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Bill Sloman
Guest
On Monday, 31 August 2015 13:55:52 UTC+10, dagmarg...@yahoo.com wrote:
What I posted was the comment that I scored well enough on IQ tests that the results didn't mean much. IQ is a useful metric for working how well regular kids are likely to do at passing exams. It doesn't measure much that's meaningful in a wider context, and if you think that your IQ score says much about the reliability of your opinions, you've just devalued that claim.
That's what humans do.
They can, but at some - fairly low - level it becomes a community effort, and governments are our way enlarging communities.
Bizarre misconception.
Roads are just an example that even you could understand, if you were prepared to make the effort. Defence and law enforcement are other examples that play well with right-wing nitwits. Universal education is another, but people like you complain that the schools teach the students the wrong attitude - insufficiently worshipful of the founding tax evaders and the like.
Synergism is the concept that you ought to have in mind.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Spirit_Level:_Why_More_Equal_Societies_Almost_Always_Do_Better
makes the point that wide disparities in income do affect peoples behaviour for the worse. Yours is unappealing.
I certainly don't claim that it's something for nothing. High tax rates aren't attractive in themselves, particularly when you are one of the people who pays them. What they buy can be worthwhile.
In Scandinavia and Germany they buy a contented, healthy and well-trained work force.
In the US rather lower taxes bought you the invasion of Irak, and the largest prison population in the developed world.
Under-paying for your administration and community services doesn't look like a wise choice. There's nothing noble about buying the right services at the right price. Trying to cheapskate out of your responsibilities to your fellow citizens does look a bit ignoble, but I'm not going to persuade you of that.
Bastiat made a virtue of it ...
--
Bill Sloman, Sydney
On Sunday, August 30, 2015 at 11:11:00 PM UTC-4, Bill Sloman wrote:
On Monday, 31 August 2015 11:57:54 UTC+10, dagmarg...@yahoo.com wrote:
On Sunday, August 30, 2015 at 9:31:33 PM UTC-4, amdx wrote:
On 8/30/2015 6:04 PM, rickman wrote:
On 8/30/2015 4:17 PM, amdx wrote:
On 8/30/2015 1:20 PM, John Larkin wrote:
I don't think that buying established stocks, getting rich that way,
does society much good.
Unless you want to count the millions of people that have retirement
funds because they have a 401k, IRA or pension that was invested in the
stock market. I think that does society much good.
So you are a proponent of wealth redistribution?
Ya, especially if it's because millions buy a product with their money,
the company does well financially and I get money because I own a part
of that company. That's good wealth redistribution!
I think it's good for society when families can save and invest their
money to make more money, so in retirement they can support themselves.
Your comment went over my head, so please explain how you pulled wealth
redistribution from personal saving and investing.
It's actually not wealth distribution. Rick's confused wealth creation
with redistribution.
If you have a pile of axe-handles and I have a pile of axe-heads, just
about anything that acts to combine or facilitate combining those
*creates* something new, additional, and valuable--axes. Wealth.
If I paid you for some axe handles, we're both better off. Wealth has
been *created*, and the benefits of the increase split between the parties
according to their mutual agreements.
If you or I started a company dedicated to that--assembling, combining, or
producing axes--and people wanted to invest in owning part of our
ventures, we all benefit if our venture succeeds.
Wealth redistribution is when a strongman of one sort or another empties
your wallet and spreads it amongst his friends. That's zero-sum. Less
than zero-sum, actually, as the second-order effects terrorize and
discourage wealth producers from producing.
"Wealth redistribution" is James Arthur's code phase for "tax and invest".
He likes nice simple idea like axe heads and axe handles. The more difficult concepts of a community owned and funded road system to let you get the axe heads from the foundry that casts them and add them to the axes handles (made from wood grown and cut someplace else) is a little too difficult for his under-neuroned right-wing brain.
You posted your IQ some years ago, and you're simply way out of your league.
What I posted was the comment that I scored well enough on IQ tests that the results didn't mean much. IQ is a useful metric for working how well regular kids are likely to do at passing exams. It doesn't measure much that's meaningful in a wider context, and if you think that your IQ score says much about the reliability of your opinions, you've just devalued that claim.
You've also assumed I was poor, Republican, etc., none of which was true.
You're constantly drawing dots then connecting them randomly into narratives.
That's what humans do.
I daresay it's you who's too simple to understand that men build roads, not
governments, and men fully realize the value, and build roads themselves.
They can, but at some - fairly low - level it becomes a community effort, and governments are our way enlarging communities.
You simply can't imagine something existing unless a government takes it
from someone first.
Bizarre misconception.
Roads are also a tiny part of our spending, which you should know by now, and
nothing to do with taking a man's earnings simply to give them to another man
who did not earn them--redistribution--which is 69% of U.S. spending today.
Roads are just an example that even you could understand, if you were prepared to make the effort. Defence and law enforcement are other examples that play well with right-wing nitwits. Universal education is another, but people like you complain that the schools teach the students the wrong attitude - insufficiently worshipful of the founding tax evaders and the like.
But you're surely plenty intelligent enough to understand these things, just
too invested in parasitism to admit that a 50% load affects the host (and
changes the host's behavior).
Synergism is the concept that you ought to have in mind.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Spirit_Level:_Why_More_Equal_Societies_Almost_Always_Do_Better
makes the point that wide disparities in income do affect peoples behaviour for the worse. Yours is unappealing.
You keep calling it noble and insisting it's something for nothing.
It isn't either.
I certainly don't claim that it's something for nothing. High tax rates aren't attractive in themselves, particularly when you are one of the people who pays them. What they buy can be worthwhile.
In Scandinavia and Germany they buy a contented, healthy and well-trained work force.
In the US rather lower taxes bought you the invasion of Irak, and the largest prison population in the developed world.
Under-paying for your administration and community services doesn't look like a wise choice. There's nothing noble about buying the right services at the right price. Trying to cheapskate out of your responsibilities to your fellow citizens does look a bit ignoble, but I'm not going to persuade you of that.
Bastiat made a virtue of it ...
--
Bill Sloman, Sydney