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akuma587 said:


2) Striving for some kind of utopia. I certainly don't think this is an ignoble thing to do. I mean we should always be striving towards something in society. A person's life isn't worth very much if they have no goals, let alone a society that hs no goals. But a true utopia is impossible, and in reality can be a terrible thing. One person's utopia is another person's nightmare. And human nature isn't lofty enough I hate to admit to really achieve any kind of utopia. But that doesn't mean that things cannot get better. And it also doesn't mean that things cannot get worse.

 

Long post for page 16 :p

Glad you spent the time to include all your views.. however I was mainly requesting that you comment on what you think about SiFiBoy's position. The part I quoted here seems to be just that.

I am glad you posed the rest, to demonstrate to him that you and I think very differently, yet the passage above we think exactly the same (and completely against his future world view).

SiFiBoy might look at me as nothing but an advisory with nothing I say having any merit strictly because it came out of my mouth, and my goals to be nothing more then argumentative. In reality, I want him to realize the world is not as he sees it, and the sooner he realizes it, the better he will be.

I think the passage above, coming from you and not me, hopefully has more of an impact.

Thanks for taking the time.



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SciFiBoy said:
Kasz216 said:

Except Progressive Taxation actually does the exact opposite.

The basis of any Utopion society is an enlightened people.

Progressive Taxation retards the sense of good will being the responsibility of the person and places the burden on the state.

As such, people would never get to the state where they beleive that the rich should give more for the common good.  Instead the view that the government should take more from the rich for the common good prevails.   A very different and very important distinction.

For an egalitarian utopia to work... the rich need to give more, not have more taken from them since the ultimate goal would be to mimimize government because everyone would belive this.

The rise of authortarain socialism was in response to the belief that the rich would never become enlightened.  Which seems to be a view you hold, yet claim to not be an authortarian liberal.

Marx however would of never forseen capitalism, upward mobility and just how generous people have gotten since. 

People are on the right steps towards it... but progressive taxation and your attempts to force your ideals through govenrment and forcing on a minority of the majority rather then true ideal and change through enlightenment.

In reality you would be more likely to create a dystopia.

The belief that people can grow into what would be needed to form a true utopia needs to allow for people to grow into those people.  Trying to force the matter can't work.

 

oh i think you misunderstand, im thinking of a Utopia were money doesent exist (as we have technology that provides everything we need) im not an authoritarian either btw (as ive said like a million times, but you never listen)


Yeah that is an eglitarian utopia.  Progressive taxation is the opposite of this.  It gets in the way of this kind of process coming to place.  If you would read my post you should understand why.

Eglitaran Utopia's are founed on enlightened people.  Progressive taxation would consistantly go against such enlightenment and as such people will always feel put opon by the government and other people and you would never have everyone at the same state.

Progressive taxation promotes social dividing rather then helps to eliminate it.

You claim to not be an authrotarian socialist but Progressive taxation is the tool of one

A non authortiarian socalist would use a flat tax to get his views done while trying to change peoples opinions and ideas on money to get everyone to roughly donate the same amount.

 

Basically your plan is to create a Dystopia to hold the world over for a Utopia... which would never come because of the Dystopia.

Enlightened people can't come about if you remove the path of enlightenement.

People would only reach the Utopia you want under a system that takes care of peoples needs with a flat tax.

Otherwise a decently sized segmenet of the richer and more talented will feel persecuted against and maintain a hording mentality, as will a poorer group who feel like they are "owed" this by anyone who gets a cooler job... or the job they wanted.

Afterall don't you think some of the people in the maintence department on star trek would rather be Captains?



well, at least you arent a Liberal



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akuma587 said:

Alright, well Mafoo asked me to come in here and give my opinion. I'll do my best.

I'm in between Rocketpig and scifiboy on this. I'll be more specific.

1) I disagree with rocketpig that things have not changed at all when you look at things at the core social level. But I do agree with rocketpig that many people think things changed more than they actually have. I mean you can call people working at minimum wage jobs and those who are convicted felons and can't move up in the system glorified slaves. But it is equally ludicrous to say that nothing has changed at all.

For instance, the average person is much less easily abused by the government and private citizens with more social power than him than he was in the past. There are many reasons for this.

a) Bill of rights and increasingly favorable forms of legal protection from government abuse of power. I won't get into this in an economic sense, but more in a human rights sense. The government cannot just wholesale kill people like it used to be able to 1000's of years ago without people saying anything. It just doesn't work like that anymore. The government can also not take your real property without paying for it anymore (real property = real estate). There are plenty of other examples too.

b) Civil laws. These have existed since before the Code of Hammurabi, but they are much more powerful now. Poor people and the average citizen can recover damages in monetary and other forms (like injunctions, etc.) much more easily than they could in the past. The legal system has provided an incredibly powerful tool.

c) Social "nets" like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid. These have undoubtedly increased the quality of life of the average person.

And the same is true just in the sense of the bourgeoisie (middle class) vs. the social elite. You didn't really have a middle class until the 17th century. This has completely changed the dynamics of power in a society.

But I do agree that at the end of the day, the few dominate the many. That much has not changed.

2) Striving for some kind of utopia. I certainly don't think this is an ignoble thing to do. I mean we should always be striving towards something in society. A person's life isn't worth very much if they have no goals, let alone a society that hs no goals. But a true utopia is impossible, and in reality can be a terrible thing. One person's utopia is another person's nightmare. And human nature isn't lofty enough I hate to admit to really achieve any kind of utopia. But that doesn't mean that things cannot get better. And it also doesn't mean that things cannot get worse.

3) None of us are 100% capitalist or 100% socialist. We are all just somewhere in the middle. Some of us are more towards one end than the other. And in reality capitalism and socialism aren't diametric opposites. They share more things than many people would admit.

You are entitled to have whatever position you want as long as you can rationally articulate why your position is a good one. But that also means you have to be able to defend your position when someone else points out the natural consequences of that position. And sometimes you need to be able to defend your position when it is taken to the logical extreme as well.

This is mainly why I disagree with Mafoo. I don't think his ideals are somehow inferior to mine. I just think that the natural consequences of his positions when translated into how they would manifest themselves in society are much more undesirable than my own. And I think the logical extremes of his position are much more unfavorable than the logical extremes of my own. For instance, I don't advocate any kind of tax bracket higher than 40%. Above that limit, I think the revenue benefits for the government are negligible and even counter-productive while the rich are also being unduly burdened.

And I also think that a hands-off approach to capitalism is naive in this day in age when the economy is about 100x more complex than it was when laissez faire capitalism was invented. I think it is foolish and downright dangerous to simply let the market do as it pleases. I'm not suggesting the government should direct the market. But I am suggesting that the government should put firm boundaries around within and without the market.

Well said, Akuma. We disagree on many things but you misunderstood one of my points.

I agree that things have changed on a social level. As I mentioned, society has become more compassionate over the past 15 centuries. We don't allow slavery, blood sport has been eliminated, and there is a middle class.

But that doesn't really change my point, which was that there is a class system and that no matter how much we "change", humanity inevitably separates itself. Yes, we're more integrated now than ever, but at the core, our individual natures haven't changed much. We're simply products of our time and that time happens to be more subdued and open than those in past years.

 




Or check out my new webcomic: http://selfcentent.com/

I hold many of the same beliefs that SciFiboy holds, but I'm sorry to put this out there, but your views are far to extreme for most western governments.  Your viewpoints actually remind me of this wingnut politician.



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I too support the liberties of the masses although I include less restrictive gun control and the legalization of all drugs.



American politics are funny, you only get to pick between eggs or porridge. Where's the bacon?





Current-gen game collection uploaded on the profile, full of win and good games; also most of my PC games. Lucasfilm Games/LucasArts 1982-2008 (Requiescat In Pace).

Bitmap Frogs said:
American politics are funny, you only get to pick between eggs or porridge. Where's the bacon?

I agree the 2 choices thing is funny, but living in Canada it isn't any better.  If you don't vote for 1 of the 2 main parties, you are only possibly allowing a marginally popular party to win the election.  This may be different in other multi-party governments, but in Canada it is pointless.

 



largedarryl said:
Bitmap Frogs said:
American politics are funny, you only get to pick between eggs or porridge. Where's the bacon?

I agree the 2 choices thing is funny, but living in Canada it isn't any better.  If you don't vote for 1 of the 2 main parties, you are only possibly allowing a marginally popular party to win the election.  This may be different in other multi-party governments, but in Canada it is pointless.

 

 

Europe (besides the UK) (which arguablly considering it a part of Europe is kind of an stretch) is pretty good at this. The political choices are quite diverse in many countries.





Current-gen game collection uploaded on the profile, full of win and good games; also most of my PC games. Lucasfilm Games/LucasArts 1982-2008 (Requiescat In Pace).

Bitmap Frogs said:
largedarryl said:
Bitmap Frogs said:
American politics are funny, you only get to pick between eggs or porridge. Where's the bacon?

I agree the 2 choices thing is funny, but living in Canada it isn't any better.  If you don't vote for 1 of the 2 main parties, you are only possibly allowing a marginally popular party to win the election.  This may be different in other multi-party governments, but in Canada it is pointless.

 

 

Europe (besides the UK) (which arguablly considering it a part of Europe is kind of an stretch) is pretty good at this. The political choices are quite diverse in many countries.

I'm glad to hear multi-party governments work better than Canada's.  Here you have 2 real choices, the Liberals and the Conservative party, both offer fairly centrist political viewpoints that really offer similar differences between the US Democratic and Republican parties.  Then you have 1 wingnut socialist party run under a banner of social equality (read wacko socialist ideals based on economic downfall), then you have the Green party which offers nothing but a voice of reason to the wingnut socialists.  Then you have the biggest waste of a party, a provincial pride party that does nothing but screw up the power balance in parliament.