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25 new of 176 responses total.
albaugh
response 75 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 22:35 UTC 2006

> You want the lower paid workers to make more money while those on the upper
> end of the scale make the same or less.

I don't know who the "you" is there, but this is the typical trick of giving
away other peoples' money.  It works so well that there are communist states
all over the world, thriving.  Oh wait...
twenex
response 76 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 22:36 UTC 2006

That's right. Only rich people deserve to make money.
twenex
response 77 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 22:41 UTC 2006

Or be allowed to get sick, then better.
albaugh
response 78 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 22:41 UTC 2006

Who said that?
twenex
response 79 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 22:44 UTC 2006

That's the logic of drivelly, self-serving whining about "giving away other
people's money."
albaugh
response 80 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 22:51 UTC 2006

Maybe to your lack of comprehension.  But you've made it clear which way you
lean.  Must come from years of having The Dole.
marcvh
response 81 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 22:58 UTC 2006

No, it's just a false dilemma of presenting things in extremes.  There are
societies, both present and past, that tried too hard to take money away
from the rich to give to the poor, and they ended up not working as a result.
There are also societies that try too hard to let the rich keep everything
and the poor die in the gutter (sometimes literally) and they don't work
either.
twenex
response 82 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 22:58 UTC 2006

No, it comes from years of having compassion.
happyboy
response 83 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 23:08 UTC 2006

hey, congrats!
twenex
response 84 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 13 23:08 UTC 2006

Marc slipped.

The usual rightwing response to the idea of giving money to the government
to look after the poor and needy is that the responsibility of giving it
should be left to the individual, and the responsibility of distributing it
should be left to charities. Quite obviously, however:

A. If you're going to be giving it away anyway, why shouldn't the money go
from the citizens to the government to the needy, instead of from citizens
to charities to the needy? The government is elected and can be called to
account for misspending money. Charities either can't, or if they can it's
a lot harder to prosecute 1,000 bent charities than 500-odd bent politicians.

B. If the worry is that politicians are immune from prosecution, change the
law so they aren't immune to prosecution for laundering money. Again, a lot
easier than prosecuting an indeterminate number of charities.

C. Given A and B, the obvious conclusion to draw is that those who want the
government "stopped from spending 'their' money" aren't the slightest bit
interested in providing for the poor and the sick, and are just using that
argument, in the full knowledge that it's a pile of crap, in the hope that
some poor, naive devil will buy it and allw the rich to make even MORE money
whilst the poor struggle harder to make even less.
slynne
response 85 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 00:16 UTC 2006

resp:75 The "you" in that statement was richard since it was his comment
I was addressing. It has nothing to do with giving away other people's
money. Creating a society where wealth tends to be distributed a bit
more evenly isnt any more artificial than creating a society where
wealth is concentrated in the hands of a few. This country already has
some good laws designed to make things a little more egalitarian (labor
laws, anti-trust laws, etc). 

There are a lot of good reasons for this, imho. Societies where most
people have enough money to have decent housing, food on the table, an
education, and a few luxuries tend to be more stable than societies were
the wealth is concentrated into the hands of a few and everyone else is
dirt poor. I was thinking about that while watching the movie The
Constant Gardiner which takes place in Kenya (which by African standards
is pretty stable). One of the characters asks another if his wife had
chosen to drive back from a town on the other side of the country and
his reply is, "I hope not, that is bandit country." Poverty breeds that
kind of crime. When you have a society with a very rich upper class, a
small middle class and a large underclass, crime becomes a big problem
for the rich and middle classes. And crime costs money, probably more
than something like a minimum wage. Because one way or another the
people with money will find themselves paying through the nose to deal
with it. Either with large taxes to pay for police protection and
prisons or by simply dealing with the costs of the crime, eg not being
able to drive home. Never mind the public health costs incurred when
people live in seriously poor conditions. TB breeds in poverty but the
rich are not immune. 

FWIW, I think that capitalism and free markets are decent enough systems
but not if they are totally unregulated. Because if you have a free
market, it generally wont stay free for long as large corporations take
the natural path of concentrating wealth and trying to make themselves
monopolies. It isnt just the government that is a danger to free
markets. 
twenex
response 86 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 00:31 UTC 2006

I agree entirely.
richard
response 87 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 00:48 UTC 2006

#73 cyklone, these are casual posts you and I and everyone else are 
making.  It is a mistake to dissect them as you would dissertations or 
something.  I'll admit to making word errors, I type fast and sometimes 
I forget things I've posted in earlier posts.  But who doesn't do that 
in casual conversation?  What annoys me is when suddenly you can't post 
a thing without it being fact checked on google and wikipedia and 
analyzed for word format and judged for intonation.  These are CASUAL 
posts.  

Last week I made a casual post where I appeared to misstate jep's 
position.  Instead of accepting it as at most either a 
misinterpretation (which by the way it was) or a simply an honest 
misstatement, jep jumps down my throat, calls me liar repeatedly as if 
I have committed some cardinal sin against him.  I took it out against 
him, because I don't like being attacked.  But neither his reactions 
nore mine were necessary.

These posts aren't becoming pleasant, not when they get overanalyzed 
and oversubjected to righteous indigination over the littlest things.  
drew
response 88 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 01:25 UTC 2006

    I shall repost a couple of questions pertinant to dealing with poverty:

* What exactly do people want/need money *for*?

* Why do we have a system of work-a-job-for-money-to-buy-stuff?

("Well DUH!!")

    Of course I know the answers, or at least *have* answers, to these. But
I want others to formulate answers of their own. These questions must be taken
into account in any effort to help the poor, or the rich for that matter.
Perhaps it will indicate that a Minimum Wage is a good thing. Perhaps it will
indicate that it's a bad thing. But it must start with a solid idea of what
wealth, and poverty, *are*.
cyklone
response 89 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 02:54 UTC 2006

Richard, you may not LIKE that your words are being "analyzed" but they 
are. And you can't do anything about it. If you want to be politically 
active, you either accept that reality or run the risk of doing lots of 
damage to your cause. Unfortunately, you given me no reason to believe you 
are any different in real life than you are on Grex. And even if you are, 
your posts on grex are still damaging.
slynne
response 90 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 03:00 UTC 2006

Money is simply a system for people to more easily trade things. This is
especially true for things like labor. All the other complexities of
money are like icing on the cake. Sometimes I think it is best not to
think too much about how lending institutions increase the money supply
or how a fiat currency works. ;) 

Why do we have a system of work-a-job-for-money-to-buy-stuff? Well, the
big idea there is that it tends to be more efficient than the
alternatives. I work for a company that sells books. If they paid me in
books, I would have to spend a considerable amount of my time trading
those books for other things that I need. Never mind that the whole
business I work in wouldnt be possible without money. 
tod
response 91 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 04:33 UTC 2006

 * What exactly do people want/need money *for*?
A blowjob
naftee
response 92 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 05:37 UTC 2006

roumanian-style
keesan
response 93 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 14:54 UTC 2006

In post-breakup Yugoslavia-that-was, people were being paid in things like
cement blocks by nearly broke factories.  It was time consuming trading them
for food to people who needed the cement blocks or were willing to trade them
to someone else.
happyboy
response 94 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 17:34 UTC 2006

sounds like an economy right up yer alley!
tod
response 95 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 18:29 UTC 2006

I shared a watermelon with a schtetl once.
twenex
response 96 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 18:34 UTC 2006

Odd bloke...
albaugh
response 97 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 21:45 UTC 2006

Why did you write "your money" in quotes, twenie?  Do you in fact believe that
people who earn income do not "own" / are not entitled to have / keep it?
nharmon
response 98 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 14 22:24 UTC 2006

In all fairness, I believe Jeff was talked about taxes that had been 
collected by the government, and not people's income. Of course, there 
are some who do not draw a distinction.
jep
response 99 of 176: Mark Unseen   Mar 16 16:22 UTC 2006

Michigan's minimum wage is going up to $6.95 in October, then $7.15 per 
hour next summer, and $7.40 the following summer, assuming the governor 
signs the bill.  The bill passed unanimously in the state senate, and 
also passed in the House, though not unanimously.

In Michigan, there was (or is) going to be a constitutional amendment 
on the issue.  The Republicans in the legislature voted for the measure 
in hopes of avoiding a big Democratic turnout from supporters of the 
amendment.  The Democrats sponsored the bill.
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