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Coffee could lead to licentiousness (Read 16229 times)
Brian Ross
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #105 - Nov 5th, 2013 at 10:36pm
 
[quote author=freediver link=1381792184/104#104 All the territories lost by other Europeans prior to WWI don't count either? [/quote]

Errr, what was "all the territories lost by," Europeans prior to WWI?

And who were they "lost" to?   Roll Eyes
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #106 - Nov 5th, 2013 at 10:41pm
 
Sorry Brian, your questions are too difficult for me. I surrender unconditionally to your superior intellect.
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #107 - Nov 5th, 2013 at 11:18pm
 
freediver wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 10:41pm:
Sorry Brian, your questions are too difficult for me. I surrender unconditionally to your superior intellect.


Finally.  So, you'll stop posting bullshit?   Roll Eyes
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #108 - Nov 9th, 2013 at 5:19pm
 
freediver wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 8:39pm:
By WWII, the relative merits of free trade between independent nations over classical imeperialism was well established. Without that, there is no way that Britain would have initiated the transfer of power to locals as a result of non-violent protests.


Lol and WWI had nothing to do with that initiation right?

freediver wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 8:39pm:
Ah I see. Australian whites were only able to trade with Europeans because they rode the Aborigines' backs


No, the Australian whites were able to trade with Europeans because they terrorised, slaughtered and practically wiped out the Aborigines.

freediver wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 8:39pm:
Would you mind clarifying which bits of my argument you actually disagree with?


The bit where the Australian Aborigines (for example) benefited from mutual cooperation and free trade between them and the White settlers, as opposed to, you know, getting annihilated as a cultural entity and forcibly assimilated into the dominant white culture. How about the blacks in South African and Rhodesia? Indians in North America? Just one big utopia of harmonious free trade right?  Cheesy

freediver wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 8:39pm:
Does this mean the whole world is now part of the British empire?


In a way, imperialism still thrives amongst the capitalist powers,  - as stated in one of my first posts - and so does retribution against states who dare try and assert their economic independence. Just ask Iran and Libya.

freediver wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 8:39pm:
What about all your claims regarding how aggressive it was? That is, after all, what I keep asking you about. Are you going to go on forever pretending that you never used that word and I never asked you how you measured it?

Was conquering the Australian aborigines more than twice as "great" as conquering India?



You're not making any sense at all. The British were plenty aggressive - as aggressive as they needed to be. In India they needed over 100 000 soldiers to conquer and maintain their hold their, in Australia they wiped out or effectively neutralized the Aborigines as a threat from the best areas with no more than a few hundred soldiers.

But as you should have picked up on by now, this is not just about the British - they were only one player in a large capitalist system, and *ALL* players directly benefited from slaughtering, subjugating and marginalising natives in order to profit in the system - and this included European spinoffs in the new worlds.

freediver wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 8:39pm:
World population has grown by a factor of about 4 in the last century alone. At the same time technology has made the administration of large areas far easier, not harder. If population is your measure, then plenty of countries that exist today are far greater empires than the classic empires of the past, even though a lot of them were built by foreigners and handed to them on a platter.


The only nations that have anything remotely resembling an empire today are the western capitalist powers - who routinely go around attacking or marginalising (directly or indirectly) nations who show any hint of pursuing an economic path that is outside those nation's sphere of influence - especially if such a pursuit risks causing a flow-on effect with neighbouring countries. But it is not "imperialism" in the old "occupy and subjugate" manner of the Romans or the British in the 19th century.

freediver wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 8:39pm:
British imperialism, particularly after the loss of the US, was far less aggressive than anything in history


Define "less aggressive". Its neither here nor there. Do you simply mean a lower scale of actual physical violence? If so, that completely misses the point - by having such overwhelming techological and economic superiority as Britain had, you are able to minimise actual physical violence because a) most of your subjects are sensible enough not to commit suicide and b) even if they do take the British on, defeat will be swift, with no chance of protracted fighting.

But this has nothing at all to do with whether or not Britain was "aggressive" or not. Overtaking half the world with minimal resistance is still aggression - in fact its an aggression that every single imperial power would dream of. Moreover, it is a logical fallacy to say that this seeming lack of "aggressiveness" necessarily meant that Britain "foresaw a mutually beneficial transition to free trade". You have to demonstrate that Britain was actually implementing policies that adhered to this (not just talking about it). Yet the evidence in terms of the expeditions of conquest and subjugation I have referred to repeatedly - coupled with the steadfast refusal of Britain to tolerate independent economic development (eg Boxer Rebellion), indicates the exact opposite.
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #109 - Nov 9th, 2013 at 5:22pm
 
Brian Ross wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 10:36pm:
Errr, what was "all the territories lost by," Europeans prior to WWI?

And who were they "lost" to?   Roll Eyes


Good question Brian. I have yet to get a single territory from FD - despite several requests.
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #110 - Nov 9th, 2013 at 8:35pm
 
Quote:
The bit where the Australian Aborigines (for example) benefited from mutual cooperation and free trade between them and the White settlers, as opposed to, you know, getting annihilated as a cultural entity and forcibly assimilated into the dominant white culture.


Is this a trick question? Or this this just another version of your stupid argument that unless Britain extended the same standards to Australian Aborigines as it did to France at the same time then it did not adopt those standards?

Quote:
In a way, imperialism still thrives amongst the capitalist powers


I was hoping that was not your actual argument. So free trade between independent nations did not actually replace imperialism because it is imperialism? Free trade is really no different to warmongering?

Quote:
and so does retribution against states who dare try and assert their economic independence. Just ask Iran and Libya.


LOL - that is all about economics?

Quote:
You're not making any sense at all. The British were plenty aggressive - as aggressive as they needed to be.


They were as aggressive as they needed to be to avoid invading their neighbours - their economic and military peers. No other empire in history did that.

Quote:
The only nations that have anything remotely resembling an empire today are the western capitalist powers


It's funny how common sense kicks in when there is a bit of perspective hey? Are you saying that "populated land mass" is not a reasonable gauge of imperialist aggression?

Quote:
Define "less aggressive".


Hitler was aggressive. Do you see the difference, or do I need to explain it?

Quote:
If so, that completely misses the point - by having such overwhelming techological and economic superiority as Britain had, you are able to minimise actual physical violence because a) most of your subjects are sensible enough not to commit suicide and b) even if they do take the British on, defeat will be swift, with no chance of protracted fighting.


They had no such advantage over all their close neighbours. Most empires exploit some kind of technical advantage.

Quote:
Moreover, it is a logical fallacy to say that this seeming lack of "aggressiveness" necessarily meant that Britain "foresaw a mutually beneficial transition to free trade".


Of course it does. It means they had already ruled out invading their peers. The transition had already been made in Europe and North America. There is a clear historical trend that you attempt to deny by making excuses every single time it actually happened.

Quote:
You have to demonstrate that Britain was actually implementing policies that adhered to this (not just talking about it). Yet the evidence in terms of the expeditions of conquest and subjugation I have referred to repeatedly - coupled with the steadfast refusal of Britain to tolerate independent economic development (eg Boxer Rebellion), indicates the exact opposite.


This is a great example of your rejection of the overwhelming evidence. Britain gave up the entire empire with relatively little effort to hold on by any objective historical measure. They did this at the same time as the debate over free trade vs traditional imperialism was happening. Modern economics was literally born while the American war of independence was raging. All the evidence is there Gandalf. You just have to open your eyes.
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #111 - Nov 9th, 2013 at 9:00pm
 
freediver wrote on Nov 9th, 2013 at 8:35pm:
e same standards to Australian Aborigines as it did to France


freediver wrote on Nov 9th, 2013 at 8:35pm:
to avoid invading their neighbours - their economic and military peers.


freediver wrote on Nov 9th, 2013 at 8:35pm:
They had no such advantage over all their close neighbours


freediver wrote on Nov 9th, 2013 at 8:35pm:
It means they had already ruled out invading their peers


Right, I think I'm starting to understand the extent of your delusion. You think this is all about the European capitalist powers not being hostile to their fellow capitalists - and since no other historical imperialist power did that, then thats all the proof you need to say that capitalism was ushering a new era of "mutually beneficial" free trade to replace conquest and subjugation.

Yeah I get that the European powers had a mutually beneficial arrangement of free trade that enabled them to prosper in the capitalist system. You are not making any sort of point though - in fact it supports *MY* point that I have been repeating from my very first post on the subject. This arrangement did *NOT* prevent the largest scale slaughter, ethnic cleansing and subjugation of the *REST* of the non-European world - in fact it heavilly *RELIED* on it. From Britain's imperial century, to Belgium's transformation of the Congo into the largest forced-labor camp in history, to Germany and Italy's desperate plunge into the last imperialistic offerings in Africa - all directly in the name of prospering in the capitalist system.

Do me a favour and stop boring me with this great "revelation" that the European powers deliberately entered into an arrangement of mutual cooperation and free trade. I am well aware of it, and have been well aware of it since I first bloody well mentioned it to support *MY* position in my very first post on the subject. And if, in the unlikely event, you do get past this irrelevant non-argument, then perhaps you can start to focus on the *ACTUAL* imperialism that was ramped up in the 19th century by all the capitalist powers (including the provinces), and how the genocides and subjugations that went on there supports your idea of the European capitalists "trasitioning" away from bully-boy old-fashioned imperialism in the new world, and towards a "mutually beneficial transition to free trade".

I dream of you addressing this with actual sensible arguments, but in my heart I know you will continue with silly word games and endless obfuscations about misquoting you (and therefore losing the debate) - because lets face it, you can't answer the key arguments being made here. You haven't answered it all thread, so why would you start now?
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #112 - Nov 9th, 2013 at 9:05pm
 
freediver wrote on Nov 5th, 2013 at 10:41pm:
Sorry Brian, your questions are too difficult for me. I surrender unconditionally to your superior intellect.


Yet you continue...   Roll Eyes
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #113 - Nov 10th, 2013 at 2:20pm
 
Quote:
Right, I think I'm starting to understand the extent of your delusion. You think this is all about the European capitalist powers not being hostile to their fellow capitalists - and since no other historical imperialist power did that, then thats all the proof you need to say that capitalism was ushering a new era of "mutually beneficial" free trade to replace conquest and subjugation.


My proof that capitalism ushered in an era of free trade that replaced classical imperialism is that capitalism ushered in an era of free trade that replaced classical imperialism, which is why today we have free trade between independent nations and no militant empires trying to take over the world.

Quote:
Yeah I get that the European powers had a mutually beneficial arrangement of free trade that enabled them to prosper in the capitalist system.


Do you get that this arrangement was then gradually extended to the new world colonies, the old world colonies and eventually the entire world?

Quote:
You are not making any sort of point though - in fact it supports *MY* point that I have been repeating from my very first post on the subject. This arrangement did *NOT* prevent the largest scale slaughter, ethnic cleansing and subjugation of the *REST* of the non-European world


Which is why I keep trying to get you to explain what you actually disagree with.

Quote:
Do me a favour and stop boring me with this great "revelation" that the European powers deliberately entered into an arrangement of mutual cooperation and free trade.


There was no explicit agreement - at least not at first. It was far more subtle than that. The debate was raging among the European intellectual elite. It influenced the policy of the day, but hardly dictated it - just like climate change science influences modern policy on carbon emissions, but is still a very long way off dictating that policy. The change did not happen overnight. The rise of explicit free trade agreements marks the end of that debate and the victory of the free trade model over traditional imperialism.

Quote:
And if, in the unlikely event, you do get past this irrelevant non-argument


It is the only argument I have presented, which is why I tried so hard to get you to clarify which bits you agree with.

Quote:
and how the genocides and subjugations that went on there supports your idea of the European capitalists "trasitioning" away from bully-boy old-fashioned imperialism in the new world, and towards a "mutually beneficial transition to free trade


The fact that the transition actually happened and is undeniable today proves that the transition happened. Furthermore, the transition would not have happened without the intellectual change that is modern economics. Although it is taken for granted today, it was a controversial view at the time. The fact that it was a transition rather than an overnight change does not really prove anything, other than your willingness to shift the goal posts around.
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #114 - Nov 10th, 2013 at 2:21pm
 
Quote:
I dream of you addressing this with actual sensible arguments, but in my heart I know you will continue with silly word games and endless obfuscations about misquoting you (and therefore losing the debate) - because lets face it, you can't answer the key arguments being made here. You haven't answered it all thread, so why would you start now?


Gandalf, in case you are still confused, this iw how it started:

polite_gandalf wrote on Oct 19th, 2013 at 2:00pm:
freediver wrote on Oct 18th, 2013 at 7:23pm:
Gee thanks Winston. I'd forgotten about all those classical economists who liked to rape and pillage in their spare time.


Just like to remind everyone at this point that there is not a single piece of documented evidence of Muhammad raping or condoning the rape of anyone.

freediver wrote on Oct 18th, 2013 at 7:23pm:
Capitalism was actually promoted as an antidote to the sort of warmongering promoted by Muhammed, and is largely responsible for the end of the age of empires?


Grin Grin Grin Oh please, do tell me more.


polite_gandalf wrote on Oct 19th, 2013 at 5:37pm:
freediver wrote on Oct 19th, 2013 at 2:08pm:
There was a time when trading with neighboring countries on a permanent basis, rather than temporarily until you can go in and take it all, was a novel idea. Building an empire was a tried and tested way of achieving economic prosperity. Breaking down trade barriers without killing people is fragile and cumbersome by comparison.


Which is precisely why the age of European empires was characterised by a race to colonise the new world by competing European powers, while at the same time those powers largely avoided direct conflict with each other (notwithstanding a couple of notable exceptions), and prospered by trading the spoils of the colonies with each other.Thats precisely how capitalism developed: abundant resources flooding the European market, the development of international trade, facilitating the accumulation of capital, leading to mass industrialisation and the capitalist system. None of that would have been possible without the largest scale empire building program the world had ever seen.

Since the colonies have disappeared, we have seen a different, arguably even more effective type of imperialism by the capitalist powers - using multinational corporations to exploit (and to a very large degree control) third world countries, trade their resources with each other, and acquire ever more capital to keep driving the capitalist system.

IMO it is quite clear to me that imperialism is part and parcel of capitalism, and without it, the system would have failed long ago.


Capitalism is not reliant on imperialism in any way, and it is pure delusion to think otherwise. In fact the system has only grown stronger as the last vestiges of imperialism are discarded. The modern economy is in not reliant on the exploitation of third world countries. The rise out of poverty of countries like China is a boon for us.
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #115 - Nov 10th, 2013 at 8:00pm
 
freediver wrote on Nov 10th, 2013 at 2:20pm:
Do you get that this arrangement was then gradually extended to the new world colonies, the old world colonies and eventually the entire world?


No. Imperialism went ahead full throttle amongst the capitalist powers until they committed hari-kari by nearly annihilating each other in the world wars. Thats the only reason imperialism stopped, and there is no evidence to suggest otherwise. I reject completely your theory that incorporating the European offshoots in America and Australia into the capitalist system was the beginning of a process that eventually included the non-Europeans - particularly when you can't even offer any evidence that it did start to happen in the non-European world prior to WWI. Fact is there is no evidence whatsoever that the non- Europeans were being earmarked for economic independence until the world wars. As late as the early 1900s the capitalists were colluding together militarily to brutally suppress dangerous economic independence by non-Europeans.

Its quite hilarious that you now freely admit that your only argument that capitalism was causing imperialism to decline is the fact that European powers stopped blowing each other up and started engaging in free trade. Hilarious because thats exactly the whole point about 19th century European imperialism and how it thrived: not fighting each other gave the European powers a great opportunity to conquer the rest of the world, precisely because of capitalism - not in spite of it.
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #116 - Nov 10th, 2013 at 8:33pm
 
polite_gandalf wrote on Nov 10th, 2013 at 8:00pm:
freediver wrote on Nov 10th, 2013 at 2:20pm:
Do you get that this arrangement was then gradually extended to the new world colonies, the old world colonies and eventually the entire world?


No. Imperialism went ahead full throttle amongst the capitalist powers until they committed hari-kari by nearly annihilating each other in the world wars.


Earth to Gandalf: many of the new world colonies became independent prior even to WWI.

Quote:
Thats the only reason imperialism stopped, and there is no evidence to suggest otherwise.


So the fact somehow does not exist that European countries were giving up territories prior to WWI, often without any kind of fight at all?

Quote:
I reject completely your theory that incorporating the European offshoots in America and Australia into the capitalist system was the beginning of a process that eventually included the non-Europeans


That is not my theory. My theory is that it began in Europe. Then it was extended to the new world colonies. Then to the old world colonies and the rest of the world. This was a continual process. There was no fundamental change in how it happened before and after each of the world wars.

You are inventing imaginary discontinuities in a clear historical trend, then insisting there is no contrary evidence - in doing so rejecting the entirety of the historical evidence.

Quote:
particularly when you can't even offer any evidence that it did start to happen in the non-European world prior to WWI.


I have, over and over and over again. You just cover your ears and chant "you have no evidence".

Quote:
Fact is there is no evidence whatsoever that the non- Europeans were being earmarked for economic independence until the world wars.


That's great Gandalf. You pick a point in history prior to something happening, then pretend it proves something that there was no evidence that it was going to happen. This is the most elaborate game of shifting the goal posts I have ever seen. Your argument is nothing more than increasingly idiotic versions of "the transition was a gradual transition rather than an overnight change, therefor it was not a transition, and every stage in the transition is therefor also evidence that the transition was not a transition, therefor there is not even any evidence for the transition".

Quote:
As late as the early 1900s the capitalists were colluding together militarily to brutally suppress dangerous economic independence by non-Europeans.


Duh. That's what a transition is. Can you explain how this contradicts anything I have said? Australia was only given independence around this time. Are you saying they would have to grant India independence prior to Australia for you to believe that it happened? As I have pointed out a dozen times, it makes perfect sense for them to extend it to Europeans and most heavily "Europeanised" colonies first. None of this contradicts the existence of the trend. I have pointed out to you many times how stupid this argument is, but you just keep dreaming up different ways of saying the same thing.

Quote:
Its quite hilarious that you now freely admit that your only argument that capitalism was causing imperialism to decline is the fact that European powers stopped blowing each other up and started engaging in free trade.


It is not my only argument Gandalf. I have highlighted plenty of times that in addition to the transition actually happening, there was active debate about whether they should go down that road. It is all there, should you wish to simply open your eyes and see what is right in front of you.

Quote:
Hilarious because thats exactly the whole point about 19th century European imperialism and how it thrived: not fighting each other gave the European powers a great opportunity to conquer the rest of the world, precisely because of capitalism - not in spite of it.


So you argue both that capitalism depended on imperialism, and that imperialism depended on capitalism?

You are right in this point though. Capitalism is one of the reasons why Europe at the time continued to advance so quickly ahead of other nations and regions. However you are dead wrong when you take that absurd backflip and argue that capitalism within Europe somehow depended on third world nations, just as you are dead wrong when you argue that it still does today.
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #117 - Nov 10th, 2013 at 9:02pm
 
freediver wrote on Nov 10th, 2013 at 8:33pm:
Earth to Gandalf: many of the new world colonies became independent prior even to WWI.


Name a single colony that itself wasn't a European offshoot and who wasn't themselves engaging in imperialism in the name of
capitalism.

freediver wrote on Nov 10th, 2013 at 8:33pm:
So the fact somehow does not exist that European countries were giving up territories prior to WWI


Correct - that fact does not exist.
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #118 - Nov 10th, 2013 at 10:05pm
 
Quote:
Name a single colony that itself wasn't a European offshoot and who wasn't themselves engaging in imperialism in the name of capitalism.


Let me guess, every country that contradicts your absurd argument is an "offshoot" and therefor does not contradict your absurd argument? You seem to be trying to argue that no evidence exists to support my case by dreaming up a special excuse for every bit of evidence there is.

Quote:
Correct - that fact does not exist.


Yes it does Gandalf. At some point your attempts to make a special case for every event in history becomes an insane rejection of reality.

There is a clear and undeniable historical trend of a transition from classical imperialism to free trade between independent nations. There was a real debate raging about whether this was a path to prosperity. This was the birth of modern economics. Modern capitalism is not somehow dependent on the imperialism of the past or the modern remnants of it that you imagine are propping up the economy. It is a rejection of the imperialism of the past. You can only delude yourself otherwise by somehow rejecting, one case at a time, the entire history of this transition, while at the same time ignoring the existence of the intellectual debate. Your argument is a stubborn, willful, elaborate exercise in self delusion in the face of overwhelming evidence.

I can only imagine that this self delusion is somehow necessary to allow for the replacement of the global economy with a throwback to 7th century arabian style warmongering and Islamic "economics".
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Re: Coffee could lead to licentiousness
Reply #119 - Nov 10th, 2013 at 10:39pm
 
freediver wrote on Nov 10th, 2013 at 10:05pm:
Let me guess, every country that contradicts your absurd argument is an "offshoot" and therefor does not contradict your absurd argument?


European offshoot: settled by Europeans, for Europeans - became a "white/European" nation. Settlers engaged in ethnic cleansing/slaughter/marginalisation of natives in order to participate in the European capitalist system.

Consists of:
United States
Canada
Australia
New Zealand
South Africa
Rhodesia

Were any of the natives of these colonies treated as "independent nations" who the European conquerors conducted free trade with? Or were these natives systematically slaughtered, ethnically cleansed and forcibly assimilated?

Do you agree that what these European settlers did to the natives puts just a little dent in your argument about the European capitalists wanting to pursue a path of free trade with the natives they ruled over?

Can you name a single example of white conquerors who ruled over non-European lands even pursuing a path of mutual understanding and free trade with their non-European subjects before WWI? Or is your only example of Europeans reaching free trade agreements with their fellow whites/Europeans - which has been my argument all along  Tongue
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