My system is better. Make the polluters pay. That is, make make parents pay. They have violated rights and owe their offspring a living and others protection from their offspring. That debt can rightfully be collected. Thus taxing parents so that they pay for the problems they have created is just. Taxing others is not - it is extracting money with menaces, and that's wrong unless the money is owed. — Bartricks
Er, no. That quite obviously isn't implied by anything I said. Up your game. — Bartricks
Explain how what you said was implied by anything I said. Go on. — Bartricks
Er, what on earth are you on about? Saying 'polluters should pay' is not equivalent to saying "I am allowed to pollute". I can only marvel at the reasoning skills that permit you to think that "polluters should pay" implies "I can pollute". — Bartricks
You're now wandering horribly. Focus. — Bartricks
With the greatest of respect, who cares what you think you're entitled to. — counterpunch
And now, rather than address the argument, you engage in witless insults. — Bartricks
after assuming that I am not useful. You think that's not an insult? You think taht doesn't make you someone who has a childish temper and can't treat an argument as an argument but has to take it personally?bog off and die — counterpunch
Who the fuck do you think you are? — counterpunch
How can one meet unreason but with unreason? — counterpunch
Taxation reduces demand - for the poor. The rich don't give a shit; carry on as they are, while poor people are dying of hypothermia because they can't afford fuel. I cannot understand how the left can advocate such a policy approach; while weeping buckets about equality. — counterpunch
No, I've been talking about universal income throughout. No doubt the word 'polluter' confused you. — Bartricks
I attempted to google some information on the socio-economic distribution of wealth in support of the idea of a growing middle class, but the ONS data is labyrinthine and my internet is a trickle. — counterpunch
but worry that UBI would undermine natural incentives, whereas, significantly increasing minimum wage could be revenue neutral for companies, and achieve much the same result - while retaining, indeed promoting socially useful incentives. — counterpunch
I'm not a corporate tax expert. I am aware of the perception that large companies don't pay a fair share, but I don't know how true that is. I secretly suspect they can just as justifiably claim to be over taxed as the middle class; but that doesn't fit with a jealous left wing narrative — counterpunch
Philosophically, I always consider Bill Gates - and imagine him in his shed, or whatever, noodling away at his computer, trying to invent windows - about to unleash an enormous wave of value, and I cannot be jealous of his success - such that I demand he be taxed to death in every country, state and townsville that has wifi. — counterpunch
it's hard to make conclusive statements on this without large scale experimentation. Which is to say we'd need a major economy - something the size of France, Germany or the UK at least - to actually implement an UBI to have any real chance of getting a good idea of the effects. — Echarmion
"From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs" is a principle of solidarity, not jealousy. — Echarmion
That sounds like ideologically motivated ignorance to me. Ha ha. I've offered my inexpert opinion Echarmion. I am more naturally inclined toward approaches that raise the floor, rather than pull down the ceiling — counterpunch
It's like some Far Side cartoon - two stalls, one says 'free money' and has an enormous queue, and the other says "a fair days pay for a fair days work" - and no-one's interested. — counterpunch
Tempting offer... but if there are less drastic means to have much the same effect, then what's the real purpose of UBI? Is it in fact, primarily - a political statement? — counterpunch
So too are all the people at the free money booth in solidarity, but they're not there because they love each other. I don't believe the communist manifesto was ever a legitimate expression of the working class interest. — counterpunch
I don't think solidarity moves people like rational self interest, and offering free money appeals to rational self interest even while being a footbridge to communism. — counterpunch
After the great die-back, maybe not. A horse or two for everyone. Or did you have some other energy source in mind?We don't have to use fossil fuels. — counterpunch
No. Blimey. Baby steps. It is wrong to mug me and give the proceeds to someone who has less. That's wrong. Okay? — Bartricks
Now, would it magically become okay if you put the matter to a vote - shall I mug bartricks and give the proceeds to this person who has less than Bartricks?
No. Obviously.
Bert reasons: oh, so, er, you're now in favour of a dictatorship!!
No, Berty. It would also be wrong if a dictator decides to mug me and give the proceeds to a person who has less.
What you don't seem to understand is that our rights - the basic moral rights that a state, if it has any justification at all, is supposed to protect - are not a function of votes. You don't have a right to life and a right to non-interference because someone voted on it.
This isn't about democracy versus dictatorship. This is about what the state is entitled to do.
*shrug* What the state is and is not entitled to do is entirely dependent on how laws are made.
Let's say you need an organ. YOu'll die unless you get it. I have a spare one inside me. Are you entitled to cut me open and take it? No, obviously not. Can you hire someone else to do it on your behalf? No, obviously not.
You may ask me to give it to you. Perhaps I ought to give it to you - not denying that - but still, it's not something you're entitled to take without my consent.
And by extension, someone else is not entitled to take it out of me without my consent and give it to you. Right?
Likewise, if I have some spare money and you need it, you have to ask for it and rely on my generosity or the generosity of others, not just take it from me. And by extension, if someone else decides to take it off me and give it to you, then they have wronged me as much as you would have done if you'd done so.
Simple and obvious stuff.
What if I'm responsible for you needing the organ in question? What if I voluntarily did something to you without your consent that resulted in you needing an organ? Well, now it's plausible that I owe you the organ and that this is a debt that can be paid with force if necessary. So 'now' you may - plausibly - take the organ from me even if I do not wish to give it to you. And by extension, others may do it on your behalf.
Hence why it is parents - who, by their voluntary procreative decisions knowingly burden others with a lifetime of work among other things - owe those they create a living, a living that can be extracted by force if necessary. THus parents can justly be taxed to provide everyone (bar themselves, of course) with a minimum income. (More than minimum, incidentally - enough to live on with dignity).
But those of us who have been decent enough not to do that to others should not pay a penny. Not until or unless we start violating the rights of others.
Metaphors are all fine and good, but it's too easy to just brush the question aside with a smirk. Rising inequality is a real problem, and one that directly impacts your stated aim of providing everyone with cheap and clean energy. — Echarmion
The people affected by UBI are not the same as the people affected by a minimum wage increase. — Echarmion
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