home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: aus.politics
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!math.fu-berlin.de!informatik.tu-muenchen.de!regent!monu1.cc.monash.edu.au!monu6!bruce.cs.monash.edu.au!munnari.oz.au!cs.mu.OZ.AU!mundil.cs.mu.OZ.AU!gleeson
- From: gleeson@mundil.cs.mu.OZ.AU (Red Mountain)
- Subject: Re: The Lam philosophy
- Message-ID: <9236423.27936@mulga.cs.mu.OZ.AU>
- Sender: news@cs.mu.OZ.AU
- Organization: Computer Science, University of Melbourne, Australia
- References: <dyfl.723784431@phobos> <6934@otc.otca.oz> <dyfl.723949468@munagin> <9234712.28497@mulga.cs.mu.OZ.AU> <dyfl.724400023@phobos> <9235116.5180@mulga.cs.mu.OZ.AU> <dyfl.724557659@phobos> <9235312.25651@mulga.cs.mu.OZ.AU> <dyfl.724650940@phobos>
- Distribution: aus
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 1992 12:55:06 GMT
- Lines: 182
-
- In <dyfl.724650940@phobos> dyfl@kbs.citri.edu.au (Daniel Lam) writes:
- >gleeson@mundil.cs.mu.OZ.AU (Red Mountain) writes:
- >>Well done Daniel! You got my point. Half of it, at least. When most of the
- >>people are in a poverty trap, they don't have buying power to influence
- >>market forces, and, more importantly, they do not have the ability to
- >>exercise their preferences because of their diminished power due to
- >>the inequalities of the anarchist economic system.
-
- >Who will fall into this poverty trap? How many people? It is my
- >contention that interventionist policies result in greater poverty,
- >rather than amerliorate it.
-
- Yes, it is your contention, and you have yet to support it with _any_
- evidence whatsoever, while blithely ignoring the facts that since
- "interventionist" policies have been in place, less and less people live in
- poverty. And this is apart from my point which you did not answer, which was
- that people who are rich would be the ones with influence over market forces,
- and the poor would have diminishingly small influence.
-
- [ Joe Bloggs minimum wage story deleted ]
-
- >Minimum wage laws fixing wages above their market levels lead to an
- >imbalance in the supply and demand of labour, and hence insitutional
- >unemployment. They impair production, cause prices to be higher than
- >they need be, and arrest investment.
-
- Crap. Minimum wage laws _protect_ poorer workers (who consequently have
- negligible influence over market forces, in this case wage rates) from
- exploitative employees. They have little effect on prices, because they're
- _minimum_ wage laws, and have nothing to do with investment where that
- investment is honest and not just concerned with making a quick buck
- at the expense of other human beings.
-
- >Minimum wage laws can, at best, only benefit a small group of workers
- >at the expense of other workers. The widespread fixing of wages
- >about their potential market rates can only lead to economic
- >depression.
-
- Where on earth do you get this from? Minimum wage laws can, at worst, benefit
- a _not-trivial_ group of workers, and only at the expense of employers'
- greed. At best, they provide a basis for further negotiation between
- workers and employers, and in many situations, this scenario couldn't be
- further from what actually happens. Your "potential market rates" are those
- decided by rich employers, the ones with the influence over the market, not
- the workers or the consumers, who have no power over those "potential market
- rates", or do not participate in that particular "market".
- In a _fair_ democratic system, where every person gets one and only one vote,
- I think you would find that those "potential market rates" would be quite
- different to what you seem to hope they would be. Hey, I'll even give you
- an example. How about Australia, Present Day. We, the members of society
- (the market) have decided (market forces) that there should be a minimum
- wage. So there is a minimum wage in Australia. But it looks like your buddies
- in the Anar^H^H^H^H Liberal Party would like to lower it, because like
- you, they feel that market forces would like it lowered. Unfortunately
- they suffer the same blindness as you in overlooking the fact that we
- Australians (THE MARKET) have decided otherwise ("MARKET FORCES" at work).
-
- >Your "case study" of Joe Bloggs is most heart-wrenching indeed. Let
- >us help him by forcing his employer to pay him $100 an hour. Sure
- >that would work, wouldn't it?
-
- Well done, Daniel. You have shown how childish and stupid your arguments
- really are.
-
- >>You haven't been shouted down, and there is no way you can say that there
- >>was less poverty in the Industrial Revolution era than there is now.
-
- >When did I ever say that? The improvement we have witnessed since
- >the I.R. is largely the achievement of capitalism.
-
- The improvement we have witnessed since the Industrial Revolution is wholly
- the achievement of _regulated_ capitalism. Or, in your own words,
- interventionist policies.
-
- > What caused
- >poverty to be relieved was capital accumulation and investment, not
- >government intervention. I do argue that had there not been a
- >deviation, or as great a deviation from lassiez-faire policies, there
- >would be even less poverty.
-
- You are fantasising that there would be even less poverty. Human nature has
- shown time and time again that in an economic and social system of no
- control whatsoever, as you are proposing, people _will_ be exploited and
- oppressed. Are you trying to say that this won't happen?
-
- >>Just because some of the poor were able to earn a little more money
- >>doesn't help your case any. What about the children forced into
- >>labour? What about the rich getting a lot richer at the expense of
- >>others? Most of the world had pure capitalist economic systems before
- >>and during the Industrial Revolution. The world did not see equality
- >>addressed or opression and exploitation attacked until society decided
- >>that government was the way to acheive it.
-
- >The children were forced into labour by the fact of poverty. There
- >was simply no way they could survive otherwise; there was not enough
- >wealth. Whereas before they would have died (in peaceful
- >tranquility, as the eulogists of the Middle Ages would say) in abject
- >poverty with no prospects of improvement without anybody noticing,
- >they now worked long hours in terrible conditions just to stay
- >alive. I agree this was a most unsatisfactory state of affairs, but
- >to imagine that all that was needed to improve conditions was
- >compassion and a willingness to use the state is to believe in
- >magic.
-
- Sorry, you miss the point there also. Children were forced into labour
- because it wasn't illegal, simply because employers were _allowed_ to put
- them to work. They were in such abject poverty in the first place because
- there were no minimum wage laws. Then more than ever, almost all the wealth
- in the world was in the hands of very few people. To use the state was to
- believe in magic? Well, it sure looks like the magic worked.
-
- >It is true the rich got a lot richer, but not true that they did so
- >at the expense of others. The poor, too, got richer. Emasculating
- >the wealth of the rich would not, in the long run, have helped the
- >poor one bit and would in fact have led to even greater
- >impoverishment.
-
- Mighty sweeping statements (the last one mainly. The first two are patently
- false). Any shred of fact to support them? At all?
-
- >I'm astounded you could think that most of the world had pure
- >capitalist economic systems before and during the I.R. Medieval
- >Europe certainly was not capitalist. Means of production were
- >largely not in private ownershp. True, there were landlords who
- >wielded great power. But they did not own the land in the full sense
- >of the word. They were bound to their subjects and to the land with
- >customary obligations. It was impossible or extremely difficult for
- >them to sell their lands. Going futher back, there were
- >well-developed markets in the Roman Empire during the Antonine era,
- >and you can argue that it was partially capitalistic. But it was not
- >until the eighteenth century that people started to understand the
- >operation of markets. It was the discoveries of the classical
- >economists that led in Britain to the demoliton of age-old and
- >well-respected customs and restrictions which had hampered the
- >market. Without this knowledge you may stumble upon capitalism, but
- >it would not be lasting. When the emperor Diocletian attempted to
- >improve the ailing Roman economy by imposing price controls and other
- >restrictions and was baffled by the failure of his edicts to achieve
- >what he wanted, he could be forgiven for nobody had told him of the
- >consequences of intervention. The modern interentionists have no
- >such excuses.
- >That's Europe. As for the rest of the world, where exactly are you
- >talking about? There were markets in China, but there was no
- >long-term capital accumulation. Where else did we have pure
- >capitalism?
-
- You have failed to understand the ramifications of your own belief system in
- regards to anarchy and pure capitalism. If anarchy is to run free, then any
- totalitarian or autocratic regime that takes control is simply a result of
- your market forces. The examples you cite above, though some are incomplete
- and at least one incorrect, have been a result of those wonderful market
- forces. You advocate capitalism and anarchy as a solution to poverty, but
- in _reality_ (may be a new concept), a system of capitalism and anarchy is
- an open invitation for anyone to do whatever they damn well please, and
- too bad to whoever suffers the consequences. Quite a while ago society
- decided that the human price that would be paid in the centuries it would
- take for "market forces" to produce a fair system (if it ever did, which is
- more doubtful than not) would be much too high. A system of "intervention",
- as you call it, is society's attempt (and the rest of the population
- besides you, Daniel, think it is a fairly good one, aeons better than
- anarchy, anyhow) at trying to achieve the sort of system that _might_
- arise from a pure capitalist system, if everybody was as fair as the
- idealists would have us believe they are, but without the cost in human
- life and hardship.
-
- What you want, Daniel, is to be able to get rich quick, and ignore anyone
- who needs to suffer so you can achieve your goal, have nobody touch a cent
- of your wealth, and make sure the poor stay in their place. If this is not
- your fond wish, then why do you advocate a system that would _encourage_
- this sort of thing? I seem to recall you failing to answer in a previous
- post whether or not you _wanted_ to see injustice, exploitation and
- oppression... Please clarify this for us now. And if your answer is no,
- then pray tell how you can reconcile this with your anarcho-capitalist
- stance.
-
- Martin.
- ---------------------=============***O***=============-------------------------
- Martin J. Gleeson | Computer Science, Melbourne Uni, Oz | ... __o Outta
- gleeson@mundil.cs.mu.oz.au | E Pluribus Unix | ... -\<, my
- "We gladly feast on those who would subdue us." - Addams | ....(_)/(_).. way!
- "I can't give you brains, but I can give you a diploma." - The Wizard of Oz
- ---------------------=============***O***=============-------------------------
-