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Author Topic: A Resource Based Economy  (Read 288301 times)
LightRider (OP)
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March 27, 2012, 11:13:11 AM
 #901

This guy is using bitcoin in a transitiony way.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xc8O1VevmcI

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March 27, 2012, 01:07:59 PM
Last edit: March 27, 2012, 01:35:37 PM by nedbert9
 #902

Even in the bronze age they had the concept of money, I think. The romans I'm sure they did.
Only a very primitive, aborigine-like society can live without it. And in such societies, you won't have true private ownership nor trade.

My only point was that money, as we think of it, is an abstract representation of wealth.  It is possible to have an economy with only concrete representations of wealth (i.e. bartering), but such a system is necessarily extremely inefficient compared to what we're used to.  If somebody says "money is the problem", they propose reverting to an extremely primitive sort of culture.  If somebody say "ownership is the problem", they propose reverting even further.


Good, concise points.  

Accumulation of wealth is what drive us as a people and our economy.

Ownership is a method of retaining wealth.

We have almost no controls over ownership in the US.  Given enough time and motivation this allows for uncontrolled accumulation of wealth.

Uncontrolled accumulation of wealth will inherently produce concentration of wealth.

It's quite simple to see that uncontrolled wealth eliminates any realistic chance of wealth for the majority.

It is how it has always been.  The self-sustaining divide between the poor and the rich.  But there is one looming difference that is trending upward.

Our intelligence, our advancing modern capability has placed an equally strict mandate of efficiency over wealth accumulation.

The concentration of wealth and application of that wealth will monopolize intelligence to satisfy the efficiency mandate.

The ultra concentration of both wealth and the vast majority of our collective intelligence will magnify long standing disparity and misery.  

This blessing of complete freedom of ownership, our advancement and the "free market" may very likely result in an unintended equilibrium.  Ironically, an equilibrium resembling the wealth redistribution of a socialist state where individual wealth of the vast majority is roughly equal.  Very little wealth.  Dramatic rises in global population only reinforce these ideas.

We follow ideas such as the "American Dream," as if a carrot while our masters give us the stick. 

Potential desire for future revolution will be quashed as the opponent will be our collective intelligence.

LightRider (OP)
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August 01, 2012, 02:02:16 AM
 #903

For those interested, there is a new web series produced by Peter Joseph. It's the best reality show ever made.

Culture in Decline

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTbLslkIR2k

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September 11, 2012, 06:21:50 AM
Last edit: September 11, 2012, 06:47:07 AM by grondilu
 #904

One of these days, I'll read this whole thread carefully.  I like the subject and I've been thinking a bit about it during recent years.

Post-scarcity economy?  I'd be happy to see it.  What's not to like in the idea of not having to work for pretty much anything?   But why does it have to mean that money should be forbidden??

If things must tend to become free, that just means that prices must tend to zero.  So in other words:  just let prices fell down!

To do so we need a stable and incorruptible money supply, because it is needed to correctly measure the value of things, that is to say the relative and absolute abundance of things.   As the amount of available things increases, their price will drop, until it eventually reaches zero, in ten, an hundred, a thousand years... who knows.

But making a decent monetary tool is not enough.  We also need to stop preventing people from producing.  Here in Europe, farmers can not produce cereals, milk and other basic products beyond quotas.  Believe it or not:  it is forbidden.   There is something similar regarding real estate.  For some strange reasons, it seems that everything is done to prevent entrepreneurs to build houses and residential high buildings.  As a result, there are not enough decent accommodation for everyone and people still have to struggle to pay their rent.  To me, this is much, much more outrageous than fractional reserve banking or other stuff that Zeitgeist is complaining about.

To reach a post-scarcity economy, we have to allow people to produce, so that abundance can arise and thus lower the price of things.

Trying to forbid the usage of money is just silly.  It is very much a communist idea and you'll end up with everything free indeed, but with empty shelves in grocery stores:




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September 11, 2012, 05:58:26 PM
Last edit: September 11, 2012, 06:54:04 PM by runeks
 #905

I've read and heard a bit about the Zeitgeist Movement, and it always amounts to some ideals about what we "could" obtain if we just did this and that. They're really good at stating the "what", without answering the "how".

How do we apply all these ideals?

LightRider, you keep saying that humans being are deficient, that all we care about is profit. Does this include yourself, and if so, what are you doing to change that?

EDIT: Also, can some - point by point - explain the exact differences between Anarcho Capitalism and a Resource Based Economy, please?

EDIT2: For anyone interested in seeing Stefan Molyneux debate a ZM advocate, check out this video, starting at 42:08 (the link will take you to that time stamp in the video): http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=hxjwBZjADiM#t=2528s
Everything before that is fairly irrelevant to the discussion IMO.
LightRider (OP)
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September 30, 2012, 11:11:30 PM
 #906

http://www.hollywoodtoday.net/2012/09/29/peter-joseph-and-the-far-seeing-emergent-zeitgeist-so-what-is-this-earth-of-ours/

This is part one of a 2 hour interview that Peter Joseph, founder of the Zeitgeist Movement, conducted with Hollywood Today.

Also, Episode 2 of Culture in Decline debuts tomorrow.

Check them out if interested!

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LightRider (OP)
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September 30, 2012, 11:15:21 PM
 #907

I've read and heard a bit about the Zeitgeist Movement, and it always amounts to some ideals about what we "could" obtain if we just did this and that. They're really good at stating the "what", without answering the "how".

How do we apply all these ideals?

LightRider, you keep saying that humans being are deficient, that all we care about is profit. Does this include yourself, and if so, what are you doing to change that?

EDIT: Also, can some - point by point - explain the exact differences between Anarcho Capitalism and a Resource Based Economy, please?

EDIT2: For anyone interested in seeing Stefan Molyneux debate a ZM advocate, check out this video, starting at 42:08 (the link will take you to that time stamp in the video): http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=hxjwBZjADiM#t=2528s
Everything before that is fairly irrelevant to the discussion IMO.

I don't believe that I've claimed that human beings are deficient and that all we care about is profit. My point is that our social, political and economic foundations distort our value system that leads to many people placing too much emphasis on profit, greed, personal wealth etc. The majority of people just want to have a comfortable and meaningful life that they can share with others.

I don't know much about annarcho-capitalism to contrast it to an RBE, but capitalism in general is antithetical to an RBE in the first place, so I can't imagine them being very similar.

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grondilu
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September 30, 2012, 11:27:45 PM
 #908

My point is that our social, political and economic foundations distort our value system that leads to many people placing too much emphasis on profit, greed, personal wealth etc. The majority of people just want to have a comfortable and meaningful life that they can share with others.

Yeah but what's your plan exactly to provide the means for people to have the comfortable and meaningful life you're talking about?  Does it consist on stealing the work and savings of those people who only care about profit and personal wealth?


If so, then I guess greed is not so bad after all, since it allows you to create the wealth you plan to steal.

LightRider (OP)
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September 30, 2012, 11:30:56 PM
 #909

My point is that our social, political and economic foundations distort our value system that leads to many people placing too much emphasis on profit, greed, personal wealth etc. The majority of people just want to have a comfortable and meaningful life that they can share with others.

Yeah but what's your plan exactly to provide the means for people to have the comfortable and meaningful life you're talking about?  Stealing the work and savings of people people who only care of profit and personal wealth?


If so, then I guess greed is not so bad after all, since it allows you to create the wealth you plan to steal.

Our technological and scientific progress will allow for us to meet the needs of all people. The earth we all share is common heritage to all people, no one has inherent rights to owning a piece for themselves. We share the planet we have for the betterment of all.

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grondilu
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September 30, 2012, 11:47:24 PM
 #910

Our technological and scientific progress will allow for us to meet the needs of all people.

Then if it must happen, let it happen.  No need for your social plan.

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The earth we all share is common heritage to all people, no one has inherent rights to owning a piece for themselves.  We share the planet we have for the betterment of all.

I've said it many times, but I'll say it again:   you can't prevent people to sell things they own.

Say we embrace your silly idea of a planet we all share.   I'll go talk to my neighbor and I'll offer him a big amount of money for his share of the planet.  He'll accept and he'll use the money to have some good times, to party all night and to travel around the world during a year.   I'll use the extra-portion of the planet to make more money in the long term.  With the extra money I'll earn, I'll buy more shares of the planet from other neighbors.

Capitalism is not just a political doctrine:  it's a truth about human nature.  Some people like to own stuff, some other like to consume.   Some people value wealth more when it's in the present, and others value it more when it's bigger, even in a far future.   Therefore savers buy means of production from consumers.   Means of production allow to buy more means of production.  And the spread between those who own stuff and those who don't increases.

That's why your idea about people "sharing the planet" is naïve.  Try to understand this:  ownership is not a static concept.  It's dynamic.  And this dynamic is what we call the free market.

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September 30, 2012, 11:48:58 PM
 #911

Yeah but what's your plan exactly to provide the means for people to have the comfortable and meaningful life you're talking about?  Does it consist on stealing the work and savings of those people who only care about profit and personal wealth?

You do realize that the entire economy of the world is based around stealing from the poor and middle classes to give to the rich and powerful, right? When the US throws out billions of pounds of food annually yet there are millions of people who aren't sure where their next meal is coming from, there is a disconnect in the system.

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September 30, 2012, 11:50:58 PM
 #912

Yeah but what's your plan exactly to provide the means for people to have the comfortable and meaningful life you're talking about?  Does it consist on stealing the work and savings of those people who only care about profit and personal wealth?

You do realize that the entire economy of the world is based around stealing from the poor and middle classes to give to the rich and powerful, right? When the US throws out billions of pounds of food annually yet there are millions of people who aren't sure where their next meal is coming from, there is a disconnect in the system.

LOL

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September 30, 2012, 11:54:50 PM
 #913

LOL

So you don't think the monetary system and the interests of government are in tune with the rich? They are actually designed for "the people"?

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October 01, 2012, 12:04:25 AM
 #914

You do realize that the entire economy of the world is based around stealing from the poor and middle classes to give to the rich and powerful, right?

No, I'm sorry but I do not share this very peculiar view of the world economy.

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When the US throws out billions of pounds of food annually yet there are millions of people who aren't sure where their next meal is coming from, there is a disconnect in the system.

There is a "disconnect in the system".  Precisely:  people who are starving are far, far away from people who throw food away.   Either they are physically far away, and thus it would cost a lot to ship the remaining of food you're talking about (not to mention how humiliating it would probably be to accept to eat that), or they are socially far away (they don't know who they are, and they don't know they are starving).  They are literally "disconnected", as you said.

But if a guy sees a starving children in Africa on television, and a minute later he watches a documentary about LasVegas restaurant where they throw tons of food every week, he'll think "oh my god there is something wrong".

What is wrong is that he sees two things that are logistically, economically, socially and politically completely different and yet he thinks that everything would be just fine if we could, magically, teleport instantly this food from US to Africa with zero cost.

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October 01, 2012, 12:11:53 AM
 #915

No, I'm sorry but I do not share this very peculiar view of the world economy.

It's strange how so few bitcoiners apparently do not yet they rage against the government and monetary machine, because it does SOMETHING they don't like, they're just not sure what. Surely inflation doesn't steal the wealth and productivity of the lower castes and squeeze it to the rich. Surely 70 year copyright laws after the death of the author is for the good of the people, not the corporations.

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There is a "disconnect in the system".  Precisely:  people who are starving are far, far away from people who throw food away.   Either they are physically far away, and thus it would cost a lot to ship the remaining of food you're talking about (not to mention how humiliating it would probably be to accept to eat that), or they are socially far away (they don't know who they are, and they don't know they are starving).  They are literally "disconnected", as you said.

Oh how embarrassing to accept free food when starving.



kjj are you just going to run away again after another one of your hit and run LOLs

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October 01, 2012, 12:21:10 AM
 #916

It's strange how so few bitcoiners apparently do not yet they rage against the government and monetary machine, because it does SOMETHING they don't like, they're just not sure what. Surely inflation doesn't steal the wealth and productivity of the lower castes and squeeze it to the rich. Surely 70 year copyright laws after the death of the author is for the good of the people, not the corporations.

You were talking about "the entire economy of the world".   This was a grotesque oversimplification.

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Oh how embarrassing to accept free food when starving.

Reminds me of a discussion I had in an other thread with an other adept of these communist idea about redistribution of wealth.   He also kept talking about food and starvation.   Jeez, is the situation in US that bad that you are so obsessed with starvation?   Are you personally hungry right now or do you just take starving people as an excuse to steal from rich people?

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October 01, 2012, 12:30:43 AM
 #917

There is no fool proof system for fairness in macro economics:

If you like freedom and little regulative interference, some people will make better choices than you, and get a larger piece of the pie relative to their effort in society.

If you like social "fairness" and distribution of wealth, some people will make better choices than you, and get a larger piece of the pie relative to their effort in society.

People who disagree with the current distribution of wealth, should search their souls to be really sure they are not driven by the same desires as the bankers or other they criticize.

Politicians get elected by offering the best value for money. Political "ponzi schemes" get most votes. The notion of economic "growth" in politics is not a magic spell, it only tells you that this politician doesn't have a clue either.

Known busted ponzies: The housing bubble, the financial deregulation bubble, the we are better innovators than China bubble, ...add more yourself.

If you want freedom, you can't have fairness. If you want fairness, you can't have freedom and you still don't get fairness.

I'm not an advocate for minimal government interference. The game will still get rigged. Politics is no more than a mirror of your own frustrations. The "them vs. us" is a genetic trait, inherited from our monkey ancestors.

The only fairness I can think of, that is universal, is the fact that each one of us have a brain with similar specs. You can choose to do good to others and society, and you can choose to improve you own situation. Most people choose to do both.

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October 01, 2012, 12:31:19 AM
 #918

You were talking about "the entire economy of the world".   This was a grotesque oversimplification.

People produce. Production is rewarded. Most of that production is rewarded in the form of money. Money power is universally stolen from producers. Is the world economy not about production and consumption? Is there something I'm missing when people who manipulate numbers on wall street to make millions of dollars are doing something far more productive than someone building cars or serving food? Why is it that when these "money producers" (as opposed to "product/service producers") do their job extremely well, the economy falls into a massive recession? Why do governments seem to be constantly flabbergasted as to how this happens? And why do they think that the only solution is to "produce more money"?

Are you sure that it is really a grotesque simplification?

Quote
Reminds me of a discussion I had in an other thread with an other adept of these communist idea about redistribution of wealth.   He also kept talking about food and starvation.   Jeez, is the situation in US that bad that you are so obsessed with starvation?   Are you personally hungry right now or do you just take starving people as an excuse to steal from rich people?

Oh how cute you're calling the fairness of the power of money and production communism.

It's amazing how few people can see the forest for the trees when they think they're in the position to be the ones to benefit from a favorable type of money.

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October 01, 2012, 12:38:54 AM
 #919

There is no fool proof system for fairness in macro economics:

If you like freedom and little regulative interference, some people will make better choices than you, and get a larger piece of the pie relative to their effort in society.

If you like social "fairness" and distribution of wealth, some people will make better choices than you, and get a larger piece of the pie relative to their effort in society.

The system itself certainly has no need to be fair, and shouldn't be. However, the deck shouldn't be stacked either.

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October 01, 2012, 12:40:28 AM
 #920

LOL

So you don't think the monetary system and the interests of government are in tune with the rich? They are actually designed for "the people"?

Neither of those things is what you said that made me laugh.  This is:

You do realize that the entire economy of the world is based around stealing from the poor and middle classes to give to the rich and powerful, right? When the US throws out billions of pounds of food annually yet there are millions of people who aren't sure where their next meal is coming from, there is a disconnect in the system.

And nearly every part of it is funny.  If the poor were worth stealing from, they wouldn't be poor.  What I usually see is the government stealing from anyone they can steal from, and bribing the poor to not wreck up the place.  Generally speaking, the rich have the means to protect themselves from this theft, while the middle class does not.

The food thing is only a mystery if you assume that everyone's time is valueless.

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