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Lootifer wrote:Automated (machines are the producers) Sustainability (and they can keep producing forever).
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












Lootifer wrote:@ Saxi OP:
I voted yes; but I firmly believe nature can be overcome and utopia is possible.
Firstly, though, we need to evolve (through the efficient use of markets as BBS always craps on about) up to the point (and probably beyond) of automated sustainability.
Automated (machines are the producers) Sustainability (and they can keep producing forever).





Lootifer wrote:@ Saxi OP:
I voted yes; but I firmly believe nature can be overcome and utopia is possible.
Firstly, though, we need to evolve (through the efficient use of markets as BBS always craps on about) up to the point (and probably beyond) of automated sustainability.
Automated (machines are the producers) Sustainability (and they can keep producing forever).



















Lootifer wrote:@ Saxi OP:
I voted yes; but I firmly believe nature can be overcome and utopia is possible.
Firstly, though, we need to evolve (through the efficient use of markets as BBS always craps on about) up to the point (and probably beyond) of automated sustainability.
Automated (machines are the producers) Sustainability (and they can keep producing forever).


































huamulan wrote:The reason there will always be poor people is because there will always be people happy to exploit those around them and live amongst inequality. Is the person reading this post happy to pool their wealth with one disadvantaged resident of Sub-Saharan Africa and then split the pot equally?
No. The world of the 'haves' is a world in which material wealth is a carrot to be held above the heads of the 'have nots'. The 'haves' are either aware that they are behaving in an exploitative manner, and they don't care, or they are unaware, so sure are they that their wealth is the result of their hard work and raw ability and that the explanation for disadvantage lies solely in the behavior of the disadvantaged.
People are taught from birth that you have to 'earn' or 'deserve' wealth. That the idea of simply sharing the world's resources equally is ludicrous, because some people have achieved more than others and that their achievement entitles them to horde the world's resources. And they in turn pass this system down to their children, who grow up into people who tell homeless men to 'get jobs'. People frame the world around them as a competition, and with this mentality people will never strive for equality. And so until people stop seeing life as a competition there will always be poor.





BigBallinStalin wrote:You won't get there if the currency system is inherently unstable. See: central banking and the government-enforced monopoly on monies, e.g. federal reserve on federal reserve notes.








huamulan wrote:Is it exploitative if I pay a foreign worker a fraction of what I would pay a domestic worker, when the domestic worker works fewer hours and under better employment conditions than the foreign worker?

















huamulan wrote:It is such an enormous plate of shit to say that poor people are poor due to their low intelligence, lack of ability or whatever other 'I can stop caring now' clause you feel like pasting onto their CV.










































saxitoxin wrote:For Cosmo Barros, a 37-year-old bartender who works in the down-at-heel neighbourhood of Brás in central São Paulo, finding ways to save money for his family of six, which survives on R$2,000 ($1,038) a month, is vital.
“We can’t be more than five minutes in the shower. To save water and electricity, I have to turn the shower on, get wet, then turn it off, soap myself, then turn it on again,” he says.
Despite this seemingly frugal attitude Mr Barros still likes to splash out. He once spent R$300 on Carolina Herrera 212 eau de cologne and aftershave balm, for example, after managing to persuade the shop owner, who is a friend, to give him a discount.
According to on-the-ground interviews in São Paulo and an online survey with 1,000 consumers nationwide, carried out by the Financial Times’ Brazil research service Brazil Confidential, spending this kind of proportion of monthly wages on beauty and personal care products is the norm among lower-income consumers, who value both brand image and quality.
ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/4402bc0c-95eb-11e1-9d9d-00144feab49a.html
Is poverty a law of nature?














huamulan wrote:So what if I throw a drowning man a life jacket, pull him to the side of my boat and then say: 'Hey, one last thing. It's a lot of effort hauling you up. That part of the rescue will cost $500.'?
He has a choice. He is perfectly free to turn down my offer and attempt to swim to shore. So I am not exploiting him?

















jimboston wrote:saxitoxin wrote:For Cosmo Barros, a 37-year-old bartender who works in the down-at-heel neighbourhood of Brás in central São Paulo, finding ways to save money for his family of six, which survives on R$2,000 ($1,038) a month, is vital.
“We can’t be more than five minutes in the shower. To save water and electricity, I have to turn the shower on, get wet, then turn it off, soap myself, then turn it on again,” he says.
Despite this seemingly frugal attitude Mr Barros still likes to splash out. He once spent R$300 on Carolina Herrera 212 eau de cologne and aftershave balm, for example, after managing to persuade the shop owner, who is a friend, to give him a discount.
According to on-the-ground interviews in São Paulo and an online survey with 1,000 consumers nationwide, carried out by the Financial Times’ Brazil research service Brazil Confidential, spending this kind of proportion of monthly wages on beauty and personal care products is the norm among lower-income consumers, who value both brand image and quality.
ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/4402bc0c-95eb-11e1-9d9d-00144feab49a.html
Is poverty a law of nature?
It's funny... the OP's original quote has less to do with the question of wether or not there will always be poor... and more to do with the idea that many "poor" people spend significant money on "beauty and personal care products" when they can't afford to feed and house their families.
Show maybe we should talk about that.
Are these "poor" people being exploited by marketing firms... or are they just stoopid?
I can afford brand name shit... but more often than not I 'opt for the generic products. "No Ad" sunblock works just as well as Coppertone... and generic Ibuprofen has the same chemical make-up as Advil.
"Image" matters if it can impact your opportunities to grow in your field... this does matter sometimes and at those times it's often worthwhile to 'splurge'... because in doing so you are creating economic opportunities for yourself. Outside that... if the choice is cologne or bologna for my kids... I go with the bologna.

















Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












huamulan wrote:Again, you just prove my point. A man is drowning and you think it is only fair to demand money after rescuing him? What is wrong with saving someone out of compassion? I once had to intervene and chase two rapists away from a woman they wanted to attack. I took a great risk. The attackers might have been armed and attacked me. Should I have visited her the next day and asked for money?
huamulan wrote:This is what I mean when I say that there will always be a rich-poor divide as long as people view life as a competition and feel that the hording of resources is acceptable. You seem to feel that helping another human in distress makes you entitled to compensation. You are worthy of greater material wealth because you got off your ass rather than watching someone die.
Say you had the exact same material wealth as the person you rescued. After rescuing them and pursuing compensation you will have become richer than them. 'I took a risk' is how you are justifying this newly created inequality. To you, creation of inequality would be justified in this circumstance.
As long as there are people who feel it is okay to create inequality and live amongst inequality, inequality will always exist. And there will always be poor.
huamulan wrote:As long as there are people who feel it is okay to create inequality and live amongst inequality, inequality will always exist. And there will always be poor.








































pmchugh wrote:Communism anyone?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












Lootifer wrote:I voted yes; but I firmly believe nature can be overcome
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












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