Re: timmy waxes a widdle on AP

At 08:11 PM 9/17/96 -0700, Vladimir Z. Nuri wrote:
but I'm still a bit confused about those prices. what determines them, anyway? risk to the assassin? it seems that it ought to be as easy to snuff out one person as it would another. e.g. everybody walks alone out at night at different times, it seems.
Although government services to the rich and poor cost about the same, the quality is radically different. Thus the risk involved in killing a poor person is vastly less than the risk involved in killing a middle class person. This is most noticeable in education, where black children are kept in holding pens with leaky roofs, masquerading as schools, for a cost that would suffice to build classrooms with a hot tub in each classroom and a pentium on every desk, even if we burnt the classroom down with the equipment inside every year and and replaced it every year. On the other hand, food, clothing, and transport, being provided for money by the free market, tend to be roughly equal for rich and poor. --------------------------------------------------------------------- | We have the right to defend ourselves | http://www.jim.com/jamesd/ and our property, because of the kind | of animals that we are. True law | James A. Donald derives from this right, not from the | arbitrary power of the state. | jamesd@echeque.com

On Sat, 21 Sep 1996, James A. Donald wrote:
At 08:11 PM 9/17/96 -0700, Vladimir Z. Nuri wrote:
but I'm still a bit confused about those prices. what determines them, anyway? risk to the assassin? it seems that it ought to be as easy to snuff out one person as it would another. e.g. everybody walks alone out at night at different times, it seems.
Although government services to the rich and poor cost about the same, the quality is radically different. Thus the risk involved in killing a poor person is vastly less than the risk involved in killing a middle class person.
I think it is more likely an us-vs.-them mentality, rather than the cost of educating the person in question. If someone much poorer than you is killed in a poor neighborhood, you don't feel as threatened - it is one of "them" - If someone of equal or greater socio-economic background suffers a violent death, you begin to think "it could happen to me, too." Now it is a matter of "us." The higher up the scale you go, the more people on the "us" side of the coin, with more money/political clout as well. This increases the demand to apprehend the killer, which increases the risk to the killer, hence, a higher price for a hit on a target in a higher socio-economic position. It is not unusual for the investigation of drug-related murders to be lax; the "tax-paying" majority often says "let them bump each other off." With lax enforcement, lack of public outcry, there's less risk. The price is lower. Now if it is the lawyer that lives just down the street ... Ooops. Bad choice of profession. :) Bad wombat. No biscuit. g'nite, all.

Rabid Wombat <wombat@mcfeely.bsfs.org> writes:
I think it is more likely an us-vs.-them mentality, rather than the cost of educating the person in question. If someone much poorer than you is killed in a poor neighborhood, you don't feel as threatened - it is one of "them" - If someone of equal or greater socio-economic background suffers a violent death, you begin to think "it could happen to me, too."
I was reading the other day about the lessons learned from the one-time tax refund in 1975. Most consumers realized that this is a one-time deal and saved most of it, rather than spent it. On the other hand, after Reagan's tax cuts the consumers spent much of their newly retained income because they believed that the lower tax rate would continue for a few years. Likewise once an occasional gubment official in Mexico is assassinated often enough for the population to perceive public service as being a hazardous profession, they'll have trouble recruiting the replacements. Assassinations won't work as long as they're perceived by the public as zero-probability events. The public perception depends on other factors besides the numbers or the frequency of the hits. --- Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM Brighton Beach Boardwalk BBS, Forest Hills, N.Y.: +1-718-261-2013, 14.4Kbps
participants (3)
-
dlv@bwalk.dm.com
-
James A. Donald
-
Rabid Wombat