Svartalf wrote:Seth wrote:Horwood Beer-Master wrote:Audley Strange wrote:...Everyone seems to think Capitalism is failing. But it seems to me what they mean is it's failing them...
Is that not the most important measure?

How many people must Capitalism be failing before it can be declared "not for for purpose"?
Capitalism doesn't fail anyone. People fail at Capitalism all the time however. But that's their fault, not Capitalism's. Capitalism is just an economic model that says if you work hard enough you can improve your economic condition. If you don't want to work though, your economic condition won't improve itself, and nobody else is obligated to improve it for you and keep you in the slothful and idle lifestyle to which you'd like to become accustomed.
Adapt or die.
I am deeply disturbed that you feel that it's people that fail at applying a system/ideology that has no claim at being on a higher seat than mankind, and is just a way to arrange the economy, not a set of higher moral values... or do you actually worship at the shrine of the Almighty Dollar?
It's not an ideology, it's just an economic model. The claim was that capitalism fails people and this is clearly not the case. People fail at applying the principles of capitalism properly, and they fail economically as a result. An economic model is not intended to achieve some pre-determined social result, it's merely a way of predicting how an economy will respond to inputs and outputs of capital and labor.
This is the great error that Socialists make in comparing Socialism and Capitalism...they are comparing apples to oranges. This fact is demonstrated by the observation that all so-called "democratic socialist" countries in Europe are using capitalism as their primary economic model for generating wealth in society.
Even Norway, with it's strong socialist roots and massive public entitlement programs depends on capitalism for it's economic existence and success. Without free-market capitalist countries to sell it's oil to on the open market, Norway's social systems and entitlement spending would bankrupt the nation very quickly.
So, you need to not conflate socialism and capitalism in the same argument. When you are arguing social policy you are comparing socialism to other political/social ideologies, not capitalism.
I could understand chretins railing at people for failing to be good chretins and that kind of stuff, but while I'd enjoy money as much as anybody, I feel no higher moral imperative to being a good capitalist.
Nor should you. Capitalism is merely an explanation of the way humans traditionally and all but inevitably engage in trade and commerce with one another most successfully. That's it. It's nothing more than that.
BTW, We ARE adapted... there's a reason why humans are fundamentally social animals, if we stuck to the kind of rugged arch individualism you seem to advocate, we'd still be running in the plains of Africa and and deeming sticks and stones wonderful clever tricks.
Except that you mistake, as usual, Libertarian philosophy for "rugged arch individualism" when it's anything but that. A respect for individual rights and the determination not to allow anyone, including government, to initiate force or fraud against any individual, does not mean that Libertarians are in the least bit anti-social or unwilling to be part of a community. It merely means that each individual gets the free choice of how to dispose of their labor and property, gets to associate or not associate freely and without obligation to anyone, and gets to make and be responsible for individual, private contracts for services and goods without the coercive force of government seeking to take and redistribute their labor and wealth to others without consent.
Libertarians do things as a part of a community for reasons of sane, mature adult personality traits such as rational self-interest, compassion, altruism and charity, not because some bureaucrat in Washington or anywhere else demands that they do them.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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