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#81
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Repub Governors are running the south and bringing jobs there. The south may undergo a boom while the more liberal states deal with the fallout of their policies. | |||
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#82
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Ideology is the death of free thought. Those who profess ideological adherence enjoy relevance inversely proportional to the number of drones advocating the same idea. That does not mean we should ignore old ideas. To the contrary, we should question all ideas, including our own, equally.
Socialism is not without rational merit, though contemporary proponents are generally disinclined to fully embrace the core principle that enables it: denial of liberty. If a state is to assume the responsibility of caring for its citizenry it must do so selectively if it is to succeed. Just as excellence acts as a vacuum on resources in a free market, failure acts the same in a system of redistribution. Failure is endemic, cultural, untreatable, but not without a highly viable survival strategy: multiplicity. Unchecked subsidy of failed conditions necessarily results in more of those conditions, increasing the inefficiency of redistribution until the system is no longer sustainable. Societies and markets must necessarily be regulated if they are to remain free from the inevitable ascent of excellence though. The success of individuals operating at two or more standard deviations beyond the mean is staggering relative to the mean. Limiting success is necessary as a matter of prudence due to the scarcity and best use of resources. No matter how astute one may be in a given field, they are not so in all fields, nor are their talents nor inspirations within said fields absolute. For these reasons among others, devoting all resources or even a majority (as they would surely enjoy within a competitive environment) is unreasonable. Similarly, individuals operating below the mean and unable to adequately care for themselves enjoy success at a radically lower level than those at the mean. Ordinarily nature would cull such individuals from the population at a disproportionate rate. An equally disproportionate birth rate in addition to the compassion of and utility for their fellow man is why such individuals have endured to this day. In a modern society many natural hazards are removed, though the same individuals are plagued by other hazards such as illicit substances, inadequate healthcare, unsafe/unstable employment, etc. which serve to fill a small part of nature's regulation. Even without subsidy, such individuals enjoy inordinate proliferation in modern society, decreasing mean performance as they assume an ever larger share of the population. This does not mean that low functioning individuals must necessarily be purged from society, rather that there is a rational argument for limiting their proliferation just as their is for limiting the success of high functioning individuals. Is any of this right though?
__________________
<Millenial Snowfkake Utopia>
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#83
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Reminds me of the r/k selection theory applied to politics Molyneux is fond of.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W8N3FF_3KvU | ||
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#84
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I'm saying this out of love for the potential economics has, that maybe some day it can stop being dogmatic witchcraft and start using the scientific method. | ||||
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Last edited by Lune; 05-12-2016 at 08:18 PM..
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#85
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I really think you are just trolling at this point. P.S.: economics can never use the scientific method. There is no control group. Which is why the only valid economics is deductive economics, i.e. Austrian economics, and basically little logic like I just showed in the previous paragraph (note the absence of any numbers). | ||||
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Last edited by Raev; 05-12-2016 at 08:22 PM..
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#86
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That function for your wage exists in some form, but is undefined. Economists try to define it, and fail stupendously. And since you're using principles of economics to justify big picture policy for the entire US economy, what economists think about general principles matters. And your wage isn't purely a product of quantifiable supply and demand. There are entrenched expectations and history involved in the wage for your job that may not have adjusted to match the current reality. There are matters of access; somewhere in the world, someone exists who speaks English and will do your job half as well for about 1/5 what they pay you, but your boss or your industry hasn't found a way to connect yet. Those things effect the supply and demand, but there is no way for economists to model them. | |||
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Last edited by Lune; 05-12-2016 at 08:31 PM..
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#87
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Actually that portion of your wage is clearly defined and understood in economics.
Now I am starting to think this guy is trolling as well. People follow their interest that is what is undefined. No one is forcing Raev to work the job he does. | ||
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#88
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Once you add in the widely-known fact that there has been mass migration out of the rust belt due to the decline of the auto industry -- its a pretty brain dead talking point. | |||
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#89
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I've not heard a good reason yet for why Bernie's policies "won't work in America"
Just a lot of reasons about why they are less likely to be voted in. | ||
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#90
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