j_mie6
Deity
I dont use it because of early anarhcy and because of slave revolts.
The first Civic swap I make is to Heriditary Rule
The first Civic swap I make is to Heriditary Rule
From the point of view of a participatory democracy, it is not only a right but a responsibility of citizens to make themselves aware of the state of their government and its interactions on a variety of levels.
Because corporations can only exist with government issued charters, the interactions between the corporate sector and government officials is a particular problem; and the lack of oversight by the former over the latter is an abdication of duty, as the latter have propagated environmental destruction, public disinformation (what passes for TV news is worse than a joke) and a general culture of consumerism that is not conducive to continued human existence on the planet.
Moreover, the educational problems in the US are unique to the US. US schools are a joke. I spent several years volunteering as a debate coach in the US public school system, and it is shocking how little training high school students get vis a vis critical thinking skills. The shift towards using standardized testing as an evaluation of schools' and teachers' efficacy is a sham, as it can only serve to turn schools into mills of production for clerical automatons who can regurgitate facts without considering the underlying ideas or implications of the "facts." And I won't even start for what passes for a "fact" in our history classrooms.
As for the "choice" you are making a terribly fallacious argument here. It is not a choice as to whether one person is killed either way, but whether tens of thousands are killed with guns or a hundreds are killed with swords in a major battle. And again - it's a thought experiment, not a practical suggestion.
Here's the thing: corporations are legal instruments to create diffuse liability for large ventures. When those ventures serve the public good, either by providing needed services or good which cannot be obtained due to risk levels too excessive for a single person or small group of investors to undertake, the corporation should be granted a corporate charter by the government. Corporations as they exist now, exist solely to maximize profits for shareholders (the already well to do and the downright filthy rich). That does not serve the public good. Moreover, most corporations do more to harm the public in the US than they do to help. The corporate structure is what allows companies to outsource their labor while retaining unfettered access to American markets. And do I really even need to discuss environmental issues?Problems like these naturally crop up when businesses are privately owned and motivated solely by profit. If lack of government oversight causes all of these problems, what kind of solution would you propose; they'll exist to a certain degree unless everything is socialized, and then you have a plethora of completely different problems. These are faults of capitalism, not lack of government control; the government is supposed to be relatively passive in a free market.
You're missing it. A million men armed with swords will kill fewer people than a million men armed with rifles. I can't make it simpler than that.Hundreds of thousands have been killed with all manner of bladed weaponry in a matter of days during countless major battles throughout history. The level of systematic slaughter propagated at points throughout antiquity wasn't equaled until World War I, centuries after firearms became the norm in all modern armies. So, if it's not a subjective choice over what's generally significantly less traumatizing to be killed with, it's certainly not a matter of which weapon kills more people in wars.
Here's the thing: corporations are legal instruments to create diffuse liability for large ventures. When those ventures serve the public good, either by providing needed services or good which cannot be obtained due to risk levels too excessive for a single person or small group of investors to undertake, the corporation should be granted a corporate charter by the government. Corporations as they exist now, exist solely to maximize profits for shareholders (the already well to do and the downright filthy rich). That does not serve the public good. Moreover, most corporations do more to harm the public in the US than they do to help. The corporate structure is what allows companies to outsource their labor while retaining unfettered access to American markets. And do I really even need to discuss environmental issues?
You're missing it. A million men armed with swords will kill fewer people than a million men armed with rifles. I can't make it simpler than that.
The answer was already in my post: Grant corporate protections only to companies which serve the public interest. Anyone else who wishes to do business can be liable as an idividual.Well, the goal of capitalism is not to serve the public good, so why exactly should a corporation be held more legally responsible for protecting it? What's your solution?
Exactly...Rifles make it easier to kill people. Not only the physical act, but the emotional transgression of killing is easier as weaponry gets more and more modern. Pulling a trigger and watching a speck on the horizon fall with a puff of pink mist is a remarkably different act that running someone through with a broadsword. Do you really think it would be so easy to recruit an army to go fight in afghanistan if they knew they'd have to wade through blood and excrement on the battlefield?How do you gather that? Just because a rifle makes it easier to kill people doesn't mean a soldier with a rifle actually kills more people. With increasing sophistication in long range weaponry, modern military engagements are being decided more and more through effective maneuvering and troop placement long before thousands of men begin meeting their deaths in all out bloodbaths. You don't have that luxury with armies comprised of swords, in which case all men can do is toss themselves at each other in waves in an open field to be annihilated on the spot within hours.
I didn't say that, and I understand that grave human suffering can be caused by any weapon from a rock to a nuclear bomb. Not to mention, there are about a dozen other ways what happened in Rwanda violates the Geneva conventions.I guess he thinks that Rwanda didn't happen...
Not entirely. It's much easier to kill a dozen armed combatants with a machine gun than a pistol, and it's much easier with a pistol than a broadsword. As the means of killing become more efficient, more people die in battles. And as the means become more impersonal, it becomes easier to get people to fight. It's basic math and applied psychology. yes, the fact that increased populations mean more combatants also lead to higher casualties, but that's not the whole story.People die in bigger numbers now, during massacres, simply because there are so many more people to kill and be killed. It has nothing to do with the weapons of choice...
People kill people.
You don't have that luxury with armies comprised of swords, in which case all men can do is toss themselves at each other in waves in an open field to be annihilated on the spot within hours.
Corporations as they exist now, exist solely to maximize profits for shareholders (the already well to do and the downright filthy rich). That does not serve the public good.
Moreover, the educational problems in the US are unique to the US. US schools are a joke.
As for the "choice" you are making a terribly fallacious argument here. It is not a choice as to whether one person is killed either way, but whether tens of thousands are killed with guns or a hundreds are killed with swords in a major battle. And again - it's a thought experiment, not a practical suggestion.
See mario, I went and took you off ignore for a minute, and this is that crap you attack me with. In Civ4 terms, the USSR was certainly a theocracy of no state religion. Religion was not allowed to be practiced (no state religion), and you couldn't spread it (theocracy allowing no non-state religions). In real life, they were a terrible dictatorial, atheist loser regime. Something you seem to espouse.But I wouldn't expect a person who believes the Soviet Union was a theocracy to grasp basic concepts like that.
You probably read too much* Ayn Rand. Besides that, your argument is unwarranted. There is no explanation as to the mechanism by which people acting in their own interest serve the public good, and until such a warrant exists, you might as well be claiming that the moon is made of cheese for all the impact you can have with that claim.This sounds like our free market system in action, what am I missing? People acting in their own self interest further the common good. There's always a boogey man to take the blame for society's ills, I'm sure 'rich men' are one of the more common targets.
I would point out that many nations have public school systems which don't fall into the problematic patterns that US schools do. There is a chicken and egg relationship between the political sphere and public education. The more public education has declined, the more idiotic politics has become in this country. And because politicians have say over public schools, they become cyclically worse. When i graduated hs 20 years ago, critical thinking was scarcely encouraged, and only by a handful of teachers. The things that pass for educational reform in this country are laughable and bound to make dissent a lost art.US schools are EXACTLY what the US populace voted for. You'll notice I live here too. There are systemic issues with one organization attempting too many things with poor economic controls (I don't mean inflation and the interest rate in this case, but just how to deal with incentives, especially in fields that do NOT force competitive behavior whatsoever, and can not) and no government in history is exempted as an organization. When one votes the government to handle US schools, this is the reality. Of course, the reason it hasn't been fixed is that there has yet to be a government created that holds 100% durability forever (exception: civ, but those leaders live forever!).
Democratic systems aren't designed to find "the" answer. In fact, there is no one answer to these problems. That you (obviously educated and at least somewhat engaged in these issues) think in terms of finding "the" answer is exactly the kind of example which proves my point vis a vis US education. Americans have a tendency to view the world, and particularly political issues, in a manner of "all or nothing." It is precisely this competitive focus, rather than collaborative problem posing methodologies that lead to a two party system in a country where almost everyone thinks the two parties are corrupt, self interested and not responsive to the needs of the people. The Tea Party is a good example of people who are finally waking up (and sadly, it's all the wrong people, but I digress).Too democratic and the population all votes individual/self interest (catered to further by candidate(s) favoring leading demographics since that is the incentive THEY are given, since they want to win. Politicians do exactly what they believe will win/succeed, and this is *not* different from your average person in anything but scale) ----> notice things that were originally intended to never have been touched HAVE been touched, but that is a predictable outcome. Too much dictatorship and there's civil war, uprisings, or in the best case a very good leader that dies with nobody to replace him/her and then it's chaos. *Nobody* has the answer, at least not yet. Nations today are overall on a pretty good run compared to how history has been. IMO the #1 reason for this is that markets have grown to the extent of international interdependence, and wars that kill oneself are not popular.
Yeah...if you carry out the thought experiment to its logical conclusion, you realize that an international or transnational body would need to be engaged to enforce the rules of war, and as such, would be a menace as a potential tyrant in the long run. Whether you wear the Yoke of the Blue Sun Corp or the UN, you are still a slave.It's a cute thought, but killing is final, and you can put a lot of people down with swords easily if nobody has anything better. IMO the most interesting part of this thought experiment is that if you allowed private organizations the real power, how long would it take before they used their weapons to control everything? If you really want to block war, the answer is not to create some arbitrary penalty that nobody will supposedly want to endure, but rather to destroy any semblance of incentive for war. Nobody will start a war without a benefit for doing so, or at least a perceived one. Ax that, no more war. It IS that simple, but don't forget that simple =/= easy
. Climbing a 100000 foot vertical shear with handholds built in for you is very simple. Doing it without stopping once...well you see what I mean.
Lol...so You get to imply (with no evidence or reasoning) that I am not aware of the Rwandan genocide, but for me to offer a similarly toned barb about something remarkably stupid you once publicly posted is out of line. Get some cheese, it goes well with whine.See mario, I went and took you off ignore for a minute, and this is that crap you attack me with. In Civ4 terms, the USSR was certainly a theocracy of no state religion. Religion was not allowed to be practiced (no state religion), and you couldn't spread it (theocracy allowing no non-state religions). In real life, they were a terrible dictatorial, atheist loser regime. Something you seem to espouse.
You just have to go and be a jerk about things and attack me though. It is clear your ideas are pretty extreme, and why I even bothered to un-ignore you I don't know, because not only are you extreme, you are very insulting toward me. So, back to the ignore column you go, never to be seen again by my eyes.
Problems like these naturally crop up when businesses are privately owned and motivated solely by profit. If lack of government oversight causes all of these problems, what kind of solution would you propose; they'll exist to a certain degree unless everything is socialized, and then you have a plethora of completely different problems. These are faults of capitalism, not lack of government control; the government is supposed to be relatively passive in a free market.
I would point out that many nations have public school systems which don't fall into the problematic patterns that US schools do. There is a chicken and egg relationship between the political sphere and public education. The more public education has declined, the more idiotic politics has become in this country. And because politicians have say over public schools, they become cyclically worse. When i graduated hs 20 years ago, critical thinking was scarcely encouraged, and only by a handful of teachers. The things that pass for educational reform in this country are laughable and bound to make dissent a lost art.
Democratic systems aren't designed to find "the" answer. In fact, there is no one answer to these problems. That you (obviously educated and at least somewhat engaged in these issues) think in terms of finding "the" answer is exactly the kind of example which proves my point vis a vis US education. Americans have a tendency to view the world, and particularly political issues, in a manner of "all or nothing." It is precisely this competitive focus, rather than collaborative problem posing methodologies that lead to a two party system in a country where almost everyone thinks the two parties are corrupt, self interested and not responsive to the needs of the people. The Tea Party is a good example of people who are finally waking up (and sadly, it's all the wrong people, but I digress).
Excluding educational loans from bankruptcy protection is a form of indentured servitude. Because there is no way to escape the debt, one is forced to take a job out of college.
Bill Gates and scores of other insanely rich entreprenuers do not have college degrees.2. There are lots of positions that do not require a degree even now.
Really? Really?And I agree that people who play this purely as a strategy game are losing out.