Nilatai wrote:
gbaji wrote:
How many of those were developed in the UK?
Well all those things were invented by British engineers & scientists. Perhaps
not in Britain, but certainly as a result of it's education system.
Sigh... Must be that excellent British education system at work. When I'm talking about how a free market encourages invention and development of new products while a socialist one discourages those things, doesn't what you just said perfectly support my position? Um... And in case you're confused, the answer is: Yes.
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gbaji wrote:
In an academic sense? Sure. But in practice, the "communism in one country" used by the Soviet Union was really just a more complete version of economic control than the socialism practiced in most European countries. The difference is one of scale. The core principle (take from the fruits of the people's labors to provide services to the people directly) is absolutely the same.
lol.
That's it? Lol? Really? Did you learn that in your excellent British education system? When faced with an argument you can't or don't want to deal with, just laugh and change the subject? Ok!
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Well, you're wrong. That's the problem.
Another brilliant analysis.
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The thing is no matter what happens in your purely capitalist world, there will always be poor people. Even if all the poor people suddenly had well paying jobs, they would still be comparatively poor. So at one end of the spectrum, there will still be people who's means are not enough to cover the cost of living.
Those are not the same thing. I will again blame your education for not teaching you better.
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It's ridiculous that you think this is a good thing.
It's ridiculous that you can't see the inherent fallacies in what you're saying. Guess what? As long as you define poverty in relative terms, you will also always have it unless you adopt an absolute redistribution system like the Soviets had. Since you insist that your system isn't the same as that one, and wont ever be the same, we must conclude that there will always be poverty in your country too.
The difference is that a free market increases the total size of the economic pie, and increases the rate at which life improving technology and products become available to all (even the poor). So while the gap between rich and poor is higher, the poor are still better off than they would be in an alternative system. Again, the extreme example of this is to compare the poorest people living in the US in the 80s, to the average person living in the Soviet Union at the same time.
Clearly a wealth gap between rich and poor has nothing at all to do with the standard of living of either group.
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I never once claimed these things are free. They are, however, cheaper on a personal level than your system.
Only because when you say "personal level" you're talking about how much you pay out of pocket. But you don't take into account the amount the government chips in, which "you" (the people collectively) pay for. That's the part you are thinking is "free". But it's not. You pay the out of pocket amount *and* the amount the government pays for. Or, at least, the people pay for it collectively.
You aren't changing the whole cost, you're just shuffling around how it gets paid so that it appears to be less expensive. You are being lied to. I can't say this any more clearly than that.
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Better educated on average is what I said. Meaning, my country has a higher percentage of literate adults than yours does. It's not that difficult a concept.
Ok. ... and then argue what makes it a worthwhile thing for the government to spend money on.
I am not arguing that it isn't beneficial to the person who receives the education. I'm asking how it benefits the rest of society for that person to have that education. If he's using his advanced degree to do the equivalent of asking "do you want fries with that?", then we can question the value of the education itself, right?
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Hahaha. Yes, I'm the one with the conditioning.
You're the one who heard the word "labor" and automatically assumed blue collar work. I was speaking of the output of labor in general. This includes everyone. Your response was just bizarre and made no sense.
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gbaji wrote:
So you advocate a system which takes from others to benefit you? And you claim that capitalists are greedy? Would you feel the same way if you were the one paying more for coke than you get?
You really don't see how your analogy fails, do you? It's like this, your taxes go to pay for things like the military, right? Do you think you should get a tax break if you're opposed to war? Answer honestly now.
No, you shouldn't get a tax break. For two reasons:
1. Because the existence of a military is one of the few necessary things a government must do.
2. Because the actions of the military benefit or harm us all equally. What you were talking about was being fine with the government subsidizing coke because you gain financially on the deal. But this only works for some of the people (those poor enough not to pay more in their share of taxes for the subsidy than they gain from the subsidy). The rest of the people pay more for their coke than they would otherwise. So the effect on the population is unequal and unfair.
It's not just about whether you personally like something.
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What do you think taxes are for? Honestly, I really do want to know.
The very fact that you think taxes should be "for" a group of people within society speaks volumes to the point I'm making. You actively believe that the government should treat people within said society unequally. I don't believe it should. There are a host of reasons why doing what you want is a bad idea in the long run.
[quote]No, the law
already makes it illegal
before that point. Iirc abortion is legal until about 24 weeks, except in
extreme extenuating circumstances. This is what I support, right there. I support that legal cut off. You can call it arbitrary but there are very important differences between the second and third trimester.[/quote]
The problem is that those extreme extenuating circumstances can be met easily, effectively making elective abortions legal at any point in a pregnancy. Those were the exact loopholes that I was speaking of.
[quote]Well if you're sure that's what the proposition would state, then I would probably agree with it. So long as it wasn't causing permanent damage. Like I said before, the devil's in the details.[/quote]
Yes, it is. The problem is that most people don't bother to look at the details. I've had this debate before. I've heard dozens of people expressing the exact same position you're expressing, and even when presented with the details will continue to refuse to believe that the law actually does allow for such elective abortions. They do the same thing you're doing. And the result is that they end out supporting exactly that which they claim to oppose.
There's a strong tendency to argue from a position of ignorance. As though somehow because you don't see or know of evidence to the contrary, it must mean that contrary position isn't true. This is doubly true in this case (at least in the US). Out of a decade of data for abortion center Dr. Tillman was running, only the last two years included one important question about late term abortions: In cases where an abortion was not performed because of a problem with the pregnancy itself (viability), and was not performed because the womans life was in danger, but was performed because the pregnancy represented a "significant impairment to a major bodily function", they
finally after years of court battles required in the documentation that they ask whether the impairment was physical or mental in nature.
For that decade, nearly half of all late term abortions (that's post 22 weeks btw) at that clinic were performed for that "impairment of a major bodily function" reason. And for most of that decade conservatives had insisted that since this could legally include mental health that it represented a loophole for elective abortions. And they were shouted down by liberals insisting that no one would actually use that reason, it was ridiculous, and they were really just trying to prevent legitimate harm to the health of the woman.
IIRC, during the last two years the clinic was in operation, when they finally fought through the legal morass to get that question added, 100% of all abortions performed under the "impairment of a major bodily function" justification (health of the mother), were performed for mental reasons. Every... Single... One. I looked up the data myself during an argument about this a couple years ago. I don't really feel like doing it again, but I will if I have to. The point is that exactly what the conservatives feared was happening was happening at that clinic.
This was not a case of pro-life folks going overboard and making up crazy stories. This was a case of the pro-choice position becoming so warped that it was ultimately resulting in exactly the sorts of things that most people who are pro-choice (me and you included) are absolutely opposed to. And yet, when I pointed out these data to posters on this forum, the same ones who insisted that Obama was absolutely correct to oppose the proposed changes in the Illinois law which would expressly prevent mental health reasons for being used for late term abortions, they still found ways to insist that the law was sufficient and no changes were needed.
Taking a "side" trumped even what those arguing the issue claimed to believe in. So yeah, forgive me if I doubt the sincerity of someone holding your position. While I shouldn't assume you'd look the other way in order to not weaken your own political positions, I've seen exactly that behavior by an awful lot of people in the past. And ultimately, unless people like you actually do take the time and effort to investigate whether the laws actually prevent the things you believe they do, it doesn't matter much. You wont know, and wont know to check.
Edited, Nov 8th 2011 5:32pm by gbaji