I have to pay taxes now; you're fired!

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Perhaps you could assist me be clarifying what the logic you refer to here is,
The one you where using, see " completely groundless" aka "any amount of influence is enough".

and what the similarities are between EPA regulations and slavery abolition acts.
Well if i didn't pay any employees my expenses would go down, thus more profit... obviously laws against slavery are hindering my business.

If memory serves, the people chained in the cave were also quite happy, spending their time at guessing about the shadows on the walls.
Yes, the point was that i for one don't remember Plato making the argument that once they got turned around to see the fire they'd be less happy. Then again it's been a while.


But perhaps that will change in time, and those places will also come to fully enjoy the fruits of human invention.
Yup, i for one can't way for space slums...[DOUBLEPOST=1353594375][/DOUBLEPOST]
Papa Johns NOT cutting hours or raising pizza costs or closing stores? What stupid left-wing nutcase is making THESE claims? Oh, it's the Papa himself.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-...bamacare_b_2166209.html?icid=hp_front_top_art

As the right calms down we'll see more and more of this.

It's almost as if less employees to serve people and higher prices are not conductive to getting more customers...
 
The one you where using, see " completely groundless" aka "any amount of influence is enough".



Well if i didn't pay any employees my expenses would go down, thus more profit... obviously laws against slavery are hindering my business.
These guys are in the business of mining coal. Demand for coal has gone down and is not expected to pick up for some time, a claim for which evidence has been provided. It is reasoned that this decline in coal demand is pressuring producers to reduce capacity and lay off personnel to cut costs. The company is blaming the government, saying that energy policies have worsened the prospects for coal. I say this may be partly true, and the layoffs are likely to be in agreement with normal business logic. You apparently disagree with something there. I'm not exactly sure with what, and I seem to be unable to convince you to clarify in plain english, beyond subtle hints and allusions. I have brought up EPA legislation, the Renewable Portfolio Standard, and government grants and subsidies to support my position. You bring up the slave trade to support yours.

I think this is the point in the conversation where you and I agree to disagree.
Yes, the point was that i for one don't remember Plato making the argument that once they got turned around to see the fire they'd be less happy. Then again it's been a while.
Didn't Plato's allegory also state that if one of these chained-up people was freed and brought out of the cave, then, once he had familiarised himself with the new situation, he would not wish to return back to the cave, and would think the games they played back there were rather silly? If that person was truly more happy being chained up inside the cave then being free in the outside world, then wouldn't it be reasonable to assume he'd want to go back?

We can both probably agree that ignorance is bliss, but we may have different opinions on whether such bliss is truly desireable.
 
These guys are in the business of mining coal. Demand for coal has gone down and is not expected to pick up for some time, a claim for which evidence has been provided. It is reasoned that this decline in coal demand is pressuring producers to reduce capacity and lay off personnel to cut costs. The company is blaming the government, saying that energy policies have worsened the prospects for coal. I say this may be partly true, and the layoffs are likely to be in agreement with normal business logic. You apparently disagree with something there. I'm not exactly sure with what, and I seem to be unable to convince you to clarify in plain english, beyond subtle hints and allusions. I have brought up EPA legislation, the Renewable Portfolio Standard, and government grants and subsidies to support my position. You bring up the slave trade to support yours.

I think this is the point in the conversation where you and I agree to disagree.

Or you know, you could try actually understanding my argument before dismissing it?


You basically said that it's not a lie because government policy did have an influence. My reply was that, unless the influence is actually the main reason for the firing, it is a lie because most, if not all government policy plays a role in the economy, but in very few cases it is the deciding factor in any free market (well market that includes plenty of free market principles).


You bring up the slave trade to support yours.
It's called an analogy...

Didn't Plato's allegory also state that if one of these chained-up people was freed and brought out of the cave, then, once he had familiarised himself with the new situation, he would not wish to return back to the cave, and would think the games they played back there were rather silly?
The way i understood your remark about Plato's Cave to my Bhutan comment was that those people are happier because they're deeper in the cave... I argued back that the allegory didn't state you'd be less happy at higher levels on the cave, and thus your argument is invalid.



If that person was truly more happy being chained up inside the cave then being free in the outside world, then wouldn't it be reasonable to assume he'd want to go back?
Which is exactly why i disagree that Plato's Cave has anything to do with the higher happiness rating.

I guess you do understand.
 
Or you know, you could try actually understanding my argument before dismissing it?
You know, you're not exactly the best person on these boards when it comes to making your points clear.

The way I understand serious discussions work is that everyone gets to state their own position, and if others don't quite understand, they ask for clarification. Offering vague clues and sarcastic one-liners leaves too much ambiguity (or just the right amount of wiggle-room, if one is less than sincere), and just results in needless misunderstandings and unintentional strawmen. Honest mistakes in making one's position clear are okay, but if one just can't be bothered with stating what they fucking actually mean, even when asked to clarify, then exactly what obliges others to bother with indulging them in their little games?

But perhaps you have an alternative view on how actual discussion is supposed to work. If so, I invite you to share it.

Now then.
You basically said that it's not a lie because government policy did have an influence. My reply was that, unless the influence is actually the main reason for the firing, it is a lie because most, if not all government policy plays a role in the economy, but in very few cases it is the deciding factor in any free market (well market that includes plenty of free market principles).
I would contend that the employees were let go due to economic reasons, chiefly the reduction in coal demand. Why there is a reduction in demand is an interplay of several different things. If you take a look at earlier postings in this thread, I think you will come to notice that no-one is claiming the company line is the unexaggerated and unbiased truth, but such is not really a requirement in my opinion. It is simply a viewpoint, one which seeks to portray events in a light the company thinks is best. But to dismiss the viewpoint as a lie with no basis in truth requires, in my view, that the reasons they state have little to no effect. This I do not believe is the case, and the various incentives for alternative energy research and production and disincentives for coal energy production in federal and state-level statutes have a significant extra-market impact on the competitiveness of coal. Hence their viewpoint would be a valid one, among a host of others.
It's called an analogy...
And I dispute it. The situation of the coal miners compares to the situation of slaves in no practical way. Companies laying off workers legally compares to slavery in no practical way. Pro-alternative energy legislation combats perceived evils similar in no practical way, either in nature or scale, to the evils of slavery. For-profit enterprise is perfectly normal, and does not need to compare to slavery in any practical way.

Unless of course you had a different purpose in mind with your analogy. If so, I'd ask you to clarify. As you may have gathered from the above, I dislike operating on guesses based on vague hints.
The way i understood your remark about Plato's Cave to my Bhutan comment was that those people are happier because they're deeper in the cave... I argued back that the allegory didn't state you'd be less happy at higher levels on the cave, and thus your argument is invalid.


Which is exactly why i disagree that Plato's Cave has anything to do with the higher happiness rating.

I guess you do understand.
As I understand Plato's Cave, the people chained immobile to the wall are not happy because of it; they are happy in spite of it, as they've never gotten to experience anything else. Now imagine some farmhand in Bhutan learns himself some english, and travels to the United States (is freed from the cave). He gets an education and a job, and is reasonably successful. Then, twenty years later, he is asked if he wants to go back to the simple life on a bhutanese farm that he knew before. I'd wager his response would be along the lines of "Hells no!". Even if some statistic says people in Bhutan are in general happier, he most likely wouldn't want to go back to the way things were (like Plato said). So it might be that we over here in the First World just have things a bit better in terms of what people want out of life, regardless of happiness ratings in either Bhutan or inside a cave.
 
Depends on your perspective. You're far more right-wing than he is. He's for small government in business, you're advocating no government in business.
 
I like TommiR. He cites sources and his positions are well reasoned and his posts are interesting to read. At the very least, I tend to learn something.
 
I like TommiR. He cites sources and his positions are well reasoned and his posts are interesting to read. At the very least, I tend to learn something.
I like him too. I don't agree with his opinions, but he's come by his opinions through careful study and consideration, and I can respect that. But I still find his avatar amusingly accurate.
 

GasBandit

Staff member
Hey TommiR, you know you're winning when they start critiquing the poster, and not the post.

And you have way more patience than me, too. heh.
 
As a philosopher, I just want to say, to both sides....FFS, make up your own analogies. BOTH of you are horribly abusing Plato's Cave for things it wasn't meant for. You're all, and those Bhutanese famers as well, stuck snugly inside the cave, I assure you (and me too). It's literally impossible to be made free and look outside of the cave.
 
As a philosopher, I just want to say, to both sides....FFS, make up your own analogies. BOTH of you are horribly abusing Plato's Cave for things it wasn't meant for. You're all, and those Bhutanese famers as well, stuck snugly inside the cave, I assure you (and me too). It's literally impossible to be made free and look outside of the cave.
This is why we MUST continue to fund robotic missions outside the cave.
 
This is why we MUST continue to fund robotic missions outside the cave.
Once robots can actually register the true essence of a thing, rather than its corporeal presence, they'll have overtaken their creators.

That said, I'm all in favour of robots.
 
Better them than us, I'm pretty comfortable where I'm at.

Well, yeah. It's been proven over and over that people are a LOT happier if they have less worries and less thinking to do. People who are "a bit simple" tend to be much, much happier than the real thinkers. You might worry about the ozone layer, global warming, national politics, the price of gas, terrorism, the sad state of the education system, your relationship, your personal hygiene, your iPhone crashing, your stocks plummeting,....
A somewhat simpler person just doesn't really know or care much about most of those issues.
Now, that farmer over in Bhutan may be just as smart as you are, but he still has a lot less to worry about. He doesn't *hear* about national politics. He doesn't *have* an education system to worry about. He doesn't *live* in a society where it's important to (shave your armpits/trim your nose hair/use deodorant/have white teeth/whatever). He doesn't use gas. Etc etc.

All in all, generally speaking*, the less you know and have to worry about, the happier you are. Inversely, the highest amount of depressions and anxieties is found with people who know about a lot of stuff, but can't actually change any of it.

Less worries -> happier. Having more stuff? Hardly matters at all, and actually has a negative impact, since more things break down/have to be replaced/have to be maintained.

*There are, of course, also neuroses, depressions etc in people with lesser mental capacities as well. People with Down syndrome and a depression are really sad to see and almost impossible to get out of it, because it's bloody hard to try and reason it out and help them. A lot of therapy methods aren't effective or simply don't work because they lack specific understanding or knowledge or capabilities of reflection.
 
You know, you're not exactly the best person on these boards when it comes to making your points clear.

The way I understand serious discussions work is that everyone gets to state their own position, and if others don't quite understand, they ask for clarification. Offering vague clues and sarcastic one-liners leaves too much ambiguity (or just the right amount of wiggle-room, if one is less than sincere), and just results in needless misunderstandings and unintentional strawmen. Honest mistakes in making one's position clear are okay, but if one just can't be bothered with stating what they fucking actually mean, even when asked to clarify, then exactly what obliges others to bother with indulging them in their little games?

But perhaps you have an alternative view on how actual discussion is supposed to work. If so, I invite you to share it.

Well if one wants a clarification it would help to actually stop at the request and not say things like "I have brought up EPA legislation, the Renewable Portfolio Standard, and government grants and subsidies to support my position. You bring up the slave trade to support yours." and then complaining about the other side using strawman arguments... (to be clear, amount of arguments brought says nothing about their importance, one could bring up 1 million instances when the Bible was right, but another needs only bring up one when it was wrong to disprove the statement that the Bible is never wrong).


I mean, was "Well if i didn't pay any employees my expenses would go down, thus more profit... obviously laws against slavery are hindering my business." really unclear? I don't see how you can interpret that one as being about the condition of slaves vs coal miners.So i assume you wrote the reply to that in an attempt to make me clarify more...

As for the sarcasm, well it's either that or i end up sounding as pissed of as Gas or JCM came off back in the day...

I would contend that the employees were let go due to economic reasons, chiefly the reduction in coal demand. Why there is a reduction in demand is an interplay of several different things. If you take a look at earlier postings in this thread, I think you will come to notice that no-one is claiming the company line is the unexaggerated and unbiased truth, but such is not really a requirement in my opinion. It is simply a viewpoint, one which seeks to portray events in a light the company thinks is best. But to dismiss the viewpoint as a lie with no basis in truth requires, in my view, that the reasons they state have little to no effect. This I do not believe is the case, and the various incentives for alternative energy research and production and disincentives for coal energy production in federal and state-level statutes have a significant extra-market impact on the competitiveness of coal. Hence their viewpoint would be a valid one, among a host of others.

Let me just distil that a bit: "I think you will come to notice that no-one is claiming the company line is the unexaggerated and unbiased truth, but such is not really a requirement in my opinion"

Yes, you aren't, my problem is that you still are making an excuse for them claiming it because of the government. Objectively at most the government's policy just made them fire those people faster.

I know that compared to some of the completely fictional "facts" some morons use (women's bodies can kill sperm) it's leagues better, but "we fired them because of Obama" is still a lie...

It's like firing a woman and saying it's because her work wasn't as good as the other woman that works for you, while there's clear evidence that some men doing the same job do an even worse job but weren't fired. Sure, the fact that she was worse then the other woman was part of the reason why she was fired and not the other woman, but the evidence shows it's not the main reason, doesn't it.


And I dispute it. The situation of the coal miners compares to the situation of slaves in no practical way. Companies laying off workers legally compares to slavery in no practical way. Pro-alternative energy legislation combats perceived evils similar in no practical way, either in nature or scale, to the evils of slavery. For-profit enterprise is perfectly normal, and does not need to compare to slavery in any practical way.

Unless of course you had a different purpose in mind with your analogy. If so, I'd ask you to clarify. As you may have gathered from the above, I dislike operating on guesses based on vague hints.

Considering what we where discussing i assumed it was clear that the slavery analogy had nothing to do with the situation of the slaves vs the coal miners, but with the effect of government policy on business.

I'm sure there are plenty of businesses out there that wouldn't have gone bankrupt/failed if they didn't have to pay their workforce, yet i don't think you'd accept them blaming the government for not allowing them to have slaves.



As I understand Plato's Cave, the people chained immobile to the wall are not happy because of it; they are happy in spite of it, as they've never gotten to experience anything else. Now imagine some farmhand in Bhutan learns himself some english, and travels to the United States (is freed from the cave). He gets an education and a job, and is reasonably successful. Then, twenty years later, he is asked if he wants to go back to the simple life on a bhutanese farm that he knew before. I'd wager his response would be along the lines of "Hells no!". Even if some statistic says people in Bhutan are in general happier, he most likely wouldn't want to go back to the way things were (like Plato said). So it might be that we over here in the First World just have things a bit better in terms of what people want out of life, regardless of happiness ratings in either Bhutan or inside a cave.
Yes (well truth is i don't know, as i have never experienced life in Bhutan, and there are other places ), that's how the cave would work. But that isn't the same as being less happy as you get to the higher levels.

That's why Plato's Cave doesn't apply, unless you argue that not only is the person in the US at a higher level, but also aware of the next level of the cave


As a philosopher, I just want to say, to both sides....FFS, make up your own analogies. BOTH of you are horribly abusing Plato's Cave for things it wasn't meant for. You're all, and those Bhutanese famers as well, stuck snugly inside the cave, I assure you (and me too). It's literally impossible to be made free and look outside of the cave.
If you check he's the one that brought it up, and i said it doesn't apply (as there's no reason why one should be less happy at higher levels as long as they're ignorant that there's more levels ahead).
 
Depends on your perspective. You're far more right-wing than he is. He's for small government in business, you're advocating no government in business.
I'm sorry if I've given you the impression that I'm against any kind of government influence or intervention in business. Given this thread, I can understand how you might have gotten the idea, but I don't think I've actually stated such, as I'm not quite that right-wing. The actual statements I've made here can perhaps best be summarised as the following three:

1) the ~160 employees that were fired as read in the OP were laid off due to normal business logic;
2) the company line that the layoffs were due to the effects of government energy policy is accurate to an extent;
3) government energy policy has had a highly appreciable negative effect on the prospects of coal energy.

In addition to this there was also our small sidetrack into examining your economic model.
As a philosopher, I just want to say, to both sides....FFS, make up your own analogies. BOTH of you are horribly abusing Plato's Cave for things it wasn't meant for. You're all, and those Bhutanese famers as well, stuck snugly inside the cave, I assure you (and me too). It's literally impossible to be made free and look outside of the cave.
If you as a philosopher tell me that nothing in the allegory is useful for the purposes of what I meant, then it's my bad. I haven't read about Plato's Cave since high school, so I may misremember a few things.
Well, yeah. It's been proven over and over that people are a LOT happier if they have less worries and less thinking to do. People who are "a bit simple" tend to be much, much happier than the real thinkers. You might worry about the ozone layer, global warming, national politics, the price of gas, terrorism, the sad state of the education system, your relationship, your personal hygiene, your iPhone crashing, your stocks plummeting,....
I remember hearing from somewhere that "if you want to find a man who is truly and always happy, start looking in mental asylums". While certainly a quip, it would stand to reason that perpetual bliss in life can only be found amongst the insane. Whilst perhaps offering the greatest degree of happiness, most people who are still in possession of their faculties would likely find the idea of such an existence undesirable. Assuming the above are true, could it be argued that a strategy which seeks to maximise happiness is not optimal, and that a strategy in which the person also desires other things is superior?
A somewhat simpler person just doesn't really know or care much about most of those issues.
Now, that farmer over in Bhutan may be just as smart as you are, but he still has a lot less to worry about. He doesn't *hear* about national politics. He doesn't *have* an education system to worry about. He doesn't *live* in a society where it's important to (shave your armpits/trim your nose hair/use deodorant/have white teeth/whatever). He doesn't use gas. Etc etc.

All in all, generally speaking*, the less you know and have to worry about, the happier you are. Inversely, the highest amount of depressions and anxieties is found with people who know about a lot of stuff, but can't actually change any of it.
I know you told me to stop using Plato's Cave, but... I think I can remember that the people chained up in the cave were happy as they were, were fearful of change, yet release from the cave was still considered a good thing - even if it was originally against their will, though don't make too much of that.

Assuming the bhutanese farmhand who doesn't want to go back is representative, would his unwillingness not count as a point in favor of the current US/western model, over the bhutanese way? Even if the bhutanese are happier in general, according to some claims.
Less worries -> happier. Having more stuff? Hardly matters at all, and actually has a negative impact, since more things break down/have to be replaced/have to be maintained.
Being rich would provide the potential for a person to fulfill a greater amount of his or her needs, thereby presumably increasing happiness. Were you talking about 'negative impact' as diminishing marginal utility of stuff to the point of being negative, or is having more stuff detrimental to happiness in general? It seems to me that both cases would result in rich people, who are people with more stuff, as being less happy. At first sight this might seem something of a paradox, may I inquire as to your views on this?
Well if one wants a clarification it would help to actually stop at the request and not say things like "I have brought up EPA legislation, the Renewable Portfolio Standard, and government grants and subsidies to support my position. You bring up the slave trade to support yours." and then complaining about the other side using strawman arguments... (to be clear, amount of arguments brought says nothing about their importance, one could bring up 1 million instances when the Bible was right, but another needs only bring up one when it was wrong to disprove the statement that the Bible is never wrong).
At that point I had already asked for clarification, without success. My outburst back there was too confrontational, I'm sorry about that. But it would make this conversation more fruitful and less frustrating if you were to continue in the manner you've adopted in your last two posts of making the effort to be more clear with your points. It helps those of us who don't know you well enough to accurately guess your way of thinking to understand.

The amount of arguments by itself is not reflective of their relevance. Their merits are. I believe all of the three points I provided are relevant to the discussion. If you wish to dispute them, please proceed to do so. And if you have something of your own to corroborate your position, I'd be happy to see it.
I mean, was "Well if i didn't pay any employees my expenses would go down, thus more profit... obviously laws against slavery are hindering my business." really unclear? I don't see how you can interpret that one as being about the condition of slaves vs coal miners.So i assume you wrote the reply to that in an attempt to make me clarify more...
The words themselves are clear, certainly. The intention behind them and your view on it's relevance to the conversation is still not. I'll get more into that later.
Let me just distil that a bit: "I think you will come to notice that no-one is claiming the company line is the unexaggerated and unbiased truth, but such is not really a requirement in my opinion"

Yes, you aren't, my problem is that you still are making an excuse for them claiming it because of the government. Objectively at most the government's policy just made them fire those people faster.

I know that compared to some of the completely fictional "facts" some morons use (women's bodies can kill sperm) it's leagues better, but "we fired them because of Obama" is still a lie...

It's like firing a woman and saying it's because her work wasn't as good as the other woman that works for you, while there's clear evidence that some men doing the same job do an even worse job but weren't fired. Sure, the fact that she was worse then the other woman was part of the reason why she was fired and not the other woman, but the evidence shows it's not the main reason, doesn't it.
I have posited three things previously:

1. The layoffs took place due to a decline in coal demand
2. A non-insignificant part of that decline is due to government policies favoring other forms of energy production
3. The Obama administration is generally thought of as continuing those policies during his second presidential term

If those three are taken to be correct, then it would follow that the company statement was correct to a non-insignificant degree. This, to me, means it is partially true, and therefore not a lie. As I've said, it is not the unexaggerated and unbiased truth, but it's partly true.

As to your example, so person A was fired for not doing as good of a job as person B, while there are indications that persons C, D and E were doing even worse and weren't fired. And the company says they fired A because of not doing as well as B. There could be a number of reasons why they fired A instead of, say, D, and some of them might be valid reasons. But not doing as good of a job as B is one of them, so the company statement is partially true, though perhaps not the whole picture if there were other reasons as well.
Considering what we where discussing i assumed it was clear that the slavery analogy had nothing to do with the situation of the slaves vs the coal miners, but with the effect of government policy on business.

I'm sure there are plenty of businesses out there that wouldn't have gone bankrupt/failed if they didn't have to pay their workforce, yet i don't think you'd accept them blaming the government for not allowing them to have slaves.
We are discussing the effects of a subset of government policies on the energy sector, more specifically their adverse effects on the competitiveness and prospects of coal energy in relation to other forms of energy production. If you wish to have a conversation about the effects of government policy on business in general, then I'm game, but it really is an entirely separate discussion.

As to your slavery analogy, in my previous post I disputed it's relevance in the discussion. Now, for the record, I'd like to ask you to spell out how you believe slavery is analogous to the situation of US energy policy and it's effects on the energy market.
 
I will repeat my assertion that economics has nothing to do with this. Murray is a shitbag murdering bastard. Dropping a mountain on both his miners and their would-be rescuers, and then blaming it all on the media attests to that.

This little performance was not for EU consumption. It was strictly for the right-wing noise machine and those who have been beaten into believing their bullshit tale that there is a "war on coal". That "unemployed miner" in the Pennsylvania campaign ads probably did the ad on threat of whatever job he has now.
 
I don't think it is the coal he hates, just the coal companies and the owners.

You can appreciate the importance of a fuel source while at the same time condemn the companies who exploit everything about that resource.
 
The operators are nearly cartoon-like in their vileness. It was said of Don Blankenship that he was the most evil man in America. Regulations? Safety? They are as nothing to these men. As long as coal moved, it was merely a "business expense" to pay whatever fine came across and continue right on as before, with complete disregard to miner safety. The Pinto Memo comes to mind, but as these men have such hold of the political process, they shrug it off with a "yeah, so?"

As long as these men make their money, the extraction industries in this state have no motivation to help this state or others like it climb out of the basement in most economic categories. In fact, their business model depends on keeping states like WV 49th out of 50 in everything that matters. It gives them a poor and uneducated work force that has been indoctrinated over the generations that the mines are the only option for them. Even when those mines are fewer and fewer with each passing day. And anything that threatens this model, even when it conflicts with state or federal law, is a "war on coal".
 
I don't think it is the coal he hates, just the coal companies and the owners.

You can appreciate the importance of a fuel source while at the same time condemn the companies who exploit everything about that resource.
Certainly, and I meant the coal companies with that statement. Perhaps I should have specified.
I will repeat my assertion that economics has nothing to do with this. Murray is a shitbag murdering bastard. Dropping a mountain on both his miners and their would-be rescuers, and then blaming it all on the media attests to that.

This little performance was not for EU consumption. It was strictly for the right-wing noise machine and those who have been beaten into believing their bullshit tale that there is a "war on coal". That "unemployed miner" in the Pennsylvania campaign ads probably did the ad on threat of whatever job he has now.
Well, decline in the demand of coal is not a matter of opinion; it is a matter of fact, assuming the EIA statistics I presented earlier can be trusted. This would lead to a decrease in operating profit for coal producers, prompting cost-cutting measures. Such measures usually mean layoffs. I believe this line of thought is in agreement with perfectly normal business theories. Regardless of what coal producers in West Virginia choose to think of themselves, they would still be subject to market forces, as they can't really sell if no-one is buying. Indeed, the same EIA statistics forecasted that coal production would go down by 7% in 2012.

You assert that such economic considerations had nothing to do with those layoffs. You argue that the company owners are evil people, make several claims to demonstrate their evilness, and state that the most logical conclusion given the evidence presented is that the workers were fired not because of business reasons, but because of the owner's evil motives. I hope I've understood your position correctly.

As I'm sure you've gathered, I disagree with that conclusion. Prevailing business theories seem quite solid, and my assesment of their application to the current circumstances would lead one to expect personnel layoffs in the industry. Which is what we are seeing here, with no evil required.

Now, you seem to live in the same state where the company in question has some operations, so it is possible you know something the rest of us don't. But given the economic circumstances of the industry, asserting that business considerations played no part in these layoffs strikes me as quite strong.
 
At that point I had already asked for clarification, without success. My outburst back there was too confrontational, I'm sorry about that. But it would make this conversation more fruitful and less frustrating if you were to continue in the manner you've adopted in your last two posts of making the effort to be more clear with your points. It helps those of us who don't know you well enough to accurately guess your way of thinking to understand.

The amount of arguments by itself is not reflective of their relevance. Their merits are. I believe all of the three points I provided are relevant to the discussion. If you wish to dispute them, please proceed to do so. And if you have something of your own to corroborate your position, I'd be happy to see it.

You know, there comes a point in an argument when if the other side can't understand your arguments there's little point in continuing.

At least try to come up with a few interpretations of your own of what i said so i can see what i'm not making clear...

The words themselves are clear, certainly. The intention behind them and your view on it's relevance to the conversation is still not. I'll get more into that later.
Considering we're not arguing in front of an audience i don't see the relevance of my intentions behind the words... they should speak for themselves.

Maybe if you tell me what exactly is unclear about them, because from my pov i've explained it twice now.

I have posited three things previously:

1. The layoffs took place due to a decline in coal demand
2. A non-insignificant part of that decline is due to government policies favoring other forms of energy production
3. The Obama administration is generally thought of as continuing those policies during his second presidential term

If those three are taken to be correct, then it would follow that the company statement was correct to a non-insignificant degree. This, to me, means it is partially true, and therefore not a lie. As I've said, it is not the unexaggerated and unbiased truth, but it's partly true.
Biased truth... i think that's where we disagree on our assessment of objective reality.

As Ambassador Kosh said "Understanding is a three edged sword: your side, their side, and the truth."

IMO it's only TRUTH if it's unbiased.


As to your example, so person A was fired for not doing as good of a job as person B, while there are indications that persons C, D and E were doing even worse and weren't fired. And the company says they fired A because of not doing as well as B. There could be a number of reasons why they fired A instead of, say, D, and some of them might be valid reasons. But not doing as good of a job as B is one of them, so the company statement is partially true, though perhaps not the whole picture if there were other reasons as well.

Ah but see, saying that they fired A because he was worse then B implies that's the only reason, when clearly it wasn't.

See here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lie#Lying_by_omission

It's clearly designed to foster a misconception, that without the government policy there would be no firings.

We are discussing the effects of a subset of government policies on the energy sector, more specifically their adverse effects on the competitiveness and prospects of coal energy in relation to other forms of energy production. If you wish to have a conversation about the effects of government policy on business in general, then I'm game, but it really is an entirely separate discussion.
While the specifics for the coal industry might be more , well, specific i guess, i see no reason why one cannot use an analogy from any other sector of industry.

If you wish to rebuke the analogy then you need to actually come up with reasons why the analogy used doesn't hold up (and for that you need to understand that it doesn't actually require making any moral judgements about slavery, i could have gone with a number of other policies most economists agree are good, like liveable minimum wages, i just assumed the slavery one would be more self evident).

BTW, for an actual explanation of the analogy i used see below.

As to your slavery analogy, in my previous post I disputed it's relevance in the discussion. Now, for the record, I'd like to ask you to spell out how you believe slavery is analogous to the situation of US energy policy and it's effects on the energy market.
How do i make it more clear then: "I'm sure there are plenty of businesses out there that wouldn't have gone bankrupt/failed if they didn't have to pay their workforce, yet i don't think you'd accept them blaming the government for not allowing them to have slaves."

Now this analogy is actually meant to show another argument then the one above about them lying about the reasons for the lay-offs.

It's meant to show that your assertion that "A non-insignificant part of that decline is due to government policies" can also be used to justify blaming the government for companies going bankrupt because they can no longer pay their workers and still make a profit.

Thus i was arguing (separate from the truth argument above) that by your logic any company can blame the government for any firing because wages are a non-insignificant part of expenses in most industries.

So either blame them for everything or only for those things in which they are the main cause... otherwise you're just arbitrarily choosing to blame the government when it's convenient.

As I'm sure you've gathered, I disagree with that conclusion. Prevailing business theories seem quite solid, and my assesment of their application to the current circumstances would lead one to expect personnel layoffs in the industry. Which is what we are seeing here, with no evil required.
But here's an interesting question, what other coal companies are firing people now that Romney lost?

Because if we're going by pure theory then there's no reason to fire them based on the election itself, but at certain points in the decline period when they work won't generate any extra income vs they salaries.
 
You know, there comes a point in an argument when if the other side can't understand your arguments there's little point in continuing.
I most certainly agree with this.
Considering we're not arguing in front of an audience i don't see the relevance of my intentions behind the words... they should speak for themselves.
Intention is meaning. What you meant by the analogy, and what its relevance in the conversation is. And you have an audience of at least one; me. And I'm occasionally struggling to understand your meaning.
Biased truth... i think that's where we disagree on our assessment of objective reality.

As Ambassador Kosh said "Understanding is a three edged sword: your side, their side, and the truth."

IMO it's only TRUTH if it's unbiased.
I doubt you will find much truth in business and politics, then, if you wish to stick with objective truths devoid of external influence and interpretations. IMO everything is always a result of a combination of factors, and many people, whether they have an interest at stake or are being sincere, will seek to either promote the point of view which they see as most advantageous to them and their agenda or take as truth the explanation that most fits with their preconceived notions of thinking. They can therefore not always be counted upon to present a view which is completely devoid of bias, whether they realise their own bias or not. And I'm not immune to this myself; any information I receive goes through a mental filter or three. That's why such things are called subjective viewpoints or opinions, not FALSEHOODS as opposed to TRUTHS.

My view is that statements can be assigned in terms of verity to three broad categories: true, partly true, and false, with the endpoints reserved mostly for provable facts. If I understand correctly, you see only two gategories, that statements are either true or false, with no area in between and the definition of true rather restricting. This may be a fundamental difference between how you and I see the world.
It's clearly designed to foster a misconception, that without the government policy there would be no firings.
That is not exactly what they are claiming. A more accurate description of their position would be along the lines of 'without anti-coal government policy, firings and hirings would be determined by market factors, but now the layoff of these people are the result of government policy'. And according to the sources I presented earlier, at least 16 GW of coal plant retirements by 2016 are a direct result of government policy (there are also other effects), which would indicate they have some point in their statement.
While the specifics for the coal industry might be more , well, specific i guess, i see no reason why one cannot use an analogy from any other sector of industry.

If you wish to rebuke the analogy then you need to actually come up with reasons why the analogy used doesn't hold up (and for that you need to understand that it doesn't actually require making any moral judgements about slavery, i could have gone with a number of other policies most economists agree are good, like liveable minimum wages, i just assumed the slavery one would be more self evident).
Every single industry has to pay for their labor, whether they mine coal, uranium, iron, or make baby food and greeting cards. Pretty much every single industry which reduces or closes down operations fires people. The reasons for this may be wholly, partly, or in no way connected to personnel expenses. In this case, they were ultimately due to reduced demand for the product. I have no doutbt the layoffs were completely legal and in accordance with the employment contracts the workers signed voluntarily.

Mining is very capital intensive. Even if the workers had agreed to work for half the pay, they still might well have been fired (well, the company might have fired other people and kept the ones who had agreed to work for half pay, but they would have fired people regardless). Running a mine costs money even if you don't have to pay much wages, and the product isn't selling at the moment, and isn't expected to sell in the near future. No need to produce as much of it, which means there is no need to keep extraneous workers on the payroll, regardless of how much a single worker costs as long as cost>0.

EPA legislation, the Renewable Portfolio Standard, and government subsidies stack the free market playing field against coal, and result in the decrease of competitiveness of coal versus other forms of energy production.

I don't see a problem in the above, and I don't see how slavery is relevant in any of this.
How do i make it more clear then: "I'm sure there are plenty of businesses out there that wouldn't have gone bankrupt/failed if they didn't have to pay their workforce, yet i don't think you'd accept them blaming the government for not allowing them to have slaves."

Now this analogy is actually meant to show another argument then the one above about them lying about the reasons for the lay-offs.

It's meant to show that your assertion that "A non-insignificant part of that decline is due to government policies" can also be used to justify blaming the government for companies going bankrupt because they can no longer pay their workers and still make a profit.

Thus i was arguing (separate from the truth argument above) that by your logic any company can blame the government for any firing because wages are a non-insignificant part of expenses in most industries.
What? If I sell hot dogs from carts on the street and people aren't buying as much as they were buying before, I might have to reduce my number of carts and lay off the workers who operate them. Even if they worked for just food and board I might have to get rid of them, as I don't want to pay for their food and board if they are not bringing in enough. If the government requires people to eat 10% of their food in hamburgers, are subsidising pizza manufacturers, and make fast food legislation which doesn't really affect the other forms but increases hot dog costs, then yeah, I might have some point in saying that the government doesn't seem to like hot dogs. And I don't think I'd exactly be lying if I said that.
So either blame them for everything or only for those things in which they are the main cause... otherwise you're just arbitrarily choosing to blame the government when it's convenient.
I disagree. Blame them when there is reason to blame them, blame them for their policies where they have had a non-insignificant impact. Doesn't mean there aren't other reasons, but when their actions have had a demonstrable impact of non-insignificant proportions, they get to shoulder some of the blame. If hot dogs aren't selling as well as they might be selling without government policies hampering hot dog sales, then lost jobs in the hot dog sector are partly at the government's doorstep.
But here's an interesting question, what other coal companies are firing people now that Romney lost?

Because if we're going by pure theory then there's no reason to fire them based on the election itself, but at certain points in the decline period when they work won't generate any extra income vs they salaries.
There were about 88 000 people working in coal mining in 2011. If you take a look at the documents, you will note that coal demand has gone down, and that production forecasts indicate a 7% decrease in coal production in 2012. You can bet your buttcheeks that ~160 people isn't the extent of layoffs in the coal mining industry if production decreased by 7%.

As to the timing, we kind of already gave it some thought. Several coal mining companies have announced some layoffs and operations draw-downs in November. So it doesn't seem to me that the circumstances the coal industry finds itself currently are particularly adverse to layoffs, but that sound business reasons may call for cost-cutting at this time.
 
I doubt you will find much truth in business and politics, then, if you wish to stick with objective truths devoid of external influence and interpretations.
BINGO...

And that's why i object to you defending them with subjective "truths".


As to the timing, we kind of already gave it some thought. Several coal mining companies have announced some layoffs and operations draw-downs in November. So it doesn't seem to me that the circumstances the coal industry finds itself currently are particularly adverse to layoffs, but that sound business reasons may call for cost-cutting at this time.
Hint: i wasn't asking you about who fired who, i was asking you to think about what you just posted means...
 
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