EyeBRollin
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2015
- Messages
- 10,697
- Reaction score
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- Age
- 35
Another strawman. Danger lies again!They literally believe that having more of something does not devalue it.
Another strawman. Danger lies again!They literally believe that having more of something does not devalue it.
“Deficits don’t matter.” -Dyck CheneySeems to me that eyeB believes that debt doesn't matter. Typical of leftists; utopia is just around the corner...
Nope, it won’t. Our debt is now over $20 trillion and Republicans gave another $1.5 trillion to away to corporations. You are being conned.Issuing more currency is only a temporary fix. Eventually, the chickens come home to roost.
The USD has been divorced from gold since 1971. My god, read a book.<eyeroll>
Cost to buy a nice suit has been roughly the price of one ounce of gold, for a century.
I wonder why the same cannot be said for the price in dollars.
This one is funny!
Explain how banks create money by loaning more than what they have in reserve.
Do you mean it is a Coup? It maybe. I just think that the world is changing and that humans are starting to throw off the shackles of the ruling elites. But you may be right. It may not be as random as we think.You all missing a major thing here. No protest could be an orginized protest unless it was orginized. You have some sort of sh1t you don't like in your city? Go ahead and protest against it tomorrow, see how many followers you get. I bet less than 5. What happened in France and is still happening was/is an organized military operation.
Unfortunately this clip and the financial intermediation/fractional reserve theories of banking are wrong. See:
Explain how banks create money by loaning more than what they have in reserve.
Poor people get sick and die because they can't afford health care. This happens in every country. This has happened in every country. This will happen in every country. There will always be poor people and poor people will always suffer in part because they are poor.Danger refuses to accept that poor people get sick.
I think it was a mistake to call these things human "rights" in the first place. They should've been called freedoms, or liberties, as in the concept of positive freedom/liberty. That would prevent semantic debates of what a right is because everyone understands that a healthy person is freer than a sick person.Poor people get sick and die because they can't afford health care. This happens in every country. This has happened in every country. This will happen in every country. There will always be poor people and poor people will always suffer in part because they are poor.
What is your definition of a "right" when so many people don't have access to this "right?"
I'll suggest that what you are calling a "right" is really a political promise that is IMPOSSIBLE to deliver no matter how much you wish it so.
That's a question so watered down as to be fallacious even in theory. But in reality too, not only does the world produce more food than it consumes, but the way it has started doing so has been through investing in food production with money. If you create more money and raise taxes accordingly on where this money flows to recycle it, then there is no change in purchasing power, no risk of any price inflation or deflation, but the government still gets more revenue to invest with.As far as governments issuing currency.
Suppose you have a million people, and only enough food, arable land, production etc. to feed 500K people.
Will printing more and more money solve this problem?
+1 to this.I would lump the right to be free from easily preventable communicable disease under "life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness."
Your limited food example assumes that your theoretical country is an island in space. Although "printing money" is not the answer, creating wealth could be. When a company goes public on a stock exchange, it almost always goes up in value tremendously. Is any money printed in that scenario? Most money is an illusory promise about the future, and not a tangible thing.
Maybe, but you still ignored it. Is that because you don't know the answer, or you don't like the answer?That's a question so watered down as to be fallacious even in theory.
Yeah, your lack of cholera has to be a real albatross around your neck.The right to a service or good is depriving someone else of the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
The right to something provided by someone else is the right to enslave others.