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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!concert!duke!gazit
- From: gazit@duke.cs.duke.edu (Hillel Gazit)
- Newsgroups: soc.men
- Subject: Re: family"* than Pro-Choicers!
- Message-ID: <725779572@lear.cs.duke.edu>
- Date: 31 Dec 92 05:26:13 GMT
- References: 725575767@lear.cs.duke.edu> <1992Dec30.225121.17075@panix.com>
- Reply-To: gazit@cs.duke.edu (Hillel)
- Organization: Nefolet shel nemushot (Fallout of Wimps)
- Lines: 120
-
-
- | Gordon, I asked you that following question several times,
- | and so far you refused to answer:
- | "Do you think that a woman should have a right to have as many kids
- | as she wants regardless of economic considerations?"
-
- In article <1992Dec30.225121.17075@panix.com> gcf@panix.com
- (Gordon Fitch) writes:
-
- >I can't answer senseless questions. This is like asking
- >"Do you think a woman should have the right to fly to the
- >moon, regardless of the consequence to green cheese?"
-
- Depends who pays for the ticket...
-
- As you know pretty well, there are several rights which are usually
- defended regardless of the question if it is "good" for society;
- free speech for example.
-
- I ask you if you see the right to have as many kids as you want,
- regardless of the price to society, as one of those rights.
-
- >tutions. For the others, having a child is an act laden
- >with heavy economic consequences even if someone foots
- >all the external bills -- because there's something
- >called child care that turns out to be a lot of work.
-
- If the deal is so bad then why so many women take it?
- (About 1/4 of the kids born in poverty out of wedlock.)
-
- This is not a rhetorical question, and I'm interested in your answer.
- An explanation why the phenomenon is much more common today than
- 40 years ago will also be nice.
-
- >In other words, the question -- which alludes to the
- >mythical welfare queen -- is empty of content.
-
- Why the people who claim that there is no "mythical welfare queen,"
- object to any law that will cut her benefits?
-
- Something just does not fit.
-
- >That's why Ms. Ashmore's story is dumb, and your constant
- >repetition of it is dumb.
-
- The point in the story is that the same women who fight so hard to
- preserve a woman's rights to decide not to have an abortion, not
- to put the newborn to adoption and take the father to cleaners will
- not support her if they will be taken to the cleaners.
-
- >Why not roll for higher stakes sometime?
-
- Describe the model of the society you suggest, and I'll try to look
- for bugs. If you can point out some working models that can be
- checked, and show stability, then it will be even better.
-
- BTW The failure of the kibbutz system in Israel convinced
- me that no socialism can survive for too long. I wonder if
- you ever tried to understand why this failure has happened.
-
- hg:
- | Before the industrial revolution *most* of the population grew food.
- | Today 3% of the population grows enough food to feed all of us. Now
- | we enter a new industrial revolution, a robotic one.
-
- | More and more work is done today by robots. We will probably be able
- | to keep the same GNP even if the population will shrink by adding
- | more robots. And if there will be a real shortage in workers,
- | then we can always "import" more immigrants (it actually happens
- | today in engineering because the Politically Correct public schools
- | just can't "produce" enough students who can do math).
-
- >Fascinating. Robots and foreigners are going to pay your
- >social security. Why?
-
- Because they like the deal.
-
- >What about all the criminals and
- >barbarians you've proposed we raise? Maybe they'll want
- >your check.
-
- There are three basic things that can be done:
- 1) Trying to educate them. That could be the best solution, but
- I don't think that it is going to happen. The NYC education
- system that cost more than $6,000 per year per student, and
- turns out kids who start to multiply before they can add, is
- an example of how a public education system which is governed
- by politicians look like.
-
- 2) Paying them some ransom so they will not have to be criminals.
- Welfare works like that, to some extent, but I think that even
- NY (the state with highest state taxes in the nation) has run
- out of ransom money.
-
- 3) More security. Making crime so unprofitable that the criminals
- will decide that it does not worth the risk.
-
- >I'm not worried. As I said, I'm fifty-three. I'll almost
- >certainly be gone by the time the philosophy of unfatherhood,
- >unmotherhood, and total irresponsibility for social
- >consequences reaps its full reward.
-
- "All the criminals and barbarians" are already here, you know...
- Look what happened in L.A., and see how the system that your
- generation created "works." If you still miss the point
- take a ride uptown in a NYC subway.
-
- >If I were twenty I'd be worried.
-
- I don't think that things will get much worse. The public money
- starts to dry up, and so people are going to learn much faster
- about the consequences of total irresponsibility.
-
- > )*( Gordon Fitch )*( gcf@panix.com )*(
-
- Hillel gazit@cs.duke.edu
-
- "You clearly have problems with the concept of responsibility.
- Awful people must be responsible, but nice people must not."
- -- Clay Bond
-