Re: A Libertine Question (fwd)

Forwarded message:
Date: Fri, 2 Aug 1996 22:05:06 -0700 (PDT) From: Sandy Sandfort <sandfort@crl.com> Subject: Re: A Libertine Question (fwd)
And any insurance company with a whit of sense would charge you rates so high that your much touted small vendors and many of the medium sized vendors currently in business would not exist. You think governments are bad? Wait till you see a bunch of bean counters racing a profit margin. In such a situation we wouldn't even have the opportunity for input into the system via constitutions, charters, and votes. Just imagine how much support a Japanese insurance company would provide its clients in regards to the current epidemic in Japan, absolutely none because it is better the little vendor go out of business than the insurance company.
Apparently Jim does not understand that the "race for profit margin" is what LOWERS the prices of goods and services. You might check out HUMAN ACTION by von Mises. Anyway, as I said in my previous post.
Really? Then would you mind explaining why costs rise over time instead of going down? Compare the cost of almost anything over time and what happens? The price goes up. Insurance has become involved in the medical industry, what happened? The cost has gone through the roof. The airplane industry was deregulated in the late 70's, what happened? The price of a ticket went up and more and more airlines went out of business because of lagging sales. In many states (such as Texas) insurance was made mandatory, what happened? The cost of automobile insurance went up. The telephone companies were broken up and 'privatized' in the 80's and what happened? The cost of phone service has gone up and the rate of new service introduction has gone down. In almost any case you care to mention where a monopoly or near-monopoly market exists and is deregulated the cost of operation has gone up.
It would be nice if businesses were offered that choice
I'm confident that the market solution would be far cheaper and less violent they injecting the coercive state apparatus into a volutary transactions between PEOPLE.
If this is so then by your own argument, business are operated by people therefor they are people, the government should conform to this model since it is operated by people also (by your argument). Therefore governments have rights (clearly incorrect). Governments have duties and responsibilities, under our Constitution the government is given no right. As a matter of fact if there is a disagreement or unclear point the 10th says specificaly that the government does not get to resolve it but rather the states or the people. Clearly the founding fathers were drawing a distinction between the people operating a system and the system itself.
I own 2 businesses...none are equivalent to my person.
So? They are owned and operated by people.
Yes, but they are not people any more than my ownership and operation of my motor vehicle makes it a person. Is your contention that because I own and operate a computer it should be given rights? This is sorta funny, I can see it now... "Your honor we would like to call Mr. Choate's 1985 Mustang to the stand to give testimony." "Mr. Choate's 1986 Mustang, you have been found guilty of speeding and reckless driving." Hey, come to think of it, this would make a great defence for many things. "But your honor, my automobile has rights and is considered a person, therefore you can't hold me responsible for running over those six nuns and two infants. I was simply along for the ride. The only reason that I was in the vehicle was that I was afraid to open the door and jump at 120 MPH." Yup, I definately like where this is going... I can see a cop reading my computer it's Miranda and waiting till Hell freezes over for a positive responce. Just think, all those dead cars...er persons...in the auto...er people-crusher... We should bring those monsters up on charges for killing people. Talk about mass murder.
Businesses are a system of rules and procedures...
Made and enforced by PEOPLE. Jim is begging the question.
Which question would that be? "Should businesses be considered people with the same rights and priviliges?" If so then it is clearly a negative answer. The Constitution does not accept that premise and the law does not accept that premise. If a business is found guilty of wrong doing do they put it in jail? No, they put the persons involved in jail. Clearly the courts are drawing a distinction between a system and those who operate it. Does the constitution ever mention business or commercial enterprise in equality with persons? Does this equality mean that I need to go the courthouse and get a DBA in order to legaly exist in Texas as a business must? Consider my dog, Reef, she is owned and operated by a person (I feed her, walk her, clean up her messes, teach her tricks, even kill her if I choose - though I can't be cruel to her) does this mean she is a person? Sounds like the original proposition, that businesses should be awarded the same rights as people because they are owned and operated by people, is a reduction to absurtity.
Would you seriously give my dog a vote?
Gee, I don't know your dog. His understanding of economics couldn't be much more rudimentary. (Okay, it was a cheap shot, but it was a silly question.)
If I may, I would like to use a quote from the Transformers movie, "You obviously don't understand the situation then." Tata. Jim Choate

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SANDY SANDFORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C'punks, On Sat, 3 Aug 1996, Jim Choate's dog wrote:
Really? Then would you mind explaining why costs rise over time instead of going down?
Gladly. Prices rise over time because of inflation of the money supply. While it is possible for private actors to temporarily inflate the money supply (e.g., extension of credit by banks), only the government can increase the money supply indefinitely. Inflation is the most insidious form of "taxation." It steals silently and punishes the savings in favor of consumption.
Insurance has become involved in the medical industry, what happened? The cost has gone through the roof. The airplane industry was deregulated in the late 70's, what happened? The price of a ticket went up...yada yada yada.
Technically, Jim's logical fallacy is called /post hoc, ergo propter hoc/, after this, therefore on account of this.
If this is so then by your own argument, business are operated by people therefor they are people...
Nope, that's not what I said. This fallacy is called a "straw man." It is a weak or mistated opposing argument set up by a politician or debator, etc., in order that he may attack it and gain an easy, showy victory. Since you have mistated my position, the balance of your argument is irrelevant. (But thanks for playing.)
Is your contention that because I own and operate a computer it should be given rights?
Nope. Whatever gave you that idea?
Businesses are a system of rules and procedures...
Made and enforced by PEOPLE. Jim is begging the question.
Which question would that be? "Should businesses be considered people with the same rights and priviliges?"
Nope. You just don't get it, do you?
Sounds like the original proposition, that businesses should be awarded the same rights as people because they are owned and operated by people, is a reduction to absurtity.
More straw men. From what orfice was that proposition pulled?
If I may, I would like to use a quote from the Transformers movie,
Could these be the source of Jim's legal and economic knowledge? You be the judge. S a n d y ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
participants (2)
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Jim Choate
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Sandy Sandfort