BostonPirate
Ijubbinatti
An aside:
Is JB3 Droid in Drag?
he changed his name a few weeks ago, but since I have PM'ed him a few times, he is stuck in my head as droid.
sorry for the confusion, I'll try to use his new name!
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An aside:
Is JB3 Droid in Drag?

I thought you were calling him a droid. I thought it was slightly harsh, but figured whatever.![]()
Are you saying inspection of food and drugs was just fine before the government got in that business? You are aware of The Jungle, right?
Maybe we could live without none of these government services in a smaller, much less unwieldy society, but the U.S. is far too large, bureaucratic, and diverse at this point. There's a dwindling sense of community. People aren't nearly as civically active as they once were. Expecting people to identify their community's own needs and redress these problems themselves is a tall order, one that I think couldn't be fulfilled.
Well we at least agree upon that.
Are you saying inspection of food and drugs was just fine before the government got in that business? You are aware of The Jungle, right?
Maybe we could live without none of these government services in a smaller, much less unwieldy society, but the U.S. is far too large, bureaucratic, and diverse at this point. There's a dwindling sense of community. People aren't nearly as civically active as they once were. Expecting people to identify their community's own needs and redress these problems themselves is a tall order, one that I think couldn't be fulfilled.
Well we at least agree upon that.
well theres no nice way to say it... its just looney to think you can get rid of all these government services and still have a functional society... in spite of the FDA we still have contaminated foods getting into the groceries.
and if we don't have a shared water system that we all pay for the entire nation would burn to the ground after we all die of thirst.
The idea that we can trust big business to consider the people over the bottom line profit is the the type of thinking that brought us the BP oilspill. It's what brought us companies selling stocks they knew would go belly up. and took insurance on them to double the profit... one from the sucker that bought the stock and the other from the insurance company that was suckered into covering the crap.
Modern society cannot be undone. We have to work with what we have. I am open to scrapping an old law instead of ammending one when it comes to regulation and oversight, but It is just not realistic to say that you can get rid of all of these parts of the gov't.
Americans do not want to give up their comforts and protections. Unfortunately they also don't want to pay for them.
I think that it's bigness that demands government. When you don't know everyone personally, the corporation and consumer become unrecognizable faces in the crowd to each other, the normal (dare I say "natural") social imperatives that would keep people behaving properly break down. May I remind that most of human history was spent in small, roving groups in which government was no more necessary than trying to swindle or disregarding the safety of your fellow tribespeople was advisable.
I think governmentlessness could be handled by people living under civilized conditions, only if communities and trade circles were very small. At least very small compared to what we're used to.
I think that it's bigness that demands government. When you don't know everyone personally, the corporation and consumer become unrecognizable faces in the crowd to each other, the normal (dare I say "natural") social imperatives that would keep people behaving properly break down. May I remind that most of human history was spent in small, roving groups in which government was no more necessary than trying to swindle or disregarding the safety of your fellow tribespeople was advisable.
I think governmentlessness could be handled by people living under civilized conditions, only if communities and trade circles were very small. At least very small compared to what we're used to.
Government evolution has to match societal evolution or we as individuals become less safe.
When government does things for which government is not needed, we as individuals become less safe.
for you perhaps, but your opinion is not universal or even common.
people want this done for them. they expect it.
I don't agree with you on this point. People don't "want it done for them." which implies a certain kind of lazy sense of self-entitlement. That is certainly true for a few, but we owe our government services to the vast bulk of people who lived without them in the past. They've thought about it, and realised that having a government do X Y or Zed ought to be the most efficient means of accomplishing a given goal.
Even Kulindahr himself admits that his Libertarian Pixie Dust* approach would "take a little more work." in other words, it is less efficient and more wasteful of resources to have something other than government perform certain social functions.
There is a reason I don't build my own highways. There is a reason as a consumer that I don't want to hire a private company to build my highways: government is more efficient at owning, building and maintaining public infrastructure than any private-sector or individual trying to approximate public infrastructure with their own disconnected "self-sufficient" approach. Self-inefficient is more like it.
I would agree
thats why we live in a republic... so those we entrust with authority can make decsions for the whole of us.
And that is how we got to here
hmmm......
that isn't as comforting as it ought to be....lol
Nice twist of my words.You don't build your own highways because you don't know how.
Private companies don't build highways because the government won't let them -- not because it would be less efficient. A group of businessmen here in Oregon wanted to build a highway to connect two areas more directly; it would have moved goods more efficiently, benefiting both customers and the environment. But the government wanted to maintain its monopoly on the building of roads (which, BTW, is unconstitutional).
Government does all services less efficiently, because they respond to political forces, not market information. The market furnishes information about what's really needed, not about who has the most influence to get something done for their county or district.
edit: Somalia has nothing to do with libertarianism.
Nice twist of my words.What I said was I as a consumer would not provide a market for privately built highways. I'm talking about consumer choice here. The private sector isn't any good at it, and there are a multitude of examples. London Underground is one. The Edmonton ring road is another. Our Provincial government wanted to give the appearance of not borrowing money, so they hired a private company to build the road instead through a rent-to-own contract which will still see them owing money over a 35 year period, in contractual payments rather than. The company has done nothing but build sub-spec bridges, shoddy paving, and generally has cut costs in every way within the narrow letter of their agreement for the purpose of maximising their profit margins.
I don't want to drive on a road where the owner/operator has those incentives. Responding to "political pressure" would frankly have given me a better road to drive on, and I value that as a consumer. And as far as "market signals" go, I can hardly take my business to another ring road, can I? Large infrastructure projects like this are by their nature monopolies, and there is no reason not to put those in the hands of the people.
If you wish to dismiss this example because of the eventual ownership role of the government making it not a "pure" private sector case, there are other examples which were truly privately owned and paid by tolls rather than contractual payments which were also judged unsatisfactory. A highway north of Toronto comes to mind.
My esteemed colleague, there's a flip side to that argument.
Let's take the example of Moody's. Untouched by scandal for years, if not decades, it stood as an example of private enterprise policing itself in a credible, reliable way.
The last year or so, it laid an egg, and now its very existence is in question.
On a personal level:
thanks to the wonderful world of government regulation so many of you love, I may soon be homeless. In a free country, however, I'd already have parked my trailer on the land of one of several people who were willing to have me there in return for beating back the wilderness that has encroached on their landscaping.
Regulations are born of lofty ideals, but serve to keep people poor, drive jobs overseas, increase homelessness and crime, and more. They stifle creativity and generosity and foster antagonism. And they make the word a nice place for the wealthy, but a trap for the poor.
they also help some poor people, although your homelesness issue concerns me as I have developed a fondness for you.
not all regs are good, but not all are bad either.
we do not live in an absolute or abstract world... there are mixes and surprises. some things dont work and others do.
On the topic of regulation, a path in the middle is surely the most prudent course of action.
What I take umbrage at is the reckless discarding of regulation in the financial markets, which, after all, concerns an intangible product. This deregulation I believe is at the core of our economic collapse.
Kulindahr, I'm genuinely sorry to hear about your predicament. If I were in a better position myself, this commie bastard would be pleased to do something to help, if he could. We've not often agreed on political matters, but you've become one of my most esteemed colleagues.
I hope your plan to be a live-in gardener works out for you.








