as defined in the OP.
Oh yeh, I should have been going by his rules (srys), but still, I don't want the federal government in education, but I do want the state and local government in education, so it's worth pointing out.
Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Ultimately, the problem is that democratic government, generally understood, will always remain conducive to concentrating the benefits for the more politically organized groups (lobbyism, cronyism--from businesses, unions, elderly, etc.) while dispersing the costs on the less politically organized (generally, the poor, the apathetic, the unrepresented future generations--think: long-term costs of deficit spending).
Democracy is still better than all of the other systems because weakly regulated economies are susceptible to tyranny from a dictator coming in to 'save' people from the economy (cf. 1930s Germany).
Lootifer wrote:Troubles me a little bit that twice the number of people have voted for international security than for education for under 18s...
You know even Friedmen advocates for government supported education at that level right? (in the form of a voucher system).
This is why we cannot have nice things...
BigBallinStalin wrote:khazalid wrote:for better or worse, we need worldwide governance
We need worldwide order/governance, but it need not come from one government. Don't you agree?
BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Ultimately, the problem is that democratic government, generally understood, will always remain conducive to concentrating the benefits for the more politically organized groups (lobbyism, cronyism--from businesses, unions, elderly, etc.) while dispersing the costs on the less politically organized (generally, the poor, the apathetic, the unrepresented future generations--think: long-term costs of deficit spending).
Democracy is still better than all of the other systems because weakly regulated economies are susceptible to tyranny from a dictator coming in to 'save' people from the economy (cf. 1930s Germany).
If this was true, then the relatively weakly regulated economies of past US, UK, and on would--as you imply--turn into Nazi Germanies. This simply isn't the case because susceptibility to tyranny from a dictator is not mono-causal (e.g. your model of regulation --> tyrannical susceptibility).
Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Ultimately, the problem is that democratic government, generally understood, will always remain conducive to concentrating the benefits for the more politically organized groups (lobbyism, cronyism--from businesses, unions, elderly, etc.) while dispersing the costs on the less politically organized (generally, the poor, the apathetic, the unrepresented future generations--think: long-term costs of deficit spending).
Democracy is still better than all of the other systems because weakly regulated economies are susceptible to tyranny from a dictator coming in to 'save' people from the economy (cf. 1930s Germany).
If this was true, then the relatively weakly regulated economies of past US, UK, and on would--as you imply--turn into Nazi Germanies. This simply isn't the case because susceptibility to tyranny from a dictator is not mono-causal (e.g. your model of regulation --> tyrannical susceptibility).
But you can see the beginnings of this in the weakly regulated economy of the past US, if you look at the political response to the enormous power Standard Oil had coming into the 1890s. The point I made wasn't that any particular economic model favors a dictatorial power taking over (note: socialism is not fascism), but rather that politicians will use a market that strays significantly from the perfect competition model as an excuse to grab government power. This can happen in any economic system under the right circumstances. I was making a statement that compared the past US to the current US and arguing that the only outcomes were either 1) something like the current system or 2) a dictatorial take-over.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Ultimately, the problem is that democratic government, generally understood, will always remain conducive to concentrating the benefits for the more politically organized groups (lobbyism, cronyism--from businesses, unions, elderly, etc.) while dispersing the costs on the less politically organized (generally, the poor, the apathetic, the unrepresented future generations--think: long-term costs of deficit spending).
Democracy is still better than all of the other systems because weakly regulated economies are susceptible to tyranny from a dictator coming in to 'save' people from the economy (cf. 1930s Germany).
If this was true, then the relatively weakly regulated economies of past US, UK, and on would--as you imply--turn into Nazi Germanies. This simply isn't the case because susceptibility to tyranny from a dictator is not mono-causal (e.g. your model of regulation --> tyrannical susceptibility).
But you can see the beginnings of this in the weakly regulated economy of the past US, if you look at the political response to the enormous power Standard Oil had coming into the 1890s. The point I made wasn't that any particular economic model favors a dictatorial power taking over (note: socialism is not fascism), but rather that politicians will use a market that strays significantly from the perfect competition model as an excuse to grab government power. This can happen in any economic system under the right circumstances. I was making a statement that compared the past US to the current US and arguing that the only outcomes were either 1) something like the current system or 2) a dictatorial take-over.
The point about Socialism was related to the stupid economic policies which followed in the Weimar Republic. It wasn't related to the National Socialists, which gee, are Socialists--given their economic policies. Italy was fascist; not Nazi Germany, which was national socialist. You wouldn't happen to be trying to whitewash socialism, would you? That would not be just nor intellectually honest.
Given so much ignorance, it's amazing that markets can still pull us through.
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