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Re: We are all Slave now.
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And if anyone goes and tries to, say, improve healthcare, well, they're just going to cause more harm than good because democracy / capitalism / the system / the establishment / your navel sucks. While the above post is just too damn long and wandering to read all of, it's a good illustration of the whole problem. |
Re: We are all Slave now.
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The endless desire to genuflect to lower taxes means advocating people get paid shitty wages. In a world where you don't have an economy without education, the Red States have been killing themselves for the last couple of generations because of their fealty to the anti-tax religion. I don't care what someone's ideology or religion is, in the 21st century, if you can't run a school system, balance its budget, and attract decent talent to teach, you shouldn't be anywhere near government, anywhere in the world. |
Re: We are all Slave now.
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(Hi, Ty!) |
Re: We are all Slave now.
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Re: We are all Slave now.
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Overfinancialization led to 2008. We cured that by plowing massive amounts of money into the system, which did not trickle down to those most harmed. And the consequence was populism, which led to Trump, who hints at authoritarianism. You have to burn the forest every now and again to save it. If the system never "clears," the system grows more and more fragile, and when it runs into its next crisis, the result is cataclysmic. Do I think we should follow the lead of Andrew Mellon in 1929? No. There are smart, limited things to be done to fix a problem. You don't let the world burn entirely. But when you fix the problem, you allow enough creative destruction to take place to wipe out most of the big players who caused the crisis, and allow smaller, more deserving and more innovative players to take their place. Libertarianism stands for many bad things. But it stands for many good things. And one of those good things is allowing a stagnant system that has pretty much devolved into rentier/crony capitalism and financial engineering to collapse to the extent it should, and allow a better group of actors to take the place of the past regime. What's so bad about that? Oh, I know what's bad about that... Many of us, here, have our bread buttered by that rentier/crony capitalist system. It pays for our tony lifestyles which allow us to come here and complain about its unfairness, and advocate fixes at its margins, but never of a sort which would directly impact us. I believe the old term for this, worth dusting off, is "limousine liberal." |
Re: We are all Slave now.
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But how does one upend a system that values people like us at many multiples of a teacher's salary? How is that perverted situation remedied? Well, you have to have a severe enough crisis to shock the system so badly that people begin to ask why a lawyer, or a broker, or some hedge fund analyst, makes so much money. You need a situation where either the market, or society, depresses the wages of the undeserving in favor of raising the wages of the deserving, such as teachers. Supporting interventions that protect the current system is never going to do this. Never. Ever. Barring a crisis that all but reconfigures our society, we will never see a situation in which a teacher or a firefighter is paid like a decent analyst or lawyer. Supporting intervention to protect a system that keeps your retirement safe is siding with unfairness. The class system, the false barriers to entry, and the wage protectionism for the affluent and connected in this country is turning us into an English class system. You and I are part of that. Sure, we're willing to fix things at the margins. We're willing to give a few thousand here or there, vote for the right candidate, perhaps donate our time. But when the next crisis hits, we will both demand that our national Handicapper General step in and protect us from the economic forces that should wipe out a system as fragile as ours. It's crazy to do otherwise, of course, as self-preservation comes first. But those crazy Libertarians? They're willing to live through the natural selection and evolution that moves a society forward. They are, in fact, progressives in this regard. And you and me? We're conservatives, trying save our stuff... saving our asses. |
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Re: We are all Slave now.
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You get things like Trump. That's what happens. And he's just the cherry on the sundae. It's the populism, class warfare, and general distrust of all systems (political, commerce, etc.) underneath where the really rich and flavorful stuff is lurking. |
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It's freakishly odd to me that you can sound off here *all the time* about how the political system doesn't serve ordinary people, causing them to lose jobs and vote for Trump and all sorts of other horribles, and then give this explanation of how giving ordinary people more political power can't work. Dude, it's almost like the noblesse oblige approach that you are advocating right now doesn't actually work. News flash: Affluent suburbs have well-paved roads and good schools, and poor suburbs don't. But you keep worrying about how democracy will collapse if we trying to treat people more equally. Quote:
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Do you have a good example of someone acting in politics out of a desire to control other people's behavior that is not also motivated by self-interest? Quote:
I understand where the populism comes from. It would have been worse if we'd had a big recession. See, e.g., the 1930s. |
Re: We are all Slave now.
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- failing to protect the country from Al Qaida on 9/11 - leading us into a war in Iraq to protect us from non-existent WMD, a war we have never stopped fighting - the financial crisis You're pointing your finger at an inadequate solution, not at the real problem(s). Note that other countries are struggling with similar issues, e.g., Brexit. |
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Quadfecta!
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I know many of my kids' teachers. I like many of them. I am pretty sure that I could do what they do passably well. I am pretty sure that they could not do what I do. I am sympathetic with your notion that what they do is, on some level, more important. I do what I do partly in order to be able to pay to live in a nice neighborhood with good schools and better teachers. If I didn't have them to support, maybe I'd quit my job and write a novel. |
Re: We are all Slave now.
Legal questions from today's headlines: A contract that requires someone to lie under oath has got to be void against public policy, yes? Shouldn't a lawyer who drafts such a contract face ethical charges for suborning perjury?
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