Re: I, Pencil, The Movie
I think anyone who has read my writings here on the subject of Greece, and Europe, will understand that I don't view the circumstances there nearly so simplistically. I have from the beginning argued that there was local corruption as well, and discussed numerous specific examples of it.
Furthermore, I think just reading what I actually wrote above reveals that position pretty clearly. Here's my paragraph again, for reference:
(emphasis added here)
It doesn't appear at all vague to me.
I had clearly summarized the TWO dominant factors, both very complex and discussed in exhaustive detail previously, that came together to make the crisis. I NEVER asserted that it was "all bankers" and have discussed the disparate monetary cultures of Europe in detail over literally hundreds of posts!
If one can't make a point without lying about a conversation partner's position, it forces the reader to question whether one had any valid point to contribute in the first place.
But in any event, it is simply ridiculous to imply that corruption is special to socialism. Corruption stems from a HUMAN desire to twist whatever system is in place, and thereby maximize one's personal benefit. That's why it happens (and must be guarded against) everywhere, regardless of the political theory a system is built around. Here in our US democracy we had TARP bailouts of a "capitalist" banking system. But to say that this was the fault of some theoretical universal "capitalism" or "democracy" is ridiculous. The most one could say is that it stemmed from a specific implementation of capitalism or democracy, which had previously been corrupted to benefit a very small set of people.
Such travesties come from corruption, and that is universally possible. The myth that it needs a "big" state to happen is ludicrous. One can make a government more corrupt by shrinking it as easily as one can make it more corrupt by growing it. One simply eliminates oversight that restricts oneself, and leaves in place that which restricts others. There is no difference between "growing" and "shrinking" a government in terms of the potential for corruption. Any unbalanced system is detrimental, and it doesn't need to be big to be economically devastating. (Feudalism, anyone? No social spending there!)
Corruption, as it stems from a universal human drive, is best mapped on an axis orthogonal to the political spectrum. There are corrupt people on the left. There are corrupt people on the right. There are people with integrity on the left. There are people with integrity on the right.
And one can find people with no integrity (for example, willing to lie about what the other side is saying) on all points of the political spectrum, and even here on iTulip.
What matters is not "big" or "small" government, but effective government. Those who obsess about either "big" or "small" government are simply not addressing the real problems of this nation at all. They are choosing (because it IS a choice to buy into left/right identity politics instead of thinking for oneself) to be a mindless pawn in somebody else's game. "Sheeple" seems to be the popular phrase for such people at this time.
It is by now obvious that my resolve is imperfect on this point, but I do my best not to engage with such worldviews directly here. There is very little point to it. An opinion that is based on identity rather than facts can't be swayed by any reasoned discussion. One might as well pound one's head into a brick wall.
Originally posted by vt
View Post
Furthermore, I think just reading what I actually wrote above reveals that position pretty clearly. Here's my paragraph again, for reference:
Originally posted by astonas
View Post
It doesn't appear at all vague to me.
I had clearly summarized the TWO dominant factors, both very complex and discussed in exhaustive detail previously, that came together to make the crisis. I NEVER asserted that it was "all bankers" and have discussed the disparate monetary cultures of Europe in detail over literally hundreds of posts!
If one can't make a point without lying about a conversation partner's position, it forces the reader to question whether one had any valid point to contribute in the first place.
But in any event, it is simply ridiculous to imply that corruption is special to socialism. Corruption stems from a HUMAN desire to twist whatever system is in place, and thereby maximize one's personal benefit. That's why it happens (and must be guarded against) everywhere, regardless of the political theory a system is built around. Here in our US democracy we had TARP bailouts of a "capitalist" banking system. But to say that this was the fault of some theoretical universal "capitalism" or "democracy" is ridiculous. The most one could say is that it stemmed from a specific implementation of capitalism or democracy, which had previously been corrupted to benefit a very small set of people.
Such travesties come from corruption, and that is universally possible. The myth that it needs a "big" state to happen is ludicrous. One can make a government more corrupt by shrinking it as easily as one can make it more corrupt by growing it. One simply eliminates oversight that restricts oneself, and leaves in place that which restricts others. There is no difference between "growing" and "shrinking" a government in terms of the potential for corruption. Any unbalanced system is detrimental, and it doesn't need to be big to be economically devastating. (Feudalism, anyone? No social spending there!)
Corruption, as it stems from a universal human drive, is best mapped on an axis orthogonal to the political spectrum. There are corrupt people on the left. There are corrupt people on the right. There are people with integrity on the left. There are people with integrity on the right.
And one can find people with no integrity (for example, willing to lie about what the other side is saying) on all points of the political spectrum, and even here on iTulip.
What matters is not "big" or "small" government, but effective government. Those who obsess about either "big" or "small" government are simply not addressing the real problems of this nation at all. They are choosing (because it IS a choice to buy into left/right identity politics instead of thinking for oneself) to be a mindless pawn in somebody else's game. "Sheeple" seems to be the popular phrase for such people at this time.
It is by now obvious that my resolve is imperfect on this point, but I do my best not to engage with such worldviews directly here. There is very little point to it. An opinion that is based on identity rather than facts can't be swayed by any reasoned discussion. One might as well pound one's head into a brick wall.
Comment