Moderator: Community Team
crispybits wrote:It's not so much whether 10% or 80% of people think the government should build homeless shelters that I'm remarking on, but that when told that there is a certain amount of money in tax revenue, so many more people would happily see it spent on parks as spent on the homeless. I'm quite happy to admit that there's a lot of government wastage, but that's not just from inefficiency and corruption/crony capitalism, it also comes from failing to prioritise the right things with the money it does have. For me the first (and only) priority of government should be ensuring a basic minimum living standard for all citizens, that being somewhere to sleep, something to eat (neither need be remotely luxurious, but very basic provision of critical needs) and a safe and fair environment in which to pursue success and happiness.
Phatscotty wrote:mrswdk wrote:Phatscotty wrote:mrswdk wrote:Who will protect IPR?
Who will keep your air clean?
Nobody, we are all going to die tomorrow. I dare to dream that if the government would only get out of the way, people and business would be able to innovate at twice the speed and we would be allowed to start tackling the issue, rather than letting the government make a fortune off us with taxes and restrictions and limitations and regulations and bureaucrats. And we have some other issues over here, mainly a government that repeatedly says they will do one thing but does another, along with a steady stream of new citizens who repeatedly swallow the bullshit without even chewing and immediately asking for seconds.
By the way, China has a government, right? So that automatically means you have clean air, right?
I never said China has the right model. I actually look at China's pollution and food contamination scandals and am glad that Western governments step in and regulate this shit (relatively) well.
I mentioned IPR because some amount of government intervention is necessary to protect innovators. Pharmaceutical products can easily take a decade to develop. Who is going to go to the huge expense of spending ten years developing new pills if a competitor is just going to come along and rip them off at the last minute?
Why does USA or the West have the right model? In what ways does the Western model work better?
I hear you there on the pharma and innovation, but imo that falls more under protecting our rights ie the courts, not so much 'gov't intervention'
crispybits wrote:It's not so much whether 10% or 80% of people think the government should build homeless shelters that I'm remarking on, but that when told that there is a certain amount of money in tax revenue, so many more people would happily see it spent on parks as spent on the homeless. I'm quite happy to admit that there's a lot of government wastage, but that's not just from inefficiency and corruption/crony capitalism, it also comes from failing to prioritise the right things with the money it does have. For me the first (and only) priority of government should be ensuring a basic minimum living standard for all citizens, that being somewhere to sleep, something to eat (neither need be remotely luxurious, but very basic provision of critical needs) and a safe and fair environment in which to pursue success and happiness.
crispybits wrote:OK, but the point of this thread is not to discuss the geographical reach/centralisation catchment aspects, but say I could organise tomorrow for your system to be implemented worldwide, and every smaller region produced a prospectus detailing their policies, which preferences about how to spend taxes would you be looking for as ideal?
crispybits wrote:OK, but the point of this thread is not to discuss the geographical reach/centralisation catchment aspects, but say I could organise tomorrow for your system to be implemented worldwide, and every smaller region produced a prospectus detailing their policies, which preferences about how to spend taxes would you be looking for as ideal?
The Theory Of Moral Sentiments, Part II Section II Chapter III, p. 86, para.4.
Little else is requisite to carry a state to the highest degree of opulence from the lowest barbarism, but peace, easy taxes, and a tolerable administration of justice: all the rest being brought about by the natural course of things.
mrswdk wrote:BBS, I'm not sure that it's that productive to tell a company who spent hundreds of millions of dollars making a film that the solution to people stealing their film is for the developer to be more creative in their marketing. The majority of people who just want the film will steal it regardless of whether or not each legitimate copy comes with a shiny box and a poster.
Plus, if a movie is available online for free then the value of the official version drops to 0. In your scenario, people will not pay $15 for a DVD that comes with a nice booklet unless they consider the booklet to be worth $15. The DVD available for free (or very little cost) on pirate has no value within the package being offered by the company. The movie company thus has to produce their movie and give it away for free, and then recoup all their costs by offering extra products (which begs the question: why make the film in the first place?).
mrswdk wrote:I would argue that DVD piracy is not as widespread in the US thanks to the government, so the effect will obviously be more minimal. It would be useful to compare the US to China, where a counterfeit DVD shop in a high street a fairly unremarkable thing.
If they were low-quality camera recordings then no one would buy them, but they're not. They're straight rip offs of cinema-quality product (if they weren't then I wouldn't buy them).
mrswdk wrote:Add textbooks to the debate. My textbooks are downloaded in full and free in .pdf format from whichever dodgy site they've been uploaded to.
virus90 wrote: I think Anarkist is a valuable asset to any game.
Anarkistsdream wrote:How can only three people agree with me about taxes being used for "Business startup grants/loans?"
This is how you help people to help themselves...
Anarkistsdream wrote:How can only three people agree with me about taxes being used for "Business startup grants/loans?"
This is how you help people to help themselves...
BigBallinStalin wrote:Anarkistsdream wrote:How can only three people agree with me about taxes being used for "Business startup grants/loans?"
This is how you help people to help themselves...
Because government does not operate in a blackbox devoid of perverse incentives from politicians and bureaucrats. Chambers of Commerce, which are predominantly used to allocate confiscated funds tax revenues for certain businesses, are a great way of rewarding special interest groups in exchange for political contributions. This form of funding typically masquerades under the banner of Moral Rhetoric ("We're helping people help themselves"), and it reinforces crony capitalism, so you'll have select businesses leaning on their political relationships in order to influence public policies and regulate for discouraging competition (e.g. in cities with laws and regulations which hamper the market of mobile food vendors).
There's also alternatives like philanthropic societies, crowdsourcing, and the large variety of banks (from loans to microloans), which obviate the alleged necessity of government in this sector.
virus90 wrote: I think Anarkist is a valuable asset to any game.
Anarkistsdream wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Anarkistsdream wrote:How can only three people agree with me about taxes being used for "Business startup grants/loans?"
This is how you help people to help themselves...
Because government does not operate in a blackbox devoid of perverse incentives from politicians and bureaucrats. Chambers of Commerce, which are predominantly used to allocate confiscated funds tax revenues for certain businesses, are a great way of rewarding special interest groups in exchange for political contributions. This form of funding typically masquerades under the banner of Moral Rhetoric ("We're helping people help themselves"), and it reinforces crony capitalism, so you'll have select businesses leaning on their political relationships in order to influence public policies and regulate for discouraging competition (e.g. in cities with laws and regulations which hamper the market of mobile food vendors).
There's also alternatives like philanthropic societies, crowdsourcing, and the large variety of banks (from loans to microloans), which obviate the alleged necessity of government in this sector.
But doesn't leaving this in the private sector give us the same issues with interest rates and the like that we currently are dealing with in the medical insurance field?
virus90 wrote: I think Anarkist is a valuable asset to any game.
Anarkistsdream wrote:Thank you for the excellent reply... I am by no means an economist..
Users browsing this forum: No registered users