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Old 05-30-2019, 09:39 AM   #1
henry quirk
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tw

"Minimal regulation, to you, is to 'wreck things'."

No, minimal, sensible regulation is just that: minimal and sensible regulation.

Wrecking things is sometimes what has to happen to get there.

Think of the 'controlled burn' as applied to politics/culture.


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"Regulations must exist to have free markets."

Minimal, sensible regulations, yeah, mostly centered on contracts.

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"It was never a question of more or less regulation. It was always about regulations that the people "who come from where the work gets done" need."

Agreed, and that, for the most part, means minimal, sensible regulation.

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"Adults, thinking like adults, first learn what works and then create informed standards."

Agreed. and these standards are almost always favor sensible, minimal regulation.
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Old 05-30-2019, 10:53 AM   #2
tw
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Quote:
Originally Posted by henry quirk View Post
"Minimal regulation, to you, is to 'wreck things'."

No, minimal, sensible regulation is just that: minimal and sensible regulation.
But you have been quite explicit. You only want to wreck things. You do not want to upgrade or improve anything. Your entire mantra is to only 'wreck things' since - and you said it - that is good.

Why this sudden admission that regulations can be good and are necessary. What changed? Are you alright? What happened to bombasticism? Or did you mistakenly listen to a moderate information source.

Oh those evil moderates. They will provide all perspective with the associated reasons why. Then one might be force to think for himself.
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Old 05-30-2019, 11:14 AM   #3
henry quirk
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tw

"But you have been quite explicit. You only want to wreck things."

Liar. I never said I only want to wreck things. There's a context you're ignoring.

#

"You do not want to upgrade or improve anything. Your entire mantra is to only 'wreck things' since - and you said it - that is good."

Liar. You ignore my posts about free enterprise, about minarchy, about self-responsibility -direction, and -regulation. You fixate, like a good lil propagandist, only on what supports your assertion.

#

"Why this sudden admission that regulations can be good and are necessary."

Minimal, sensible regulations as needed by a watchman minarchy (which, as you know, I've written about before, in-forum, several times).
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Old 05-31-2019, 09:57 AM   #4
tw
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Quote:
Originally Posted by henry quirk View Post
Liar. I never said I only want to wreck things. There's a context you're ignoring.
Correct. What you advocate is "wreck shit".

Moderates build, create, and upgrade things. Extremists want to 'wreck shit'.
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Old 05-31-2019, 10:19 AM   #5
henry quirk
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for tw...worth repeatin'

"For every rule made there are dozens of people plotting to get around it."

Sure, but that's how it 'is'. One reg, 500 regs, doesn't matter: someone is gonna (try to) navigate 'round it.

So: if folks naturally and normally try to break the rules, isn't it better to have a handful of sensible, easily understood, demonstrably enforceable regs than volumes of overblown, self-conflicting, arcane, almost impossible to enforce regs?

Isn't 'mind your own business, keep your hands to yourself, or else' better than 10,000 loophole-plagued codifications that favor the guy with the fatter wallet?

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"Capitalism has never been "self-regulating and -responsible", quite the contrary rape and pillage the gospel."

When did I bring up capitalism? I didn't, but: since 'you' did...

I've been unambiguous: I'm no fan of capitalism. By defintion, it favors 'capital' and therefore lends itself to melding with 'state'. I favor 'free enterprise' which is all about the individiual.

Having said that...

Capitalism (even the state capitalism we're saddled with now) can be self-regulating cuz the folks who transact 'can' self-regulate. Absolutely, capitalism (in any form) discourages self-regulation. Much easier to bilk folks who've been taught to 'not' cover their own keisters (who've been taught to rely on others for protection), but this is not the same as sayin' capitalism (more accurately, 'capitalists') 'can't' self-regulate.

I'll concede tte point, however, since -- at this late stage of American capitalism -- it's unlikely the big fish will ever play by the same rules foisted up on the small fry.

So: do we toss capitalism out and replace it with state socialism? We're more than half way down that road already. Here's the thing: at some point state capitalism becomes indistinguishable from state socialism. The Central Commitee or Politburo is really no different than the Board of Directors.

Now, I know we have democracy (one man, one vote) as the bulwark against the concentration of power, but -- really -- how's that workin' out for us?

When you and me step into the voting booth, we merely get to choose from a selection arranged by other folks, folks we don't know, don't have the ear of; folks with agendas that may not mirror our own.

We think we can reform the process by addin' layer after layer of regulation to it, but, practically speaking, we just muddy the water makin' it easier still for us to get hoodwinked.

So: I suggest, have suggested, will continue to suggest, we should move in another direction, one encouraging self-direction and -responsibility for each and every one, where 'government' is properly seen as limited proxy, where corporation stands as naked to the world as the corner independent. Remove 'their' protections and privilege, don't chain and hobble 'me'.

Yep, some stuff, some people, are gonna get (really 'need' to get) wrecked. Killing' cancer isn't easy or painless. Healthy cells are whacked hard gettin' to the cancerous ones.

-----

and: what exactly do you, tw, know about moderation or moderates?

Nuthin'.

You're the most extreme extremist in-forum.

You're lack of self-assessment and -knowledge pretty disqualifies you for anything.

'nuff said, to you.
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Old 05-31-2019, 10:55 AM   #6
henry quirk
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bruce

"In a country founded on living by the rule of law, the courts decide. That means the law has to cover every conceivable end run, or the law has to say you have to follow the rules made by X agency that cover every conceivable end run."

How's that workin' out, tryin' to codify every conceivable circumstance, and puttin' all your faith in men and women who present themselves as being Bastiat's 'finer clay'?

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"OK I'm minding my own business and keeping my hands to myself while my business is poisoning the water supply, the air, or food.

Most definitely you 'not' minding your own biz or keepin' your hands to yourself. I went through this sequence of specious thinkin' with Happy Monkey (I think...might be wrong) a few months back. HP offered the same example. If you have a mind to, you can find the thread by goin' here...

https://cellar.org/search.php?searchid=10204920

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"The only time they self regulate is when it's part of collusion between themselves to screw us."

Would you, in their position, automatically try to screw the other guy, the little guy?

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"Tossing them out is a pipe dream, they won't quit without a fight and have the money, guns, and lawyers to win."

Tossin' out the tyrant doesn't happen via the ballot box or in court.

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"The only way to fix it is to be involved from selecting the dog catcher on up..."

I disagree.

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"I wouldn't say nobody agrees, I think most people feel it can't be done, (see money, guns, and lawyers), so the best we can do is pressure legislators to protect the public from them with regulations. Not ideal, but maybe possible."

A while back, well before you and me, some folks (about a third of the population) decided to break with the powers that be. These folks were countered by another third of the population who liked things as they were, and both sides had to deal with a third of the population who largely didn't give a crap one way or the other.

I imagine the break down is close to that in the here and now.

The difficulty of the act is, in itself, no reason not to 'try'.
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Old 05-31-2019, 11:25 AM   #7
xoxoxoBruce
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Non-violent resistance to topple active regimes is successful 47% of the time. That's still successful twice as often as as violent resistance.
However success takes about 3.5% of the population actively protesting not watching on TV cheering them on. Time to start gathering friends and neighbors.
So that's only 1.25 million people in the streets vs the police with...

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Oh, and the military but they wouldn't fire on the people kent state would they?
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Old 05-31-2019, 11:38 AM   #8
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Henry,

The Revolutionary War worked because there was an ocean between us.

Or maybe you are talking about the so called Civil War. That one didn't work because there was no ocean between the North and South.

At this point in US History, it's not a region fighting for its independence like either of those two wars, it's an idea that some people have and some people don't. Any fighting would be a true civil war that would destroy the country. Much like Zaire or the former Yugoslavia. People just killing the neighbors they disagree with.

I can't get behind that, Henry.
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Old 05-31-2019, 12:24 PM   #9
xoxoxoBruce
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It wouldn't have to be a war persay, if people stopped shopping at walmart it wouldn't last long. Look how Sears was dethroned. Same with other businesses who abuse the public trust, except the utilities and monopolies(duopolies) we rely on. Then again, they might straighten up and fly right out of fear of reprisal through regulation.
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Old 05-31-2019, 12:25 PM   #10
henry quirk
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Bruce,

I take your stats with more than a couple of grains of salt.

One: I don't know where you got 'em.

Two: My gut tells me they're way off the mark.

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Glatt,

"I can't get behind that, Henry."

Then you'll be on the other side (or sittin' on the sidelines).

As you like.
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Old 05-31-2019, 12:30 PM   #11
xoxoxoBruce
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From here, but I think they got it from here.
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Old 05-31-2019, 12:35 PM   #12
henry quirk
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bruce

"It wouldn't have to be a war persay"

I'm inclined to think otherwise.

#

"if people stopped shopping at walmart it wouldn't last long. Look how Sears was dethroned. Same with other businesses who abuse the public trust, except the utilities and monopolies(duopolies) we rely on. Then again, they might straighten up and fly right out of fear of reprisal through regulation."

No, Bruce, the war isn't against the corps. It's against the mechanism used by the corps, the machine that extends protection and privilege to the corps.

Again: in a true free market (free enterprise) the state doesn't favor the rich cuz -- bein' severely limited -- it can't favor the rich (or the poor or anyone).

You keep pointin' to the corps as the root of evil while I keep pointin' to the state.

We're talkin' past each other.
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