http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DdLdGkAiJjYSimon_Jester wrote:But in Britain? How far back do you have to go before such things become common?
Done.
Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DdLdGkAiJjYSimon_Jester wrote:But in Britain? How far back do you have to go before such things become common?
The problem I have with not formulating the problem this way is that we've reached the point where corporatism stands foursquare against the public interest. It is hurting people. It is not promoting a healthy market, or a healthy economy, or anything else but the enrichment of the people running and owning those corporations, and the relatively small managerial and financial class that does their money-shuffling for them.Lord Zentei wrote:While I hear what you're saying, the problem I have with that way of formulating the problem is that "greed" is such an ephemerally defined concept and often bandied about knee-jerk style as a blanket pejorative against self-interest.
In many cases, the favoritism can only be fixed by changed government actions- it requires someone to stop turning a blind eye, not someone to stop interfering with the system by actively changing it.IMHO, it's better to drop the buzz-phrase and focus instead at the extent to which favoritism is made possible by the government (a problem faced by all economic systems), and the general tolerance of such.
And how precisely does my formulation fail to capture that?Simon_Jester wrote:The problem I have with not formulating the problem this way is that we've reached the point where corporatism stands foursquare against the public interest. It is hurting people. It is not promoting a healthy market, or a healthy economy, or anything else but the enrichment of the people running and owning those corporations, and the relatively small managerial and financial class that does their money-shuffling for them.
If you don't have any way of defining "greed" as opposed to self-interest in general, how do you expect society to act against it, or the system to be inoculated against it? Where do you intend to draw the line?Simon_Jester wrote:It's not a rigorous definition, "greed" is not something you can legislate against, but at some point you have to be able to point to an institution that's damaging your society and say "this is vicious." Where things are vicious, you must be able to put a name to the vice, to make it clear that no this is not okay, not just a natural part of the system doing its thing, this is in fact a broken part that needs to be fixed. Until you're willing to do that- to call a bridge in danger of collapse rickety, to call a bureaucracy that takes bribes corrupt, and so on- you can't really tackle the problem the way it needs to be tackled.
<snip rant>
If it is government which is helping to cause the problem, it is eminently rational to point the finger of blame to government. Neither can you expect a corrupt government to simply fix itself. If you want things to improve, then you need to eliminate corruption in government before you seek to give it additional powers, or you'll accomplish nothing of value.In many cases, the favoritism can only be fixed by changed government actions- it requires someone to stop turning a blind eye, not someone to stop interfering with the system by actively changing it.
Thus, blaming government can easily make it harder to address the problem rationally. When the fox raids the henhouse, the guard dog may be to blame for sleeping through it, but we cannot forget that it is the fox which killed the chicken, not the dog. Beating the dog will not necessarily save future chickens.
They don't?Stas Bush wrote:Other people's property rights do not influence my desire for self-enrichment.
I don't know whether it's "most" capitalists who do that, but to the extent that people in general do that (capitalists and others), we have the importance of rule of law.Stas Bush wrote:In fact, most capitalists who pursue self-enrichment at the expense of others are well aware that they are trampling on their "rights", be it property rights or some other rights, but they consciously ignore it because the self-enrichment goal is prioritized over others.
There's a difference between the following:Stas Bush wrote:As for "they don't" - well, duh. When one desires self-enrichment, he does not think of others. That desire arises independently of all other members of society. It is his, and his alone, regardless of what others do or say. This desire is thus independent from others, and as such, since it arises independently, a person often simply does not ponder over "justified or not" related to conflicting interests when he is thinking about his own and that alone. It is quite simple.
By maintaining rule of law through independent courts, a political process with clearly defined parameters and a regulatory framework that is not designed by a select group whose disputes they are supposed to arbitrate.Darth Raptor wrote:How is a market society supposed to prevent corruption, the formation of trusts and the slide into corporatism and imperialism?
Your question does not make any sense.Darth Raptor wrote:Why should individual property rights be given greater consideration than the real needs of human beings?
Permanent growth is not the goal, but the optimization of production (which is necessary, regardless of physics). If that permits growth, then growth is the result.Darth Raptor wrote:It seems that an economy that is constantly growing is impossible on its face (due to physics), and that any economic system is, ultimately, all just a scheme for rationing the three resources that actually exist (energy, labor and raw materials). If that's the case, then shouldn't the objective be to maintain the greatest standard of living for the greatest number of people?
If that was directed at me, then I have to ask: WTF are you talking about?Bakustra wrote:Your proposal for dealing with regulatory capture and monopolization is to infringe upon the property rights of others. That's not very capitalist.
By acting to restrict capitalists from using their property to influence the political system in their benefit, you are curtailing their property rights. This is something that is necessary to prevent regulatory capture in a meaningful sense. But the majority of capitalist thought is predicated on the idea that property rights are an unmitigated good. Even if not to the extent of Hayek, the idea of infringing upon the rights of others to use their property as they see fit to express themselves is not a capitalist one. It is largely a socially-democratic one, but social democracy is not really a capitalist system. It is an attempt to steer capitalism into more humane ends, but the current burst of austerity seems to suggest that it is itself highly unstable in the end.Lord Zentei wrote:If that was directed at me, then I have to ask: WTF are you talking about?Bakustra wrote:Your proposal for dealing with regulatory capture and monopolization is to infringe upon the property rights of others. That's not very capitalist.
Okay, so, I presume we can both agree that some non-profit, regulatory agency (let's call it a state, for simplicity's sake) with the power (both legal and physical) to enforce its regulations is needed. If so, then I assume we're on the same page here in that we want complete transparency in its operations and accountability in its functionaries. IOW, democracy, but I don't expect you to have an issue with that.Lord Zentei wrote:By maintaining rule of law through independent courts, a political process with clearly defined parameters and a regulatory framework that is not designed by a select group whose disputes they are supposed to arbitrate.
Because by refusing to use language which might condemn them, it offers them something rather durable to hide behind- which is exactly what American corporatism has done. It's seized the language of libertarianism and the philosophy of the free market, and used that language and philosophy to justify empowering corporations to do as they please with the economy at other people's expense.Lord Zentei wrote:And how precisely does my formulation fail to capture that?Simon_Jester wrote:The problem I have with not formulating the problem this way is that we've reached the point where corporatism stands foursquare against the public interest. It is hurting people. It is not promoting a healthy market, or a healthy economy, or anything else but the enrichment of the people running and owning those corporations, and the relatively small managerial and financial class that does their money-shuffling for them.
Public interest. Any case of private citizens trying to suborn politicians to change the law in their favor, outside the electoral process, is pretty much guaranteed to be a Bad Thing. Call it rent-seeking or corruption or whatever you want, it's still bad. We can start there.If you don't have any way of defining "greed" as opposed to self-interest in general, how do you expect society to act against it, or the system to be inoculated against it? Where do you intend to draw the line?
The problem is that the exchanges can have huge effects on third parties who don't get a voice in the decision, and that context can cause people to make decisions that leave them miserable, because they can't find anyone to agree to an outcome that would make them non-miserable.But if you define "greed" as "desire for X, regardless of consequences for others", then that's not a problem with self-interest, but the lack of definition of and support for people's property rights. * That's a precise formulation of the problem that is encompassed in the point I made earlier.
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* After all, it's a mischaracterisation to assert that capitalism is simply about people doing what they want regardless of how it affects others; it's people interacting in mutually voluntary exchanges for their own reasons.
In this case, the corruption is mostly being used to preserve the status quo: the government refuses to take on powers because it adopting those powers would be bad for the people who are paying it. Congress and White House alike refuse the power to provide health insurance in a public-option system, because that would hurt insurance companies. They refuse to tax the rich more heavily because that would hurt the prosperous and comfortable.If it is government which is helping to cause the problem, it is eminently rational to point the finger of blame to government. Neither can you expect a corrupt government to simply fix itself. If you want things to improve, then you need to eliminate corruption in government before you seek to give it additional powers, or you'll accomplish nothing of value.In many cases, the favoritism can only be fixed by changed government actions- it requires someone to stop turning a blind eye, not someone to stop interfering with the system by actively changing it.
Thus, blaming government can easily make it harder to address the problem rationally. When the fox raids the henhouse, the guard dog may be to blame for sleeping through it, but we cannot forget that it is the fox which killed the chicken, not the dog. Beating the dog will not necessarily save future chickens.
What do you call a man who, by voluntary interaction with a third party, knowingly makes your property worthless? What if the property he makes worthless is something you need to live?Lord Zentei wrote:Yeah, though a collective of relatively small actors can manifest destructive power politically as well as economically.There's a difference between the following:Stas Bush wrote:As for "they don't" - well, duh. When one desires self-enrichment, he does not think of others. That desire arises independently of all other members of society. It is his, and his alone, regardless of what others do or say. This desire is thus independent from others, and as such, since it arises independently, a person often simply does not ponder over "justified or not" related to conflicting interests when he is thinking about his own and that alone. It is quite simple.That difference is the difference between the thief and the buyer/seller.
- Not caring about other people's property rights in one's quest for self-enrichment.
- Not specifically seeking to improve the lot of others beyond their acceptance of a voluntary interaction.
Um... no. Not to be able to use your property to indiscriminately manipulate the political process is not a violation of your property rights. It's a recognition of the property rights of others than the one who desires to do that, since the government has the power to monopolize the use of force for the purpose of non-voluntary transactions.Bakustra wrote:By acting to restrict capitalists from using their property to influence the political system in their benefit, you are curtailing their property rights. This is something that is necessary to prevent regulatory capture in a meaningful sense. But the majority of capitalist thought is predicated on the idea that property rights are an unmitigated good. Even if not to the extent of Hayek, the idea of infringing upon the rights of others to use their property as they see fit to express themselves is not a capitalist one. It is largely a socially-democratic one, but social democracy is not really a capitalist system. It is an attempt to steer capitalism into more humane ends, but the current burst of austerity seems to suggest that it is itself highly unstable in the end.
EDIT: Monopolization works much the same way. In order to prevent horizontal or vertical integration, you must infringe upon property rights at some point.
Indeed. Although I'm skeptical of simply equating "democracy" with "complete transparency in [the government's] operations and accountability in its functionaries".Darth Raptor wrote:Okay, so, I presume we can both agree that some non-profit, regulatory agency (let's call it a state, for simplicity's sake) with the power (both legal and physical) to enforce its regulations is needed. If so, then I assume we're on the same page here in that we want complete transparency in its operations and accountability in its functionaries. IOW, democracy, but I don't expect you to have an issue with that.
I'm not sure where we're disagreeing here, as this seems to be a departure from your previous point.Darth Raptor wrote:Here is where I argue that you can only achieve that through the active participation of a healthy and educated public, and in order to get THAT, the state needs to be ensuring that its citizens are healthy and educated--either directly or through a third party.
What the hell are you talking about? I point out that preventing people from spending their money as they see fit, whether through anti-trust legislation or through barring regulatory capture, means curtailing their right to use their property how they want, and you come out with this. I mean, how exactly is buying out your suppliers a violation of their property rights? How is donating shitloads of money to politicians a violation of people's property rights? I'm not saying that those aren't abusive acts, but I don't see how those are property rights or what the concept of monopoly of force has anything to do with it. I mean, unless you're going to redefine capitalism as you see fit, in which case I guess I'll just have to share my new definition of it.Lord Zentei wrote:Um... no. Not to be able to use your property to indiscriminately manipulate the political process is not a violation of your property rights. It's a recognition of the property rights of others than the one who desires to do that, since the government has the power to monopolize the use of force for the purpose of non-voluntary transactions.Bakustra wrote:By acting to restrict capitalists from using their property to influence the political system in their benefit, you are curtailing their property rights. This is something that is necessary to prevent regulatory capture in a meaningful sense. But the majority of capitalist thought is predicated on the idea that property rights are an unmitigated good. Even if not to the extent of Hayek, the idea of infringing upon the rights of others to use their property as they see fit to express themselves is not a capitalist one. It is largely a socially-democratic one, but social democracy is not really a capitalist system. It is an attempt to steer capitalism into more humane ends, but the current burst of austerity seems to suggest that it is itself highly unstable in the end.
EDIT: Monopolization works much the same way. In order to prevent horizontal or vertical integration, you must infringe upon property rights at some point.
I'm in the middle of trawling through Simon Jester's gargantuan post, so I'm not going to waste too much time covering this:Bakustra wrote:What the hell are you talking about? I point out that preventing people from spending their money as they see fit, whether through anti-trust legislation or through barring regulatory capture, means curtailing their right to use their property how they want, and you come out with this. I mean, how exactly is buying out your suppliers a violation of their property rights? How is donating shitloads of money to politicians a violation of people's property rights? I'm not saying that those aren't abusive acts, but I don't see how those are property rights or what the concept of monopoly of force has anything to do with it. I mean, unless you're going to redefine capitalism as you see fit, in which case I guess I'll just have to share my new definition of it.
So basically you're unwilling to admit that your method requires curtailing the property rights of people, you presume that "can" means "will" in order to justify your argument, and you frame literally everything on the grounds of property rights. So explain how banning monopolies does not involve infringing upon property rights, then. That does not involve interference with the government, but rather with other private individuals. All it involves is buying and selling, which are completely voluntary transactions.Lord Zentei wrote:I'm in the middle of trawling through Simon Jester's gargantuan post, so I'm not going to waste too much time covering this:Bakustra wrote:What the hell are you talking about? I point out that preventing people from spending their money as they see fit, whether through anti-trust legislation or through barring regulatory capture, means curtailing their right to use their property how they want, and you come out with this. I mean, how exactly is buying out your suppliers a violation of their property rights? How is donating shitloads of money to politicians a violation of people's property rights? I'm not saying that those aren't abusive acts, but I don't see how those are property rights or what the concept of monopoly of force has anything to do with it. I mean, unless you're going to redefine capitalism as you see fit, in which case I guess I'll just have to share my new definition of it.
If you can't see how subverting the government who has a monopoly on the power to use force for the pursuit of non-voluntary transactions can curtail other people's property rights, then you're an idiot.
Sigh.Lord Zentei wrote:I'm in the middle of trawling through Simon Jester's gargantuan post, so I'm not going to waste too much time covering this...
Responding to multiple people isn't quite as annoying as having to trawl through gargantuan posts. Nonetheless...Simon_Jester wrote:I don't want this to turn into a dogpile, but I was here early on, and so I think I can reasonably claim a right to respond. I'll bow out if it turns into a dogpile too bad to manage, and with Bakustra here it just might.
This is nonsense. And you're not addressing my point: bandying about buzz-phrases does nothing to provide an adequate framework for deciding what is acceptable and what isn't. It's just an appeal to emotion, and one that is detrimental to rationally analyzing the situation. Neither am I refusing to use language which condemns wrongdoers, but I'm adverse to using vague and non-specific language which can just as easily be leveled against anyone who simply desires something for himself.Simon_Jester wrote:Because by refusing to use language which might condemn them, it offers them something rather durable to hide behind- which is exactly what American corporatism has done. It's seized the language of libertarianism and the philosophy of the free market, and used that language and philosophy to justify empowering corporations to do as they please with the economy at other people's expense.
As I'm pro-welfare, I'm not entirely sure how "libertarian" I am. Classical liberal, perhaps. Nonetheless: by your approach the dialogue which would permit the accurate diagnosis of the problem is undermined. This is not in anyone's interest. Besides which, parties which spout liberal and progressive rhetoric have been captured too.Simon_Jester wrote:At this point, the illnesses of American corporatist capitalism will not be fixed by libertarians, because libertarians are dangerously enmeshed with faux-libertarian corporatists. Even if libertarians can diagnose the problems (as you have, with regulatory capture), the voter base which supports libertarian rhetoric keeps voting corporatist, because the corporatists have hijacked the movement in the eyes of the public.
That's why I consider it so important to be able to turn around and reject the corporatist narrative- to say that no, these large institutions aren't doing what's good for America, or anyone else except themselves, and that their desire to accumulate wealth is endangering the average person's ability to have a future.
And "public interest" is defined how, exactly? And at what point does it supersede the interest of private individuals who make up the public? Anyway, I don't see how you're refuting my position. If you're destroying the economic game for everyone else, then you're demonstrably transgressing against their fortunes as individuals too.Simon_Jester wrote:Public interest. Any case of private citizens trying to suborn politicians to change the law in their favor, outside the electoral process, is pretty much guaranteed to be a Bad Thing. Call it rent-seeking or corruption or whatever you want, it's still bad. We can start there.If you don't have any way of defining "greed" as opposed to self-interest in general, how do you expect society to act against it, or the system to be inoculated against it? Where do you intend to draw the line?
If people act in their self-interest, and the public interest is served or at least not demonstrably harmed in a meaningful way, then that's fine: public goods and 'victimless crimes' are OK by default. But when people act in their self-interest to gain large fortunes, at the expense of the present and future prosperity of the whole nation... that is not OK, because ultimately it destroys the economic game for evreyone else.
This is called an "externality", and is covered by classical economic theory. And yes, if they actively harm you when they make a transaction, then based on the idea of property rights, you can sue them for damages.Simon_Jester wrote:The problem is that the exchanges can have huge effects on third parties who don't get a voice in the decision, and that context can cause people to make decisions that leave them miserable, because they can't find anyone to agree to an outcome that would make them non-miserable.But if you define "greed" as "desire for X, regardless of consequences for others", then that's not a problem with self-interest, but the lack of definition of and support for people's property rights. * That's a precise formulation of the problem that is encompassed in the point I made earlier.
_____
* After all, it's a mischaracterisation to assert that capitalism is simply about people doing what they want regardless of how it affects others; it's people interacting in mutually voluntary exchanges for their own reasons.
Capitalism deliberately ignores the question of how my decision to trade with you affects some other person across the street.
Simon_Jester wrote:To some extent this promotes progress, because it keeps the argument "but someone is harmed by X!" from overriding the argument "but six people are helped by X!" and preventing all social change. But it can also retard progress and make people miserable, because it lets "but you and I benefit by X!" trump "but fifty people lose their jobs because of X!"
Not so, changing government policy is not possible without diminishing corruption (unless things become so bad that the public won't support the corrupt politicians any more regardless of how many campaign donations they receive).Simon_Jester wrote:In this case, the corruption is mostly being used to preserve the status quo: the government refuses to take on powers because it adopting those powers would be bad for the people who are paying it. Congress and White House alike refuse the power to provide health insurance in a public-option system, because that would hurt insurance companies. They refuse to tax the rich more heavily because that would hurt the prosperous and comfortable.If it is government which is helping to cause the problem, it is eminently rational to point the finger of blame to government. Neither can you expect a corrupt government to simply fix itself. If you want things to improve, then you need to eliminate corruption in government before you seek to give it additional powers, or you'll accomplish nothing of value.In many cases, the favoritism can only be fixed by changed government actions- it requires someone to stop turning a blind eye, not someone to stop interfering with the system by actively changing it.
Thus, blaming government can easily make it harder to address the problem rationally. When the fox raids the henhouse, the guard dog may be to blame for sleeping through it, but we cannot forget that it is the fox which killed the chicken, not the dog. Beating the dog will not necessarily save future chickens.
Changing government policy on issues like this is one and the same with changing the corruption in Congress. We will never see anyone taking bribes from the insurance industry to bring about public-option health insurance in America.
Explain the scenario more clearly. If you're talking about active destruction of property, then I call him a saboteur; if you're talking about creating something that out-competes my production, then I call him a successful competitor. I may hate him for it, of course, but that's another issue.Simon_Jester wrote:What do you call a man who, by voluntary interaction with a third party, knowingly makes your property worthless? What if the property he makes worthless is something you need to live?Lord Zentei wrote:Yeah, though a collective of relatively small actors can manifest destructive power politically as well as economically.There's a difference between the following:Stas Bush wrote:As for "they don't" - well, duh. When one desires self-enrichment, he does not think of others. That desire arises independently of all other members of society. It is his, and his alone, regardless of what others do or say. This desire is thus independent from others, and as such, since it arises independently, a person often simply does not ponder over "justified or not" related to conflicting interests when he is thinking about his own and that alone. It is quite simple.That difference is the difference between the thief and the buyer/seller.
- Not caring about other people's property rights in one's quest for self-enrichment.
- Not specifically seeking to improve the lot of others beyond their acceptance of a voluntary interaction.
How much harm can be done in this way before we say that your rights are being infringed by this other person's consensual dealings with people who aren't you?
Yes, that's fair enough. But as long as you don't use rhetoric which undermines our ability to diagnose the problem rationally, and which isn't vague enough that it can't be used against non-destructive enterprise too.Simon_Jester wrote:Sigh.Lord Zentei wrote:I'm in the middle of trawling through Simon Jester's gargantuan post, so I'm not going to waste too much time covering this...
I'm sorry, I didn't think in terms of compactness.
My point is basically rhetorical, and therefore unimportant, anyway. It's restricted to the assertion that we shouldn't be afraid to say bad things about people who hurt the public interest, and that doing so can be productive.
This is the position you propound:Lord Zentei wrote:No: what I'm doing is calling you an idiot who isn't paying attention to what is being said, and who isn't contributing to the fucking discussion.
By the way, I'm willing to put up a 'compactified' version of a post on request if you need me to. I'm not going to go howling to the mods because you don't want to go line by line with someone whose idea of an off the cuff response runs to five paragraphs...Lord Zentei wrote:Yes, that's fair enough. But as long as you don't use rhetoric which undermines our ability to diagnose the problem rationally, and which isn't vague enough that it can't be used against non-destructive enterprise too.Simon_Jester wrote:Sigh.
I'm sorry, I didn't think in terms of compactness.
My point is basically rhetorical, and therefore unimportant, anyway. It's restricted to the assertion that we shouldn't be afraid to say bad things about people who hurt the public interest, and that doing so can be productive.
Right, continue to post incoherent bullshit non-sequiturs and unjustified blanket claims all you want.Bakustra wrote:<snip>
Well, in that case, our present disagreement is probably more rhetorical than substance-based. There's most likely not much more to say on the matter.Simon_Jester wrote:By the way, I'm willing to put up a 'compactified' version of a post on request if you need me to. I'm not going to go howling to the mods because you don't want to go line by line with someone whose idea of an off the cuff response runs to five paragraphs...
Anyway. Basically, I don't think condemning the behavior of the American health insurance and financial sectors as "greedy" really endangers our ability to diagnose the problem rationally. I don't advocate 'outlawing greed' or any such nonsense, but we have to recognize that at some point the desire to succeed becomes a vice- just as appetite can become a vice, if it leads you to gorge yourself and become fat and useless.