BrooksBearLives said:
Doc Holliday said:
Booray said:
Doc Holliday said:
If the left views free market economics as just ideological cover for the rich, then we must go further and ask why they think that.
The reason why teaching people sound economics doesn't make them supporters of free market capitalism is because they don't WANT to believe that free market capitalism is a good thing. They WANT to believe that it's wrong and so they do. People are first and foremost religious. This means they first put their faith into a worldview they want to be true. They will only accept reason and evidence if reason and evidence are consistent with their chosen worldview.
This means that the only way to convince people to support free market capitalism is to get them to want to support free market capitalism. This requires a change in their faith, or the world view of which they want to be true. People's views on politics and economics tend to come rather indirectly from their religious and cultural views. Therefore, you're probably not going to get very far in convincing people of free markets by presenting directly free market arguments. Rather their religious and cultural views must first be changed to enable them to want to support free markets.
It is indeed, easier to sell socialism than liberty. Socialism is quite superficial and not even considered socialism but in a lot of instances just "government correction of capitalist shortcomings".
I did want to add that moral superiority trumps facts, reason and logic. The left, on a perch of moral superiority, loves to point to any sign of a moral shortfall in the right. They maximize and feign moral outrage at any sign of it in the right and attempt to ignore or minimize it in themselves. Witness the Virginia governor's (Northam) refusal resign and be knocked off his morally superior perch. Actually, all three top Democrats in Virginia are refusing to resign for perceived lapses in moral judgement.
Moral superiority is a form of political correctness designed to stop debate or discussion. A minimum wage superficially looks to benefit the poor. Any understanding of economics tells us this is not true. I do not expect any minimum wage earner to have a grasp of any level of economics and all he sees is an immediate improvement in the size of his paycheck. The left can roil the minimum wage earner to demand through protest and strike, that is; social disruption, a higher minimum wage which may be, if it doesn't cost him his job, initially of benefit and the left appears to be the champion of the poor. We know in the long term an increase in the minimum wage earner would at best leave the employee at best treading water but is more than likely be detrimental.
Quote:
"The Left" did not post the OP.
You regurgitated the left's solutions with this sentence:
That legal structure would include higher minimum wage;strengthened collective bargaining rights; the absence of mandatory arbitration provisions in employment agreements; the right to assert employment claims in class action settings; increased penalties for underpayment of wages; sensible restrictions on covenants not to compete; access to health insurance or care (whether through the employer or via single-payer) and a variety of other things that have been eroded over the past 25 years.
You fail to see that every employment is a consensual agreement. No one is holding a gun to your head and telling you that you have to work somewhere or agree to that companies terms and provisions. You can quit.
I own a business and this will force me to pay out more money. I will retaliate to save my bottom line. That means less hiring, increasing the price of my product and slowing down my production to maintain where I got to so that I don't reverse course.
Do these solutions work if the buying power remains the same? No.
You're clearly eliminating the human/market behavioral element in your solutions here. The market is not static. This is not a math problem.
There is no possible way to use the government to get corporations to pay out more money.
Quote:
Anytime you see facts you are uncomfortable with, you default to decrying "the Left" or "progressives" and then painting the facts with the broadest brush possible.
You are not responsive to facts whatsoever. You distort everything to conform to your worldview which I am about to point out below.
Quote:
What the OP posits is that improved unemployment does not necessarily cleanly translate to an improved standard of living. That is an observation, not an attack on the free market. It is an invitation to consider legal structures that will help translate employment to an improved standard of living.
All can be debated and we need a sensible mix. But what is true is that the relationship between capital and labor has tilted decisively in capital's favor over the last quarter century. So even when "times are good" the trickle down benefits are actually pretty arid.
This is an outright lie.
The percentage of people living at starvation level poverty has fallen 80% since 1970. Before then, more than one in four people around the world were living on a dollar a day or less. Today, it's about one in twenty.
You're saying that wealth disparity isn't a thing? It has grown exponentially. This is a fact.
Of course it's a fact, but it's not for the reasons you think.
It's not a zero sum economy. Buying power is all that matters. We have the highest buying power in history.
The poor aren't poor because the 1% exist. Or because shareholders have enormous amounts of wealth.
It's not a pie: the idea that there is a fixed amount of houses, cars, medicines, money etc. to go around, and the more a billionaire gets the less is left for the rest of us. That is a falsehood.
When an iPhone verges on outdated technology, it's impossible to miss the fact that wealth grows.
Lets say a man is tired of catching fish with his hands. So he uses his brain and makes a spear and increases his catches tenfold. Can another man, who never thought to make a spear, properly complain that the other guy has received an "unfair distribution" of fish? No. The spear maker doesn't gobble down an already-baked pie--he produces. What advances society and why technology has rapidly increased alongside American capitalism is because the non spear maker makes a net and catches more than the spear maker. The cycle continues and continues bringing in hordes of people who contribute to increased output.
Do individuals working for a company have equal claim to what the company has received in wealth? NO!. It's a consensual agreement.
Where you are laying blame is a falsehood.
Wealth disparity is not the system nor the law. It's due to cultural decline, poor education and the behavior of society. We are seeing a massive decline in IQ and entrepreneurship and an increase in economic illiteracy. That explains the disparity.
What you should focus on is making it easier to compete with the 1%. Not stealing and redistributing their wealth.