The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Incidentally, there's a reason I don't go around claiming qualifications--because you're not supposed to claim that you're right because you have a fucking degree, you're supposed to back it up. And maybe there's more than a little of the fact that I want myself to be wrong in more than a few cases going on in the fact that I'm reluctant to elaborate. I simply refuse, in short, to go around waving diplomas and try to wedge them into a claim of expert knowledge.
Yeah, but someone whose knowledge on the subject is limited to what they find at the library and the Internet on their own is not the equal of the formally education. The formal education does not make you right, but it establishes credibility - especially the tone and authority with which one speaks. I suspect your silence has more to do with the fact your attitude is not substantiated with education, and your silence is in service to that fact. Quite frankly, I'd be surprised if you had any formal education on this topic. What are you anyway? A classicist? A BA in history? I do not feel comfortable making assertions as broad as yours.
I don't have to find only educated people correct, or think you have to be educated to be correct, but I CAN find it odious when people who don't know what they are talking about talk big. J has been educated in geology by one of the major contributors in the field, especially with reference to Hubbart's theories. What I wonder is why you feel so capable of broad pronouncements on the topic, beyond the scope of which others are comfortable making.
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:And, again, the reason why these debates get so melodramatic is that there's simply no common ground. I don't want society to be organized on capitalist lines, so no communication with an economist is productively possible for me. It's essentially asking me to accept some basic preconditions of capitalism which I simply won't accept in the first place.
What are you even talking about? If I were to ask you to explain basics of macroeconomics which students can take in advanced placement in High School would you even know what I was talking about? There are simply characteristics of economics which hold true regardless of the society in which they are implemented. Does compound interest not work? What about the theory of price? Do you suggest that even knowledge or study of such things necessarily predisposes one to a laissez-faire policy? I guess that will be news to Stas, a socialist and an economist educated in Russia. What about Marxian economics? Austrian School? How about the economics surrounding integralism? How do you even begin to approach these aspects of social policy if you have no use for economics or economists, full stop?
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:I cannot in good conscience support a capitalist society as it is currently organized, and under its current governing first principles, that is to say, that continuous economic growth correlates with prosperity. This seems to me to be a rather straightforward conclusion to the issue, and that was the point I was trying to make with that quote of Ossus' in my sig,
And that's your whole fucking problem; not everything is some goddamn screed about philosophy and history of nations. Ossus made fun of you in the last thread because you made a stupid argument about prices and shortages and economics. For his other faults, you were in such a rush to substantiate your
polemics with nitty-gritty things - fact-based things - about economics. And you didn't know what you're talking about. That results in getting made fun of on this board. When you're particularly tenured and melodramatic about saying something stupid, you shouldn't be surprised when you get made fun of even harder.
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Namely, to point out the inherent immorality of allowing food to be governed by an unrestrained capitalist market economy. What he said is, in fact, structurally correct. It is simply immoral.
Which is universal amongst OECD states and their economic policies? Really? This is a problem across all modern nations? Because maybe I'm mistaken, but you just went on a screed about the loss of virtuous medieval institutions and now you're complaining about something which is not universal to modern states all of which lack those virtuous medieval institutions. First of all, you're a moron, because food in the U.S. is not the product of unrestrained capitalist market economics, but the conscious result of deliberate interference by the government in order to enrich the already rich.