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Unfair distribution of wealth


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2010 May 28, 6:47am   11,153 views  89 comments

by Honest Abe   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

It is paper money, created out of thin air that creates the unfair distribution of wealth that is making the middle class fall behind and the poor more poor. Newly created money, and credit in a paper money system benefits those that can access the money first and buy capital goods and real property at one price before the new money circulates and makes all prices go up. Wages do not keep up with inflation and that creates yet another squeeze on the middle class.

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63   RayAmerica   2010 Jun 6, 5:00am  

Troy says

We’re only 9 months into his first fiscal year, which began Oct 1. Way to lie with statistics, Ray.

I love the way you lefties always accuse people of "lying." Uhhh, I copied and pasted the article, so it wasn't me that said anything. Furthermore, he says nothing in it about "fiscal year" as you claim. What he does say is that we, I mean Obama, is spending at a $4.9 BILLION per day clip. I really wish you people would READ and try to comprehend what is being said before you rush off and call someone a liar. It would go far in establishing at least some semblance of credibility on your part.

64   Â¥   2010 Jun 6, 7:15am  

bob2356 says

but his spending is still outrageous

how so? Be specific.

Was it the $50B bailout of GM?

Obama inherited a system that was in total meltdown Jan -> Mar 2009. What the RayAmericas of the world intentionally refuse to understand is that the nation pushed up a $5T plus debt bubble on itself 2002-2007, and this debt bubble was fueling CONSUMPTION 2004-2006 to the tune of $400B or more a year.

It's still all going to blow up badly. The government has some power in determining when, where, and how we crash, but not if.

Anybody who thinks they have a workable answer to the problem is talking out of their ass.

65   Honest Abe   2010 Jun 9, 4:22am  

OK, here are some ideas for fixing America:

(1) Prohibit deficit spending

(2) Make it easier to start and operate a business

(3) Put an absolute restriction on money growth

(4) Privatize all government entities that are operating at a loss

(5) Eliminate all redundant government programs

(6) End the Federal Reserve System

(7) Reestablish sound money

(8) Outlaw stimulus and bailout plans

(9) Reduce military spending to no more than 5% higher than China's military budget

(10) Only taxpaying US Citizens should have the right to vote.

Plus I've got at least 25 more ideas to add to the 10 above.

Political leaders are the ones that need regulation. America needs a rigid structure of fiscal responsibility built on a solid foundation of truth, trust, the rule of law, and sound money principals. Unfortunately, our morally weak leaders (and those that support them) would much rather make policy that erodes our financial stability and passes the financial burden to future generations who are too young to vote or haven't even been born yet. I think that is unacceptable and morally bankrupt.

Others will think that is perfectly acceptable...those are the ones who are OK with the socialization and destruction of America as we know it. UGH !!

66   EBGuy   2010 Jun 9, 7:21am  

Interesting thread. I have a hard time envisioning the end of fiat money, as the government requires taxes to be paid with dollars. If you go totally grey market in your personal economy, I suppose its possible. A couple of thoughts:
1. Local currencies. These usually boil down to a base unit of the currency being equivalent to a man hour of work. This, of course, does not account for specialization and differentiating between more valuable outputs from the work being done. At the same time, it's very applicable to every day life. I've never hired a babysitter, but my wife and I go out a least once a month. We have an informal co-op with two other couples and rotate babysitting duties. This exchange of services is not taxed (Yet!). But imagine, if you will, plugging into the more formal structure of organized co-operatives throughout the world. Now imagine, instead of their 'accounting' system being just internal to the co-op, there is a hierarchy that allows an interchange between co-ops (using the Intertubez). At a certain point, you can imagine the flow of both goods and services without fiat money changing hand (at which point, I'm sure, the gov't steps to value those goods and service and get their cut).
2. BTU dollars. This, I don't think, has been practical because of mankind's ability, in the past, to exploit increasingly concentrated stores of energy. In another words, EROEI (energy returned on energy invested) has steadily increased as humans progressed from an agrarian culture to an industrial society. At this point, though, its hard to envision EROEI getting any better than the soon to peak Ghawar oil field in Saudi Arabia. We've got a lot of fat to cut with efficiency measures, but, I could imagine (at a certain point in the future) when 'energy units' are no longer an inconsequential part of goods and services produced. In another words, the value of an energy unit rises to the point where a 'BTU dollar' could become a medium of exchange. No idea what that looks like, though. But hey, if we're telling the majority world to cook with biogas from their waste, no reason households here couldn't become energy producers. Perhaps this looks like charging our neighbor's electric car with solar panels (or a fuel cell) and getting a credit in a networked accounting system (instead of on our PG&E bill).

67   jkingeek   2010 Jun 10, 7:49am  

Cool. But, I don't see where it says she's grossing $500K a year...

68   jkingeek   2010 Jun 10, 12:21pm  

I see. Not bad for re-selling Chinese made plastic. Assuming the stuff is made in China as nearly everything is these days.

70   Â¥   2010 Jun 10, 1:49pm  

jkingeek says

Assuming the stuff is made in China as nearly everything is these days.

Chinese are trying to move up the ladder and avoid having to make this meaningless plastic crap. . .

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/01/business/worldbusiness/01factory.html

71   Â¥   2010 Jun 10, 2:20pm  

jkingeek says

thoughts?

I agreed with the apparent need to monetize about $5T in present dubious assets held by the banking system.

People here by now are probably aware of my shorthand analysis I take from the Federal Flow of Funds Report:

L.100 Households and Nonprofit Organizations -- Home mortgages

Q301: $5.264T
Q407: $10.538T

That is a clean doubling in mortgage debt yet prices are back to 2001 levels in many if not most bubble areas, even though interest rates are at historical lows and Federal insurance limits are around double what they were in 2001.

This tells me that there's $5T of bad debt still out there. That sounds like a lot but it's $100K over 50M households.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/CMDEBT?cid=97

This ZH opinion quickly falls into the libertarian rubbing of hands about the coming collapse and either overextension into state socialism or the destruction of the modern welfare state and return to rugged-individualist minarchy.

Both of those are certainly possible futures, the third is that we continue bumbling on. The one great thing about the immense inefficiencies in our health care system is that there is still immense savings to be wrung out of it, on the model of Canada or Japan, should we manage to "lose freedom" on his simplistic chart and actually start cracking down on the theftastic margins medical providers are running on us.

We also need the return of the Clinton tax brackets. These start coming back soon enough I guess.

We're likely to get smushed by our need to buy oil in a future with declining production and rising consumption by China, a China that can easily double its buying power by revaluing the RMB rate. Alaska's oil is basically earmarked for China's consumption now, and if & when they do a 2X revaluation they'll get twice the oil for the money. Twice the iron ore and coal from Oz, twice everything from everywhere. The average Chinese person may not have a pot to piss in still, but the top 300M people in that economy have got it made, and I'd rather be them than us at this juncture I think (assuming I could be one of that top 300M).

I'm leaning toward the thesis that the 2001-2002 recession was trying to tell us something about the sustainability of offshoring our productive base, and we used the housing boost juice to put off the pain, said pain we are feeling now.

It is a complicated picture, a mess, and I don't think anyone has any idea where this is going to go this decade.

72   Honest Abe   2010 Jun 11, 10:14am  

"Americans are least supportive of government when it redistributes income and penalizes success. An April, 2009 survey by polling firm Ayers-MaHenry, asked registered voters which of the following statements came closer to their view:

(1) Government policies should promote fairness by narrowing the gap between the rich and poor, spreading the wealth, and making sure that economic outcomes are more equal.

(2) Government policies should promote opportunity by fostering job growth, encouraging entrepreneurs, and allowing people to keep more of what they earn.

Whereas 31% opted for (1), 63% chose (2). Even when explicitly offered more government services, Americans prefer less government." The Battle, How the Fight Between Free Enterprise and Big Government Will Shape America's Future - by Arthur C. Brooks

73   Â¥   2010 Jun 11, 10:18am  

We've been brainwashed good, no denying that. Meanwhile,

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/CMDEBT

and

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/FYGFDPUN

$11T bubble since 2001 can fake a lot of people out about how close prosperity is for them.

It's all downhill from here. 'Tis sad, but a people get the government they deserve. As for us, we are largely a nation of self-absorbed idiots.

74   Honest Abe   2010 Jun 11, 11:41pm  

Well, you appear to be truely disturbed. Review the post on "WHAT IS A DOLLAR" Fri, 11 Jun 2010 at 4:48pm. The description of PERSONALITY DISORDERS sounds a lot like you.

It describes irrational liberal thinking, feelings of envy, jealousy, inferiority, revenge, and victimization. Other traits are obsessive pursuit of control and regulation as well as infantile claims to entitlements and compensation. Personal responsability is absent.

Obviously the Nanny State is your utopia...MOMMY.

75   RayAmerica   2010 Jun 12, 12:57am  

Nomograph says

A person who starts name calling is a person who has run out of ideas. You sound like a six year old child.

Perfect illustration of liberal/leftist hypocrisy. Thanks for your contribution Nomo.

76   RayAmerica   2010 Jun 12, 12:59am  

Honest Abe says

It describes irrational liberal thinking, feelings of envy, jealousy, inferiority, revenge, and victimization.

Very well put. Another wise man once summed it up by saying "liberalism is a mental disorder." You're both on the same page.

77   elliemae   2010 Jun 12, 2:10am  

Do you have anything to contribute beyond your hatred of liberals?

Troll.

78   Honest Abe   2010 Jun 12, 9:12am  

Utopia only exists in the mind of irrational liberals. The beauty of freedom is equality of opportunity, not equality of results. Thats why libs hate freedom, the results are not equal. MOMMY -ITS NOT FAIR - HE'S GOT MORE THAN ME !!!

79   Â¥   2010 Jun 12, 9:51am  

Honest Abe says

The beauty of freedom is equality of opportunity, not equality of results. Thats why libs hate freedom, the results are not equal. MOMMY -ITS NOT FAIR - HE’S GOT MORE THAN ME !!

LOL. Statement 1 contradicted by statement 3, separated by a strawman.

Quality argumentation there, Tex.

80   elliemae   2010 Jun 12, 12:40pm  

I hate freedom? No. I do, however, dislike trolls who believe that they know how I think just because they've branded me as a lib. I also wonder why, if abeabe likes freedom so much, he hasn't felt free to set up his own forum upon which he and like-minded people can further their agenda without having to deal with us pesky free-thinking types.

81   jkingeek   2010 Jun 12, 11:19pm  

Every forum I've ever been to is the same it all boils down to libs and cons battling it out in cyberspace. I think everyone in here takes these comments too personally and most resort to "name calling"... what other six year old tactics work in cyberspace? You can't shove, kick, or throw anything. What's the quote from the Bible about... casting stones?

82   jkingeek   2010 Jun 13, 5:14am  

I haven't felt too represented lately..... have you?

83   elliemae   2010 Jun 13, 7:48am  

jkingeek says

I haven’t felt too represented lately….. have you?

In some ways, yes. In other ways, no.

jkingeek says

Every forum I’ve ever been to is the same it all boils down to libs and cons battling it out in cyberspace. I think everyone in here takes these comments too personally and most resort to “name calling”… what other six year old tactics work in cyberspace? You can’t shove, kick, or throw anything. What’s the quote from the Bible about… casting stones?

Some of us are trying to have discussions, and some are trolls with the maturity of six year olds. Or younger.

84   Â¥   2010 Jun 13, 11:55am  

jkingeek says

I haven’t felt too represented lately….. have you?

my guy just got shot down by Fiorina, Wrecker of Tech, in the primary. Same poor dude lost to Feinstein in 2000, too.

He needs to choose his opponents better.

Representatives don't represent me, they represent the entire electorate. Since the electorate's heads have rocks in them, I think our politicians are doing a good job of representing them.

85   elliemae   2010 Jun 13, 12:22pm  

Troy says

He needs to choose his opponents better.

My quote of the day!

86   Honest Abe   2010 Jun 14, 7:31am  

All healthy developmental influences from infancy to competent maturity enhance both individual autonomy and mutuality with others. Acquiring occupational and social skills in preparation for adult living in a free society is central to that development. Competence in these areas permits the achievement of individual self-responsibility and a necessary basis for voluntary economic and social cooperation.

Big government, liberal mentality, and invasive social policies, however, foster economic irresponsibility, pathological dependency, and social conflict (and name calling by some of the more infantile posters here at Patrick.net).

87   RayAmerica   2010 Jun 14, 7:37am  

Honest Abe says

and name calling by some of the more infantile posters here at Patrick.net).

Ellie "infantile?" Who would have guessed it?

88   elliemae   2010 Jun 14, 4:36pm  

RayAmerica says

Ellie “infantile?”

I think it's cute the way you write my name and add to it every time.

89   Honest Abe   2010 Jun 15, 4:30am  

Free enterprise embodies the values that made us the greatest nation on earth. Values such as individual liberty, equal opportunity, entrepreneurship, and self-reliance.

Unfair distribution of wealth is caused by government distortion of the free market. Indeed the recent economic crisis has further distorted our values and given a small minority who oppose freedom and free enterprise a pretext for making sweeping social(istic) change. Change which includes expanding bureaucracies, increasing income redistribution, less freedom, the loss of individual rights, more taxes, and government controlled corporations...not a pretty picture.

HOPE and CHANGE is really doublespeak for HOPE and CHAINS.

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