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#161
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You also have to realize productivity isn't the problem. US workers are insanely productive, probably the most productive in the developed world. Productivity has increased over the last decade while wages have decreased. Also, as I stated, many of our unions are corrupt and ineffective. That isn't a failing with the entire concept of unions, just like a single corporation being corrupt and malevolent isn't damning of the entire concept of corporations as a whole. A corporation can be socially responsible just like a union can be. The problem is, unions have become such a fringe concept and have become so detached from our culture that we have trouble running them properly. Look at how our employment culture has become. People look at jobs like they are a favor instead of a bilateral between employer and employee. The idea that "Oh man I'm lucky to have this job, oh thank you boss, anything boss. You want to fire my coworker and give me all his responsibilities without a commensurate increase in pay? Okay, sure, I'm just glad to have this job" is a poisonous, very real, and very pervasive attitude in the current market. And it's something that needs to end in order for labor to make any progress. Much of the trend of corporate profits increasing while wages remain stagnant is rooted here, in the spinelessness of the American worker. Organized labor, when used with reason and restraint, is a tool to give the employee the power to resist unreasonable demands. | |||
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Last edited by Lune; 10-23-2015 at 03:51 PM..
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#162
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I remember being taught in school about how the New Deal lifted us out of the depression. And yet, the Great Depression lasted for 7 years after the New Deal began. That is what I call failure. On the other hand, free market policies stopped the Great Depression of the 1920s in its tracks and lead to renewed prosperity. Socialistic governments with 'strong labor' are in fact disasters all over the place: Southern Europe has youth unemployment of 40%. Venezuela is a disaster where you can't buy a pack of sardines and a taxi ride to the beach requires 100$ US at the current exchange rate. Denmark is in the midst of a massive housing bubble (Copenhagen housing prices have increased 50% over the past 3 years due to NIRP). Germany is about to take on 1 million Syrian immigrants. I'm sure that will work out well for them. | ||||
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#163
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#164
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When Mark Zuckerberg founded Facebook, the first people to profit were a small cabal of founders and his investors. A small group of people were elevated into the elite, the investors reaped tremendous profits, and nothing of value happened for the middle class except maybe a slight bump in their stock portfolios. What I'm getting at is this: If you have $10,000,000, it is far easier to make another $100,000 than if you have $10,000. Yes, in the process of making another $100,000, economic growth will ensue, jobs will be created, etc etc. So what? Economic growth isn't our issue, economic opportunity is. Rich people are doing fine, poor people aren't. How can the free market address that? Quote:
I want you to know we don't disagree as much as you seem to think we do. It's not like I believe the free market is totally evil or that it's even a dichotomy between pure free market vs. pure socialism. Like most issues, the ideal position is a middle ground. What I'm really arguing here is that the middle and lower classes need to be subsidized, not taxed (mainly in response to Orruar and Irunedyourday's discussion), and I think we both agree that's accomplished first and foremost by liberating our political system. | |||||
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Last edited by Lune; 10-23-2015 at 04:25 PM..
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#165
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its like looking at a homeless person, who also happens to disagree with you, and then saying that he's homeless because he disagree's with you. As far as Denmark, the results of that bubble will yet to be seen. If you think that Denmark is unique form all problems because its got the 3rd happiest people on earth (http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/...ntries-of-2015) you're making a slight exaggeration. Denmark isn't perfect, but its a perfect example of what socialism can do for the overall society. As far as Germany, whether they were socialists capitalists or pretty much anything but fascists, the influx of immigrants from the crisis in Syria would still happen. So again, you cant use that as an example about why socialism is bad In fact, you haven't shared one example of socialism being the central cause of any one problem (and Im not talking about communism). However you have shared many reasons why a free market driven political system has been the central cause of problems here in the USA. So its pretty clear that one of these systems is a disaster, while the other one isn't. Hell we've given 30+ years to republicans, Id say its time that we admit that conservative policies just don't make a country better off than progressive ones. There is just too much ideology in conservative policies. | |||
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#166
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As a matter of full disclosure, I don't think ANY president can provide a "better quality of life." Such a statement is so subjective as to be meaningless. Mother Theresa thought she had a great quality of life while Bill Gates may think she lived in squalor. Keep in mind that Obama promised "Hope and Change" and all I have ever seen out of that is more "change" going to the IRS and a health care system with increasingly high costs. I look forward to the specifics you can provide to support your claim about Sanders.
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#167
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#168
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#169
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Now for quality of life. With a better economy, more jobs, healthcare, great working conditions, time off for family leave, time off for vacation, higher wages, and policies that will push for mandates for all of this? that is how Bernie Sanders, focusing all of his term on fixing our broken economy, can make for a better quality of life for the people that live here in the USA. There is A LOT of influence that the president and his office can do to affect, and DOES affect your quality of life. It is the central issue that drives the governments of most developed nations.. not the nation that spends more on military than the next 14 countries combined mind you, but MOST countries. and absolutly yes, quality of life is subjective... but there are ways you can objectively measure it: http://theweek.com/articles/463919/h...trys-happiness | |||
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#170
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