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Should Government be more or less?

Discussion in 'Alley of Lingering Sighs' started by Nakia, Jun 7, 2007.

  1. Nakia

    Nakia The night is mine Distinguished Member ★ SPS Account Holder Adored Veteran Pillars of Eternity SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!) Torment: Tides of Numenera SP Immortalizer (for helping immortalize Sorcerer's Place in the game!) BoM XenForo Migration Contributor [2015] (for helping support the migration to new forum software!)

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    And who is to define slack-jawed yokels? Who is to define education? Having a college or university degree does not make one educated. Especially in this day and age of specialization. And no matter how smart you are or how 'well educated' you think you are there is some one out there smarter and better educated.

    Lawyers? If we didn't have them we would invent them but that doesn't mean I want them to have the final say as to what is best for me.

    Also, please remember that we who live in the Federal Union of the United States of America live in a very large country with multi-layers of government. I am reasonably happy with my local government; semi-happy with my state government and not at all happy with my Federal government.

    Government is necessary but must be limited or we cease to be a democratic republic. A dictatorship by any other name is still a dictatorship.
     
  2. Montresor

    Montresor Mostly Harmless Staff Member ★ SPS Account Holder

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    You will find that anyone who advocates government by an "enlightened" class considers themselves "enlightened" and fit to govern, and that those who advocate limits to who can or cannot vote consider themselves eligible to vote.

    They just forget that the decision about who is enlightened and/or eligible will be made by somebody with political power and influence. And that will not be themselves.
     
  3. Morgoroth

    Morgoroth Just because I happen to have tentacles, it doesn'

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    I have a couple of major problem with the minimized government ideal.

    Firstly and most importantly. Born poor. Die poor. No chance of rising from poverty. No bank is going to loan to you since you have nothing to back it up, you have no education and will be forced to work on the abysmal market-prized minimum wage that will be lower than the current one. When you get sick you'll be even worse, no free healthcare and I think all of us know how much healthcare costs if you're paying it from your own pocket. The result would be a whole new class of poverty which I don't want to see in my country, not now not ever.

    Secondly, an unregulated market requires everyone to have perfect information about everything. If I buy a can of beer I have not the slightest idea what kind of enviormental damage the production of that can caused and that's why there are government institutions such as that research the sort of things, and then the elected officials on basis of that research set the standards.

    Thirdly, I can't help but think that a minimized government means a weak government and a weak government may have significant trouble in keeping other entities from taking its place, or enforcing the rules of the society.

    I think the purpose of the government is to enable a good life for the majority its citizen. A large intrusive government will make the citizen fearful and limits their freedom and can't provide them a good life. A minimized government lacks all stabilizers between social classes and fails to provide them with proper security.

    So in the end it's all about finding the golden middle road. The closer to the center the better in my opinion. Therefore I vote for "medium-sized government". ;)

    To put it into perspective I think Finland is doing quite well, we're perhaps a bit too far in the "big-government" direction but we are moving away from it right now. Hopefully the transition won't take us too far from the middle though.
     
  4. jaded empath Gems: 20/31
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    Okay, first off - sorry but I can't fight the compulsion: ...more or less what? :p

    Secondly, I agree with a lot of what Morogoth has said - the 'golden mean' of government; just enough to accomplish what it should, but not so much that it starts think up less benevolent things to occupy its idle time with...

    Seriously, if one objects to 'big government', where does one draw the line - how much smaller does the government have to get to be okay? I'm guessing that line differs for every citizen of the government in question.

    Hey, I'm the jaded one, here - quit muscling in on my turf! ;)

    But I'd take issue with the UNIVERSAL nature of your statements; altruists do exist (they're way too rare, but not extinct). I'd be a lot more accepting (and in agreement) if there were a few 'almost's or 'nearly always's in there...
    (wow, it feels so WEIRD to argue against cynicism!)
     
  5. AMaster Gems: 26/31
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    What the 'minimize government' types forget is that
    So in point of fact what they're advocating is transfering as much power as possible from those who are theoretically (though, to be sure, not even close to always--in practice) and legally accountable to the general public to those whose sole legal responsibility is to maximize their own power, in the form of profits.

    Which strikes me as a rather poor idea. Everything from dumping pollutants into rivers to sweatshops to the industrial revolution should illustrate why it is a poor idea.

    Before anyone starts bringing up the USSR, let me make it clear that I'm closer to Morg's view than Lenin's view.
     
  6. Montresor

    Montresor Mostly Harmless Staff Member ★ SPS Account Holder

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    The money in your bank account is a measure of how much other people have been willing to pay you for your services: Your work, your time, or your other contributions to society.

    True - money can also be made in criminal ways, for example by taking bribes and kickbacks. Government should be prosecuting these things, not doing them.

    What big government means to me is transferring power from those who contribute most to society - industrialists, without whom you wouldn't have cars, electrical appliances, computers, the internet - to those who contribute only impediments: Bureaucrats and politicians.

    To take an example, I run a freelance translation agency. I might also have started a larger agency and hired people. But if I did, my administration tasks would multiply and keep multiplying, the moment I begin hiring people. And because I live in Scandinavia, I pay 60% marginal tax, which is a punishment for hard work. So I don't hire people. I couldn't be bothered.

    Dumping pollutants into rivers: Who owns the rivers in the United States? The government does. So the government could, if they would, sue the pollutants. My solution: Sell the rivers to private owners, with the clear understanding that the owners could and should sue polluters for trespass and destruction of private property.

    Sweatshops: Would it have been better if the owners hadn't opened sweatshops? The workers would then have been unemployed, and the population in general would have been without a product in demand.

    The industrial revolution: You think it was a bad idea? Without the industrial revolution, you would (if you hadn't died in childhood) have been working a handplow, not complaining about evil industrialists on the internet.
     
  7. AMaster Gems: 26/31
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    Yes. But that's not all it is. Your statement is in no way incompatible with the notion that money is power.

    False dichotomy. The choice is not between sweatshops and no products.

    Frankly, if you can't run a profitable business without using sweatshops, you're not a very good businessman, and your business must be massively inefficient.

    Period.

    Strawman. I don't think industrialization is a bad idea. I think the way it was accomplished (and in many cases is being accomplished) was.
     
  8. Chandos the Red

    Chandos the Red This Wheel's on Fire

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    What exactly is an industrialist? A person who builds a car? or the internet? Or someone at the top of the corporate ladder, who controls the assets of a company? Corporate fat cats are probably the most useless people in society. But I would not consider them to be "industrialists." I'm not sure what is meant by that particular term. Most jobs, goods and services are not created by "industrialists" anyway, but by the free market. Individuals have very little to do with the process by themselves.
     
  9. Ragusa

    Ragusa Eternal Halfling Paladin Veteran

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    The praise for the 'industrialist' sounds very much like Ayn Rand to me. I don't find her industrialist model all that persuasive, in fact, it seems to me somewhat myopic.

    I find it amusing that Rand's terminology is inspired by socialist terminology, she seems to see the 'industrialist' as a class. The 'industrialists' couldn't rain all these blessings on the benighted masses wouldn't it be for taxpayer provided infrastructure, taxpayer provided education for their work-force-to-be, the state's system or laws and courts that guarantees property rights and effective legal protection and so forth.
    For all that industrialists pay taxes, or ought to. If they don't they are parasites, freeloaders, taking advantage of all these blessings, without paying their part of the bill. The presumed 'blessings for society' alone don't suffice.

    Besides, Japan's MITI doesn't fit this explanatory model. They have it the other way around. Without their guidance Japans industrialists wouldn't have so successfully developed high technology. It also overlooks the extent to which US taxpayer funded technology research for instance, benefits the industry and enables later profit. We wouldn't have the internet today without DARPA defense research, that is, massive hidden subsidies for the US industry channeled through the defense budged. The industrialist class doesn't exist free floating and on its own. To assume that anyway, leads to a warped perception and distorted conclusions on the issue.

    In my reading Ayn Rand's vision of this 'class', so villified in the revolutionary Russia of her young adulthood, resulted in her her to go to the opposite extreme, praising the industrialist to the heavens, and missing the point as well. She's in that sense, quite literally an anti-communist.
     
  10. AMaster Gems: 26/31
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    She also had an odd view of history, as illustrated by her speech to a West Point graduating class in which she claimed that America had never engaged in a war of conquest. And that America hadn't profited from WWII.

    Evidently, the thirteen colonies became fifty states because the injuns (and Mexico) A) gave the USA land and B) courteously vanished into the ether. And apparently that America became a global hegemon in the immediate aftermath of WWII was entirely unrelated to the war. I suppose God chose to uplift us, or something.
     
  11. Montresor

    Montresor Mostly Harmless Staff Member ★ SPS Account Holder

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    No, my statement is compatible with the notion that money has to be earned. It is not necessarily evil. And it is not necessarily used to suppress others.

    Running a sweatshop was, at the the time, one profitable way of running a business. It was replaced by other, more efficient (and therefore more profitable) ways.

    Sorry, but that was the way it came out.

    If you know a better way of accomplishing it, do it, don't tell those who accomplish how they should do.

    You mean only the free market counts, not the people who produce the actual goods? Including the individuals who come up with new ideas and start new businesses?

    I have the deepest respect for anyone who can start from scratch and build a business, employing people in the process. That person helps make society richer. (That class does not include people like Kenny Lay, who run businesses by running to Washington - which I think is what you mean by "corporate fat cats".)

    And just for clarification: I held these ideas long before I read a single line by Ayn Rand - I only started reading her works last year - though I freely admit she helped me set words to some of my ideals.
     
  12. Ragusa

    Ragusa Eternal Halfling Paladin Veteran

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    AMaster,
    reminds me of something I read retired head of the DIA, Col. Patrick Lang, say about Zalmay Khalilzad - in the Bush Sr. administration assistant deputy undersecretary of defense for policy, working for Paul Wolfowitz, ex special envoy to Afghanistan, ex ambassador to Iraq and now US ambassador to the US.

    Khalilzad had then drafted a policy statement that essentially said that the United States should use its power to benevolently dominate the world, and not hang back from use of force if necessary. Lang disagreed, and at some point Khalilzad got more and more angry with Lang and finally yelled, "The problem with you native Americans, is that you don't understand your responsibility in the use of power."

    Maybe it is a pattern that immigrants to the US tend to out-patriot and out-idealise even the staunchest flagwaver? That would well explain Rand's enthusiastic view of America.
     
  13. AMaster Gems: 26/31
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    That money can be inherited suggests that it doesn't have to be earned.

    As for the 'evil' and 'suppress others' bits, well, no, of course it isn't; power isn't intrinsically good or evil. But then, I've never claimed it was. Nor have I mentioned 'evil indsutrialists', or anything of the sort. If I give the impression I am railing against such things, it is not through intent.

    At any rate, may I request a yes/no answer to the following: is money power?

    If the answer is 'no', may I further request that you explain your reasoning?

    Even if one were to accept the notion that the sweatshop went away because more profitable methods were found, that still leaves entire generations of laborers screwed over by the abuses associated with the IR.

    I simply will not accept any ideology which claims that, for the lot of the human race to be improved, entire generations must not only not benefit from the improvement, but be worse off than they would have been without 'progress'.

    I simply will not be persuaded that such things were--or are--necessary. Or desirable.

    A variation on 'those who can, do, those who can't, teach'. Like the phrase it is derived from, it is nonsense--though, it must be admitted, amusing.
     
  14. Montresor

    Montresor Mostly Harmless Staff Member ★ SPS Account Holder

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    No, money is not power. But money can buy power, like government favors. If anything, that supports smaller government, not bigger. Government historically doesn't support workers, it supports employers.

    Were they worse off? If so, why did they work in a sweatshop?

    There can be only two explanations why anyone would work in a sweatshop: 1) They worked there VOLUNTARILY, because they believed they were better off, or 2) They worked there involuntarily, because they were FORCED to. If so, the owner didn't force them without the tacit understanding and acceptance, or even the active help of, government.

    If you can't start a business, you have no right to wait until others do, and then step in to dictate (not teach) how they should run their business.

    That business is somebody else's private property. You have no right to run it for them. What you do have is the right to open a competing business and ruin them, by taking away their customers and their best skilled workers.

    A government that hinders you from doing that is, effectively, protecting existing businesses by limiting competition. They are protecting politically connected businessmen (Kenny Lay is a good example) from new and more effective competitors. Two effects of this is fewer products to choose from in the "open" market (leading to higher prices) and fewer employers to choose between for workers (leading to a worse work environment). That is another price you pay for big government.
     
  15. Ragusa

    Ragusa Eternal Halfling Paladin Veteran

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    Monty, that's all quite theoretic and abstract. There is generally a big difference in leverage between workers and employers, and employers exercise that to their benefit. Of course, employees can also use their leverage when they want to see their special skill reflected in their salary. But that is an idealised picture.

    From my own experience I can say that many workers to choose between reliably guarantees a very poor working environment, lower wages, exploitation and low job security. And that isn't a result of government regulation but of the general job situation. People who need to pay their bills can't afford being too picky; likely they are not inclined to take risks. Now you can say that the disgruntled employees should quit and seek a better paid, decent job. That's what I did. But in times of prevalent unemployment that is still a very pious thing to say.

    My former employer made a point of paying his employees two weeks late or so. As a veteran I had to reassure my complaining colleagues that everything was going the regular way, which in a sense was the case. Month by month. Participating in stonewalling my colleagues underlined to me that there is no equal weight or equal chances in the relation between employer and employee, starting at the core with access to information. Among my former colleagues the movie 'Glenngary Glenn Ross' had cult status. I suggest you go watch it.

    I am familiar with the intricancies of offloading the entrepreneurial risk on the employees under the rubric of 'performance related pay'. I had some limited insight into the reports of the project I worked at. Whenever our pay schemes for the sellers were changed 'to better reward the successful sellers' our company was able to cut costs, profits went up, and the sellers earned a little less. The pay schemes were designed to be intransparent. I learned a lot about new-speak when I went there.

    My ex-bosses attitude was 'It's my company, my money, and I handle things the way I like'. Nothing wrong with that, basically.
    Except that compliance with the law isn't voluntary. On every memo sent downwards I made a habit to circle in red those items that were invalid because they were in conflict with work law. The funniest thing I encountered was a memo that amounted to a one sided change of the contract for all employees. I have it as a memento at the wall of my study. And I always thought a change in basics like payment requires a new contract between employer and employee. Speak about essentialia negotii. My ex-boss apparently felt that there is nothing wrong with that. It took a frenzied effort by a near hysterical company lawyer to talk him out of it. It was hilarious.

    What I want to say with my lengthy rant is that when you have worked in such a Versalife-like place you start to appreciate the value of government regulation.

    The market settles everything? So does death. That doesn't mean the eventual resolution is a desirable one. I concede that those who keep the economy running are indispensable. That is no justification to give them a blanc cheque. How did Errol Flynn say as iirc Sindbad? 'Trust in Allah, but tether your mare!'

    The faith in the market deserves as much scepticism.

    [ June 11, 2007, 18:25: Message edited by: Ragusa ]
     
  16. AMaster Gems: 26/31
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    Monty, again: please explain your reasoning.

    I'm genuinely interested in it.

    Structural coercion. They couldn't farm, because most/all suitable land was privatized, and the land owners had no interest in enabling people to engage in subsistence farming on their land. They could try squatting, but then they're tresspassing and get thrown in prison.

    They can't not work, because then they starve. So they work.

    So, yes, the government aided and abetted capital, in that the government privatized land and enforced property laws.

    The government also aided capital vs. strikes, but that wouldn't have been relevant had the prior condition of 'can't subsistence farm' not been met.

    Can't, eh? Interesting assumption.

    At any rate, I disagree.
     
  17. Montresor

    Montresor Mostly Harmless Staff Member ★ SPS Account Holder

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    Ragusa: First, my congratulations on getting out of that place! :)

    Late payment is a violation of your employment contract. My suggestion would have been to bring suit, and to warn other prospective employees that the employer didn't pay wages (which means there is no point in working there).

    Protecting peoples' rights from force or fraud by criminals is one of the few roles I see for government. Not honoring a contract, for example not paying one's debts (including salaries), comes under the "fraud" category.

    It does. Employees can accept the new contract, or the employer can terminate the existing contract, telling the employees that if they want to continue in the company after the old contract expires, it will be under the new contract. That is, IMO, his right. But he can't change the contract single-handedly, since this would mean forcing you to work under a new contract.

    A similar example: In my old job we were negotiating new contracts (after several company mergers we had three or four different "standard" contracts with varying basic clauses, bonuses, etc.). The boss tried to smuggle in a "customer clause", stating that if we left the company (voluntarily or otherwise), we were not allowed to work for the company's clients for 18 months. In practise, that meant we couldn't work freelance or go to another translation agency, anywhere, since most large clients "shop around" for the best price.

    Our negotiator immediately told the boss that he would not sign the new contract and that he would recommend to the rest of us to not sign, either. The clause was changed to a much reduced "colleague clause", prohibiting us from leaving and subsequently recommending our old colleagues to new employers. This would prevent us from going to another agency and then try to steal more people away from the company.

    By this time I was so tired of these machinations and other policies of the company that I handed in my resignation instead of signing the new contract, much to my boss' regret. ;) I wasn't by a long way the first, or last, of my old collegues to walk out after the mergers and all that followed.

    I prefer to say that compliance with a contract is not voluntary. In this case, that contract probably referred to work law.

    Your ex-boss can handle his property any legal way he wants - but violating contracts he has entered voluntarily is not a legal way.

    Fair enough; I honestly can't say I blame you. :) I think your old employer will end up with the employees he deserves, and with legal trouble he also deserves. As stated above, contract enforcement is one of the few things where government should play a role, and he definitely violated your employment contracts.

    I don't believe that working conditions need to be defined by a government, they can also be defined in a set of rules agreed upon by employer and employees. They can be standard for an industry, or they can be specific to a workplace, but once stated in a contract, they are binding. In our time and age, what employer would dare refuse to enter a clause stating that the work environment is, to his best knowledge, safe to the workers? Refusing that clause would be as good as admitting that the workplace is not safe.

    And, such rules would not be subject to arbitrary changes whenever the government feels it needs to "do something". In my opinion, faith in government deserves as much scepticism as faith in the market. :)

    @AMaster: Sorry, didn't see your post until I had replied to Ragusa.

    Government aided capital against labor. Isn't that a good reason for limiting government's role?

    I think that also answers your question why I believe money isn't power by itself, but that it can be used to buy power; i.e. government help for special interests - in this case, capital.

    I am not assuming that you can't start a business. I am saying that if you do, it is YOUR business to run, not everybody else's.

    The same goes in reverse; if somebody else starts a business, it is not yours to run.

    Besides, George W. Bush or Arnold Schwarzenegger may not agree with you on how your business, or somebody else's, should be run. Don't forget that, before you appeal to government.

    EDIT #2: I got to thinking of this comment:

    Unless I misread you, you are saying that it is OK to seize control of other peoples' property if you deem it to be "for the common good". But wouldn't that mean that I have the same right to seize your property for the same reason?

    In the extreme case, this supports the Kelo vs. City of New London decision. That was government (the Supreme Court) seizing private homes and giving them to a private developer "for economic development".

    [ June 12, 2007, 00:36: Message edited by: Montresor ]
     
  18. Chandos the Red

    Chandos the Red This Wheel's on Fire

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    Any business which operates and is maintained in a given society is bound by the principles and laws of that society and government. If "business" wishes to profit from the workers and customers within society, then it too must also be a part of, and accept the principles, which also in a good many instances, allowed it to be "successful" in the first place. Every business is told "how to run," by both the Rule of Law, and obviously, the customers and workers within the economic market. No one "owns" the economy, just as no one "owns" the internet (except Al Gore of course). Yet everyone is a vital part of it, without whom the process could not function.
     
  19. Darkwolf Gems: 18/31
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    Ok, there are a number of elephants in the room that are being ignored here. First off, a governmental structure that works in a nation the size of your average European country will not suffice in a nation the size of the US or Russia. This would be the equivalently of wiping out the national governments of all the nations of the EU and having local gov't report directly to the EU. There is a reason that the Founding Fathers of this country set up a weak Federal Gov't and strong State gov't. The problem isn't that gov't has been growing, it is that FEDERAL gov't has been growing. Again, beating the dead horse, but once the States lost representation in the Federal gov't (17th Amendment) we lost a major check that kept the Federal Gov't from usurping power.

    Second, in regards to the labor issue, Gov't is not (IMO) as effective or as efficient as organized labor (unions) at protecting workers rights. Gov't should have no more oversight than to make sure that workers are not recklessly endangered (OSHA type thing, though this has gotten insane as well). Issues such as compensation and benefits should be negotiated between employers and employees.

    Finally, universal health care (UHC). Honestly, it won't work, and if it is passed people will be complaining about how it sucks and longing for the days before it happened with 5 years of its implementation. UHC is, from a political view, nothing more than a way to make people more dependent upon gov't. Sure people are in favor of it, the current system is breaking down, and it sounds great...I mean how can you not support every one getting great health care. Problem is that the current levels of service simply cannot be maintained if they are extended to everyone, and quality will erode. The sad thing is that most politicians are in favor of this as it empowers them, and other valid ideas that could fix the problem aren't even examined, and are actually squashed, as they have no benefit to politicians.

    That is all I have time for now, and probably most of you have stopped reading by now anyway. ;)
     
  20. Morgoroth

    Morgoroth Just because I happen to have tentacles, it doesn'

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    I pretty much agree with you on about the two first issues but disagree about the universal healthcare. It really does not has to be accomplished purely through government means, it can also be done with large participation by the private sector which is partially subsidized by the government. Universal Healthcare means just that the government provides for those who can't afford an insurance. This is not in my opinion something that is impossible to accomplish, it's all about political will.
     
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