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- From: KAMCHAR@ibm.cl.msu.edu
- Newsgroups: alt.philosophy.objectivism
- Subject: Re: An Observation
- Message-ID: <1k2fshINNmfk@msuinfo.cl.msu.edu>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 04:49:21 GMT
- References: <C17MyA.DAD@newcastle.ac.uk> <1993Jan21.205940.10054@shearson.com> <1jnu48INNmau@msuinfo.cl.msu.edu> <1993Jan22.194209.23083@shearson.com>
- Organization: From Beyond Political Correctness
- Lines: 183
- NNTP-Posting-Host: cc210-3.cl.msu.edu
-
- >pmetzger@snark.shearson.com (Perry E. Metzger) writes:
- >>KAMCHAR@ibm.cl.msu.edu writes:
- >>>pmetzger@snark.shearson.com (Perry E. Metzger) writes:
- >>>>Chris.Holt@newcastle.ac.uk (Chris Holt) writes:
- >>>What happens if you get struck by cancer and die of it? Life isn't
- >>>fair, Chris. Not every problem can be solved. Utopia isn't possible.
- >>
- >>Hmmm...a Social Darwinist declaring life unfair. Can you smell an
- >>oxymoronic situation, folks? (sorry for the sniping tone, but...I'll
- >>chat on this point later in the article...)
- >
- >Not only am I not a social Darwinist, but it would appear that your
- >sentence lacks semantic content. What are you trying to say,
- >precisely? That I'm wrong and utopia is possible? That every problem
- >can be solved? What is it precisely that you object to over here?
-
- The original comment, from Chris:
- >>>>So is there a causal relationship? What happens when the wage
- >>>>offered for a job is less than that needed to live on (and the
- >>>>person can't get two jobs)? The trouble is that people's needs
- >>>>tend to be a step function at the lower end (too little and they
- >>>>sicken and die).
-
- Your response was in the vein of "So what? Personal problems don't bother me,
- the GNP is what matters." Sounds like Social Darwinism to me.
-
- >>>To be more specific, what happens when in spite of hundreds of
- >>>billions of dollars being spent every year by the government you STILL
- >>>can't afford to eat? You can't wish certain problems away, Mr. Holt.
- >>>When you claim that system A has flaws, we must also consider whether
- >>>those flaws are not in fact worse under system B.
- >>
- >> Debating between Neo-Stalinist Communism and a mythological version of
- >>Capitalism based on a rosy version of America in the late 1800's does not do
- >>the discussion justice.
- >
- >Who was bringing up neo-stalinist communism? Why not just compare
- >housing prices and homelessness in New York and Houston?
- >
- >In New York, where the horrors of the free market have been replaced
- >by a system in which housing prices are controlled, thus destroying
- >the rental market and forcing all new construction to be of coops and
- >condominiums that the poor can't afford, in which new construction is
- >made prohibitive by restrictive zoning, thus creating a lack of new
- >units of any kind, where zoning is used as an excuse to demolish
- >"substandard" housing, thus eliminating more housing for the poor (the
- >logic used being similar to the notion that by demolishing all
- >inexpensive restaurants the poor will be able to patronize the
- >expensive ones), where, in short, vast effort has been expended by the
- >local government to assure fairness, there is no affordable housing
- >and lots of people live on the streets.
- >
- >In Houston, where no effort has been made to keep housing "affordable"
- >Vnd where there is no zoning, such horrors have somehow been avoided.
- >
- >Strictly speaking, comparing two cities isn't fair since they aren't
- >identical.
- Quite a bit. Here's a few differences:
- New York (Pre-fifties portions, and Manhatten today) sprawls upward, Houston
- sprawls outward (a collapsing house kills off five, maybe ten at the most.
- Collapsing tenaments kill off hundreds, maybe thousands).
- New York has winters.
- Houston is younger than New York.
- New York's highways are crowded because of all the people around it; Houston's
- highways are crowded from intentended neglect.
-
- >However, if you want you can be fairer -- for instance, you
- >can compare homelessness levels before and after New York went on a
- >ramapage destroying all the "substandard" housing. You can compare
- >smaller cities with and without rent control. When you do this, you
- >always reach the same conclusions.
- (As for the rent control item, I've been against it--in part because I
- could never understand how it was meant to work and understand how it worked.)
- >
- >Compare Japan to India.
- Japan: State capitalism with a singular people (only the Appalacians have a
- more inbred people) with nowhere else to turn. Conditions would hardly be
- called prosperous by our terms, and their men are dying from overwork (no, I'm
- not making this up. I wish I knew the Japanese name for this.)
- India: An old society with a megamix of peoples and groups from almost
- everywhere with a long history behind them. While I'll admit I'd rather be in
- Japan than India (personal preference--hell, I'm on a computer, ain't I?) I'll
- be willing to bet that India will be around long after Japan dies on its own
- wastes (unless Japan exports these wastes to India, of course).
-
- >Compare Hong Kong and mainland China.
- Twenty million nervous expatriots on the edge of a massive country are bound to
- embrace anything that allows them to live, however poorly.
-
- >You could compare poverty levels before and after the Great Society programs.
- Vietnam also happened during that time, draining much of the energy of
- society from constructive activities benefiting the nation towards destructive
- activities both here and elsewhere. Our nation has yet to recover from it.
-
- >
- >>Other systems which existed around the world BEFORE
- >>Europeans started their souljourn around the world actually kept their
- peoples
- >>well off and in a population balance. I've yet to see the European system
- >>variants (and capitalism in particular) do this, indeed they seem to have a
- >>line about poor people deserving their fate running through them.
- >
- >Evidence, please. Keeping "population in balance" seems to be
- >something the evil European Phalologocentric White Supremicists seem
- >to do very well -- birth rates in the developed world are quite low,
- >and the poorest people in the U.S. do far better than the average
- >person in Bangladesh. If you have evidence that I'm wrong, I'd like to
- >see it.
- Consider: Most of mankind's two million years of existance the population
- seems to be kept at a decent balance; and from what has been observed from the
- few remaining hunting-and-gathering groups around, the population wasn't
- balanced by malthusian mechanisms but through birth control (both before and
- after conception). Only after intensive agriculture can overpopulation become
- possible. The present low rates of birth (especially in the US) seems to be
- not from comfort and prosperity, but a worry for the future.
- >
- >>>Your argument would have a certain degree of validity of government
- >>>actually could fix poverty, but since it can't, arguing that a few
- >>>people are poor under capitalism and capitalism is therefore bad seems
- >>>specious when you consider how many more are starving under socialism.
- >>
- >> As long as you look merely at eco-political systems, you're right.
- There
- >>ARE other forces which make their effects knows ALONGSIDE the eco-political
- >>world.
- >
- >What exactly is an "eco-political system"?
- Economical/Political systems. My fault.
- >
- >> You wouldn't believe how rich the yoeman of 1800 was. He had his source
- >>of food complete with some control over how it came about (the farm), he had
- >>twin sources of social and cultural stimulation (the church and the pub), a
- >>rock-steady set of expectations and rewards for belonging in a society which
- >>helped him to develope the ways he could (note that I didn't say spoon-fed
- him
- >>everything he wanted), and a government which went as far as it could in
- >>protecting his investment and didn't NEED to try to create a society. I see
- >>none of this (especially the society aspect) going on today.
- >
- >His wife would likely die in childbirth.
- Not if they went to a midwife.
- >In winter, he froze.
- What, no blankets? No coats? No fire?
- >In summer, he sweated.
- And slowed down his pace to adjust. What's a matter with that?
- >His children would likely die before the age of five.
- >He'd spend dawn to dusk all summer long in back-breaking labor, and his
- >children would have to pitch in, too.
- Excuse me if I sound amazed, but wasn't farming mainly a spring and fall
- routine? True, there was other things to do, but you make it sound as if the
- family had to do everything BY THEMSELVES!!!
- Haven't you heard of community? Of people pitching together to help each
- other? Half this stuff was, I'll bet, helping OTHERS get settled--and I'll bet
- they got that help themselves when they moved in.
- >The food wouldn't always
- >show up -- some years, bad weather or insects or other causes would
- >make all his crops fail. Starvation would often occur (or have you
- >forgotten horrors like the Irish potato famine).
- Hmmm...I never knew American yeomen grew everything in monoculture. And I
- thought monoculture planting was invented with machine farming and pesticides.
- Silly me--I should have realized american yeomen were stupid idiots unable to
- mix-and-match their plantings to insure a harvest under anything but abysmal
- conditions.
- >
- >His average lifespan was under 40 years.
- Average lifestyle after the age of five: 70 years. Granted, many died who
- now would have been saved by technology and knowledge we now have, but after
- that the survival rate was better. Remember the biblical phrase (as a source
- of wisdom and knowledge, not "The Truth To End All Truths"): Three Score and
- Ten are the years of a man's life."
-
- >Thanks, but I'll take my comfortable heated home, my high-tech
- >healthcare, my supermarkets, and my electricity. I can do without the
- >church, which preaches things I don't believe in, and I've got all the
- >pubs I need.
- I'll take the warmer climate myself; keep watch over my health and eat
- organic foods (unless the nearby agribusiness decides to ruin my health by
- spraying your food by airplane), and I'll meet my friends at the church and the
- pub--heaven knows where you'll meet yours.
-
- Kamchatka Charlie KAMCHAR@ibm.cl.msu.edu
- Workers and oppressed peoples of the world unite--you've got nothing to lose
- but your lives and the world and your soul to gain!
-