In Praise of Capitalist Inequality
For several weeks now, the Occupy Wall Street protestors in New York City and around the country have been demanding “economic justice,” which includes a mishmash of leftist goals including universal health care, forgiveness of student loan debt, and higher taxes on the wealthy. To the extent the OWS protestors have a unifying theme, it’s that capitalism is bad and that redistributing wealth to reduce “inequality” is good.
The Irish socialist playwright George Bernard Shaw once wrote, “A government that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.” The Occupy Wall Street protestors demanding government redistribution of wealth from the richest Americans (“the 1%”) to themselves (“the 99%”) would certainly agree. But as some of them are starting to learn, if their ideas were actually put into practice they’d end up being the Peters, not the Pauls.
Already, some of the OWS protestors are finding their ideas coming back to bite them. Recently, OWS kitchen staff staged a mini-revolt because they were tired of working 18-hour days to prepare meals for “freeloaders.” Another OWS protestor was upset that someone had stolen her $5500 Macintosh computer. Redistributing wealth suddenly became a lot less appealing when one was the victim of the “redistribution,” rather than the recipient.
The OWS protestors are learning first hand about something that novelist Ayn Rand discussed more than 50 years ago in Atlas Shrugged, in her vignette about the Twentieth Century Motor Company. In the novel, the new owners of the factory decided to run the company according to the supposedly noble precept of “From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.” Workers would be assigned duties based according to their expected ability — but paid according to how much money they needed, rather than how much they produced.
In theory, this would result in a more equitable distribution of wealth. But in practice, it meant the men of greater ability worked longer hours without hope of reward. Hence, the more competent workers either left or deliberately underperformed. In contrast, the more irresponsible workers received more money because of their “need” — regardless of how hard they worked. Of course, eventually the company went bankrupt.
But Rand’s lesson was not merely that such a model was economically unsustainable. She also made a deeper moral point about the motivations of the workers who supported this scheme. As one of the characters in the story said:
There wasn’t a man rich and smart enough but that he didn’t think that somebody was richer and smarter, and this plan would give him a share of his better’s wealth and brain. But while he was thinking that he’d get unearned benefits from the men above, he forgot about the men below who’d get unearned benefits, too. He forgot about all his inferiors who’d rush to drain him just as he hoped to drain his superiors. The worker who liked the idea that his need entitled him to a limousine like his boss’s, forgot that every bum and beggar on earth would come howling that their need entitled them to an icebox like his own.
This is precisely the lesson that the OWS kitchen staff (or the woman with the laptop) have learned the hard way. Most people who advocate robbing Peter to pay Paul always imagine themselves as Paul — never as Peter. But when their desired forced redistribution is applied at a national level, the result is the near-universal misery and squalor of socialist countries like Cuba and North Korea. Except for a few political elites, everyone is equal — but poor.
In a free society, the economic inequality that the OWS protestors oppose is not something to be condemned, but something to be celebrated. A fully capitalist society allows people to rise as far as their ability and efforts allow. Because people differ in their talents, work ethic, and personal priorities, the natural result would be unequal levels of wealth.
Unequal “power law” distributions are the norm in a free society. A small number of authors sell a disproportionate number of books — just ask Harry Potter author JK Rowling. A relatively small fraction of blogs attracts a majority of web traffic. Or as anyone who works in a customer service field knows all too well, a small minority of customers always account for the majority of complaints.
Hence, it’s natural that a relatively small fraction of individuals might possess a disproportionate share of the wealth. In a free society, such inequality per se is not a problem, especially given that there is still income mobility for people to rise (or fall) as they deserve based on their talent and willingness to work hard — which is still the case in America.
Fortunately, many Americans still have a healthy respect for earned inequality. When Apple CEO Steve Jobs recently passed away, William Stoddard poignantly wrote:
I’ve given many thousands of dollars to Apple over the decades, a substantial part of which went to Jobs. And every dollar I’ve spent has brought me something that was worth more than the money was. Jobs spent his life giving me things of greater value than the money he accepted in exchange. And the same is true for his other customers. He gave the world far more value than the value of his personal wealth. If his fortune looked huge, it was a measure of the immense number of other people he made better off.
The fact that Steve Jobs earned a greater fortune than most others reflects the fact that he created much more value than most others — and in the process enhanced others’ lives to a proportionately greater degree. Steve Jobs’ earned wealth was a direct reflection of the value he added for himself and others — and his wealth should be praised and respected as a noble achievement.
It is also important to recognize that America is not currently a capitalist country, but rather a mixed economy with both capitalist and socialist elements. Hence, some Americans have become undeservedly rich through political “pull” and favors. But the OWS protestors aren’t opposed to government favoritism in principle — they merely want to shift those special favors onto themselves.
The OWS protestors claim to want “economic justice.” But real economic justice doesn’t consist of looting others’ wealth, but respecting others’ right to keep what they’ve earned. Unlike the OWS protestors, I don’t want to destroy the 1% to achieve a dubious “equality” where everyone is equally miserable. I don’t want to live in a dog-eat-dog world of constant “redistribution” and mutual predation where I survive only by looting from those wealthier than me, while those poorer than me survive by looting from me. Instead, I want a capitalist society which allows the top 1% the freedom to make their lives better — and in the process makes my life better as well.






“From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.” This was written by Marx, I guess, in 1870th, who lived exactly that way and was all his life supported by a rich capitalist called Friedrich Engels. Do the Wall Street protester dream of a new Engels? Aren’t Soros and meals for freeloaders not good enough for them? In 1948 Marx and Engels wrote in Communist Manifesto – “Proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains”. If capitalism goes down, all these protesters will lose all the perks they get from it and will truly become starving proletarians of 21 century.
You mean 1848, not 1948.
Although many Leninists and anarchists have joined OWS, I would guess that the majority of the protesters are Jeffersonian reactionaries, hankering for a pre-modern social order, one that is free of “the money power.” In short, they are possibly agrarian radicals. Since you quote Ayn Rand, I refer PJM readers to this blog on her endorsement of modernity: http://clarespark.com/2011/01/04/railroading-ayn-randalissa-rosenbaumdagny-taggart/. This is a worse insult than calling them Marxists, who welcomed the modern world, science, and technology. As did Ayn Rand.
Thanks to PJM readers who have visited the blog I posted above. I have two more short essays on Rand, with links here: http://clarespark.com/2011/04/16/index-to-ayn-rand-blogs/. I am particularly partial to the one on We The Living, which could not have been bolder given the date of publication, when virtually all American intellectuals were fellow travelers at the least and generally soft on the Soviet Union, a habit that lingers into the present in many of our universities, hence the OWS protesters. We never learned enough about the Cold War, see http://clarespark.com/2011/04/09/jean-francois-revel-and-father-mapple/.
Doc Hsieh: Without truthful understanding of the globe’s present economic and political state affairs, you play the part of a shill for the controllers whose plans include obliterating you and your family as they are now doing to citizens of nations who don’t want to play to their tune. You are arguing for an illusive “free” enterprise system that the OWS folks know rightly to be an illusion. Today, you may have a measure of this world’s goods and thus believe that this ‘good fortune’ of yours and your family’s will continue indefinitely. The OWS not only are resisting that illusion and the attendant propaganda of the controllers that the illusion is ‘really real’ reality, they by their actions are seeking to awaken people like you who unwittingly are playing the fool for the controllers. I pray that you and others will awaken soon.
True free market capitalism does not have any controllers, unless you think that free individuals are ‘controllers’, which would be a contradiction in terms. Is Dr. Hsieh a shill? If he is, then he is a shill for freedom, and that is very good idea. Maybe you should try reading Rand, Hayek, von Mises and others who understood the meaning of economic freedom.
You should read “Family Of Secrets – The Bush Dynasty” to find out who is really running the country… Learn about the real “Controllers” Both Republican and Democrat!
PS Here’s the Amazon link in case your interested: http://www.amazon.com/Family-Secrets-Dynasty-Powerful-Influence/dp/B002T45028/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1320594239&sr=1-2
Tommy Tanda, I ask you to tell us what other system would improve the lives of the people of our country? Would you prefer socialism, fascism or communism? All of these are proven failures. Perhaps you would prefer the way the Greeks live with retirement at age 50 and fewer and fewer people trying to support the many?
In our society everyone has a chance to make a contribution and to be rewarded. Our classes are very mobile with people moving from one class to the other, both up and down. If OWS protesters have a beef it should be some people and corporations that are gaining from a government that falsely picks the winners and losers. Even then we have a choice to vote them out of office.
The tone I hear from reading your remarks is from a depressed person with no hope, for which I am sorry. Don’t look to government to change your life because only you can do that.
Exactly. What they SHOULD be protesting is crony capitalism and not wealth redistribution. What they’re asking for will make us a China or USSR, but then they probably have romanticized ideas about those societies from our school “history” books.
chuckh: no, I am not a depressed person. In fact, I’ve never felt more alive, thank you, primarily due to seeing the political illusion in all its horrible effectiveness. At this point in history, we don’t have a choice as to which economic system we might choose – our true power to choose has been eliminated. We are living in a real world in which real, actual people do control governments, events, and global monetary means that benefit the select elite, however you care to define them. It sounds as if you like so many fail to engage the political reality that exists because you have already dis-allowed and dis-qualified any other creative and possible ways that might could emerge if a group of people who seek mutual and common benefits in their social relations really see the political relations as they are. When you or anyone argues for the present system, the status quo, you are stating: I prefer the illusory “safety” of the known distresses which logically can only grow worse and which portends grave consequences for me, my family, and my community rather than investigate deeply and seriously the truth of our situation and face the possibly terrifying and possibly unanswerable question: what can we do now? Our prayers, and we all should learn what it means to pray if anyone has failed to so learn, should be directed to asking for the strength of will and the courage to face that possible terror and that potential question which has no ready answer. My hope is secure. But it is extremely, extremely sad to observe good people voice only the slogans of the controllers while they are “peaceably” being transported to their own peculiar concentration camps.
Who are these controllers. Are they hiring? Seriously, are you saying there is a secret group of folks controlling the world? And that their plans include: “plans include obliterating you and your family as they are now doing to citizens of nations who don’t want to play to their tune.”? Would the current government overspending and the overprinting of fiat currencies be part of their plan?
Controllers….It’s the Jooooos (Oops, Pardon me…Neo-Cons)!
The Controllers? Read “The Creature from Jekyll Island” by Griffin; “Web of Debt” by Brown; “The Shadows of Power: The Council on Foreign Relations and the American Decline” by Perloff; “The World As It Is” by Hedges; and a hundred other books that expose the system as it is in reality. The system of the controllers is not an “ism”: not capitalism; not socialism; not communism. Perhaps reality was described a hundred years ago by these terms in which you have been schooled to believe the illusion is real. Read Ellul – any and many of his books. Read Peter Dale Scott. His term of “deep politics” describes the nature of the political illusion: the decisions about means and ends which affect us all are made here at the level of “deep politics” – not in “local political theater” which changes nothing but demands the expenditure of hugely gross amounts of time, energy, and financial resources… all for naught. Nothing in the political domain changes or will change via the D vs. R system of government, except the continuing erosion of civil liberties (viz. The Patriot Act and a slew of the Bush & Obama generated Exec. Orders in the last 10 years), the loss of true economic freedom (viz. open your eyes and see where the money has gone, is going, and will go – the “1 vs. 99″), and the growing means of control (viz. the existing “police state”, TSA, FBI, NSA, Homeland Security, etc, etc, etc). Ugh!!! The controllers, such as Poppy Bush as revealed in “The Family of Secrets” (book recommended by Ed above), operate successfully because they have successfully created and maintained the effective cover of “deep politics.” FDR said himself: “In politics, nothing happens that is not planned…” or something to that affect… in the 1940s. What we as a people most urgently need is conservatives who will question what they are being told by the true shills of the present system… about the world they think exists. Read http://www.tomdispatch.com sometimes. One needs to develop the ability to see beyond the insignificant ‘D’ versus ‘R’ debates. “They” – the controllers – are globalist, neither D or R, and only desire greater political control, more secured access to wealth without limitation, and effective and efficient un-interruption to the pumping out of its ideological propaganda. Your becoming awakened politically is subversive to their ends, as well as their means, and loosens the noose that’s hanging around your neck. Blessings.
You don’t offer any evidence that what you are saying is correct, just accusations that communists, world governmentalists and socialists have been spouting since forever, and based on a lack of “truthful understanding of the globe’s present economic and political state affairs”. Why should anyone listen? No need to pray for me, thank you very much.
It is exactly because he understands that good fortune has to be produced and cannot be expected to just “continue indefinitely” that he is opposed to a society in which fortunes are expected to just appear out of thin air and distributed accordingly. It is because he knows that he may not always be able to support himself and his family that he is opposed to forcefully distributing what he has now to everyone else as if he could always count on his own living standard to magically remain as high as it is today.
Hsieh confuses the inequality that results from free market capitalism with the present inequality, resulting in large measure from crony capitalism and its concomitant tax policies. In a nutshell—Russia and China, too, exhibit vast inequality, but few would argue that this is a sign of health. One can deplore the current state of economic distributions in the U.S. without being any stripe of socialist.
Wrong.
From Paul’s article:
“It is also important to recognize that America is not currently a capitalist country, but rather a mixed economy with both capitalist and socialist elements. Hence, some Americans have become undeservedly rich through political “pull” and favors. But the OWS protestors aren’t opposed to government favoritism in principle — they merely want to shift those special favors onto themselves.”
Hard to know what the force of that “hence” is. Is the corruption due to the socialist element, the capitalist element, the combination, corrupt capitalism, corrupt socialism, that combination or some variant thereof? Unless and until these elements are identified and suitable safeguards against the defects are in place, I would be wary of touting Rand (Ayn or Paul) as Our Prophet.
In another nutshell—support for what Smith called his “system of [natural] liberty” (aka ‘capitalism,’ which is actually a Marxist coinage) is not the same thing as support for the business practices currently in force and use in the U.S. (and elsewhere) today. Smith himself was more than wary of giving the profit motive unfettered room to operate.
Some degree of inequality may betoken economic health in a free market system, but there is no good reason to identify what we have currently as either free market inequality or health.
when government gets involved everything goes off kilter
like most things in nature– corporations will seek the path of least resistance
when it becomes more profitable, and easier to achieve, to lobby and hobnob with lawmakers rather than perform in a true competitive environment, where the concentration of power is diffused incidentally, among many parties then true capitalism ceases to exist
and when free capitalism ceases to exist it stinks to be you and me
To hmi
We do know the source of the corruption. It stems from the idea that it is the function of government to ensure a vibrant economy. In order to create and preserve a vibrant economy, policies were enacted making it legal for government to favor certain people or industries at the expense of all others. This takes the form of government provided subsidies, tariffs, bank deposit insurance, flood insurance, low interest rates and licensing requirements. These policies are part of the data used by individuals who act in order to remove the uneasiness associated with being alive. Individuals may act based on the data that says the best way to ensure the success of my business is to go to congress and win a grant or subsidy or protective tariff. These policies distort the way people would otherwise act. These policies encourage lobbying/corruption. The solution is to enact policies prohibiting government from encouraging or discouraging particular industries. The corruption you speak of will be considered a crime . Once it becomes a crime, acting man will look at this data and it will tell him that approaching congress for a subsidy or tariff may result in a waste of time at best and jail time at worst.
Dr. Hsieh is not confusing anything. We do not have real free market capitalism, and that is the problem. The politicians over the years have legislated the free market into the slavery of laws that distort market signals and prevent free markets from functioning as efficiently as they should – freely! As for the inequalities in Russia and China, there are also similar inequalities in North Korea, that bastion of a worker’s paradise. They have their elites who are very wealthy but the rest of the people stay poor. There are elite at the top and the rest are the peons. “Poor” Americans are far wealthier than the poor in those countries. This is not because of “crony capitalism”, it is simply because of crooked politics, the collusion of politicians and business. All these factors distort the price signals sent to markets. It would be far less likely to happen if the politicians did not legislate it. For example, sub-primes never could have happened in the volume they did, if the politicians had not legislated ridiculously low interest rate loans to risky home buyers. Just as one cannot legislate criminals into being honest citizens, one cannot legislate economic equality…the world is not perfect, humans are not perfect, so why in the world anyone thinks that humans are smart enough to legislate us into a perfect world is beyond belief. The only economic equality comes when all are slaves except for a few elite…like the Russia, China and North Korea examples. The reason is that in order to reach economic equality, control must be exercised by men to make it happen. Do you really want to trust a politician to care about your well being? The only way that will happen is if you become the politician, and you will take care of your own interests, but most likely not mine, because you have no idea what my interests are.
“Dr. Hsieh is not confusing anything. We do not have real free market capitalism”
Thanks for helping with my point. If the thing to which Hsieh attributes the present inequality does not exist, then the present inequality cannot be owed to or a sign of health of such non-existent free market capitalism. It must, therefore, be due to other causes. One of those causes would seem to be crony capitalism.
Wrong. It is not crony capitalism, it is crony statism.
Your complaint of “crony capitalism” is very noble but unrealistic. If you were to eliminate all business benefits from politically motivated tax breaks, etc., you would not be able to save more than $500B per year, to be extremely, extremely generous of the savings in taxpayer money. This equates to about $1500 per year per capita. This is far from enough to pay for a $30K per year college tuition plus other freebees for all Americans demanded by the OWS. This is the same reason that taxing the rich at 100% will never even get close enough to make a significant increase in wealth redistribution. Furthermore, in every society of any type, there will always be cronyism, whether Communist, Socialist or Capitalist. Even today, in a so-called “capitalist” USA, we have both crony capitalism and crony socialism. There are certain organizations, businesses or groups of people that get favorable treatment, because our government is politically-based, on democracy, direct election of representatives. And our representatives always need money donations, from whoever. Examples of crony capitalism are General Electric, Amtrac, the oil companies, Agriculture, etc. Examples of crony socialism are public and private unions, organizations such as ACORN, homeowners with write-off mortgages, environmentalists, African-Americans and their affirmative action programs, etc. Ideally, we should eliminate all cronyism.
Deplore……Hmmmmmm…..Every time I hear someone somewhere somewhen use the word “deplore,” it always follows with no action, no accomplishment, no creative solutions, or, in few words—-nothing happens. Deplore is a word used frequently by those who have no intention of doing a thing about whatever is the situation they DEPLORE.
The DEPLORERS are do-nothings. They just deplore. The world seems filled to the brim with deplorers. And, that is it; they just deplore. They are thus meaningless and ineffectual players playing in their underwear in their mama’s basement with their computers, teleprompters, and their own poo poo.
All collectivist and redistributive systems try to do something that can’t be done: change basic human nature. The idea that you will work to support others flies in the face of the reason most people work, which is to acquire food and shelter and as many luxuries as they can amass beyond that. As Adam Smith wrote in “Wealth of Nations:” “It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages.” http://www.econlib.org/library/Smith/smWN1.html#B.I, Ch.2, Of the Principle which gives Occasion to the Division of Labour, benevolence (From paragragh 1.2.2) This is human nature. I want something you have, so I will trade you for it with what I have. To be a beggar and live on the kindness of others is no way to live. Similarly, to expect government to take from others and give to you is an unsustainable plan. Man is a lazy animal, and will do as little as possible to get what he really wants.
“The idea that you will work to support others flies in the face of the reason most people work,…”
Exactly, and if you show the slightest signs of unwillingness to redistribute your earned wealth you will be forced to – by legal force or by other forms of coercion. There can be no freedom under statism.
When I was in Vietnam last March, our guide told us the following (as close as I can recall): “Following reunification in 1975, we were a socialist country. You know what socialism is? It’s where if I work hard and you don’t, we get the same thing. So no one worked hard. In the 1990s, the government changed the rules and people who worked hard could profit. Things are much better now.”
It seemed that just about every house and building that we passed had a little shop where people were trying to sell things, be that food, crafts or merchandise. The people work hard and many foreign companies have built factories there. Supermarkets were rare but there were many smaller local markets that were packed. Visiting those markets was an interesting experience.
Saigon was said to be a country of 8 million people and 4 million motor scooters (and both numbers appeared low to me) with a lot of new construction. The air was fairly polluted because of all those scooters (especially the Chinese made scooters which while cheap, the Vietnamese called junk) but the economy appeared to be doing well. If they have any environmentalists in China and Vietnam, it appears they’ve been told to sit down and shut up.
The OWS protestors don’t want economic justice.
Their objectives are to do as much physical damage and civil disruption as they can get away with. Their methodologies are in-your-face intimidation, over whelming loudness, unbearable filth and ugliness.
They are the logical products of the educational and parental systems of a society that replaced the morals and living standards set forth by God with self-gratification, greed and hatred 50+ years ago.
In short, they are exactly like President Obama.
And like Obama, left to continue what they are doing much longer they will with certainty destroy what is left of our country.
I am reminded of a statement made in the 7th grade by a fellow student who told the teacher, “Oh yeah? We’ll I’ll just fail this test THEN you’ll be sorry.”
This is the type of “reasoning” and “logic” the Occupy the Water Closet crowd is displaying.
Among other non-sequiturs of their style include:
“Look what you did to me.”
“Look what you made me do.”
“It’s not MY fault I’m poor.”
“Because of rotten corporate America, I don’t have a job.”
“They deserve to be destroyed…because I am in debt.”
And on and on.
All five of those statements should have been removed from the child’s lexicon of excuses while they were still in childhood, which, perhaps debatable, they still are. But had there been a parent, or at least a real adult to take the time to refute, then dismiss such ridiculous sentences, the child might have grown up to realize that they are responsible for themselves, to seek out wisdom so they can care for themselves in the future and not have to worry about being saddled with monumental debt at 22 years of age.
Prior-planning-prevents-piss-poor-performance. But, maybe it was their parents who were just so tickled that their son/daughter was going to college and getting a “nature studies” degree that they failed to look in the registry of where jobs were growing in the US and the world. Gee, these are the same people who bitch when they call Verizon customer service and get “Gary” in Mumbai on the line.
It always staggers me that many Americans have the distinct inability to draw inference and “connect the dots” from their own experiences. It gives rise to such comdedic statements like, “I don’t like to travel to other countries, they’re filled with foreigners.” But, if you are the one complaining about jobs moving to China, why then, do you think it’s great that your kid is getting a degree in a field of study that has no practical application anywhere in the world?
In the occasional movie when the archaeologist is yelling at the bookworm about what they’ve read and says, “Have you ever actually gone OUT THERE and looked?” tells me, not just in the context of the movie but also in our day-to-day life that as a society, we seem to lack some pretty basic skills.
It’s something that used to drive my father crazy; When I couldn’t find something he told me to go get. He would go to where I just “looked” and there it was. Heavy sigh and, “See? All you need to do is learn how to look; How to really look. Don’t just look with your eyes; You have to lift up things, look under other things, open drawers, cabinets. It might be under here, or here, or over there.”
The same applies in our daily lives. This lesson is not being taught to the youth today. Parents seem reluctant to have the talk with their kids about when they are scheduled to leave home…and it SHOULD be scheduled.
“Hey, son, so whatcha gonna do when you turn 18? You know, when I turned 18 I joined the military. That may not be your cup of tea but I will say I met a lot of interesting people, learned a trade that I could use in civilian life and the travel was all free. Plus, I got some great breaks on college tuition while on active duty”
Or, “If you want to go to college, I suggest you study up in school and get good grades, I can’t afford to pay any tuition. And if by some change I can help out, I’m not paying for some basket-weaving degree.”
Parents seem to largely want to be their kids’ “friend” while failing them as parents. Perhaps it’s because they found their own parents to be “cold” and “uncaring” but in reality, it’s the hardest thing in the world to NOT coddle your own child and let them make mistakes and sometimes have to deal with their own messes. When they’re seven, or twelve. Not when they’re twenty-five.
But then, if the parents had done their jobs properly, when their twenty-five year old makes a mistake, the twenty-five year old will comprehend that they have screwed up and must deal with it themselves.
And on and on.
Occupy the Water Closet has shown me what I predicted some years ago when I was still in the military and running into brand new troops who did not understand what it meant to report for duty on time. It was a completely new phenomenon in the military. So much so that they set up special briefings for inprocessing for newbies to reinforce what they were supposed to have absorbed in basic-training and in tech-school. I just shook my head.
“on and on…” is right!
It seems nobody in your childhood taught you about the proper use of periods (“.”) and commas (“,”).
While you’re looking that up, also check “pithy”, “trite” and “blowhard”.
What exactly is your problem?
Though seemingly obvious given my previous comment, my problems are as follows:
1) Your extraordinarily poor use of punctuation.
(i.e. “It’s something that used to drive my father crazy; When I couldn’t find something he told me to go get.”)
2) You use many words to say very little.
Very well. It is your choice to read or not read that which I have written. I think your attitude is superior and aloof.
You might look up the terms, “ass”, “jerk” and while you’re at it, “troglodyte”.
Brief enough?
And this might help you self-certified critics of how to punctuate:
http://theoatmeal.com/comics/semicolon
It seems I struck a nerve.
Are you implying that “When I couldn’t find something he told me to go get.” is an independent clause?
BONUS: unmotivated capitalization.
I liked your post and found it easy to read. Most importantly, I understood what you were saying. So did the dolt who criticized you. You obviously struck a nerve.
Only dolts need to point out punctuation and grammar errors, if there were even any. I honestly didn’t notice.
Please post again in the future.
You seem to be an expert on the use of those terms, troll, which is obvious from reading your ridiculous remarks.
Sorry for the intrusion into your little club.
I suppose I’m not welcome to participate in a free exchange of ideas here because I’m a “troll”, but I’d appreciate the benefit of explanation. What does “troll” mean, in this context? I’m not sure what you’re implying, so I am unable to defend myself if warranted.
While we’re explaining things, how are my remarks “ridiculous”?
Do you contend that SG-1′s punctuation is flawless, or at least above elementary school expectation?
Or do you refer to my aside that his comment is not “pithy” ? I think it’s apparent verbosity makes the possibility negligible, yet it remains.
Perhaps, I think most likely, you take offense at the use of “trite” and/or “blowhard”. We could have a discussion about those terms if you’d like clarification.
I suspect, however, further discussion will be useless given the general tenor of this discussion board. It seems you assume I disagree on the fundamentals of SG-1′s position and are instinctively protecting him/her from “attack” by an “outsider” (please forgive me if I’m wrong, but you have elected for the pejorative and ad-hominem without apparent motivation). Quite the contrary, I think he almost makes salient points, but nothing approaching revelatory (through writing so poor it obfuscates any nascent value, but I repeat myself).
I also couldn’t resist the irony of his use of “on and on” as he drones endlessly with such tedium.
If you meant something else, please explain. I am curious if your defense was actually substantive beyond apparent tribalism.
Again, it’s your choice (or not) to read that which I have written. If you wish to deride my punctuation or style, then fine. You’ll get no argument from me.
However, you seem to have egregiously high expectations of what people choose to write about and how they present their ideas. I have read some decidedly poor postings from members here and yet, I could decipher the their meaning.
I’m not shooting for a grade here, but thank you for critiquing it anyway.
Might I suggest the local public library for literary genius? I am not one, nor do I try to be one, nor make a pretense of it. Stream-of-conciousness writing does have its problems, doesn’t it?
You’re the guy who is worried that the fire department parked on your azaleas while your house is burning down. Sorry to have so offended, sir (or ma’am).
“…replaced the morals and living standards set forth by God with self-gratification, greed..”
Wasn’t one of the points of this article is that self-gratification and greed are morally righteous? That was the point of Ayn Rands work: Self-gratification uber alles!
Uh, no, Jimbo, me boyo, That was not what Rand was presenting. It was the exact opposite. The point of the narrative was that hard work, creativity, risk taking, and personal/business drive would at some point bring success.
I read the book and saw the first installment of the movie. That point as noted above should be clear to everyone. Why wasn’t that clear to you. Go back and read the book. Self-gratification NOW was egregious to Rand. You got it, if you got it, when you got it; that is, if, as, and when you succeeded. Full-on capitalism. (That magnificant bridge and train could have been destroyed in six ways to Sunday. They built and did it anyway—-and succeeded.
“If his fortune looked huge, it was a measure of the immense number of other people he made better off.” Despite this undeniable fact, there are always cries for “the rich” like Steve Jobs to “give back to the community,” either in terms of paying more taxes or contributing their wealth to charity. The more we tax, nag and belittle the creative geniuses, the fewer of them we will have.
Actually, that’s not true. We’ll still have geniuses. We just won’t hear a thing from them.
Ever.
The greatest casualty of Leftist societies is not what is destroyed; it’s what is prevented from ever being. For every Steve Jobs who benefits the world, there’s no way of knowing how many other creative minds simply took one look at the life of moral servitude they are repeatedly told is their proper duty, and said to themselves (or felt): To hell with that. I will not work on such terms. I withdraw consent, I withdraw my sanction, I shall strike…
Selfish, you say? Oh yes, you bet. But there’s nothing you can do about it. You cannot force a mind. You cannot steal or coerce what was never created, and which you cannot know might exist.
THAT is the primary moral meaning of “going John Galt”; it isn’t just about taxes, or keeping one’s money. It’s about withdrawing one’s *mind* from the world.
You just reminded me, in a round-about way of that running gag on the original Star Trek series where Chekov says, “It was inwented in Russia”.
It speaks indirectly to what you’re addressing here. In the USSR, there was genius, of a sort, but only that solicited by the communist machine. When the wall came down and former Soviet pilots were allowed to examine US hardware, they were amazed at the extremely high quality of our fighter jets vs. their own aircraft.
In the Soviet Union, they had no time nor need to make high-quality anything because, truly, they didn’t expect to keep using things over and over. Although the debate can chase itself over the issues of quantity vs. quality.
However, innovation did happen. When we got a look in the 70′s at the MiG Foxbat, engineers were fascinated that the Russians had mastered the art of miniaturizing the vacuum tube. Solid state technology had yet to reach the USSR in terms of mass-production. On Western jets where titanium was used in high heat areas, the Russians used stainless steel.
But this is the result of forced adaptation. Not real, groundbreaking innovation. The Joke may be, (with thick Russian accent) “In United States space program, when you were troubled with writing in zero-gravity, you spent meeelionss of dollars to come up with pen that could write in space. In Russia, we used pencil.”
But we also lived in a system that was so familiar with the advantages of technology, we thought nothing of setting engineers loose on an idea with a timeframe and a goal and they would be thrilled for the opportunity to contribute. If you really want to be inspired, watch “From The Earth To The Moon”. Specifically, the episode called “Spider” where Grumman has to create from scratch, the first lunar lander.
Though it may be said that in 1970′s Russia, you would never see a Ginsu Knives commercial, it is because of our system that we could have personal computers, the telephone, the television, etc. Although much of their core technology not specifically created here (See Burke’s “Connections” series), they CAPITALIZED on existing technology to adapt it to other uses and come up with something new and useful.
Genius in a command and control economy is stifled.
I think part of the problem is that there doesn’t seem to be a correlation between what high level executives are accomplishing and the compensation they’ve been receiving. When a union worker gets paid for standing around doing nothing it’s easy to see the outrage, but if a CEO collects a multi-million dollar salary while his stock price circles the drain we hand him a bonus.
What we’re concerned about is the establishment of an aristocracy with an enlarged sense of entitlement. It was on when Thain and company at Merrill tried and shove bailout money into the pockets of the people who ran the company into the ground.
That’s not capitalism. That’s the reason people left Europe in the first place to come to America. Because the cards were always stacked by the “have’s”.
If there is little correlation between accomplishment and compensation for CEO’s, that is a problem for the company, not for the government or for the public. It only becomes a public issue when the government becomes entangled with the business via bailouts, government-sponsored enterprises (in which there seems to be remakably little interest), or other devices.
“We” don’t hand the CEO anything. Those “golden parachutes” are contractually obligated, and are handed to him by the board, who negotiated it. Do I like it? No. But it’s a corporate governance issue. If one were sufficiently exercised about it, buy some of the company and exercise your right to vote your shares to stop that from happening.
actually we did “hand over” rather a lot of dollars to corporate executives: the ones who took the bailout. private company, no govt. bailout money–sure, the board can decide on the compensation. but when you take govt. money–meaning We The People’s money–you do not get to give your executives multi-million dollar bonuses.
seems pretty simple to me.
“What we’re concerned about is the establishment of an aristocracy with an enlarged sense of entitlement.”
“We” already have that. They are called teachers and public unions. The money CEOs make comes from the companies profits, and has nothing to do with how the stock is performing. If it’s a private company, not subsidized by the government, why should you care?
“….if a CEO collects a multi-million dollar salary while his stock price circles the drain we hand him a bonus.”
“We” don’t hand him anything. The company does. And the reason taxpayers are incensed about union workers standing around doing nothing is because usually that’s being done on the taxpayer’s time and money. I don’t care whether or not union workers sleep on private company time. That only affects their bottom line, not mine, unless I buy their product.
The Twentieth Century Motor Company was in Starnesville, Wisconsin, IIRC.
That’s the name for those occupation camps — Starnesvilles.
The most expensive Macintosh Laptop is only half the $5500 claimed. Is she preparing to defraud her insurance company?
Perhaps she doesn’t know what it cost since it was given to her by an indulgent parent or she stole it fair and square.
Perhaps she included the value of installed software and downloaded music along with the hardware costs. Perhaps she was a ditz. I really don’t know.
Excellent article. When people are successful it benefits all of us. Are people no longer educated about Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, the Wright Brothers, etc. or is learning about inventors and how their contributions have changed our lives considered “politically incorrect”?
“Are people no longer educated ”
The answer is, Yes, they are not!
True enough – but you are equating being successful with making money. There are lots of ways to be successful which don’t involve financial compensation.
And the evidence suggests the opposite of what you are claiming. More equal societies are better for all. This isn’t a plea for socialising the means of production, just a claim that success and happiness, if they can be measured at all, are greater when everyone has enough to eat.
I will not put the financiers who created subprime mortgages, credit default swaps, collateralized debt obligations, and all the other forms of financial manipulation in the same category as Thomas Edison or Henry Ford or Steve Jobs.
These folks at Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch and Countrywide Financial didn’t invent Macintoshes or iPhones. They didn’t invent automobiles or power plants. They didn’t invent anything except clever ways to slosh money around. Too clever, because they created a genuine Ponzi scheme in which the total amount of credit default swaps they created came to over $40 trillion (that’s TRILLION), triple the annual GDP of the United States.
And they created actual fraud, in which rating agencies like Moody’s overrated these packaged securities as AAA so that they could be sold to unsuspecting investors.
THEY SCREWED UP. Big time. And unlike Steve Jobs who had already created the Macintosh by the time Sculley aced him out of Apple, these financiers created nothing but a financial collapse.
I can’t defend their actions, and I absolutely refuse to put them in the same category with the entrepreneurs and inventors that folks here keep defending.
One reason I’m a conservative but NOT a Republican is because the rhetoric doesn’t match the actions. The GOP likes to talk about “job creators” and cites the Silicon Valley entrepreneurs (most of whom voted for Obama). But in practice, in Congress, the Republicans are constantly defending hedge fund managers, bankers and financiers, none of whom invented a darned thing.
Bro.Marx also stated “He who does not work does not eat” While Government supported Capitalism is no better than Government supported Socialism for in the end both systems have Authoritarian controls.
From looking at the Socialist Pay Scale of the Federal Governmnet a GS12 is certainly not paid the same rates as a GS3. So how exactly do these freeloaders of redistribution expect to redistribute wealth?
No, St. Paul said that, Marx just quoted it.
An economy operates in three modes: Investment, Production and Consumption.
It must produce enough to support all three modes. Why?
Because an economy operates in two time phases:
Present. Future.
Its wealth must enable all time phases.
Investment: is the means-to-continue-into-the-future. Wealth is set aside from current consumption. It’s invested in long-term infrastructures: new factories, new roads, research into new inventions; training of new workers and hiring new workers.
Production: the making-of-current and future use products. Wealth is divided into producing things that can be used for NOW and for the FUTURE. This is a mediating process that links to Investment and Consumption. Production costs must not use up all the wealth.
Consumption: using current wealth to purchase goods/services for current consumption. This must produce WEALTH, i.e., surplus. The surplus then goes back onto the Investment and Production Modes.
If your economy only operates within the Production-Consumption modes, you are a third world dependent economy. You produce only enough to consume. You are unable to INVEST in the future.
This means that inequality of wealth production is VITAL. In all societies. A certain ratio of the population MUST produce more wealth than is required to produce goods and more than they consume. This surplus is moved into INVESTMENT.
Not all workers can produce enough wealth, above production costs, and above consumption needs. That’s why inequality exists. Only some can do it and the society doesn’t require everyone to be ‘wealth producers’.
BUT, the ratio of those who do not produce wealth and those who do, can’t move into an imbalance.
You have three sets of people: non-productive, medium productive, surplus productive.
If the non-productive ratio exceeds a certain proportion, this ratio exceeds what the producting members can support. They can’t produce enough wealth to: produce more goods for consumption AND produce surplus wealth for investment. Disaster.
That’s what has happened in Europe. The ratio of non-producers or middle producers has exceeded the capacity of the economy to produce Investment wealth.
And that’s what is happening in the US now. As the ratio grows of non-producers increases, and the ratio grows of the population only capable of no-growth steady state (no surplus to invest)…well, the ratio of surplus people shrinks. They can’t support this huge dependent population. Disaster.
The solution? Reduce the proportion of those dependent on that surplus. Reduce the ratio of govt workers, reduce taxes and regulations on private businesses which are the ONLY means of wealth production. Allow inequality of wealth production to increase and the middle class, who produce the wealth, to increase.
Welcome back ETAB.
As you know, I feel that your economic framework is largely correct but somewhat heartless.
Capital is the secret sauce, but there is an even more secret sauce, innovation. Without innovation, there can be no improvement in lifestyles, no matter how much captital there is, how hard people work, and no matter how diligently they consume.
And innovation cannot be dictated. The idiot bureaucrats have proved it many times, for millenia, recently notably with their nonsense green spending boondoggles. Innovation also can’t be taught. Steve Jobs attended what, a couple of semesters of college. Gates dropped out. Edison…don’t get me going.
Innovation has to be ALLOWED, and ENCOURAGED.
And of course, it’s the first thing killed off by marxists, socialists, statists, whatever you want to call them. If somebody is smart enough to create a new tool, that same person is smart enough to see the obvious flaws in a centrally planned society, and has a good chance to be powerful enough to challenge the authorities. So inevitably, lifestyles degenerate, very quickly, under statist control.
Innovation should done by right, along with keeping the results by right.
“Allowing” and “encouraging” are terms of thought that belong to statism. A long leash is still a leash. You probably did not intend to mean that, but that illustrates how insidious and pervasive the Left’s terms of thought really are, even amonng many libertarians and conservatives who otherwise oppose the Left. The amount of support for the Occupation coming from putatively “right-wing” sources (like Zero Hedge commenters) is another sign of this.
I don’t maintain a left/right lexicon.
By “allow”, I mean “not punish with taxes, inane government regulations, and class warfare demagoguery”, and by “encourage” I mean a culture that recognizes the value of innovation and the rare people who can actually do it. In my opinion, that is the opposite of what marxism does.
That’s an interesting comment, proreason, that my suggested economic framework is ‘heartless’. Emotional bonds have no place in an infrastructure. The bones, the skeleton, of an organism, operate by function. Not by emotion.
Does emotion have a role to play within a society? Of course. It’s vital. But it’s on another level of society – and society can be understood as made up of multiple levels, from the most basic common structure (that economic triad) to the psychological nature of being human to the trivial (whims and follies of individuals).
Emotions are not whims; they are necessary components of ‘being human’; without them we are robots. But emotions, such as compassion, care and anger, shame, greed, are basic components of our human (not societal) nature. They should not but do, interfere with the economic triad. We can emotionally support our dependents (children and elderly) but we can emotionally stand up for ourselves and refuse to be sponged off and used by the greed of others, and the unions and those who sponge off others are just two examples.
As for innovation, that’s yet another area of a society. It’s the peripheral adaptive capacity of the population. Some societies inhibit and repress dissent, questions, explorations. We can all remember the intellectual winter of the early medieval period in Europe – and the same in the Islamic world – where dogma and a rejection of reason and human observation has prevented adaptive progress. A society must never repress this capacity-to-reason, and that’s why freedom of expression is vital. This also means that we must have inequality of thought; i.e., we must not all ‘think alike’ but must be open to questions.
Perhaps I should have qualified “heartless” with “incomplete”, “too mechanical”, or “missing the human component”. Heartless was shorthand for ignoring the human element. I don’t apologize for it, but I didn’t intend to imply that an economy has emotions either.
Your three dimensions miss the most important one, human genius.
One can invest forever, but without people with the vision to see entirely new products, lifestyles stagnate. The key problem with central planning isn’t lack of investment or production. Oobviously the Soviets had abundent supplies of both. The key problem was that central planning restrict 99% of humanity from creating new things, despite the fact that 99 serfs hoeing the dirt have many times more genius than the 1 apartchik scheming up the next 5 year plan. But if all they are allowed to do is hoe, life improves at the pace of the Middle Ages. Occasionally, a Gutenberg breaks through, but it’s too rare.
Edison and Jobs were worth thousands of Buffets.
I know too many people, myself included, who had to be desperate before they discovered a course of action that led to real money, and happiness.
Desperation IS uncomfortable, but it yields huge rewards. We should not make an unproductive life comfortable. If we do that, we will drain the motivation from our populace.
We must preserve the upside.
Excellent article, Dr. Hsieh. The WSJ should publish it, too. Laisezze-faire capitalism is the only moral solution to our economic quagmire.
Dr. Hsieh: “This is precisely the lesson that the OWS kitchen staff (or the woman with the laptop) have learned the hard way.” You HOPE they learned it. Are they still there? If they are, they didn’t learn. I’ll bet they’re still there, and attributing their “noble failure” to something, anything other than the real reason.
They haven’t learned a thing from that.
Nor are they capable of understanding that the very people who recruited them to join this “movement” are the same ones who are destroying their future economic opportunities.
Yes, an excellent article, Dr. Hsieh.
As noted by many above, young people stay young/infantile longer and are not taught how to connect the dots or reach a logical conclusion. All their lives, they’ve whined and “it” was delivered: spending money, cars, concert tickets, fashionable clothes, outrageously priced shoes, the newest of technologies and gear, education, etc., etc.
We’ve produced the UOMe generation to the 10th power.
Many (most?) have no concept of earned rewards or how money works. Since education is the only world they understand, GRADES are a useful illustration of the model they espouse.
Example:
In college, everyone is expected to show up, study, learn, take tests and produce papers as required. However, some do this better than others. That’s unfair. To be fair, everyone in every class will receive a C, regardless of performance, attendance or ability.
High-performing A and B students are required to share points they’ve earned until all D and F students receive Cs. The fact that D and F students can’t or won’t do what it takes to earn a C (B or A) is irrelevant. From each according to their ability or motivation, to each according to their need for a C.
Welcome to socialism in action. Now, how does all that “fairness” feel?
“Let us celebrate our superiority. Let’s us celebrate those who suffer for lack of our character.” Job.
this guy should run for Prez or at least be someone’s campaign manager. Or you could write a book on what not to say during hard times in America.
You must have been a member of the peace movement during WWII. :: ))
The component element within the political Left which have come to admire failure and complain about the marginalization of certain groups in life have come to do so because they see themselves as Robin Hood’s Merry Men, unfairly cut out from having a piece of the pie.
The marginalization is very real but the cause is not since that status is one that is self-inflicted by reality. The real cause are the value systems embraced by failed cultures and native ability.
Unfortunately reality cannot be gerrymandered to produce talent and value where there is none and so someone, a King John, must be produced as the exploiter, the fall guy.
A lot of anger and movement will be produced but nothing will be changed because in the end you can make all the pronouncements and explanations about rain and ignore it all you want as well but you will still get wet.
“…if their ideas were actually put into practice they’d end up being the Pauls, not the Peters.”
I think you meant “…Peters, not the Pauls.”
Great article. I am a believer that capitalism is the best system and would never begrudge guys that create something and get uber-rich in doing so. They bring us all up in direct and indirect ways. But there is certainly some unfairness in the system that could probably be fixed. I have a problem when I see people that for no reason other than force of personality, politics, paternalism, networking, favoritism … rise to executive levels where they are given incredibly rich and generally undeserved compensation packages at the expense of others and the shareholders when they contributed little or nothing to the creation of the company or products, and when what they do could be done by others. These and perhaps other processes within the capitalist system have room for attack; but not the system generally.
There will always be instances of executives rising to positions of power and high income who do not deserve it, “deserve” meaning that they have risen beyond their level of competence. This is called the Peter Principle. But that isn’t an injustice–that’s a mistake. If those in a position to correct the mistake fail to do so, and there are enough of these mistakes being made in key departments, performance of the company at the customer level will become evident. Profits and future prospects will dim. Astute stockholders will recognize this and unload their shares. Over time, share value will decline, and this will serve as a feedback signal to top executives that something is wrong within the company. If they, in turn, fail to recognize and correct their management problems, the company’s stock will drop so much that it will eventually be bought by a competitor or will go bankrupt.
There is no perfect system, but any system that is used must have a self correcting mechanism such as this. When government interferes with this “creative destruction”, they are subsidizing failure and hurting everyone involved in the capitalist system–stockholders, employees and the public.
Government involvment in the capitalist system must be limited to producing legislation and regulations that have only one purpose–to prevent fraud and injury–and not to dictate economic outcomes.
The rich will always hold the advantage for 1 big reason. Immigration. The wages will not go up and the unemployment rate will not go down because of it. It’s the 800 pound gorilla in the room but virtually every commentator online, tv or print will not really delve into it, mainly because both liberals and conservatives need high immigration for their own reasons.
If you create 100,000 jobs a month, the rate cannot go down because we bring in over 100,000 legal immigrants a month. It’s just math. That’s not counting the illegal immigration, so take that off the table.
I wish honest conservatives would add this critical caveat when they are making their economic arguments and bashing those who cannot seem to be able to get ahead. The system is rigged against them. I’m not saying you cannot get ahead. I have to some degree, although legal H1B immigration has probably cost me a million dollars easily over time.
You hit the razor right on the head. There is no unemployment; there are almost 200,000 immigrants a month, legal and illegal, coming into America.
The value of a worker has plummeted.
So poor Americans deserve jobs while poor outsiders deserve to starve in their countries rather than be allowed (!) to offer better performance for less pay. You, Sir, are heartless.
to sinz54:
Please read:
Bloomberg to OWS:Blame Congress for mortgage congress, not banks
And
Smoking gun document ties federal policy to subprime mortgage crisis
Feel free to share, publish, diffuse this:
http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/403/nojobs.jpg/
“Americans have become undeservedly rich through political “pull” and favors”
The OWSers have convinced us that a return to a pure capitalistic society would result in the 1% taking most of the wealth with the rest fighting over scraps.
In truth, it is the mixed economy that forces us to fight over scraps in an ever shrinking pie. What would you do if your taxes were lower so that you could save an exra 5,000 a year? What would you do with that?
We dont know how high out economy could fly if freed of the burdens it bears. What if the US was the place everyone in the world could go to get rich. Instead, people dream of doing business in China and bribing the cousin of some powerful party leader, a “Shindlers List” economy where pull and influence instead of profit is the driving force.
The Controllers? Read “The Creature from Jekyll Island” by Griffin; “Web of Debt” by Brown; “The Shadows of Power: The Council on Foreign Relations and the American Decline” by Perloff; “The World As It Is” by Hedges; and a hundred other books that expose the system as it is in reality. The system of the controllers is not an “ism”: not capitalism; not socialism; not communism. Perhaps reality was described a hundred years ago by these terms in which you have been schooled to believe the illusion is real. Read Ellul – any and many of his books. Read Peter Dale Scott. His term of “deep politics” describes the nature of the political illusion: the decisions about means and ends which affect us all are made here at the level of “deep politics” – not in “local political theater” which changes nothing but demands the expenditure of hugely gross amounts of time, energy, and financial resources… all for naught. Nothing in the political domain changes or will change via the D vs. R system of government, except the continuing erosion of civil liberties (viz. The Patriot Act and a slew of the Bush & Obama generated Exec. Orders in the last 10 years), the loss of true economic freedom (viz. open your eyes and see where the money has gone, is going, and will go – the “1 vs. 99″), and the growing means of control (viz. the existing “police state”, TSA, FBI, NSA, Homeland Security, etc, etc, etc). Ugh!!! The controllers, such as Poppy Bush as revealed in “The Family of Secrets” (book recommended by Ed above), operate successfully because they have successfully created and maintained the effective cover of “deep politics.” FDR said himself: “In politics, nothing happens that is not planned…” or something to that affect… in the 1940s. What we as a people most urgently need is conservatives who will question what they are being told by the true shills of the present system… about the world they think exists. Read http://www.tomdispatch.com sometimes. One needs to develop the ability to see beyond the insignificant ‘D’ versus ‘R’ debates. “They” – the controllers – are globalist, neither D or R, and only desire greater political control, more secured access to wealth without limitation, and effective and efficient un-interruption to the pumping out of its ideological propaganda. Your becoming awakened politically is subversive to their ends, as well as their means, and loosens the noose that’s hanging around your neck. Blessings.
Watch the YouTube video “Money as Debt” and have your eyes opened!
Crony Capitalism is what ruins GENUINE capitalism.
Too big too fail? BULLSH*T.
So tired of it all. I’m just going to chuck all of my hard work and go bankrupt. Wish me luck! I’m too small to fail!
Paul Graham wrote, in 2004, a very insightful essay on where economic inequality comes from, why people get upset about it, and why it might actually be a good thing. The gist of it:
http://paulgraham.com/gap.html
“I’d like to propose an alternative idea: that in a modern society, increasing variation in income is a sign of health. Technology seems to increase the variation in productivity at faster than linear rates. If we don’t see corresponding variation in income, there are three possible explanations: (a) that technical innovation has stopped, (b) that the people who would create the most wealth aren’t doing it, or (c) that they aren’t getting paid for it.”
Excellent article — even the poorest of us live better today because of income inequality paired with opportunity. As long as that is allowed we will continue to prosper and “follow the leaders.” Thanks for a refreshing take on what we must consider and re-learn — both the moral and practical issues.
The Occupy folks are opposed to crony capitalism, the unholy alliance of government and business that is the source of middle class empoverishment. Wealth and poverty have always been part of the human condition. It’s just gotten out of hand lately, and OWS is demanding more balance.
“I’ll believe corporations are people when Texas executes one.”
“Again, it’s your choice (or not) to read that which I have written.”
But I can’t choose not to load your verbosity. Your texts are as long (or longer!) than the actual articles.
“If you wish to deride my punctuation or style, then fine. You’ll get no argument from me.”
Funny, considering that’s exactly what I did and I got an argument – from two (different?) people.
Hilarious, considering you follow that statement with further argument defending your style.
I make my critique for the third, and final, time:
I believe you would grant that blog sites are often judged by the quality and number of comments their posts generate. For example, while the substance of the articles is (often) exceedingly bad, the comments on the Huffington Post are (consistently) stupefyingly mundane and/or abhorrent, which further reduces my opinion of the site.
Your “style” reduces my opinion of PJMedia, despite the fact I often agree with your ultimate position. I don’t believe intelligent opponents of your position will be swayed by your excessive contribution; I do believe they will be strengthened in their opposition. You are the amen chorus.
You clutter up a lot of pages on PJMedia with numerous comments that amount to textual cruft. They increase page load times and, while I fully understand your points, they aren’t always interesting. (trite)
Additionally, you have a tendency toward exceedingly-long, unnecessarily-complex sentences making relatively simple points. They read as if written by one who wants to appear more intelligent than he actually is, despite his high opinion of himself. (blowhard)
I don’t want to shut down your voice, but suggest you use more care and discernment in the future; it will do you benefit.
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The original critique was a bit mean, I was using irony and a not-so-gentle ribbing. I’m kind’ve sorry for that, but I call’em like I see’em. The post I commented on was, in my opinion, embarrassingly bad. But (again, my opinion) your response has been more embarrassing.
I hope you appreciate the importance of language and its proper use. The ability to “decipher the meaning” is a bit below my expectations of adult discussion; society needs some kind of standard.
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“You’re the guy who is worried that the fire department parked on your azaleas while your house is burning down.”
All I did was point out you were using poor sentence structure and that your writing could be more concise.
I wrote three sentences. You asked for clarification, which I provided.
You’re now replying to a response directed at a third party.
Who’s house is on fire?
I would have appreciated this kind of critiquing in the first post you presented. By writing what you did you left it up to me to decipher your full meaning, which you have explained much better here.
Page load times for people on dialup may be a problem but I really think that’s hardly the issue since you have chosen, instead, to critique the content of my lack of literary skill and the length of my posts. Perhaps more proofreading on my part is in order. But then, again, it’s stream-of-consciousness and I’m guessing, based on your assessment that my consciousness is a matter of some critiquing as well.
Brevity may be the soul of wit. But then, I have never tried to be witty. My verbosity has been praised by others. I’m sorry you don’t care for it. I’m also sorry that you think I’m trying to prove that I’m more intelligent than I really am. That smacks of pomposity on your part.
I am not the smartest guy around. Nor am I the stupidest. My opinion of myself is not that high, nor is it very low. But, you have successfully squelched me. You’re right. No one needs to read what I think. Thanks for pointing that out. Were it not for the overwhelming number of superiors that I have, including you, then..well…I guess I would have more to say.
I truly appreciate your help.
If it were not for the brains and drive and wealth creating power of capitalists, America would not exist as it is, and most people living a good life in America today would instead be slowly dying in some awful peasant pesthole, prematurely worn out.
What many don’t seem to understand is how much we owe the prime movers of society. They are NOT like average people, they live, eat, breathe their business. They think about it 24/7 and are driven to achieve what they do by a vision others don’t have. Such people are worth far more than they earn, as William Stoddard wrote, because they bring incalculable wealth and progress to the entire human race.
Thank you for an essay which brings this important point to light.
Nice straw man article.
“It is also important to recognize that America is not currently a capitalist country, but rather a mixed economy with both capitalist and socialist elements. Hence, some Americans have become undeservedly rich through political “pull” and favors. But the OWS protestors aren’t opposed to government favoritism in principle — they merely want to shift those special favors onto themselves.”
OWS is against the political pull and favors , not against the rich.