traptunderice wrote:
cry of the banshee wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
cry of the banshee wrote:
North From Here wrote:
cry of the banshee wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
cry of the banshee wrote:
Cheap labor = lower competive wages for all = less money to spend...
Because credit cards don't exist? We're not in record amounts of debt for no reason. People can't afford what they need and capitalism can't sell what it has that people don't need. Credit closes those gaps.
You can't be this stupid, all due respect.
You seriously don't get it, you can't think outside of your marxist bubble. Capitalism is (in and of itself) good. It's corporatism that is bad. And anybody that continues to both conflate the AND suggests the answer is to pile up debt isn't really worth discussing this with.
With all due respect, I think you misread some of his post. He certainly wasn't advocating the piling up of private debt as a good thing like we see in our fair country.
With all due respect yourself, how else could
Quote:
Credit closes those gaps
be interpreted in context with my post?
At best, it's irrelevant to the topic at hand.
He seems to be arguing for imported labor, on the basis that it "drives down costs", with a little swipe at capitalism thrown in for good measure.
If that were the case, there would be no need for credit.
No, credit is not what is needed to "close the gaps", a moratorium on imported cheap labor is what is needed.
You said cheap labor would result in lower wages for all, I completely agree. You then claimed that would lead to less money for people to spend and hence not purchase the products being produced. I completely agree. I then state that is what has happened. Credit cards enter the picture. People are paid less and continue to make the same amount, products need purchased, credit cards enable them to make said purchases. Piling up debt is how capitalism keeps itself from nosediving. Looking at the economic grand scheme of things I'm not sure how you could argue. Credit plus weird finance derivative bullshit. Student loans defaulting, fucked up mortgages given to people who couldn't afford them, unprecedented credit card debt widespread. Blame individuals for lacking personal responsibility if you want, but it sounds like a widespread structural symptom of a system that can't support itself without its junkie fix.
I've gotten V's panties in a bunch. Sorry.
@Karma's article: yup, bureaucracy blows.
Negatory, no panties bunched here. Credit and capitalism are not the same thing. credit is a banking scheme, which again is more in line with corporatism.
http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/20 ... tween.htmlI mean this with no offense, buddy, but that article is rubbish. If that passes for what definitions that are circulating in right wing/independent circles then I now realize that there is a huge problem that probably can't be bridged. Obv Moore is a jackass, but not where the problem is. It's the definitions.
Quote:
Capitalism is a social system based upon the recognition of individual rights, including private property rights where all goods, both intermediate goods and final goods, are owned privately. The “rights” referred to above are ethical-legal principles that identify and sanction man's freedom of action strictly within a social context.
Not an economic system? That definition is actually the definition of classical liberalism as defined by John Locke. That dude who influenced TJ Tommy Jeff once upon a time. When the constitution is defining rights and property is included in that, they aren't defining capitalism.
Capitalism is a system of production/consumption. It has a particular mode of producing things that, defined by Adam Smith who was kinda an important dude in America, was rooted in the division of labor as seen in factories and assembly lines. Capitalism produces a surplus of goods. It's not me and you at home being self-sustaining, but it is us going out in the world and producing a shit ton of stuff that will take care of us, but in addition that we will sell to other people insofar as we exist within a capitalist system. Capitalism produces goods for a market that are dependent upon being sold and a particular ideological code of freedom of speech and property rights are tied to it, but are not necessary as we've learned in China. This has a lot of implications that aren't necessary for the definition, but the fact that what you cited totally missed how, for lack of a better example for something so steeped in swinging around the Constitution, the Founding Fathers used words, definitions, and concepts is appalling.
I'm not even going to mess with the definition of corporatism, because it is pretty fucking inconsequential. Yeah, a lot of goofy ass shit in America's economy could be label corporatist, but as to why those things happen blaming a boogeyman authoritarian govt is pretty fucking weak. Instead there are economic reasons established by the economic structure, i.e., capitalism, that determine how folks act. Not the desire to take your guns, jobs, and freedom.
I really do respect you, V, but that shit is rubbish. Read Wealth of Nations and you'll be way better off.
[/quote]
Yes, I understand all that, and the main focus is the differences in what is labelled "capitalism" and "corporatism".
Capitalism is an economic system, yes, but it is also a social one.
Capitalism in the simplest terme is the freedom to produce and keep whatever wealth is the result of ones labor, with minimal government inteference, as long as it is within the confines of the law.
Corporatism, in the way that I see it, is the lobbying and controlling through political power and money of government by corporations to exempt them from the law (or make exceptions: in this country one must be a legal resident or have a visa to be employed. The law limits the amount of visas allowed per whatever period of time. Corporations lobbying the government to "bend the rules" for them is an example of this. same with corporate welfare).
cap·i·tal·ism
/ˈkapətlˌizəm/
noun
noun: capitalism1. an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
cor·po·rat·ism
/ˈkôrp(ə)rəˌtizəm/
noun
noun: corporatism1. the control of a state or organization by large interest groups.
I can't make it any simpler than this.
Corporatism by the defintion above, all due respect, is far from "pretty fucking inconsequential". Surely you can see why.
Is it a coincidence that the only ones that are experiencing an economic recovery are... big corporations and banks?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/1 ... 13882.html