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Question: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?

Yes, ofcause.    
  18 (72.0%)
No, it doesnt    
  7 (28.0%)




Total votes: 25
« Created by: Pantheon on: Oct 29th, 2013 at 9:31am »

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Does Capitalism Exploit Workers? (Read 59256 times)
Vuk11
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #120 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 2:14pm
 
|dev|null wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 12:22pm:
Perhaps because workers aren't meant to be exploited in a just and fair society?   The social contract is that if you work, you should be paid fairly for your labour.


Every individual has a different idea of what pay is "fair" this is fundamental. If value is subjective (I'm sure we can at least agree on that so we are on the same page can't we?), then whether someone accepts a wage is up to them, not up to you to say what is fair or not. For instance someone who want to buy a house ASAP might view weekend work for normal wages as more valuable to them then refusing to work them. That is up to THEM not YOU as value is subjective.

If someone voluntarily interacts than they are accepting it and value accepting the proposal more than rejecting it. If people are so worried about unfair hours then choose an employer that doesn't do that. You see if all employers do the exact same thing, then there is massive incentive for an employer to DIP just liittttllleee bit, so as to attract the most productive of workers that would say "hey this guy is offering penalty rates!", if every worker then flocks to him he can then choose the most qualified workers, so it's a win for him and a win for the employees, and a loss for the crowd not offering these hours.

There can never be collusion in the market as there is too much incentive to undercut for advantage, this is the best thing about competition is that the person being the most competitive wins and the reason they win is for offering what people want! So both win and the people you disagree with lose. I can't stress that enough.


Quote:
They still do.   The problem is the workers yet again end up being shafted with their entitlements being often lost because the system believers shareholders' rights take priority over workers' rights.  Angry Angry Angry Angry


Entitlements destroy society, I hope people see this.
Free market capitalism values co-operation through voluntary trades, and competition to appeal to workers and customers above all else. IF you aren't pleasing workers or customers, the moment an entrepreneur undercuts these fools, they get to pick from the best workers and they get the bulk of customers.

If people fear so much unfair dismissal than in a free society business would be FORCED by this massive demand to offer in contracts unfair dismissal clauses. If they don't someone will and take all the best employees again.

This is also evident in the theory of DRO's (dispute resolution organisations) and credit rating agencies. You can easily have DRO's oversee contracts in the work place and credit rating agencies rate employees, consumers and employers on their ability to uphold contracts.

If you go against contracts the DRO steps in via signed agreement, if found guilty the rating agency lowers your contract rating and people are going to deal with those with a higher contract rating.

The moment I said the above I know new questions pop in like "what if they buy out the DRO/credit agency" etc etc, who watches the watchers etc etc. We all have the SAME FEARS! Which is what's so beautiful about a free society is to have business you have to quell the fears or else someone else will. (If no one does I'd start a damn business that's for sure)

For more on this including answers to worst case scenarios I link this smallish article (not too long I promise Wink ):

The stateless society  - An examination of alternatives, By Stefan Molyneux

(What we are looking at is the second section, dispute resolution)

http://www.lewrockwell.com/2005/10/stefan-molyneux/the-stateless-society-an-exam...
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #121 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 2:18pm
 
Chimp_Logic wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 2:04pm:
vuk11 citing the Chicago Lunatic economists like friedman

lol

The very clowns who buggered the world with immoral fascist economic models

well done



Current governments did NOT listen to Friedman nor Keynes.

They picked and chose a couple of aspects of what they proposed and ignored the rest which was essential! For instance the current GFC woes is blamed on Keynes, even though I disagree with him I have to defend him as it is only just:

Keynes advocated saving a surplus and then spending it during a deficit/downturn he warned against governments racking up debt FIRST to get out of debt, without having first saved the surplus! This is what the US did, it followed keynes advice only in debt spending but ignored his imperative that you MUST save the surplus first!

Friedman and JFK were right and both wanted to abolish the FED and return control of the currency to the government as per the constitution. It's not their fault that the FED and petro-dollar have run rampant and destroyed so much and created so many problems, they wanted to get rid of the fed! Friedman himself after returning the currency to the government though it even more desirable just as Hayek had proposed to have multiple competing currencies to create an equilibrium to prevent rapid devaluation of currency.

Good to know you still gloss over and refuse to read peoples posts before spitting out an opinion Wink Good old chimp screeching and throwing sh*t around just like the name suggests Wink
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« Last Edit: Oct 31st, 2013 at 2:31pm by Vuk11 »  
 
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #122 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 2:24pm
 
perceptions_now wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 1:58pm:
Finally, as Energy is going into Decline, so to is the Global Population, with a "natural" leveling now taking place, as the Baby Boomers first retire, then die, over the next 20-30 years. In addition to the Boomers, Food Production & Fresh Water issues, relevant to Energy & Climate, will mean the planet can no longer sustain 7-8 Billion people and the Global Population will then go into actual Decline, thus causing Economic collapse.

So, we need BIG changes & we need them quickly!


Couldn't agree more.
I would propose that only if people are free could they possibly meet the demands of what's coming.

People need to be free to invest time/labour/money/resources into whatever it is that they perceive will help with the current ills, whether it be alternative energy or whatever innovations people can come up with.

Do you have an opinion on what should be done?
Nice post anyways.


Sorry for spaming the thread guys there were a lot of posts to address from yeserday/today  Embarrassed  Cheesy Grin
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« Last Edit: Oct 31st, 2013 at 2:32pm by Vuk11 »  
 
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #123 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 3:30pm
 
Vuk11 wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 2:24pm:
perceptions_now wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 1:58pm:
Finally, as Energy is going into Decline, so to is the Global Population, with a "natural" leveling now taking place, as the Baby Boomers first retire, then die, over the next 20-30 years. In addition to the Boomers, Food Production & Fresh Water issues, relevant to Energy & Climate, will mean the planet can no longer sustain 7-8 Billion people and the Global Population will then go into actual Decline, thus causing Economic collapse.

So, we need BIG changes & we need them quickly!


Couldn't agree more.
I would propose that only if people are free could they possibly meet the demands of what's coming.

People need to be free to invest time/labour/money/resources into whatever it is that they perceive will help with the current ills, whether it be alternative energy or whatever innovations people can come up with.

Do you have an opinion on what should be done?
Nice post anyways.


Sorry for spaming the thread guys there were a lot of posts to address from yeserday/today  Embarrassed  Cheesy Grin


lol...

Two pathetic clowns looking at the simple small picture - cant see the horizon nor the thunderstorms nor the rainbow

Whilst the global population is a long term factor, it is not the main problem of the world today.

The issue today concerns the distribution of wealth and resources etc, both within countries and between them

The USA for example makes up about 5% of the global population and yet generates about 30% of the net global pollution and waste, as well as requiring 1/3 of the worlds resources.

So the stress and demands on the planet are identical if there were 1.4 billion US citizens on it, or if there were about 16.5 billion citizens from Taiwan

or about 73 billion Kalahari bushmen or 91 billion Canadian eskimos.

So I assume when you two clowns are expressing concern about the total global population, you are being good little bigoted, racially deranged freak fascists

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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #124 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 3:40pm
 
Chimp_Logic wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 3:30pm:
lol...

Two pathetic clowns looking at the simple small picture - cant see the horizon nor the thunderstorms nor the rainbow

Whilst the global population is a long term factor, it is not the main problem of the world today.

The issue today concerns the distribution of wealth and resources etc, both within countries and between them

The USA for example makes up about 5% of the global population and yet generates about 30% of the net global pollution and waste, as well as requiring 1/3 of the worlds resources.

So the stress and demands on the planet are identical if there were 1.4 billion US citizens on it, or if there were about 16.5 billion citizens from Taiwan

or about 73 billion Kalahari bushmen or 91 billion Canadian eskimos.

So I assume when you two clowns are expressing concern about the total global population, you are being good little bigoted, racially deranged freak fascists


Equality is not the most desirable outcome of society.
An example for arguments sake:

Poverty level is set at $55, Man A earns $50 and man B earns $60. A is in poverty, B is not yet they are very very close to equal.

Then you have the same men, A starts a business and employs B voluntarily:

A now earns $200 (instead of 50) and B now earns $100 (instead of 60).

The logical conclusion of placing equality above prosperity and freedom, leads you to accept the first case as more equal, therefore more desirable. Yet anyone with common sense would see that the second case is more desirable for both people in question (A and B), regardless of your outside subjective preference of equality.

So I put it to you that equality is not equity. Nor is equality the most desirable or effective measure of, prosperity, freedom and happiness. Obviously the second case Man A and B are both happier then in the first case yet are less "equal".

Do you agree?
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #125 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 3:47pm
 
In counter to my own above argument:

You could use a similar example to prove the opposite but it raises another more important question.

Man A and B again. A earns $500 yet B earns $50, again with $55 being the poverty level. They are not nearly equal and B is worse off than A.

A socialist would say we have to take A's money/resources/property and give it to B. That is immoral. (use of force, theft, involuntary etc).

There are many solutions to the above problem then merely taking from one to give to another. A if left unrestricted to be charitable to B, A could hire B, B could start his own business, B could get an education and qualify for higher productivity thus higher wage, B's family could help, B could work towards being self sufficient. I'm sure you can come up with many more efficient ways than I just did, than redistribution. As Thomas Sowell would say wealth is not distributed, it is earnt by appeasing people in voluntary interaction.

The key point is, that by stepping out of the way you allow B the best chance to have opportunity to increase his wealth above poverty, more opportunity than trying to restrict both with regulations or restrict A from helping B through regulations. The question is what gives B the best opportunity to morally increase his wealth? I say freedom of choice is much more desirable than force.

Would you agree?
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #126 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 3:53pm
 
Vuk11 wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 3:40pm:
Chimp_Logic wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 3:30pm:
lol...

Two pathetic clowns looking at the simple small picture - cant see the horizon nor the thunderstorms nor the rainbow

Whilst the global population is a long term factor, it is not the main problem of the world today.

The issue today concerns the distribution of wealth and resources etc, both within countries and between them

The USA for example makes up about 5% of the global population and yet generates about 30% of the net global pollution and waste, as well as requiring 1/3 of the worlds resources.

So the stress and demands on the planet are identical if there were 1.4 billion US citizens on it, or if there were about 16.5 billion citizens from Taiwan

or about 73 billion Kalahari bushmen or 91 billion Canadian eskimos.

So I assume when you two clowns are expressing concern about the total global population, you are being good little bigoted, racially deranged freak fascists


Equality is not the most desirable outcome of society.
An example for arguments sake:

Poverty level is set at $55, Man A earns $50 and man B earns $60. A is in poverty, B is not yet they are very very close to equal.


Do you agree?


The poverty level is clearly defined in economics - people who live on less than half the median wage.

In Australia, the median annual income level is about 24,800 per annum, so the poverty level is set at about 12,400 or less. Australia has about 2.3 million people living on $12,400 per annum or less.

Politicians and economists conveniently quote the MEAN income level in Australia when talking about the battlers or the typical Australian worker. The mean income level in Australia is about $65,000 per year, but only 20% of workers earn that amount or more per year.

It gets worse as you go up in income - only about 5% of Australian workers earn over $105,000 per year.

Its an extremely skewered distribution in income earning capacity.

(Note also that when House prices are quoted, the median price is normally used rather than the mean. People know that the mean price can be a little miss leading sometimes. But they rarely quote median wages - always the distorted and convenient mean wage level. So that politicians and business leaders can formulate policies for the MEAN, AVERAGE, citizen. that is the top 20%. In reality they only rule for themselves and the top 0.00034% or so)

Incidentally vuk11, Big hard working Gina Reinhart earns $15,000 per minute - even when she is sleeping and having a dump.

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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #127 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 4:00pm
 
Chimp_Logic wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 3:53pm:
The poverty level is clearly defined in economics - people who live on less than half the median wage.

In Australia, the median annual income level is about 24,800 per annum, so the poverty level is set at about 12,400 or less. Australia has about 2.3 million people living on $12,400 per annum or less.

Politicians and economists conveniently quote the MEAN income level in Australia when talking about the battlers or the typical Australian worker. The mean income level in Australia is about $65,000 per year, but only 20% of workers earn that amount or more per year.

It gets worse as you go up in income - only about 5% of Australian workers earn over $105,000 per year.

Its an extremely skewered distribution in income earning capacity.

(Note also that when House prices are quoted, the median price is normally used rather than the mean. People know that the mean price can be a little miss leading sometimes. But they rarely quote median wages - always the distorted and convenient mean wage level. So that politicians and business leaders can formulate policies for the MEAN, AVERAGE, citizen. that is the top 20%. In reality they only rule for themselves and the top 0.00034% or so)

Incidentally vuk11, Big hard working Gina Reinhart earns $15,000 per minute - even when she is sleeping and having a dump.



Is my example wrong in disproving that equality is the ultimate measure of happiness and prosperity? Especially when the poor in Australia are better off than the rich in other countries. That's the whole point even those in poverty if the whole society is prosperous are better off and have better opportunity.

Though I would still put forward that the destruction of the middle class is due to state restrictions that prevent small business from competing, from state actions such as monopolizing industries, controlling the economy, private central banking etc etc.

The above that you mention is not a result of voluntary interaction for mutually perceived benefit but rather crony corpatism and socialist policies.

This is an effect of people having less opportunity the pure result of government restriction on opportunity.
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #128 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 4:01pm
 
SOCIAL DARWINISM AS A MORAL JUSTIFICATION OF LIBERAL CAPITALISM

Capitalism of the 20th century led to very clear class distinctions in the United States. The Captains of Industry, (depending on whether you saw them as philanthropists or criminals), subscribed to a concept of " Social Darwinism " which promoted a survival of the richest ideal and was reflected in their business dealings. Men like John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, and others (today Bill Gates) have used this social concept to justify their incredible and morally questionable wealth.

“In order for Socialism to be an effective system people must deny their desire to be competitive and greedy or to progress on a higher moral level”. These desires are a part of human nature which, in accordance with capitalist teaching, should be encourage as a driving force for becoming rich. Competition, according to Darwin, is what promotes evolution, thus in a societal context if there is no competition then there would be no evolution. The liberal capitalism pronounces an intervention of the government and intellectuals as a heretic sin and a threat to the whole society.
This hypocritical rule applies until the whole society is caught in its self-destruction at which point the “socialist” interventions are more then welcome allowing the crocks to continue their criminal job on long term basis.
Today, in the West and elsewhere, capitalism together with Social Darwinism is adopted as more pragmatic and efficient social concept feeding off of human characteristics, like greed and competition as a meaning of the life allowing crocks ( “Beasts” – Plato ) to build their new modern slavery kingdoms.

Social Darwinism is an assumption that happiness in the society can be achieved trough competition of the fittest and the most adaptable. Social Darwinism established first in the Victorian era in England, then adopted and strengthened in America, and elsewhere, which states that the strongest or fittest only should survive and flourish in society. This "ethical" concept very well compliments with the idea of corporate capitalistic globalisation and is very suitable for today’s borrowing materialistic shopping societies where people very often massively buy what they don’t need with money that they don’t have. Today Social Darwinism is widely accepted in corporate world and used for increasing productivity of modern slaves: working class or corporate employs.
Social Darwinism, by definition, is the principle that "the survival of the fittest" applies to human ethics and politics just as it does to biological evolution. The theory of Social Darwinism was introduced by Herbert Spencer. The theory was then used by White Protestants, men, and others to proliferate the idea that they were socially and “genetically” superior.
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #129 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 4:05pm
 
Interstingly Athos free market capitalism promotes two things, not just one. It promotes competition between business and employees which empirically IS beneficial as a whole. It also promotes voluntary interaction for mutually perceived benefit IE cooperation.

I fail to see how people trading voluntarily in cooperation and competing to please consumers/employess is immoral.
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #130 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 5:35pm
 
Vuk11 wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 2:14pm:
|dev|null wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 12:22pm:
Perhaps because workers aren't meant to be exploited in a just and fair society?   The social contract is that if you work, you should be paid fairly for your labour.


Every individual has a different idea of what pay is "fair" this is fundamental. If value is subjective (I'm sure we can at least agree on that so we are on the same page can't we?), then whether someone accepts a wage is up to them, not up to you to say what is fair or not. For instance someone who want to buy a house ASAP might view weekend work for normal wages as more valuable to them then refusing to work them. That is up to THEM not YOU as value is subjective.


"Fair" is as far as I am concerned defined in this case as a living wage.  If you can't live on it, it is unfair.  If you are being prevented from being paid the same wage as another person who is doing comparable work because the employer refuses to pay it, that is, I would suggest definitely unfair.

Quote:
If someone voluntarily interacts than they are accepting it and value accepting the proposal more than rejecting it. If people are so worried about unfair hours then choose an employer that doesn't do that. You see if all employers do the exact same thing, then there is massive incentive for an employer to DIP just liittttllleee bit, so as to attract the most productive of workers that would say "hey this guy is offering penalty rates!", if every worker then flocks to him he can then choose the most qualified workers, so it's a win for him and a win for the employees, and a loss for the crowd not offering these hours.


You assume that there is no unequal power relationship between the employer and the employee.  This is patently foolish.  Employers will always attempt to suppress wages as they eat into their profits which they seek to maximise.

Quote:
There can never be collusion in the market as there is too much incentive to undercut for advantage, this is the best thing about competition is that the person being the most competitive wins and the reason they win is for offering what people want! So both win and the people you disagree with lose. I can't stress that enough.


Wrong.  Indeed Adam Smith warned of the dangers of cartels forming to distort the market which is why he saw the need for regulation.

Quote:
Quote:
They still do.   The problem is the workers yet again end up being shafted with their entitlements being often lost because the system believers shareholders' rights take priority over workers' rights.  Angry Angry Angry Angry


Entitlements destroy society, I hope people see this.


No, they do not.  They ensure that workers receive fair recompense for their labour.  They are hard fought for rights that the Government has legislated to ensure are provided by employers.

Quote:
Free market capitalism values co-operation through voluntary trades, and competition to appeal to workers and customers above all else. IF you aren't pleasing workers or customers, the moment an entrepreneur undercuts these fools, they get to pick from the best workers and they get the bulk of customers.


In theory but in practice you have cartels forming which work to prevent full competition and enhance profits for the sellers at the expense of the customers and the employees.  They seek to drive down wages and to maximise the price at the expense of the customer.

Quote:
If people fear so much unfair dismissal than in a free society business would be FORCED by this massive demand to offer in contracts unfair dismissal clauses. If they don't someone will and take all the best employees again.


Employers have resisted for generations, nay, centuries having unfair dismissal clauses in contracts which is why Government has filled the void with legislation.   If employees attempted, individual to have such clauses included they were simply not offered the job in favour of someone who didn't.

As for rating agencies, we've seen how good a job they did during the GFC!  Bloody hopeless!   The only way of preventing exploitation is legislation and of course enforcement agencies which are independent from that of the Employers!   Cheesy Grin Cheesy Grin Cheesy Grin Cheesy Grin Cheesy Grin
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #131 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 5:57pm
 
A lot of people tend to disagree with Adam Smith due to times being different now and economics evolving. Obviously that isn't a refutation to his argument but i'd love to see someone explain how these "cartels" form in the absence of a state? Without using logic that includes causation due to corporations (state created) and direct state actions.

My argument is that these cannot form in a free society due to the incentive to undercut and compete for customers and skilled employees. The difference is the society we have has business receiving special privileges and subsidies whilst unions are becoming militant with the power the state grants them to negatively effect employees that don't  join them.

I can see how they have formed with the above corporate lobbying in direct action via corporations or states. (By state I mean things like privatizing an industry to a sole company or a resource to a small group etc, which is largely different then opening it up to the entire world to compete in)

With the rating agencies and DRO's I'll give examples of some ideas that are in their infancy today. (However most of it is gone into in the article itself which I encourage people to read BEFORE criticizing something at face value)

Ebay and paypal mediate disputes, the RTA in Australia mediates disputes. In australia you have things much more effective than courts. For example TICA the rental blacklist here, what is more of an incentive to you to behave:

A. Not paying rent, skipping out of town when the bill comes around giving the lessor/agent no possible way of serving you with notices and enforcing debt repayment.

B.  Ending up on a rental black list meaning you will be refused tenancy agreements 9/10 times and only accepted by dodgy private agents in dodgy areas.

The same goes for things like not paying your phone/electricity/Car loans etc, if you get a bad enough credit rating; no phone for you, higher premiums for certain things, no loan for you, no contract for you.

Now imagine that carrying over in a free society to contracts etc, in combination with dispute resolution companies that you subscribe to or pay a usage fee to, in order to enforce contracts, resolve disputes etc. It's all much better explained in the article.

I would close with the idea that anything that is now recognized as essential, will have such a demand in a free society that it will be taken care of. People all have the same fears and if every Australian fears losing workers rights then it makes sense that to appease every Australian employers would have to settle this in the multi-generational change to a free society. If every business decided not to offer penalty rates, what do you think would happen the moment one business did? All employees would flock to them and they would have the pickings and choosing of the most qualified for each position, unlike the competitors. If you can't imagine that happening then what horribly negative imagination do you have, is that not a logical conclusion?

With the above idea of DRO's and Credit Agencies, I would like to know how in a free society a cartel could possibly form without, corporate power given to it by the state and without direct state intervention that has created a framework in the past for monopolies.

Cheers.
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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #132 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 6:03pm
 
For any curious this is the article:

http://www.lewrockwell.com/2005/10/stefan-molyneux/the-stateless-society-an-exam...

It contains dispute resolution and also collective services in a free society. (Just one person interpretation of what could solve these problems, think of what 22+ million Australians could come up with? Or close t 7 billion humans could?)

This will explain the whole collusion myth and a few other issues that are illogical in practice IMO (assuming an absence of state coercion and state given corporate powers):



PS. As one of the comments rightly points out, he misses out on explaining vertical monopolies which wouldn't have the same issue of "monopoly" etc
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« Last Edit: Oct 31st, 2013 at 6:37pm by Vuk11 »  

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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #133 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 6:49pm
 
...

...
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« Last Edit: Oct 31st, 2013 at 6:56pm by Chimp_Logic »  

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Re: Does Capitalism Exploit Workers?
Reply #134 - Oct 31st, 2013 at 7:27pm
 
Chimp_Logic wrote on Oct 31st, 2013 at 12:23pm:
I have provided you with a simple first step reference, I have referred to advocates of capitalism who warn about the inherent immorality and un natural self destructive elements that are BUILT IN to the capitalist regime/ I could go on...

You have ignored these points even though they are basic starting points for this important debate.

Your mind seems to be made up on this issue.

So the only things left for me to fire at you are the basal rocks that expose your hypocrisy, your inability to empathise with your fellow human being, your persistent adherence to totalitarianism, your refusal to award basic human rights and freedoms to the working class and treat them as the capitalist slaves that you wish them to be, your deranged lack of social justice.

I could go on - but I wont.

I will allow you to stew in your own ferment - to pick up the pieces of your lunacy and plungement into the abyss of your own cerebral vomit you flowery scoundrel



you referred some who saw the inherent immorality and un natural self destructive elements of capitalism are a better option than socialism or any other economic system. 

Interesting enough its because of him who helped worsen capitalism by enabling government and big business to push down not only small business to the ground but the worker worst of all.

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[b][center]Socialism had been tried on every continent on earth. In light of its results, it's time to question the motives of its advocates.
 
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