Monday, November 26, 2012

Inconvenient Truths

I've decided that I never want to run for political office.  In order to give myself proper incentive to this end, I've decided to post of list of what I consider to be politically incorrect truths that would be a nightmare to clean up if I did run. All potentially quantitative claims will be unsubstantiated inasmuch as I believe the data associated with such statistics to be unilaterally biased, one way or another.  Enjoy.
  • On average, black men are more athletic than white men.  
  • On average, white men are smarter than black men.
  • Young black and/or Latino men are more likely to engage in criminal activity than others not meeting those three criteria.
  • I don't care what your upbringing was like, if you engage in socially unacceptable behavior, you need to suffer the consequences.
  • Prison should be hard work... with no healthcare.
  • I'd bring back firing squads.
  • Selective abortion is murder of the most innocent individuals by those whom he/she should be able trust most.
  • Inasmuch as it's no more socially harmful than alcohol, marijuana should be legalized, subject to similar restrictions as alcohol, and have the piss taxed out of it.
  • There's a special corner of Hell waiting for investment bankers.
  • In our society, capital gains are often used as a sole source of income, and thus, should be taxed as income.
  • "An armed society is a polite society. Manners are good when one may have to back up his acts with his life." -Robert A. Heinlein
  • People are just not really designed to be functional past 50.  A mandatory retirement age of 50 should be set and the privileges of healthcare (minus morphine injections) and driving would be revoked at age 70.  At that point, in the words of Auric Goldfinger, "I expect you to die."
  • I'd give illegal immigrants 2 options: 1) Leave.  2) Die.
  • Two words: English Only.
  • Build the wall... put machine gunners on the top.
  • While we're at it, put a mile-long minefield just north of the Mexican border... that would be entertaining if nothing else.
  • The high population densities would make China really easy to nuke, should that be necessary.
  • Anyone who takes a camera into a war zone should be shot on site.
  • I'd support a "separate but equal" initiative that would extend similar privileges to gay couples as straight couples, but call it something that didn't have the word "marriage" in the name.
  • We have two options to maintain healthy forests: 1) Log. 2) Let forest fires burn, unrestrained. Personally, I like my wood products.
  • Labor unions, while serving a useful purpose, have become too powerful.
  • I like a couple of Nickelback songs.
  • Capitalism is not a universally extollable virtue.
  • Nuclear power is great in aseismic areas, assuming all precautionary procedures are followed. 
  • Ohio and Florida both really suck.
  • If the Eastern Seaboard was cut off and allowed to float out to sea, it would make the United States of America a better place.  (Yes, I realize that this is not scientifically feasible.)
  • "The only way to redeem the south is to burn it up and baptize for the dead." -J. Golden Kimball
  • I miss natural selection.
  • Speaking of which, I don't think creation and evolution are mutually exclusive.
  • I think FDR was the best president.
Potassium.  I think that should do it for now.

Friday, November 16, 2012

On Capitalism

It's been a while since I've posted anything philosophical on my blag and my homework that was due tomorrow is now due next Wednesday, so I have a little free time to blag.

I'll be speaking on these issues as an American, but many of the ideas that I present will be applicable to all of western society.

Let me start off this post by saying that I'm a registered Republican and I voted for Mitt Romney (somewhat begrudgingly).  I'm an almost universal social conservative, being pro-life, pro-gun, pro-religion, pro-self sufficiency, pro-drilling, pro-fracking, and pro-logging.  I'm aligned with the conservative base of the Republican party on basically every issue... except one.  Unfortunately, that one issue is the hottest topic in the entire political sphere of western society.

Many of my super-conservative friends seem to extol capitalism as if it's a universal virtue sent by revelation from Heaven for the benefit of mankind.  In reality, capitalism is an extreme on the opposite side of the economic system spectrum from socialism.  Either one, in pure form, is just as likely to collapse in on itself and to leave society in ruin.  Many pundits on both sides of the aisle would have you believe that these two ideals are mutually exclusive, when in reality, any functional society requires balanced elements of both self service (capitalism) and social service (socialism).

Any blue-blooded American who's not a clove-smoking hippie can tell you why pure socialism, aka communism, doesn't work.  Under this sort of system, all people work for the benefit of the whole and resources are distributed as evenly as possible.  Any individual's prosperity is not based on how hard or how effectively that one person works, but on how well people work around him or her.  Under a purely socialist system, it's easy to give a minimal effort and receive a similar reward, because everyone around you can pick up your slack.  However, when too many people do this, the system collapses because nothing actually gets done.  Communism is the liberal extreme of the economic system spectrum and does not provide sufficient individual incentive to be sustainable.

In contrast, many Americans seem to have difficultly identifying why pure capitalism doesn't work, even though the answer should be more obvious to an objective observer (if such a person exists).  Part of this phenomenon is probably due to the fact that essentially pure socialist economies have existed for relatively short periods of time.  Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia, and Red China (until more recently) are all good examples of societies that existed for a time with more or less socialist economies and eventually collapsed or, in the case of China, transitioned to a sort of pseudo-capitalism.  On the other hand, a purely capitalist society has either never existed or didn't last long enough to create any lasting records.  There are basically two reasons why.  One should be obvious, though people seem to have a hard time grasping it, and the other is more subtle.

First, I have two words for you: Market Failures.  A purely capitalist economy is incapable of providing certain public goods that are essential for a healthy, functional society.  Two excellent examples of market failures of public goods are the military and civil infrastructure.  There are several others both in and out of the realm of public goods, but these two are among the best simple examples.  These public goods can only be provided by a socialist system.  Many conservatives would balk at the idea that the military is a socialist program, but these folks haven't really thought about it.  For this program, the government is taking a little bit of wealth from everyone in order to preserve the nation as a whole.  The military is certainly not the most socialist system set up by the federal government, but it's along the same lines.  As far as public infrastructure goes, I'll let POTUS speak for himself.  Mitt Romney's heyday of taking this quote out of context made it slightly painful to vote for him.


If a society has a system that provides for these essential public goods, it is not a purely capitalist society.  These things can only be provided by a system that is inherently socialist in that it takes some proportion of the wealth from the populace in order to provide for the general welfare.  If a society does not have these public goods, there is a very high probability that it will soon collapse and be replaced by a society that does.

Now that we've covered what should be obvious, let's move on to the more subtle.  I've said for a few years now that an economist is also a political philosopher, even if he/she is a really bad political philosopher.  The ideas and analyses of wealth and trade cannot be totally divorced from those of power.  Not only does material wealth, in and of itself, bring power with it, those who are powerful are also more capable of obtaining material wealth by virtue of their power.  Free-market economics assumes that men would rather trade than steal.  While this is often true, there are clearly those who are willing to break to rules for the sake of wealth and increased power.

Any society that doesn't, at least somewhat, regulate the exertions of the powerful upon the weak, will eventually fail.  Power held by individuals and small groups leads to isolation of those individuals and groups from the rest of the populace.  Essentially, the very few ruling elite sit in a gated inclosure atop a hill and manage the numerous lower classes remotely.  A society in this state is volatile and there are many ways in which it can fail.  One way is that the powerful do not allocate enough of their wealth for public goods, resulting in a market failure, as previously mentioned.  Another is the small groups of the powerful spending resources to fight against each other, attempting to shrink the others' wealth and power, until the society collapses by attrition (see next paragraph).  There's also my personal favorite, which is united rebellion by the weak against the powerful.  Though few individuals may hold large quantities of power, a large majority is almost always more powerful in aggregate.  This rebellion can manifest itself as a peaceful refusal to work for the powerful, at some personal risk, or blood can flow down the streets of Paris (figuratively speaking:).  Regardless of the precise circumstances, a society that does not prevent the powerful from becoming too powerful will fall eventually.

It's been asked before how deregulation of economic players can possibly lead the economy to shrink.  I have another word for you: Rent-seeking.  Economic regulation is only universally bad if it's assumed that all participants in a capitalist economy are acting to grow their wealth in absolute terms and not merely relative to the wealth of others.  Rent-seeking is essentially using one's wealth and power to gain a larger proportion of the existing wealth, rather than creating new wealth.  Left unchecked, rent-seekers will almost universally shrink the total wealth available and cause a society to decline.  A purely capitalist society has no checks for the power plays of rent-seekers that can lead to economic and societal decline and collapse.

I said at the beginning of this post that both pure capitalism and pure socialism are extremes in the spectrum of economic systems and neither can exist in a functional society, at least not for very long.  As such, there is a need for balance between elements of both self service and social service.  For the political problems faced in much of the western world, I like the application of the far eastern philosophy of Yin and Yang.  For the description of this philosophy, I give mad props to whoever wrote the opening line of the Wikipedia article I just linked above.  It's pure gold.  "In Chinese philosophy, the concept of Yin-Yang, literally meaning 'shadow and light,' is used to describe how polar opposites or seemingly contrary forces are interconnected and interdependent in the natural world, and how they give rise to each other in turn in relation to each other."  Capitalism and socialism are polar opposite and seemingly contrary ideas that necessarily have to be applied in tandem in order to maintain a healthy and functional society.  Without essential elements of both schools of thought, a society will collapse sooner, rather than later.
You can consider capitalism to be light and socialism to be darkness, if that helps you.  It really doesn't matter.