rjaypeters wrote:TallDave wrote:the burden of proof falls on the person claiming this is a problem.
I agree, to a point. Those who claim the current situation is good also have a burden.
I am not confusing causes with effects. It is useful to examine the causes of our current situation. Timothy Noah (from his Slate.com articles) guessed the following amounts of responsibility for the "Great Divergence." Great Divergence = increasing disparity in income. I've eliminated factors he raised but dismissed as not having any effect and changed his order. I'm not going to write about immigration or tax policy.
* Immigration is responsible for 5 percent.
* Tax policy is responsible for 5 percent.
* Trade is responsible for 10 percent.
* The decline of labor is responsible for 20 percent.
* Various failures in our education system are responsible for 30 percent.
* Wall Street and corporate boards' pampering of the Stinking Rich is responsible for 30 percent.
Some questions for the reader:
Do you believe the decline of organized labor is good for the Republic?
I believe the decline of organized labor is not only good, but inevitable.
rjaypeters wrote:
When it is time to negotiate my wage with my employer, how will I fare better, alone or collectively with my fellow wage earners?
Depends on whether you mean long term or short term. In the short term, if you can force employers to pay *YOU* more, then you are ahead. In the long term, you are simply creating a force which points in the direction of removing you from the payroll, lest the employer be destroyed by non-union competition. If only there were some way the unions could FORCE an employer to keep them employed. Oh... wait....
That's not going to work against a global work force.
rjaypeters wrote:
After all, it is my capitalist duty to get the maximum amount of money for my labor, isn't it?
It most certainly is, and if you are a Fiscal conservative, you have no moral qualms about how you go about it. Threats and intimidation are perfectly reasonable arrows in the quiver of people who want to keep the morality out of money issues.
rjaypeters wrote:
On the whole, I don't object to the increase of trade with other countries. One effect seems to be the decline of manufacturing in the US. Do you believe the decline in manufacturing in the US is good for the Republic?
No, it is very bad. I fault the liberals for wrecking our manufacturing base. The more they attempt to social engineer industry, the less functional it becomes.
rjaypeters wrote:
Do you believe various failures in our educational system are good for the Republic?
Absolutely not. There is no adequate negative feedback system in place for correcting problems in the educational system. Also, many of the problems in our educational system are the consequences of the culture, policy, and the legal system.
rjaypeters wrote:
Do you believe Wall Street and corporate boards' pampering of already well compensated people is good for the Republic?
Not really, but you might as well ask me what someone else should have for dinner. Not really any of my business. How a free people spends their money ought really be up to them. (as long as they are not doing anything treasonous or illegal.)
rjaypeters wrote:
Modern Walmart is an interesting example:
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/walmart- ... d=11067470
Quote: "Smith, an alderman in Chicago, presented posters at a city council meeting showing that Walmart CEO Michael Duke's $35 million salary, when converted to an hourly wage, worked out to
$16,826.92. By comparison, at a Walmart store planned for the Windy City's Pullman neighborhood, new employees to be paid $8.75 an hour would gross
$13,650 a year.
Smith's numbers could be a bit off. Equilar, an executive compensation research firm, calculates that Duke earned just south of $20 million in 2009 and $28 million in 2008,
not counting millions of dollars in potential performance awards. But the alderman argued that there's still a "sad" contrast between Duke's compensation and the wages of his employees. End quote.
Sam Walton and the people who worked with him
created an international phenomenon. Walmart's effect on the economy of the United States and the world is difficult to overstate, but did Michael Duke, running an established company, work
that much harder and smarter than his lowest-paid employee? Is Michael Duke responsible for the creation of that much wealth?
Not at all. He is the recipient of one of those "windfalls" of life that I mentioned in my previous message. Yeah it's irksome that some people should get so many fruits for so little toil. It IS part of how our system works though.
rjaypeters wrote:
If you think the current situation is good, do you also think the trend to even greater income disparity (or wealth) is a good thing?
As Winston Churchill remarked, "Democracy is absolutely the worst form of government, except for all the others. " Capitalism is a lot like that. The current situation may not be great, but the currently discovered alternatives are far worse.
rjaypeters wrote:
At what point will you think income disparity (wealth)will be a bad idea?
I don't think income disparity is a problem. A long time ago I wrote messages comparing Economics to thermodynamics. Distributed heat is worthless. It is only possible to create motive force when there is a concentrated heat source. Economics works like this too.
As for the social impact, i'd rather have thousands\millions of fabulously wealthy people than just a few or one as existed during monarchies.
The concept of Monarchy and Nobility may have left governing and politics (at least in this country) but economically the equivalents are very much with us. The difference is, nobody is forced to remain in their economic class, and have the ability to attain the upper ranks with hard work and luck.
rjaypeters wrote:
Will you draw a line between good and bad? Where?
We don't bother. This issue is another example where I can apply one of my favorite rants. People want to create artificial boundaries where none in fact exist. It is a virtual continuum from the economically impoverished to the fabulously wealthy. Evil is not a function of wealth, it is a function of intent.
It's like a gun. It's not inherently evil, it depends on what you do with it.
rjaypeters wrote:
rjaypeters wrote:E.g. 'the first things Capitalists do is get a law passed to close the market to new competitors.'
TallDave wrote:This is a real problem; markets need to be free.
TallDave wrote:...so when your rich capitalist tries to get a law passed to make life diffifult for competitors, he generally finds the going very difficult.
Not that difficult. Let's look at copyright law in the US:
From Wikipedia: "The first federal copyright act, the Copyright Act of 1790 granted copyright for a term of "
fourteen years from the time of recording the title thereof", with a right of renewal for another fourteen years if the author survived to the end of the first term. The act covered not only books, but also maps and charts." And:
"Works created in or after 1978 are extended copyright protection for a term defined in 17 U.S.C. § 302. With the passage of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, these works are granted copyright protection for a term ending
70 years after the death of the author. If the work was a
work for hire (e.g., those created by a corporation) then copyright persists for
120 years after creation or
95 years after publication, whichever is shorter."
Who benefitted most from these increases in copyright term? Why the fifty or twenty-five special benefit to works created by a corporation? That Sonny Bono must have loved him some corporations!
Finally, Bill Gates. To whom is he leaving the vast majority of his fortune?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldne ... z114GFAF5n
'We've chosen not to pass it on to our children."
'We want to give it back to society in the way that it will have the most positive impact.
Bill Gates. The "Chance Gardner" of the computer world.
rjaypeters wrote:
He said he did not want to leave it in his will for his children and added: 'It's like saying which children are most important."
BTW, isn't Bill Gates giving half his fortune to charity before he dies? Warren Buffett? Go look at the Wikipedia article for Warren Buffett and read the 'Philanthropy' section.
Not sure what this has to do with copyright law, but I agree with you that copyright law is far too protective of it's beneficiaries. People who invent things do far more good for the nation and the world, yet they get nothing like the protection afforded to copyright folk.
Copyright law should NOT be better than patent law.