It is very difficult to believe that you actually understand my comments as your responses and illustrations they contain seem to have no relevance. Certainly there are many goods that can only be consumed by one person only ( eg food ) but this hardly refutes the possibility that land and other means of production could be distributed more fairly or owned in common like that great invention of 19th century capitalism the joint stock company.ForgedinHell wrote:You are living in a world of make-believe, which is where most socialists live. They can't handle reality. Your statement was self-refuting. If resources are limited, then they cannot be universally distributed to everyone, can they? To give food to one person, means another does not get that food. Socialism cannot change that fact of reality. Capitalism allows people the freedom to decide how the resources will be divided, while the socialist believes that she or he knows better than anyone else how resources shall be divided. The poblem the socialist has is that the socialist has no rational basis for making the decision. The free-market has a price mechanism that helps to efficiently divide resources. The socialist has no such mechanism, and just issues arbitrary commands. Like telling people that apartments must be provided and the rent can't be more thn $200.00 a month. If the market-clearing rent is $500.l00 per month, this command just creates a shortage for apartments. Demand increases, without any incentive for anyone to povide additional apartments. So what happens? A black-market develops where people offer apartments at more than $200 per month rent, and people willingly pay the rent. However, now this free-exchange is considered a criminal act by the state.MGL wrote:You left the most important part of the defintion out.ForgedinHell wrote:I have noticed that there are a lot of socialists lurking about on this forum. They seem to take offense with my definition of socialism, which is the use of force by one group of people against another. It is the deprivation of freedom. The socialists whine like babies that I have somehow been unfair in my definition. So, my challange to all you socialists out there is this: State your definition of socialism without it contradicting my definition for socialism.
SOCIALISM IS THE USE OF FORCE TO TAKE AWAY FREEDOM...OF AN INDIVIDUAL TO CONTROL TOO MUCH OF THE FINITE RESOURCES OF PRODUCTION AND THEREBY TAKING AWAY THE FREEDOM OF OTHERS TO BENEFIT FROM THESE RESOURCES AS WELL.
Why do you keep using the example of price fixing and totalitarian command economies? The principle of a fairer distribution of the means of production does not, as far as I can see, rule out the possibility of a free market in goods and services. It only suggests that a government intervene if there is no fair distribition and this intervention does not have to involve price fixing of things like rents.
As a consequence, it has been very difficult to understand where you are coming from. Perhaps if you answer these questions with specific answers your argument will become clearer.
1. Do you understand the difference between capital and income?
2. Do you appreciate that the more capital one has, the more income one is likely to recieve?
3. Do you realise that this difference this makes in earnings cannot be attribuitable to the labour of one's own body?
4. Do you understand that force cannot be used to protect property unless it is also enforces the rules that settle property entitlement. Justifying the enforcing of a property right presupposes the legitimacy of that right. You cannot separate them.
5. Do you not accept that the freedom one person has in enjoying property denies that freedom to someone else? I can probably infer your "yes" to this from your example of food above, but please clarify if you think that does nor count.
6. Do you think that we are entitled to force each other not just to do no harm, but also to make at least a mimumum effort to help those in peril?
7. If you work and pay taxes, albeit begrudgingly, have you not voluntarily accepted this arrangement. Are you not therefore bound by your own definition of earnings to accept that what you own is only your net salary?
8. If someone stumbles across a spear, what labour are they expending? This does not seem to be a rule about justifying property by earnings, but justifying property by a rule of "finders keepers"
9. Is this rule of "finders keepers" some kind of natural moral law that precedes and over-rides any legislative law that is enacted by\agreed by a majority of citizens?
10. What makes this rule of "right by sight" any less deplorable than "right by might"?