rEvolutionist wrote:Seth wrote:rEvolutionist wrote:Seth wrote:
No, you don't understand. Yes, that money gets spent in the economy, but taking it from the person who earned it and giving it to a welfare leech doesn't improve or increase anything over letting the earner spend it himself on what he wants.
Yes it does, as I have already explained. Rich people spend more of their money on imported luxuries and useless rent seeking investments. I agree they spend more in the sharemarket and that provides investment funds for some business, but once again, without demand, there is no need for business. You must have demand first.
Well, first of all, if your country isn't a producer of luxuries that's inevitable, and second, your statement "useless rent seeking investments" is right out of the Communist Manifesto and is a classic Marxist ideological statement.
It's straight out of Adam Smith, you dope!
It's also straight out of the Communist Manifesto and Das Kapital.
Rent-seeking is labor just like any other labor.
Rent seeking isn't real labour. It's what Adam Smith called "unproductive labour". It's just speculation.
Both he and Marx are utterly wrong. It's only "unproductive" in the sense that the owner of the capital isn't grubbing in the dirt with a hoe or hammering on an anvil, but economically it's just as productive as anything else. In order to seek rent you need to have created that which you are seeking to rent to someone else, like an apartment building. Investing one's money in building an apartment building is anything but "unproductive labor," it employs hundreds of workers and generates wealth for every person and company in the supply chain. After that, it generates wealth for everyone in the supply and maintenance supply chain, and for the managers, and the lawn care people, and the swimming pool cleaners.
And, since it's obviously necessary to mention this given your dearth reasoning ability, it benefits the renters, who have a place to live and a place to put all their acquired goods they need to furnish their flat, all of which are made by someone, somewhere, as a creation of wealth.
The reward to the capital owner who financed the building is the profit from the rents he gets from the occupants.
If he gets no reward for investing (and risking) his capital in the project, why would he bother to have an apartment building built? He wouldn't, and all those myriad of people who would otherwise construct, maintain, supply and occupy the building, to the benefit of the economy, would be jobless, incomeless and homeless.
Marx's entire philosophy of capital rests on this slender reed of rent-seeking being unproductive and therefore illegitimate "labor."
Remove that reed, as I have done, and his entire philosophy collapses in a heap of its own weight.
And what does demand have to do with justifying the taking of property (money) or labor from one person and giving it to another?
Don't move the goal posts. You claimed there is no difference who spends the money. I showed you how there is a difference.
That's not what I said at all. The difference is that under redistributionism the person who earned the money doesn't get to spend it, somebody else he doesn't even know does. That's a huge difference. As far as the absolute economic impact of the earner spending it versus a welfare leech spending it, it's exactly the same. The issue is moral, not economic in the short-term sense. The long term effect of redistributionism is, of course, corrosion of the motive for productively laboring in the first place, which ultimately destroys the economy as the productive class balks at being slaves to the dependent class.
My rationalisation is, as it has always been, that rich people have it easier due to their money and position in society (a lot of it unearned) and therefore need to repay what society has given them in the way of this easier access to markets and services.
And how has society "given" them anything at all?
By providing a system where it's easier to make money when you start from a position of privilege.
Egalitarian socialist nonsense. The market works the same for everyone, regardless of their starting position. That some people start with more than others is not a function of the market, it's a function of fate. Your premise fails on the assumption that because life is unfair it's morally acceptable to rob the rich. Being rich (or getting rich) is not a crime against the poor, it's just a fact of life. Being rich does not therefore justify the forcible seizure and redistribution of that wealth for the benefit of others. Your argument assumes falsely that everyone is somehow entitled to start out in the same economic condition as everyone else.
The fact is that the free-market playing field is perfectly level for all. However, getting on the team may take one person more work than another, but that's just how life is. It's not fair, but the wealthy are not responsible for life being unfair and therefore don't owe anybody anything merely for starting out wealthy.
And why do they owe a debt of labor or property to society because their lives are "easier" than someone else's?
Because they have disproportionately benefited from society. So they need to disproportionately give back to society.
Nope. They benefit from society exactly the same as any other person dollar for dollar. That they have more dollars to start with does not mean that they are taking disproportionate advantage of the market.
Life is not fair. Get used to it.
Surely even you can see that the modern state serves corporations over the individual?
Non sequitur. If,
arguendo, this is the case, what does that have to do with taking money from one person to give to another? What has the payer done to deserve having his money taken and what has the recipient done to deserve to have it?
Society and capitalism are rigged, Seth. The people who advantage from that rigging are being asked to account for that.
If they did the "rigging" then perhaps they bear some culpability for fraudulent activities. If they are merely taking advantage of what is available to them, they owe nobody anything merely because some people don't start out wealthy. What you're suggesting is like saying that because one football team is better at playing football than every other team it must be burdened with a handicap so that the contest is "fair" for the lesser teams.
Again, egalitarian socialist claptrap and nonsense.
Be a banker and rob the nation through immoral financial practices and you get a government handout and a raise.
That's a political and judicial issue isn't it? Banks and bankers who violate the law should go to jail. If they don't that's a moral wrong.
That's exactly what I am saying. Our current societies are rigged and immoral.
That may be the case, but that doesn't mean that those who are wealthy are responsible for how it became that way and are therefore obligated to surrender their property to someone who has no right to it.
Rich people disproportionately benefit from society and then they have the fucking temerity to squirrel their money away offshore to avoid paying taxes. THAT is robbery.
Non sequitur. That's not what's at the bar. What's at the bar is the root question of how you justify one person taking money from another person against that person's will in order to serve the interests of the taker?
Of course it's not a non-sequitur. It's the very point. The rich benefit the most from society and they morally defraud society the most. That is the justification of taking some from them to redisperse it amongst those it was taken from.
Marxist propaganda. It is insufficient simply to claim that because one person benefits "more" than another from the way society works that this imposes a moral obligation on that person to surrender his property to those who benefit "less" than he. It's not as if the individual has committed any crime that makes his gain illegitimate. All he does is to do what every other person is empowered to do, which is to use his wealth wisely to create more wealth rather than frittering it away on crack and bling.
Life is not a zero-sum game where the advancement of one means the oppression of another. That's pure Marxist bullshit.
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