
by You-Gi-Owe » Fri Nov 16, 2012 4:21 pm

by Skibereen » Fri Nov 16, 2012 4:23 pm

by Neutraligon » Fri Nov 16, 2012 4:28 pm
You-Gi-Owe wrote:If the poor got richer and their living standard increased, even if the rich got richer, would that be okay with you?
OR
Would you rather the difference between the poor and the rich was less, even if the living standard of the poor didn't increase?

by Romalae » Fri Nov 16, 2012 4:29 pm

by Bafuria » Fri Nov 16, 2012 4:32 pm


by TaQud » Fri Nov 16, 2012 4:34 pm
You-Gi-Owe wrote:If the poor got richer and their living standard increased, even if the rich got richer, would that be okay with you?

by Vetalia » Fri Nov 16, 2012 5:05 pm

by Northern Dominus » Fri Nov 16, 2012 5:11 pm

by Moving Forward Inc » Fri Nov 16, 2012 5:11 pm
You-Gi-Owe wrote:If the poor got richer and their living standard increased, even if the rich got richer, would that be okay with you?
OR
Would you rather the difference between the poor and the rich was less, even if the living standard of the poor didn't increase?

by Vetalia » Fri Nov 16, 2012 5:13 pm
Northern Dominus wrote:I'm all for the Austin Aries route, Option C. How about we raise the standard of living for the lower and middle classes and keep the upper class standard of living right where it is. Because frankly they've been doing suspiciously well ever since the stock market crash and they really don't need ANOTHER gold-plated learjet, or whale forsekin shoes, or other idiotic things that the ultra-wealthy waste money on.

by Northern Dominus » Fri Nov 16, 2012 5:19 pm
First, everyone in the financial sector starts playing by the rules. Nobody is saying that you can't take risks with money, but when your massive hedge bet screws an entire companies worth of managers, accountants, and skilled laborers without so much as a slap to the face rather than the wrist, then something is seriously seriously unbalanced.Vetalia wrote:Northern Dominus wrote:I'm all for the Austin Aries route, Option C. How about we raise the standard of living for the lower and middle classes and keep the upper class standard of living right where it is. Because frankly they've been doing suspiciously well ever since the stock market crash and they really don't need ANOTHER gold-plated learjet, or whale forsekin shoes, or other idiotic things that the ultra-wealthy waste money on.
Yeah, but how do you do that? Not that I disagree, I definitely agree that a strong middle class and secure lower class is necessary for a robust economy, but how do we do it?

by Mike the Progressive » Fri Nov 16, 2012 5:40 pm

by Vazeckta » Fri Nov 16, 2012 5:43 pm
You-Gi-Owe wrote:If the poor got richer and their living standard increased, even if the rich got richer, would that be okay with you?

by Frisivisia » Fri Nov 16, 2012 5:47 pm

by GCMG » Fri Nov 16, 2012 6:00 pm

by Northern Dominus » Fri Nov 16, 2012 6:00 pm
Screw equality for now, I just want the lower and middle classes to have a fighting chance again. As I mentioned before one of the gateways to upward mobility is of course education, and that's been under assault from the likes of the Koch Brothers and their continued assault on public education in one form or another. And then there's the predatory school loans and the explosion of for-profit institutions, and how that bubble hasn't exploded and rained crap back down on everybody below a certain standard of living I have no idea.Mike the Progressive wrote:Full income equality will never happen. Ideally, what you want is a small wealthy class and a small poor class, with a large middle class. The more people have invested in property, in goods, in the economy less likely are they to take up arms in hopes of the revolution. I'd say no true capitalist society has ever produced a revolution and are usually the most stable. Russia was largely feudal and mercantilist, even though it was formally abolished years before the revolution. The same goes with China.

by Mike the Progressive » Fri Nov 16, 2012 6:07 pm
Northern Dominus wrote:Screw equality for now, I just want the lower and middle classes to have a fighting chance again. As I mentioned before one of the gateways to upward mobility is of course education, and that's been under assault from the likes of the Koch Brothers and their continued assault on public education in one form or another. And then there's the predatory school loans and the explosion of for-profit institutions, and how that bubble hasn't exploded and rained crap back down on everybody below a certain standard of living I have no idea.Mike the Progressive wrote:Full income equality will never happen. Ideally, what you want is a small wealthy class and a small poor class, with a large middle class. The more people have invested in property, in goods, in the economy less likely are they to take up arms in hopes of the revolution. I'd say no true capitalist society has ever produced a revolution and are usually the most stable. Russia was largely feudal and mercantilist, even though it was formally abolished years before the revolution. The same goes with China.
This isn't anything new of course. The upper echelon terrorists went after skilled laborers heavily in the 70s and 80s, pushing through free trade agreements and lowering tariffs on companies that sent jobs overseas, and sooner or later it's going to come back and bite them in the ass. Frankly I'm surprised they haven't been dragged on hurdles out of their estates in the Hamptons among other places and shot in the streets for their complete screwing of the American Dream by now.

by Zijeme » Fri Nov 16, 2012 6:07 pm

by Northern Dominus » Fri Nov 16, 2012 6:16 pm
You're right about one part of manufacturing. Unskilled labor is something we should probably get rid of and that could go overseas. Or we could keep it here and used skilled labor to build robots, skilled labor that came from the unskilled ranks because they had access to education because it wasn't routinely fucked over by the likes of the Koch brothers and their obscene uses of their trust funds. That technology has come from the US in the past and it can again, we just need to make sure we encourage the production in the first place.Mike the Progressive wrote:Northern Dominus wrote:Screw equality for now, I just want the lower and middle classes to have a fighting chance again. As I mentioned before one of the gateways to upward mobility is of course education, and that's been under assault from the likes of the Koch Brothers and their continued assault on public education in one form or another. And then there's the predatory school loans and the explosion of for-profit institutions, and how that bubble hasn't exploded and rained crap back down on everybody below a certain standard of living I have no idea.
This isn't anything new of course. The upper echelon terrorists went after skilled laborers heavily in the 70s and 80s, pushing through free trade agreements and lowering tariffs on companies that sent jobs overseas, and sooner or later it's going to come back and bite them in the ass. Frankly I'm surprised they haven't been dragged on hurdles out of their estates in the Hamptons among other places and shot in the streets for their complete screwing of the American Dream by now.
Probably because most in the US don't view it that way. I am not opposed to free trade and lower/no tariffs. Whether we like it or not markets have to change. We couldn't remain in manufacturing forever. New technologies are introduced, more people enter the work force, you can't stop it. It's chaotic yet it's also beautiful.
However, I do agree that the government should not take sides. On labor or capital. Both should be left to their own interactions without the third party interfering or if they have to, by treating the two equally. Of course, I'm skeptical of the latter, regulators have been in bed with those they are suppose to regulate. New laws aimed to prevent another market failure seems to only guarantee big businesses of a bailout.

by Vetalia » Fri Nov 16, 2012 6:25 pm
Northern Dominus wrote:As far as the government taking any sides, you're right. What it SHOULD do is learn from its history and force, at gunpoint if nessecary, companies to compete with each other openly rather than collude to screw us over. See, I don't want to beg the banks to give me a pithy loan at a high rate. I have a helluva credit score, so I want the banks to beg me to take a loan from them and give me the lowest possible number, and I want them to do the same for my friends. That's called competition, being forced to offer a better product, and if you do it well enough then more people buy your product.
Instead our pensions get turned into 401ks, invested in some hairbrained scheme that we had no say in whatsoever, and then when things go to hell suddenly its our money rather than the investment banks that has evaporated.
How exactly is that fair to anybody?

by Northern Dominus » Fri Nov 16, 2012 6:45 pm
Which more to the point is a big middle finger to the American taxpayer.Vetalia wrote:The bigger problem now is banks aren't lending because interest rates are too low to make it worthwhile...who in their right mind would lend out money at 3.5% for 15 or 30 years when they could just park it in cash or invest it otherwise?
But see, the 401k was never supposed to be an alternative to the pension. It started out as a perk for executives. Furthermore, pensions can still be moved to companies with little trouble, and they're managed by people who know what the hell they're doing most of the time, rather than joe schmo who is equally well served with investments using a coin or a crystal ball because financial planners that have reasonable rates are hard to find these days.Vetalia wrote:I'd definitely take a 401(k) over a pension; I at least own that money contributed (as well as the company's money after it vests) and can roll it over into an IRA after leaving the job. Plus, those investment plans give you the choice of where to direct your money within the scope of the options offered; if you want to be conservative you can focus on conservative investments and if you want to take on risk you can do so.
With a pension, you're not only basically trusting that the company will remain financially healthy 50 years from when you start paying in with absolutely no guarantee that you'll ever see any of it but also that they'll keep the plan funded enough to actually pay out benefits. Even worse, you're also trusting that the company's plan manager will invest its assets prudently to generate the best return for its members...one of the big reasons for the pension problems in recent years is those plan managers invested the funds unwisely and lost a ton of money. Worst case, they end up dumping it on the PBGC and if you're lucky you get 30 cents on the dollar of what you were supposed to receive.
I'd never go for a company with a pension plan unless I was being paid more than what I'd receive via a company with a 401(k).

by Yumyumsuppertime » Fri Nov 16, 2012 7:29 pm

by Vetalia » Fri Nov 16, 2012 8:09 pm
Northern Dominus wrote:This is the point where the Treasury Department should tap those particular entities hard on the shoulders and remind them that it's American taxpayer money that helped kept them out of the red, so either they start getting that money back out there and help rebuild America or they're going to find all federal funding yanked and their companies broken up so quickly that the line of tow trucks to haul away their BMWs, Mercs, Rolls and other fancy cars will be only slightly less head-spinningly massive than the rate at which their private business jets get impounded after the government calls in all of their debt. Oh and by the way, while that's going on Glass-Steagal is going back into full effect with a few updates so this kind of crap doesn't happen again.

by Neu Leonstein » Fri Nov 16, 2012 8:26 pm
Northern Dominus wrote:Oh and by the way, while that's going on Glass-Steagal is going back into full effect with a few updates so this kind of crap doesn't happen again.
I'm not opposed to 401ks, but unless you dedicate every minute of your free time to figuring the market out they're not a good alternative to the pension. Maybe as a half/half deal or an option, but not the standard.
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