That's the very antithesis of free market. You're basically arguing the same as "shouldn't a person be free to decide he will sell himself into slavery?"So why can't a union have the freedom to sign a contract that has the employer guarantee to only hire union guys? Shouldn't the market decide if that's better then the alternative?
but you're gonna do your damnedest to paint me as such, because Ad Hominems are the go-to resource of the rhetorically bankrupt.I looked again... you're no Kellyanne, but
C'mon, you should know better than to think any persuasive argument begins with the word "c'mon."C'mon, you know you don't believe that, and you're basically forced to be republican because it's a 2 party system, and they're just slightly closer to your own stance (even though you know they're lying about it, and just want to make their donors richer).
It's been mathematically proven that you'll never get out of the 2 party system without changing 1st-past-the-post... even if both parties fail spectacularly enough for you to get multiple new parties, they'll all unite over time until only 2 are left (unless you have some sort of local thing that keeps a party separate for pure ideological issues, like the Quebec thing).I'm still waiting for the 2 party system to crash and burn out. I know I'll be waiting a long time, but I am so sick of everything needing to be party line.
I'm not, but lets be honest here, we all know what side the libertarians are on, even if they hate to admit it...Also, telling Gas that he needs to be a Republican is hilarity in and of itself.
C'mon, you should know better than to think any persuasive argument begins with the word "c'mon."
Sort of like how we all know democrats are really just commie socialists who want to live on welfare and not contribute, right? Even if they hate to admit it.I'm not, but lets be honest here, we all know what side the libertarians are on, even if they hate to admit it...
The truth of the matter is there is an irreconcilable rift in the American population which has been growing for a long time, and it's one of collectivism vs individualism. What makes it even more complicated is that it doesn't fall among geographic lines, unlike the slavery issue of the 19th century.
How exactly?That's the very antithesis of free market. You're basically arguing the same as "shouldn't a person be free to decide he will sell himself into slavery?"
An Ad Hominem attacks a quality of the speaker that is irrelevant to the discussion. Like, let's say, calling someone "rhetorically bankrupt"...but you're gonna do your damnedest to paint me as such, because Ad Hominems are the go-to resource of the rhetorically bankrupt.
"Don't blame me, i voted for Kodo"....I've been a card carrying libertarian since I was old enough to vote. I've undermined the two party system at every opportunity presented to me. I don't care who is "just slightly closer" to what.
You're trying really hard to make me stop feeling bad about calling you Kellyanne, aren't you?Sort of like how we all know democrats are really just commie socialists who want to live on welfare and not contribute, right? Even if they hate to admit it.
Quite a lot of the platform Trump ran on was extremely focused on collectivism, particularly the issues in the rust belt and in coal country. Government intervention in the free market to support failing industries is definitely not an individualist stance.
And becoming a union-exclusive employer also gives up rights to free association, also inalienable.How exactly?
In my example the owner and the union have come to an understanding by negotiating with each other, and, as per free market principles, it should then favour both (i said contract, not laws forcing them to do it).
While being a slave implies you give up rights (that are supposedly inalienable).
Then maybe you should have put it that way to begin with, instead And calling someone rhetorically bankrupt is not an ad hominem - an ad hominem casts aspersions on an argument because of its author. You attempted to undermine my argument by comparing me to Kellyanne Conway, someone universally recognized as an all around horrible person and liar, whereas I cast aspersions on you personally because of your use of an ad hominem. There is a quite obvious difference.An Ad Hominem attacks a quality of the speaker that is irrelevant to the discussion. Like, let's say, calling someone "rhetorically bankrupt"...
While i was outright accusing you of dodging the issue... even if i did it by comparing you to someone that is an insult to be compared to (sorry, couldn't help myself).
Less rudely put: you where overgeneralising a lot to fit your point better...
"Don't blame me, i voted for Kodo"
You do remember that in that parable, Kodos and Kang each represented the two major parties, NOT a third party, right?....
I have specifically, and now repeatedly, said that the divide I describe is NOT Dem/Rep.But anyhow, you just admitted there's more then two sides. Or at least that your prior Dem/Rep "divide" is flawed.
Or made generalizations that tried to force everybody into one of two labels.[DOUBLEPOST=1487105898,1487105829][/DOUBLEPOST]And maybe it would help undermine the 2 party system more if everyone stopped trying to simplify all conflicts as side 1 vs side 2.
What, because I held a sarcastic mirror up to a specious argument?You're trying really hard to make me stop feeling bad about calling you Kellyanne, aren't you?
Well, this dynamic is true of EVERYTHING, not just political parties. Absent an extant monopoly, the point of stability of any dynamic system is going to be the emergence of two major players.It's been mathematically proven that you'll never get out of the 2 party system without changing 1st-past-the-post... even if both parties fail spectacularly enough for you to get multiple new parties, they'll all unite over time until only 2 are left (unless you have some sort of local thing that keeps a party separate for pure ideological issues, like the Quebec thing).
Hmm. I guess he didn't.I didn't see Gas saying Dem vs. Rep, you kind of went there yourself. Individualism and collectivism is the issue that goes deeper than parties, but I would argue instead that the sides are "Collectivism that benefits me and Collectivism that benefits 'society'." Neither party has the monopoly on either position.
If that was true all ecosystems would result in 1 predator vs 1 prey...Well, this dynamic is true of EVERYTHING, not just political parties. Absent an extant monopoly, the point of stability of any dynamic system is going to be the emergence of two major players.
--Patrick
You do have a point about "first past the post." That needs to go. I doubt it will without a catastrophic impetus.If that was true all ecosystems would result in 1 predator vs 1 prey...
Also, see any other political system not using 1st past the post.
And in politics there are enough diverging views on issues to sustain more then two parties... just look at Gas with his libertarian views, that he himself says mean he's not a republican.
Except that there's no such thing as an unbreakable contract. Not in free countries anyway.And becoming a union-exclusive employer also gives up rights to free association, also inalienable.
Oh, so you can see the difference.Then maybe you should have put it that way to begin with, instead And calling someone rhetorically bankrupt is not an ad hominem - an ad hominem casts aspersions on an argument because of its author. You attempted to undermine my argument by comparing me to Kellyanne Conway, someone universally recognized as an all around horrible person and liar, whereas I cast aspersions on you personally because of your use of an ad hominem. There is a quite obvious difference.
Do you remember what the point of the "parable" was? Until you actually are a 3rd party, it doesn't really matter, does it.You do remember that in that parable, Kodos and Kang each represented the two major parties, NOT a third party, right?
I have specifically, and now repeatedly, said that the divide I describe is NOT Dem/Rep.
Yeah, you should really stop doing that... Mr. Individuality vs CollectivismOr made generalizations that tried to force everybody into one of two labels.
No, because you used one of those fun house mirrors. As per the rest of my post.What, because I held a sarcastic mirror up to a specious argument?
Try starting a new enterprise in new york that doesn't use union labor, see how free that association feels.Except that there's no such thing as an unbreakable contract. Not in free countries anyway.
And the freedom to join or leave an association is kind of the main thing about the right to free association...
Signing a contract under no duress, is, by definition, the essence of the right to free association.
Unless you think the employee should be force into "diversity" hires, i don't see how you can object to that...
Yes, I posted extensively about the Libertarian candidate, Gary Johnson. Who I voted for. Which I also posted repeatedly.[DOUBLEPOST=1487109328,1487109252][/DOUBLEPOST]Do you remember what the point of the "parable" was? Until you actually are a 3rd party, it doesn't really matter, does it.
Did you even have a candidate last year? And didn't Ron Paul run as a Rep in 2012?
Again, you're misrepresenting. I said there was a great division between individualists and collectivists, not that everybody is either an individualist or a collectivist.Yeah, you should really stop doing that... Mr. Individuality vs Collectivism
This is empty noise.No, because you used one of those fun house mirrors. As per the rest of my post.
It's not my point, it's been proven mathematically that consolidating parties is the most advantageous strategy in such a system.You do have a point about "first past the post." That needs to go. I doubt it will without a catastrophic impetus.
Now who said unions can't act in counter productive, or even criminal ways? It's a danger with any "association" (gangs are ones too).Try starting a new enterprise in new york that doesn't use union labor, see how free that association feels.
Oh right, the Green party is the vaccine lady... and he ran in 2012 too.Yes, I posted extensively about the Libertarian candidate, Gary Johnson. Who I voted for. Which I also posted repeatedly.
Then you clearly framed it badly, because i'm not the only one who took it that way.Again, you're misrepresenting. I said there was a great division between individualists and collectivists, not that everybody is either an individualist or a collectivist.
Well you did ignore the rest of the previous post, so i guess it would seem that way to you now.This is empty noise.
It's "your point" in that you were the one who brought it up in the discussion. That it has been proven doesn't mean it wasn't a point you were making.It's not my point, it's been proven mathematically that consolidating parties is the most advantageous strategy in such a system.
There's even a name for it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duverger's_law
No it wasn't!It's "your point" in that you were the one who brought it up in the discussion. That it has been proven doesn't mean it wasn't a point you were making.
Seriously, just because I say something, don't feel the need to immediately take a contrary position.
I think she's accepted that her time as a public figure is over. She's not speaking at the DNC in 2020. I don't even think she gets those private speeches anymore. I saw talk of her getting a TV show but I can't imagine anyone who wants to hear a damn thing from Hillary Clinton again.What's Hillary been up to the last month or so, besides tweeting. Anybody know?
1 predator v. 1 prey is two simultaneous monopolies, one on predation and one as prey. As for sustaining two parties, I didn't not say that all other competitors would vanish, just that they would not dominate.If that was true all ecosystems would result in 1 predator vs 1 prey...
And in politics there are enough diverging views on issues to sustain more then two parties... just look at Gas with his libertarian views, that he himself says mean he's not a republican.
I should've told you to save the effort. I'm well aware of what you see.Ok, I'm back in the office and can expand a little further, now.
There seem to be two conflicting schools of thought on the role of government in America. One philosophy is that the role of government is to take care of its citizens and make their lives better, whereas the other philosophy is that the role of government is to protect the liberty and safety of its citizens but otherwise have no role in their lives, leaving them to rise or fall of their own accord and the capriciousness of fate.
The collectivists will say "how can a modern wealthy country not provide universal health care for its citizens," the individualists will say "how can a country with pretense to upholding liberty and freedom confiscate the property of one citizen to give to another citizen under the threat of force?" The collectivist and individualist disagree as to whether or not the constitutionally enshrined individual right to keep and bear arms is more important than public safety and their own peace of mind when they are "out with their kids" in one public area or another. Collectivists will say it's the duty of the individuals to strive for the betterment of the whole, or at least the poorest, whereas the individualist will say it's the duty of the individuals to be responsible for themselves, which will have the effect of strengthening the whole collectively.
It's a centuries old debate, and granted, it's been harder to see over the last decade or so because there have been so many collectivists in charge of setting policy.
But what you're seeing is a perverted version of that, which is why I said I see it more as "collectivism that helps me" vs. "Collectivism that helps society." And I see so many of the projected stereotypes of people on government assistance and the like in my mom, who will acknowledge that she needed those government programs when she was young, but she eventually didn't, but she buys into the lies that most people on welfare are just free loading forever while not working. Instead of getting mad at the people inflating costs beyond their with, or at wages not keeping up with inflation, she gets mad at people who work three jobs and can't get by for daring to get government assistance when she can't. And the frustrating thing is that when I break down the things she gets mad about, I can tell that she actually knows the underlying issues but she's complete indoctrinated to think that it's the poor stealing from her. Or that society is fucked because all these kids with liberal arts degrees are stealing blue collar jobs from people who have way more job experience.I should've told you to save the effort. I'm well aware of what you see.
I was telling you what I see. I just don't see those groups as the actual source of tensions in your Country. It still just looks like it's fundamentally race and class, with a great swath of the lower class being tricked by the wealthy and powerful, through those founding myths of Life Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness (and wealth!), into thinking that they too are part of that "upper class."
That's the quick and half-assed version of what I see. Unfortunately, I don't have the stienmotivation to expound in sufficient detail to facilitate an illuminating discourse on the topic. So, uh, yeah. Too many big words hurt my thinker.
Others here can assuredly correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't it in 1984 where they talk about how the "real struggle" is between the middle and upper classes? The middle class leverages the poor to displace the upper class, where the poor never really get any better, and are just a tool of whomever wants power? Or something similar. Or I might be thinking of another dystopian novel. Any corroboration/correction available?But my point is that class warfare is a thing, but most of it is a smokescreen.
My very vague recollection is that the middle class equivalent, the outer Party, are the main target of the surveillance/oppression apparatus precisely because they are the ones with the means, know-how, and motivation to overthrow the state. The proles have more freedom of movement and are far less surveilled (I recall there being a conversation out in the open about buying black-market butter) because they are uneducated, pliable, and not expected to give trouble.[DOUBLEPOST=1487174601,1487174148][/DOUBLEPOST]Refugee Rape Mobs on New Year's Eve Were a Hoax, Say German PoliceOthers here can assuredly correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't it in 1984 where they talk about how the "real struggle" is between the middle and upper classes? The middle class leverages the poor to displace the upper class, where the poor never really get any better, and are just a tool of whomever wants power? Or something similar. Or I might be thinking of another dystopian novel. Any corroboration/correction available?
Your "most of it is a smokescreen" got that popping in my head again, but it was some time ago when I came across that.
According to German tabloid Bild, a "rioting sex mob"—composed largely of Arab refugees—wreaked havoc on the city of Frankfurt during this year's New Year's Eve celebrations, groping and sexually assaulting dozens of women. The story quickly made an international splash. Now police say it's "completely baseless," an invention of Frankfurt restaurant owner Jan May and a woman identified as Irina A.
(...) On Tuesday, Frankfurt police confirmed to the Frankfurter Rundschau that Irina had not even been present in Frankfurt on New Year's Eve. And interrogations of other witnesses led police to doubt the story in its entirety. They now believe the accusations were "without foundation" and "there were no... attacks by masses of refugees."
I'm not so sure the issue is so much with where it's going as it is with where it's coming from. I know the rhetoric is "I don't wanna subsidize no freeloaders," but I'm sure the underlying cause is really, "I don't want any of MY money subsidizing those freeloaders."I feel like the argument could get to its roots if we had more say in what was done with each person's taxes in particular. As it is, each side sees a chunk of their income going to things they don't agree with because it all ends up in the same amorphous government pot.
Just get the planned parenthood accountants to manage the budget. They can make sure there's no amorphous pot.I feel like the argument could get to its roots if we had more say in what was done with each person's taxes in particular. As it is, each side sees a chunk of their income going to things they don't agree with because it all ends up in the same amorphous government pot.
Well if that's how you want to see it, then there's never one monopoly, it's always 1 firm and 1 body of consumers.1 predator v. 1 prey is two simultaneous monopolies, one on predation and one as prey.
Don't worry, i took it as such.As for sustaining two parties, I didn't not say that all other competitors would vanish, just that they would not dominate.
Well actually that's not literally what I wrote, but it is what I meant.
--Patrick
Yes. And the two dominant players know this, and so they give just enough lip service that all the people who prefer party #3 and below hear just enough going their way that they don't feel strongly enough to break away from their preferred of the two dominant parties and instead vote for party #3 and below.having only two major players would not cover everyone's actual views right. Which is exactly how it is in the US.