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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!warwick!uknet!gdt!mascdb
- From: mascdb@gdr.bath.ac.uk (C D Burdorf)
- Newsgroups: alt.california
- Subject: Re: relocation
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.134752.11526@gdr.bath.ac.uk>
- Date: 23 Nov 92 13:47:52 GMT
- References: <1eg523INNfs2@gap.caltech.edu> <1992Nov20.110910.9551@gdr.bath.ac.uk> <171@steiny.com>
- Organization: School of Mathematics, University of Bath, UK
- Lines: 229
-
- In the referenced article, steiny@steiny.com (Don Steiny) writes:
- >mascdb@gdr.bath.ac.uk (C D Burdorf) writes:
- >
- >>but don't want to admit it.
- >
- > Your statement is presented as a statement of fact, but it seems
- >very ignorant to me. People approach the issue of the meaning of words
- >who have little interest in politics. I have a friend that got a scholarship
- >to Queens at Oxford because if his exceptional work in Political Science
- >and his main area of inquiry was Wittgenstein.
-
- Sorry, but I'm not impressed.
-
- > In fact, I have a book
- >right here on my shelf called "Wittgenstein and Justice" by Hanna Pitkin.
- >It is about applying Wittgenstein's work to political science. The
- >question of what words refer to concerns most philosophers these days.
- >The most widely held theory is that they do not refer to anything.
- >
-
- I guess that explains why the rest of the world has such low regard
- for philosophers these days. It sounds like mental masturbation to me.
-
- > But why bother? If you call Reagan a fascist, or you call Reagan
- >a socialist, what have you done? Nothing. You are just being a trained
- >pigeon.
- >
-
- That's your opinion and you can think whatever you want. Nonetheless,
- I have given you evidence to support that Reagen and Bush used
- slogans, have used economics to enforce social regimentation, and
- have been dictatorial in the way that they have subverted the
- system of checks and balances. Therefore they meet several
- of the standards which makes one a fascist.
-
- Newsgroups: alt.california
- Subject: Re: relocation
- Summary:
- Expires:
- References: <168@steiny.com> <1992Nov19.115307.1651@gdr.bath.ac.uk> <169@steiny.com>
- Sender:
- Followup-To:
- Distribution:
- Organization: School of Mathematics, University of Bath, UK
- Keywords:
-
- In the referenced article, steiny@steiny.com (Don Steiny) writes:
- >mascdb@gdr.bath.ac.uk (C D Burdorf) writes:
- >
- >>In the referenced article, steiny@steiny.com (Don Steiny) writes:
- >>>mascdb@gdr.bath.ac.uk (C D Burdorf) writes:
- >>>
-
- >>He had a chance to get rid of Paul Volker, but he reappointed him.
- >>It was a rubber stamp approval of high interest rates.
- >
- > That is not what you said in the first place, you can see that
- >what you wrote is a factual misstatement. I cannot read your mind.
-
- I'm sorry, but I think you're nitpicking. I say that Reagen was
- responsible for high interest rates, because he reappointed
- Paul Volker who brought interest rates up in the first place
- and kept them there. I therefore hold Regean responsible.
-
- >
- > You might not be aware that international cooperation in exchange rates
- >has been growing for some time. Having an independent Federal Reserve
- >system is considered good policy by one and all. I do not know for sure
- >why Reagan did it. I can think of other plausable reasons. Besides,
- >are arguing that Volker did the wrong thing?
-
- Yeah well have you been following what's been going on in the European
- Exchange Mechanism? So-called international cooperation of exchange
- rates doesn't work. I think Volker did the wrong thing. Double-digit
- inflation is a problem, but one that could have been delt with in a
- more gradual way. Instead interest rates went to 20% and it drove
- a lot of businesses under and threw a lot of people out of work.
- I see this as a somewhat economic fascism in that the rich got hurt
- very little , maybe they had to postpone buying that new Maserati, but
- the people at the lower end ended up on the streets.
-
- >
- >>When you're out of work or have to take a low-paying service job instead of
- >> a well-paying >manufacturing or professional job, it doesn't matter that
- >>inflation is low.
- >
- > Why is that?--You accuse me of making unsupported statements. This
- >statement makes no sense to me. Inflation hurts everyone. A decrease
- >in the spending power of people on fixed incomes affects the whole economy,
- >for instance.
-
- Well, lets put it this way would you rather flip burgers at McDonalds
- or work on an assembly line at GM.
-
- >
- > Besides, there are many high paying service jobs. Ross Perot, for
- >instance, made millions of dollars by providing system integration services
- >to the US Government.
-
- That's not what I mean by service jobs. Service jobs tend to be in
- the food industry, sales, etc.
-
- > The
- >biggest improvements in a while in the US auto industry have been in the
- >last few years as the companies are learning to compete globally.
- >
-
- Personally, I don't like small, wimpy, unsafe japanese cars.
-
- >
- > It is very sad. But I am saying the the reasons you are giving and
- >not the reasons you give. In California, especially in Southern
- >California, the downsizing of the defense industry is causing job losses.
- >The internationalization of labor is perhaps also causing job losses. But
-
- >I do not think that this is something a politician can do something about.
-
- I disagree. Instead of throwing people out of work, there should
- have been a program to move workers in the defense industry into
- other areas. Our best scientists and engineers went to the defense industry,
- if there was some attempt to move them into the domestic economy doing
- things like designing better cars and hifi's and cameras and robotic
- assembly lines, the country would benifit. Instead they are treated
- as expendible dead weight and chucked out. I see this again as a
- fascist attitude.
-
- >I have been maintaining that calling Bush and Reagan "fascists" and blaiming
- >everything them obscures the bigger picture.
-
- I don't think it obscures anything. I think that the root cause of
- a lot of the problems in the US, violence in the cities, unemployment, etc.
- has a lot to do with the fascist tendencies of the people at the top.
- I have presented lots of instances.
-
-
-
- > Patronizing? Elistist? Huh? You seem to have a habit of
- >calling people names using words you do not fully understand how to use.
- >I did not say your views are "wrong." I am philosophically committed
- >to relativism at this point in my life. You are very defensive.
- >As for "elitist"--how many of the downtrodden masses have time to
- >read "alt.california" on USENET, anyway? Who do you think your audience
- >is here anyway?
-
- I know exactly what I'm saying. I think you are being patronizing
- and elitist, because you think you've got all the semantics worked
- out, but nothing is that definite.
-
- >
- >>There's BS in the US media and just because the Wall Street Journal
- >>says something doesn't mean its right.
- >
- > [The Economist is not the US media. It is an English
- >publication--but what the heck, what with riots and Iraqgates, no one
- >can tell the difference anymore.]
-
- It's British actually, and quite conservative in tone. My attack
- on mainstream media has to do with the fact that it is all supported
- by the corporate empires, so it is therefore unlikely to
- print anything that conflicts very radically with it.
-
- >
- > I think this sentence shows our fundemental difference. If you
- >read what I said, I never said that the Wall Street Journal or The
- >Economist were "right." I simply said that there was an alternate
- >point of view with strong arguments to support it.
-
- I can respect your view. I just have a problem when you
- nitpick at what I have to say and then try and make it look like
- I'm totally out of touch with reality.
-
- >
- > The freer movement of goods and capital, changes in the nature of
- >capital, better telecommunications, computer use, ..., all these things have
- >contributed greater internationalization of the market place. That
- >means that if I need someone to put a frozzle-grommet on my widget, then
- >to a greater degree, I can look anywhere in the world for that worker.
- >I can make my decisions based who is cheapest. This means that Joe
- >Shmoo in Little Rock is competing with people in the rest of the world,
- >and in some places, like Mexico.
-
- Interesting choice of places. I just think that the US government
- should be more interested in the good of all its people instead
- of just the consumer.
-
- > It is cheaper to live than here so they
- >can pay people less.
-
- It's also easier for them to exploit their workers and
- pollute the environment without repercussions.
-
- > It seems that if we restrict the ability of our
- >companies in the US to use this global labor pool their labor costs
- >will be higher and thus the cost of US goods will be higher.
-
- Yeah, but the general population is better off if everyone is
- working even if the consumer doesn't get the cheapest goods
- especially if it is the result of exploitation.
-
- > If they
- >cost more, all other things being equal, people will not buy them. If the
- >companies do not sell their products, then they will not make any money
- >thus, handing the industry to foreign interests. It is a paradoxical
- >situation. This is an example of an issue for which I do not see a simple
- >solution.
-
-
- >was a huge job training program. In addition, money was allocated for
- >research, and such things as ARPA and the Internet, which connects us all
- >for this discussion, were significantly funded by defense spending. And
- >people did not mind that much because of the cold war. Now that that
- >channel is being drastically reduced it is having a big impact on the
- >economy. There does not seem to be a simple solution to this
- >either. Should the money be funnelled into R&D the way it was done
- >in Japan? Which industries are to be the recepients of this munificence?
- >Which companies? I am sure everyone has their favorite.
-
- Well, I don't think its very humane to throw scientists
- and engineers in the defense industry out on the streets.
- They should be moved into domestic industry.
-
- >
- > Calling Bush a fascist and blaming everything on him is addressing
- >the problem at too high a level to be useful. It grossly oversimplifies
- >things. So what if he is? Maybe he beats Barabra? So what? What
- >effect does that have on the internationalization of the labor pool?
- >
-
- One's attitudes can explain their actions.
-