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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 6:31 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Diamondeye:

Really? He's telling me I'm stupid because he doesn't understand a complex economic post? He's telling me I'm stupid because he doesn't remember arguments he's had and lost in the past? He's telling me I'm stupid because I expect people to read and remember the citations they ask for?

He's doing everything I stated in this thread and several others of late ...

He's a troll.


Point out where he's told you you're stupid. I havn't seen any of this behavior you're citing. I HAVE, however, seen you unreasonably expecting everyone to remember what you posted who knows when in the past, and I DIDN'T see that the link you provided had the information you claimed.

As for "reading and remembering" I haven't seen a very good history of citation from you in recent years (maybe it was better back before 07-08; I don't recall) and yes, it is unreasonable of you to expect people to remember everything you post. It is ESPECIALLY unreasonable for you to expect everyone to just take your economic analysis over that of every other economist out there.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 7:06 pm 
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Khross wrote:
It's not my fault you lack the knowledge to parse that post on economics; nor, for that matter, is it my fault you and Taskiss think people need to prove negatives all the god damn time.

I'd be happier if you wait to include me in your posts until after I've actually engaged with you in the thread. I imagine it's hard for you, knowing there are folks that aren't impressed by your ego, but still, your attempts at getting their attention should be toned down just a tad.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 7:30 pm 
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Taskiss:

You stop telling people to prove a negative and then acting like you're smart because you have ...

And I'll stop including you in posts where I'm talking about people being dickfaces on the Glades.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 7:32 pm 
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Diamondeye:

I don't expect anyone to remember everything I post. I expect them to remember things they've asked me to post. Since Arathain is particularly bad at remembering such things ... I can only conclude he's a total troll.

As for my economic analysis? How many times do I have to be right while all these pundits people cite keep ending up wrong before you understand ...

I am an actual god damned credentialed authority on matters of economics?

That'd be like me telling you you have no **** clue about anything military and we should disregard your posts on all things military because of some idiot in New Zealand with a blog ...

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 8:25 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Diamondeye:

I don't expect anyone to remember everything I post. I expect them to remember things they've asked me to post. Since Arathain is particularly bad at remembering such things ... I can only conclude he's a total troll.


As far as I can tell, the things you've asked him to remember also include responses to Monty over a year ago, so, while he may not remember your responses to him, you've also asked him to remember more than that.

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As for my economic analysis? How many times do I have to be right while all these pundits people cite keep ending up wrong before you understand ...

I am an actual god damned credentialed authority on matters of economics?


You know, it's funny how you seem to be a credentialed authority on so many things. But that's ok, you're obviously a guy that seeks out education. However, you are not the only credentialled authority out there on any of these subjects, and more importantly, you may have made some accurate predictions, but economics are far too complex a subject for anyone to be unerringly "right" and everyone else "wrong". Any layman can see that, if they're willing to avoid the temptation of oversimplification.

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That'd be like me telling you you have no **** clue about anything military and we should disregard your posts on all things military because of some idiot in New Zealand with a blog ...


I seem to recall at least one incident where you told me exactly that because I said something you didn't like. In any case, I never said you didn't have a clue, or that anyone should disregard anything you post. I said you're not the only knowledgable person out there and there's no reason we should just take your word as gospel. Do you expect no one to ever question you?

I certainly don't expect to go unquestioned on military matters. That's why I explain them in such lengthy detail, so that people will understand why I hold the opinions I hold. I'm not the only authority out there; if General Powell posted something contradicting me I wouldn't be just dismissing him as "wrong". I would, however, explain why I disagreed with him. I also make it a point not to allow my enthusiasm for military affairs to interfere with my judgement, and avoid the temptation to, for lack of a better term, simply adovcate for stuff based on how wanktastic it is. I may not always be perfect in that regard, I may not have the only opinion out there on security, and I may be excessively wordy sometimes, but I sure as **** do not expect someone to remember the details of what I posted regarding the air engagement channels of a Perry class frigate a year and a half ago, either.

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 8:38 pm 
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Khross wrote:
How many times do I have to be right while all these pundits people cite keep ending up wrong before you understand ...

How about you offer up someone besides yourself as an authority? Seem to me I offered to do the legwork on our last disagreement and check out the opinions of any of the current experts you'd care to share names of on your idiotic, out of touch position on the need for jobs in the USA and all I heard was crickets.

Anyone ever disagree with you that you didn't then go out of your way to cast as an inferior?

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 8:44 pm 
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 9:45 pm 
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Wwen wrote:
Unfortunately, the government cannot produce wealth.

Consider the following scenarios:

  • Scenario 1: A group of 1000 people all want to have a rec center for sporting events, so they each contribute $100 to cover the cost and then go ahead and built it. Has wealth been created?
  • Scenario 2: A group of 1000 people all agree to pool their $100 contributions and decide by majority vote what to do with the money. A majority (but not unanimous) vote results in a decision to build a rec center, which they go ahead and do. Has wealth been created?
  • Scenario 3: A group of 1000 people decide to form a town, and on town meeting day, a majority of them vote to levy a $100 per person tax to fund the construction of a rec center, which they go ahead and build. Has wealth been created?

I don't see why the answer would be different in one scenario than in another. In each case, it's the same $100k construction project resulting in the same rec center.


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 10:23 pm 
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Did all 1000 people vote in scenario 3? Or just their elected leaders?


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 13, 2011 10:46 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
Wwen wrote:
Unfortunately, the government cannot produce wealth.

Consider the following scenarios:

  • Scenario 1: A group of 1000 people all want to have a rec center for sporting events, so they each contribute $100 to cover the cost and then go ahead and built it. Has wealth been created?
  • Scenario 2: A group of 1000 people all agree to pool their $100 contributions and decide by majority vote what to do with the money. A majority (but not unanimous) vote results in a decision to build a rec center, which they go ahead and do. Has wealth been created?
  • Scenario 3: A group of 1000 people decide to form a town, and on town meeting day, a majority of them vote to levy a $100 per person tax to fund the construction of a rec center, which they go ahead and build. Has wealth been created?

I don't see why the answer would be different in one scenario than in another. In each case, it's the same $100k construction project resulting in the same rec center.


Wealth has nothing to do with what is created, but the demand for what is created, and what sort of business is derived from that creation. Simple investment into a thing is no guarentee of the creation of wealth. If more resources go into creating a thing than the thing can be valued at, then wealth was lost in the thing's creation.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 12:01 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Wwen wrote:
Unfortunately, the government cannot produce wealth.

Consider the following scenarios:

  • Scenario 1: A group of 1000 people all want to have a rec center for sporting events, so they each contribute $100 to cover the cost and then go ahead and built it. Has wealth been created?
  • Scenario 2: A group of 1000 people all agree to pool their $100 contributions and decide by majority vote what to do with the money. A majority (but not unanimous) vote results in a decision to build a rec center, which they go ahead and do. Has wealth been created?
  • Scenario 3: A group of 1000 people decide to form a town, and on town meeting day, a majority of them vote to levy a $100 per person tax to fund the construction of a rec center, which they go ahead and build. Has wealth been created?

I don't see why the answer would be different in one scenario than in another. In each case, it's the same $100k construction project resulting in the same rec center.

No, it was moved from people's pockets into a rec center?

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 12:35 am 
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All three of these scenarios are examples of consumption of $100k. Wealth is being forfeited in exchange for a Rec Center.


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 4:57 am 
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It seems more and more to me Democrats just don't understand opportunity cost.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 8:14 am 
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Elmarnieh wrote:
It seems more and more to me Democrats just don't understand opportunity cost.

I would argue that most American's do not understand opportunity costs, nor do they understand the concept of sunk costs.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 8:17 am 
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Paper dollars have been transformed into a capital improvement of real property that has increased the utility and value of said property. How is that not an increase in wealth? In any event, if you don't think this particular project entails an increase in wealth, that's fine, just insert some other hypothetical project that you think does increase wealth. The point of the scenarios is that I don't see what difference it makes whether the project (whatever it is) is completed through an informal/private pooling of resources or a formal/governmental pooling of resources. If the project is the same either way, what does it matter?


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 10:28 am 
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Khross wrote:
Arathain:

No, we simply have a history of you trolling and throwing out insults when you lose an argument.


Come on, man, really? I can't remember the last time you focused on a discussion long enough for me to lose without you going off on some tirade and throwing insults and putting everyone down. It's unnecessary. I don't insult you, and you know it.

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We have a history of you refusing to read links and citations, and then blaming people for making posts that use them.


Again, so you say. But what links and citations I have seen (you don't provide these of late) don't back up what you're saying.

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We have a history of you requesting sources and then ignoring them when you know you're wrong.


This is false, and you know it.

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Quite simply you're a troll ...

So go **** off and stop lying. You've turned into the almost-republican Montegue.


So in the same post where you accuse me of throwing around insults, we get this gem. Come on, man, you're barely even trying.

Khross wrote:
Diamondeye:

Really? He's telling me I'm stupid because he doesn't understand a complex economic post? He's telling me I'm stupid because he doesn't remember arguments he's had and lost in the past? He's telling me I'm stupid because I expect people to read and remember the citations they ask for?

He's doing everything I stated in this thread and several others of late ...


Are you kidding me? I don't recall ever calling you stupid. Quite the opposite, actually:

Arathain wrote:
Wow. Hey, Khross, just to clear things up - I don't know you that well, but I believe you're probably a pretty smart guy. Ok? I want you to understand this so that maybe you get a little less upset next time I challenge one of your statements. It seems you take any challenge as an assualt on your intelligence or something. It's all good, man, ok?


For a guy that complains so much about people not reading your posts, that's a pretty big miss. Meanwhile:

Khross wrote:
In case you're wondering, it's threads like this one that make most of us think you're an illiterate twit.

So, to answer your question, you simply don't understand basic logic or rational thought chains.

In other words, this thread is a monument to you being an stupid prick who's not even smart enough to be a civil engineer. Go **** yourself.


Lovely.

Khross wrote:
He's a troll.


Come on, now. Responding to posts is not trolling. Especially when the response is discussing backup for on topic statements.


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 10:32 am 
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Khross wrote:
I am an actual god damned credentialed authority on matters of economics?

That'd be like me telling you you have no **** clue about anything military and we should disregard your posts on all things military because of some idiot in New Zealand with a blog ...


I've suggested to you repeatedly that this is a valid claim to make. If someone asks you for a citation, it's perfectly reasonable to say "No, I don't want to take the time to find that" or "This is my analysis based on my expertise" and let it go. If that's not enough for someone, so what? But you don't do that typically, that I've seen. You tend to just freak out.


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 11:27 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Paper dollars have been transformed into a capital improvement of real property that has increased the utility and value of said property. How is that not an increase in wealth? In any event, if you don't think this particular project entails an increase in wealth, that's fine, just insert some other hypothetical project that you think does increase wealth. The point of the scenarios is that I don't see what difference it makes whether the project (whatever it is) is completed through an informal/private pooling of resources or a formal/governmental pooling of resources. If the project is the same either way, what does it matter?



You make several assumptions RD.

It only has increased utility if people want it.

A public council passes a tax to create a center because they want it. It passes. No one uses it because it was not demanded.

What utility was gained?

This is how a large amount if not most tax money is used.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 11:33 am 
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Arathain:

I don't freak out when people challenge me; I get annoyed when you guys continue to make the same erroneous arguments despite being given more information to change that opinion in the past than I care to reproduce for a 5th or 6th or 7th time.

Indeed, this post does include the information you think is absent. It does, in point of fact, explain exactly why more jobs won't solve our problems:
Khross wrote:
But, it gets a little more complex, and for a full understanding Keynes, we need to turn Marx: yes, Karl Heinrick Marx of Communist Manifesto and Das Kapital fame. In particular, we want to look at Marx's contribution of the Labor Theory of Value primarily developed by David Ricardo and Adam Smith. And, I admit that here it gets a little heady simply because Marx's application is far more Hegelian than economic, but speaks to the issues of the Twentieth Century. Namely, with the advent of the time clock, minimum wages, and income taxation, our government exerts enormous marginalizing pressures on the fundamental economic commodity: Labor. Indeed, money in the United States represents the exchange value of Labor (see Marx), which is why Keynesian economics become problematic at the macro economic levels. Policies which increase the demand for labor while simultaneously marginalizing its exchange value create deflationary pressures that continually depress that value of labor vs. the goods and services it is used to acquire. Going back to the explanation of Keynesian economics, this reality makes impossible the goal of full employment. Consequently, you can never have enough demand for labor to meet the supply. When coupled with other various external shifts, this creates the broader economic difficulties of the last 50 years. Needless to say, current attempts to increase taxation and spending ignore the fact that labor supply relative to jobs has increased, that education relative to population has increased, that wages relative to hours worked per household have fallen 60%. Were Demand-Side economics correct, then the government intrusions of the last 50 years should have yielded some sort of economic utopia based on real wealth and real innovation during the Clinton Administration (and don't read that as any critique of Clinton's policies, because it's just a temporal marker). But it did not, rather we're now facing a series of demand driven bubbles and supply over-corrections encouraged by the very Keynesian policies of every president post-Eisenhower.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 11:35 am 
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Elmarnieh wrote:
You make several assumptions RD. It only has increased utility if people want it. A public council passes a tax to create a center because they want it. It passes. No one uses it because it was not demanded. What utility was gained? This is how a large amount if not most tax money is used.

Fine, but that's not the point I was responding to. I was commenting on the oft-repeated claim that "the government cannot produce wealth"; not the claim you're making here that government often fails to produce wealth because it spends money on things people don't actually want or need. That's a very different (and much more defensible) claim.


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 11:39 am 
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Under current U.S. Tax Models the following are true:

Government expenditures never create wealth.

Never ...

Never ...

Never ...

Government expenditures do no create GDP either.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 11:42 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
You make several assumptions RD. It only has increased utility if people want it. A public council passes a tax to create a center because they want it. It passes. No one uses it because it was not demanded. What utility was gained? This is how a large amount if not most tax money is used.

Fine, but that's not the point I was responding to. I was commenting on the oft-repeated claim that "the government cannot produce wealth"; not the claim you're making here that government often fails to produce wealth because it spends money on things people don't actually want or need. That's a very different (and much more defensible) claim.


It can but the deck is far stacked against it and so any time its exceedingly rare and I would argue at best it can break even with what the private markets would do.

First of all its trying to do good with other people's money which has a whole host of issues. Second if the demand is there its already going to be more efficiently done by private entities because they don't have to spend money on the support system to take move and re-issue the money that government does. Third governmental systems attract more corruption by their monopolistic state than do private enterprises (and those associated problems of a monopolistic system operating for elastic goods and services).

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 11:55 am 
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Khross wrote:
Arathain:

I don't freak out when people challenge me; I get annoyed when you guys continue to make the same erroneous arguments despite being given more information to change that opinion in the past than I care to reproduce for a 5th or 6th or 7th time.

Indeed, this post does include the information you think is absent. It does, in point of fact, explain exactly why more jobs won't solve our problems:
Khross wrote:
But, it gets a little more complex, and for a full understanding Keynes, we need to turn Marx: yes, Karl Heinrick Marx of Communist Manifesto and Das Kapital fame. In particular, we want to look at Marx's contribution of the Labor Theory of Value primarily developed by David Ricardo and Adam Smith. And, I admit that here it gets a little heady simply because Marx's application is far more Hegelian than economic, but speaks to the issues of the Twentieth Century. Namely, with the advent of the time clock, minimum wages, and income taxation, our government exerts enormous marginalizing pressures on the fundamental economic commodity: Labor. Indeed, money in the United States represents the exchange value of Labor (see Marx), which is why Keynesian economics become problematic at the macro economic levels. Policies which increase the demand for labor while simultaneously marginalizing its exchange value create deflationary pressures that continually depress that value of labor vs. the goods and services it is used to acquire. Going back to the explanation of Keynesian economics, this reality makes impossible the goal of full employment. Consequently, you can never have enough demand for labor to meet the supply. When coupled with other various external shifts, this creates the broader economic difficulties of the last 50 years. Needless to say, current attempts to increase taxation and spending ignore the fact that labor supply relative to jobs has increased, that education relative to population has increased, that wages relative to hours worked per household have fallen 60%. Were Demand-Side economics correct, then the government intrusions of the last 50 years should have yielded some sort of economic utopia based on real wealth and real innovation during the Clinton Administration (and don't read that as any critique of Clinton's policies, because it's just a temporal marker). But it did not, rather we're now facing a series of demand driven bubbles and supply over-corrections encouraged by the very Keynesian policies of every president post-Eisenhower.


Yes, I saw that, and addressed it here: http://www.gladerebooted.org/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=6797&start=125#p156970

Please note that my response included follow up questions, including the bold:

Arathain wrote:
Now, this is pretty obvious from a macroeconomic standpoint, but it doesn't fully address the point. The implications of this being that continued stimulus/job creation policies, etc. serve to drive down the value of labor. But unemployment does this as well (same supply and demand curve). Also, the curve is (generally) balanced - in other words, given supply, demand and value will stabilize. So while it stabilizes at a lower value, why is this "worse"? Perhaps you are not making this argument, but you seem to be implying that job growth policies are bad, but not unemployment. Why would this be different? Available labor is available labor. It is supply. Why do policies aiming to increase hiring do more damage to labor value than just having a large unemployed labor pool? Is it a temporary bubble that you are concerned about? Why?


I'm not sure why you are suggesting I don't read your posts, when I quoted them, discussed them, AND requested further discussion.

This was your response:

Quote:
Arathain:

If the Law of Supply and Demand is valid, then you have 0 arguments with my statements in this thread. It's pretty much that simple. Once you reach the point where successive workforce generations can and do expect less money for the same job as a previous generation, you're well past market equilibrium for a given commodity. And since people are commodities and have been since we invented the Time Clock and Fiat Currencies, I'm really not sure why you'd even argue that more jobs will help our economic situation.


I had a follow-up post to this one as well that outlined where you were not addressing my questions, nor were, in my opinion, fully making your case. Regardless, using this example, you're doing one of two things: you're either not reading my posts (which would be problematic considering your complaints in this thread), or you are not being truthful when you make statements like this:

Khross wrote:
We have a history of you requesting sources and then ignoring them when you know you're wrong.


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 3:09 pm 
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viewtopic.php?p=156974#p156974

This response negated any need for my to respond to your longer post. If the Law of Supply and Demand is valid, then nothing I posted was either out of place or unintelligible.

That said, you and Taskiss have yet to defend your positive assertion that jobs will improve our economic situation. Surely, since my position is "idiotic" and "out of touch", the two of you should have no problem finding a litany of links to disagree with me ...

And, yet, neither of you ever offered a single citation or even explanation for your position.

Why is it I'm supposed to accept your (mostly Taskiss there) "refutation" (which is a bare assertion) when you two have demanded over and over I "prove" a negative? And, when I actually even bother to entertain your irrational request, you ignore what's posted because of whatever impetus you have?

Sure, you asked a bunch of questions; I read your post and determined that asking a "yes or no" question of my own would solve the problem in the most expeditious manner: either you agree with the Law of Supply and Demand or you don't. If you do, then "jobs" won't help ... if you don't, then "jobs" might help ...

But, you know, I've provided a sourced explanation for my position and only received a bunch of ... bullshit containing no citations and a whole lot of appeal to tradition and popularity. What incentive do I have for continuing the debate, when you throw out such lovely false dilemmas like this last one?

But, all of that said, since you really don't get it and neither does Taskiss ...

And because Hopwin actually asked nicely ...

It's pretty much all about money. Money ... money ... money ...

Money and the velocity thereof.

Government policy concerns itself, at least as far as the U.S. is concerned, pretty much only with the rate at which currency changes. You'll note, I used "currency" there, not "money", because our government and talking heads have a very deluded and inaccurate understanding of "money" ... as does the vast majority of the population. In fact, Americans and pretty much everyone else who has lived their entire life under a fiat currency conflate the two terms; but, "money" and "currency" are not synonymous.

So, what constitutes "money" in the United States? Well, to answer that, we need to know what a commodity is and is not ...

Hint, at least as far as macroeconomic policy and government action is concerned, the following definition is no longer valid:
Wikipedia wrote:
A commodity is a good for which there is demand, but which is supplied without qualitative differentiation across a market.[1] A commodity has full or partial fungibility; that is, the market treats it as equivalent or nearly so no matter who produces it.
Rather, because as Frederic Jameson has said, "We're all Marxists now;" the actual definition of commodity is something like this:
Wikipedia wrote:
In classical political economy and especially Karl Marx's critique of political economy, a commodity is any good or service produced by human labour and offered as a product for general sale on the market. Some other priced goods are also treated as commodities, e.g. human labor-power, works of art and natural resources, even although they may not be produced specifically for the market, or be non-reproducible goods.
Marx's analysis of the commodity (in German: Kaufware, i.e. merchandise, ware for sale) is intended to help solve the problem of what establishes the economic value of goods, using the labor theory of value.
Of course, there's a whole lot of conflation between the two in the media and government and in political speech; but, unless someone specifically mentions pork bellies or cotton futures, they're using the Marxist definition.

Money and commodities are very much involved with each other; and, in the United States, that fungible, ever present, and value regulating commodity happens to be ...

Human Labor.

2010 Census Data will likely show median incoming dropping from 2000, but even so the median household income in the United States is right around $50,000 a year ($50,233 in 2006). So, we can divide $50,233/2080 to find the median value of a dollar in a standard work year ($0.40 / minute). This means a dollar is functionally worth 2.5 minutes if human labor if we use the median household income. But, that's probably a bad idea, because Bill Gates "made" about $1,000,000,000 (1 billion dollars) last year (or enough to bring 20,000 people with 0 income to the median line). And, obviously, because we're in the business of trading in human labor, a five-dollar bill has significantly less real value to Bill Gates than it does the panhandler on the corner of 5th and Park. (That's $134 or so a second by the by for Gates).

Now, were our money not labor and our currency a marker for some other commodity, something that isn't quite so disparate as human labor, we'd see a lot more stability in prices and inflation; we'd also see more stability in wages and earning, instead of a continual decline over the last 50 years.

In any case, we're trading in human labor; we valuate things in time units of labor; we back our currency in time units of labor ...

But our government and our economic policy really don't care about that; they simply don't. In fact, the value of a five-dollar bill or a thousand-dollar bill is essentially the same: worthless. U.S. monetary supply is ... (and consequently policy) is stupid ... it is stupid in epic ways ...

Money Supply

If you click that link, you'll see part of the conflation between money and currency. The Money Supply is the total number of physical currency in circulation plus ... well, plus mostly credit.

Here's where things become problematic for "creating" jobs ...

1. The Federal Reserve has been engaging in "quantitative easing."

...

More later when I have a chance ...

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 14, 2011 4:00 pm 
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Khross wrote:
viewtopic.php?p=156974#p156974

This response negated any need for my to respond to your longer post. If the Law of Supply and Demand is valid, then nothing I posted was either out of place or unintelligible.


So you say, but you just walked away from the thread without addressing any of my follow up, wherein I discussed the issues I had with your explanation.

Khross wrote:
That said, you and Taskiss have yet to defend your positive assertion that jobs will improve our economic situation.


/facepalm Wow.

Arathain wrote:
Oh, you want to play games? Well, start with your own. You have just made a positive assertion that I made a positive assertion that jobs will solve our economic problems..

Prove it. Where was this?


Arathain wrote:
Khross wrote:
I have no problems being questioned. I have problems with people thinking it's always someone else's responsibility to disprove their arguments: You and Taskiss are the most egregious offenders.


You make this claim, and yet - when called on it, you didn't show where I had done this, and meanwhile, you had to be nagged into backing up your positive assertions.


Arathain wrote:
Khross wrote:
The positive assertions are:

b) Common knowledge requires justification – Arathain


You should be able to quote where I said "common knowledge requires justification". Go. I think you'll find there were qualifiers on that.


Arathain wrote:
Khross wrote:
So, why don't you and Taskiss defend your positions?


I haven't taken a position on this. I'm still trying to understand where you're coming from so I can weigh in.


Arathain wrote:
You say you're "not sure why [I'd] even argue that more jobs will help our economic situation" when I have repeatedly corrected your strawman, and stated multiple times that I AM NOT MAKING THAT ARGUMENT.


Again, for someone that takes such offense at people supposedly not reading their posts, this is a big miss. I did not say that jobs will improve our economic situation.

Quote:
Why is it I'm supposed to accept your (mostly Taskiss there) "refutation" (which is a bare assertion) when you two have demanded over and over I "prove" a negative? And, when I actually even bother to entertain your irrational request, you ignore what's posted because of whatever impetus you have?


I’m not asking you to prove a negative. Never did. In fact:

Arathain wrote:
Khross wrote:
More to the point, I didn't make a positive assertion in this thread. I made a negative statement:

More jobs will not solve our problems.


Swing and a miss.
Khross wrote:
More jobs will make our problems worse.


This was repeated several times. And I wasn’t asking you to prove this, just back this up. Let me know where you’re getting this, because obviously – this is contradictory to everything that’s reported. Hell, I wasn’t even really saying that – what I was saying was simply repeating it without backup won’t convince anyone.

Quote:
Sure, you asked a bunch of questions; I read your post and determined that asking a "yes or no" question of my own would solve the problem in the most expeditious manner: either you agree with the Law of Supply and Demand or you don't. If you do, then "jobs" won't help ... if you don't, then "jobs" might help ...

But, you know, I've provided a sourced explanation for my position and only received a bunch of ... bullshit containing no citations and a whole lot of appeal to tradition and popularity. What incentive do I have for continuing the debate, when you throw out such lovely false dilemmas like this last one?

But, all of that said, since you really don't get it and neither does Taskiss ...


No, I didn’t get your position at all. Hence the questions….

Khross wrote:
And because Hopwin actually asked nicely ...

~Snip~

More later when I have a chance ...


Looking forward to it….


Last edited by Arathain Kelvar on Wed Sep 14, 2011 4:03 pm, edited 3 times in total.

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