StorminNorman
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Master Hand > Invisible Hand > Dead Man's Hand > Regulatory Hand
Did I ever compare a regulated country to North Korea?
Norway is free because the government has decided to allow freedom in certain areas - like free speech. They are not completely free though and the government has the ability to restrict rights if they so choose (it just happens that in a Democracy, it takes a great deal of political power to do so - as well as a goal in doing so).
No. The key is a government that respects individual rights - such a country, like the one America was meant to be, would not have a military dictatorship that abuses the rights of it's citizens.
We won't know if it's possible unless we try, right? You know what we DO know is not practical? The mixed/fascist economy that we are left with today. Or have you not noticed the incredible amounts of debt that has been accumulated by America, Canada and Europe?
You can choose to care about whatever you want, it really doesn't matter to me.
A free market wouldn't necessarily prevent the oil leak - though what's the point in regulation if it couldn't do it either?
What we have seen is that regulation doesn't do anything except raise the prices of goods, curtailing innovation and limiting competition for companies. If the purpose of regulation is to prevent lead from getting into our toys, or disease in our food, or oil in our water - and yet we still get lead in our toys, salmonella and BP, what purpose does it serve?
You know, besides enriching the pockets of politicians?
You are asking you same old loaded questions with crazy assumptions.
The MMS is the administration's regulatory agency. It's not over or under regulation, they didn't enforce it properly. It's not the magical Phlebotinum people make it out to be. The fact is, I posted the public's expectation of Obama here is absurd. There is little he can do.
But if you are the believer in regulation will solve the shortcomings of the market, then I point out where they could have solved it then and there with the MMS, but they didn't. Pro-regulators should be bashing the administration on this - but I wouldn't. It gives a false sense security and moral hazard on controls. Just like the Canadian banks right now. Leveraged up 20 times because the government haz their backs (even the worst bailed out banks were at least half of this leverage).
Which brings us to this: this is an example of property rights fail. The government should not be granting out free license like this to BP to begin with. BP Should have been forced to deal with with the businessmen and fisherman. They would need to reach settlement on conditions, provisions and liabilities etc... They have all the incentive in the world micro and inspect stuff like this because it would damage their business and livelihood. But there was no respect to property rights here, because the government created the moral hazard. All the government manage to do is usurp their property right and limit the liability. Now taxpayers could very well be on the leash for this, all in the name of the mighty regulatory hand who knows better.
Except you do realize that if the Norwegian government just got rid of freedom speech, they likely would become very unpopular and may even be overthrown.
Freedom can exist due to social convention, some things are so enshrined in a society due to social convention that getting rid of them would be almost impossible.
The fact remains capitalism is a economic system, not a political one, you can have a free enterprise system with democracy or a dictatorship.
Let ask you this, do you think its right that some companies in the west set up shop in countries where governments don't care about their people? Is that not exploiting tyranny to make yourself richer?
Except if you are wrong, you would end up creating a cyber punk nightmare society.
Fine but should anyone take your arguments seriously if they are based on unproven ideal?
Yeah and murders still happen despite the fact murder is illegal, does mean we should just make murder legal just because murders still happen even if they are illegal? How would making murder legal prevent more murders?
But if true capitalism existed in the first, wouldn't these companies ensure that we wouldn't have massive oil spills or lead based toys in the first place? Wouldn't there be no need for any kind of regulation, if some companies would stop doing irresponsible things, but they do these things don't they?
How do you know these companies would make products that are safer and not damage the environment with fewer rules and enforcements, shouldn't they be doing that anyway? This spill is bad for business and was caused gross negligence on the part of BP, so why did it happen?
So why did the spill happened? Simple, the same reason hard core Libertarianism fails as an ideology, greed doesn't make people rational, it makes them irrational. BP thought they could save a few bucks with these short cuts they took, they let their greed their good judgment, that often happens with greed, its why greed is considered a vice, it makes people think short term, not long term and makes them ignore important details.
I mentioned that. But I don't see why you would be happy with a government that has the ABILITY to take away freedom of speech, but chooses not to use it.
In a capitalist government, the ability would not exist.
Capitalism transcends economics - capitalism is the economic implementation of individual rights. It is true, you can have free markets without democracy (it would probably be easier to have free markets without democracy), but I would argue that a dictatorship that protects individual rights and stays out of the economy is significantly superior than a democracy with a controlled economy.
Yes, I think it's right for companies in the west to go to countries that have looser labor laws. I think it's wrong that companies are forced to do that due to tyrannical American labor laws.
Okay.
Yes, because I history shows that the more respect for individual rights you show, the more prosperous your country is. Furthermore, capitalist have tended to be right in predicting the collapsing of the Western economy. For example, Dox has been right on almost everything.
Regulations are not in place to punish wrong doing, regulations are put in place to prevent wrong doing from ever being able to happen. Laws against murder are meant to punish that do murder. You are trying to compare apples to Applebees.
In no way is capitalism a magic wand that wipes humanity free of their flaws. There will be greedy companies in a capitalist system or a mixed economy. There will be good companies.
Regulation, however, doesn't prevent greedy companies from being greedy and ****ing up. Regulation does require industries to hire lobbyists and bribe politicians. Regulation does alter how a business operates - for example, its hard to know if the leak would be so deep (and thus so hard to plug) if there weren't Federal restrictions on where to drill.
Well, that was fast. Barely 10 minutes into Thursday's landmark congressional testimony where BP CEO Tony Hayward and other leading company executives are revisiting the Gulf Coast oil spill before a subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee the first controversial statement has entered the record.
And no, it didn't come from the gaffe-prone BP brass. Instead, GOP Rep. Joe Barton of Texas the ranking member on the House Energy Committee made a decisive splash in his opening remarks. A staunch conservative who has a long record of backing oil industry interests, Barton apologized to BP CEO Tony Hayward for the "shakedown" the Obama White House pulled on the company. (Barton has received more than $1.5 million in campaign donations from the oil industry, according to Open Secrets, a nonpartisan watchdog group.)
"I'm not speaking for anybody in the House of Representatives but myself," Barton explained, "but I'm ashamed of what happened in the White House yesterday. I think it is a tragedy of the first proportion that a private corporation can be subjected to what I would characterize as a shakedown. In this case a $20 billion shakedown."
[Photos: Obama meets with BP executives]
Wrapping up, Barton said: "I apologize. I do not want to live in a country where any time a citizen or a corporation does something that is legitimately wrong, is subject to some sort of political pressure that is, again, in my words amounts to a shakedown, so I apologize."
Who the hell said there was no regulation in BP. What part of private property do you not understand. It's not the samething as big government.Like I said I like liking asking extreme questions to gauge someone's opinion, its just fun. No point being completely serious on this forum.
And if there was no regulation on BP is this case, they still would have the bad casing, so what's the point of your criticism?
The fact is almost no one would be calling for any kind of regulation if companies didn't act in a irresponsible manner in the first place.
True capitalism exists, shouldn't these companies have prevented stuff themselves? This spill wasn't a simple mistake, it was gross negligence.
Wouldn't denying BP drilling rights in that area have been considered big government and over regulation? What is big government and over regulation and what isn't, is there any absolute definition for these loaded made up political terms?
I can't help but laugh at the people who are trying to use this situation as an example of why we should have less regulation. Completely and utterly ridiculous. They're so mindlessly devoted to their political mantra that they seek to turn any major problem into one of government intervention and interference.
Good drones.
So because it's not 100% effective we should do away with it? Do you honestly believe that these types of occurrences would become LESS frequent in the absence of regulation?Oh, definitely. Because, after all, it's clear that regulation saves the day. After all, it's not as if the oil spill happened in spite of government regulation.
Regulation doesn't keep oil out of water, it doesn't keep salmonella out of food, it doesn't keep lead out of toys, it doesn't keep poison out of Shrek glasses, etc. etc. etc.
Good companies do things right, bad companies **** up and regulation pads the pockets of politicians, limits innovation and increases prices for consumers.
I agree with this, most definitely. Quality over quantity.The actual quality of it and enforcement is more important than adding more.
I can't help but laugh at the people who are trying to use this situation as an example of why we should have less regulation. Completely and utterly ridiculous. They're so mindlessly devoted to their political mantra that they seek to turn any major problem into one of government intervention and interference.
Good drones.
So because it's not 100% effective we should do away with it? Do you honestly believe that these types of occurrences would become LESS frequent in the absence of regulation?
You've presented this line of reasoning before, and every time you do I can't help but wonder how, in your mind, it makes sense. The logic is so flawed it makes my head spin.
I think you're being more than naive.When BP is destroyed due to the finical consequences of their cost-cutting measures, yes - I don't you need regulation to prevent other energy companies from not making the same mistakes BP made.
Regulations are always reactionary - we are going to get regulation to prevent this exact situation from happening again. Of course, such regulation is unnecessary as the real consequences are enough to prevent this situation from happening again.
Again, good companies don't need regulations to do the right thing. Bad companies are going to try to influence regulations and use every loophole they can (like BP did). Regulation isn't the cause for good companies to be good, and it doesn't keep bad companies from being bad.
Did anyone hear the news that BP's CEO Tony Hayward is attending a luxury yacht race today?
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Who the hell said there was no regulation in BP. What part of private property do you not understand. It's not the samething as big government.
I said it should have been treated in a properties right issue to begin with; fishermen would have owned a stake and have conditions (such as constant monitoring and getting third parties involved) on drilling and/or prevented it even. I said they have more incentive to keep things guarded since their business and livelihood are stacked in it. Whereas the government DO NOT. Without private property or respect towards it, there is no market period. Even if you disagree with the freemarket, it's hard to argue anti-private property ideas with the freemarket gelling together.
There was no respect for property rights here. They went ahead and usurped everything, give thumbs up to whomever they choose (aka BP), limited the liability, then created a moral hazard under the false pretense government regulation protected everything. Regulation is not some phlebotinum. They simply didn't enforce what already existed. The actual quality of it and enforcement is more important than adding more. And you guys thinking doing the same thing will result in something different?
This is why the finance industry is such a huge joke. They hire lawyers to regulate the financials, and they think adding more will change things.
I think you're being more than naive.