There you go again, Flacaltenn, making up some words, pretending I said them, and then getting all irate about them. Until you start making sense, I've got nothing to say.
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Yeah, JonL, ((SEE NEXT POST FIRST))
I guess when you said Quote:
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1) Public Relations 2) Customer Satisfaction 3) Legal challenges due to harm bodily or otherwise 4) Competition 5) Contract law for products and services. So JonL -- make any sense in THAT context? I know it's hard to swing into seeing an opponent point of view. But you simply cannot assert that to "allow people to chase profits with no regard for things that happen outside of their immediate financial view?" -- represents the reality of our free market system EVEN ABSENT govt involvement. |
Hey JonL:
I know what happened here. I was responding to your words in Whell's post #98. The link goes back to your post at #95. But those words are no longer there. But back at #95 we find: Quote:
Normally on a political board -- this is where the flaming starts.. But not with you (or me). I'm a PROLIFIC editor and would rather have it right than fast. REALIZE that I was responding directly to your (now deleted) quote. I'll apologize if you go first. :D |
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I never deleted anything.
I never even HINTED at anything as absurd as "one GOVT inspector for every private enterprise." I understand all the purist, theoretical arguments for libertarianism. That's not a world I want to live in. I don't want to live in a world where an elevator manufacturer makes a cost-benefit analysis about the safety of his products. Maybe he'd start selling defective elevators to low-income housing units, knowing that the residents can't afford a lawyer, and even if they sue for wrongful death, a jury may say "well, that 50 year old guy only earned $24,000/year, so we'll award the family $500,000." The elevator maker might take those odds. Just one (bad) example that popped into my head. I don't believe that government workers are rewarded when people die, nor do I believe that all companies that make egregiously defective items go out of business. Certainly their owners and managers are often free to go on to start other businesses that might also make defective products. My statement about unfettered capitalism referred to the fact that horrendous working conditions and child labor existed 100 or so years ago, and reflected my belief that given the same opportunities to do so, businesses (not all, maybe only a few at first) would revert to that same inhumane behavior. Hell, they'd have a freakin' FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY to do so, in the absence of regulations... wouldn't they? Stockholders don't hold MORALITY over PROFITS, do they? I don't think so. I think a CEO could get into deep trouble if he decided to forgo profits just because he didn't think it was right to go after them. Anyway, it's quite a stretch to call me a "statist" because I believe in sensible regulation. And finally, I absolutely can and do "assert that to 'allow people to chase profits with no regard for things that happen outside of their immediate financial view?' -- represents the reality of our free market system EVEN ABSENT govt involvement." That, my friend, IS the libertarian ideal. Do whatever you want until someone makes it financially less attractive to do so. |
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But, I do agree... I also "think it's a good thing to chase profits." But not with a disregard for things that happen outside of the immediate financial view. |
JonL:
I stripped that quote from Whell's post at #98. The words are no longer there OR in your original at #95.. Didn't make them up. You can retract them if you want to.. Despite the last rant that it's all about profits, I'm sticking to: Quote:
An elevator manufacturer that routinely kills low-income people is no more immune from market pressures than one that kills Park Avenue residents. And in that case, HOW DO YOU excuse the failure of 1) The govt agency who accepted and bought those low-income elevators. 2) The city inspector whose name appeared in the deadly elevator. 3) The warnings from the competitors who tried to tell you not to go with the lowest bidder or insist on a "minority owned enterprise" because they might kill people. What motivates all THOSE PEOPLE to be moral and competent? What's their incentive to remove all risk from the equation.. That's my point JonL. I've given you SEVERAL solid motivations beyond profit for the mean greedy capitalist. You give ME a couple for all of these equalizers you value so highly. Do they have a job after the bodies are pulled from wreckage? A SINGLE accident is not neccessarily a failure of design. Could be a fluke. Could be misuse. Could be maintenance. Your blanket assumption that this stuff happens SOLELY because of GREEDY manufacturers, is a little too convienient. And not just for elevators. |
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My admittedly bad example of the elevators was a demonstration of what would happen in YOUR world where there is little to no government oversight. In my example of YOUR world, the low income housing was privately built an owned and the builder bought the cheapest elevator he could find. Maybe the owner is a legal resident of Bermuda and isn't afraid of being sued. Maybe the elevator company is in China. It's your world. There is no gov't agency that accepted and bought the elevators. There is no city inspector. As for your list of five fundamental checks, tell me... which ones are not directly related to maximizing profits (or cost avoidance, really the same thing)? |
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2) The customer might be happy with the cheapest elevators, but the public using them has no control over that decision. 3) One of the things high on the Chamber of Commerce's wish list is "tort reform" limiting the amount of damages that a person could recover, no matter how bad the injury no how egregious the misconduct. In terms of market forces, the potential for large awards is what attracts lawyers to represent clients who otherwise could not afford them. Put a limit on tort damages, and those lower on the economic totem pole are less likely to obtain competent counsel. 4) Safety ain't cheap. Sometimes environmentally sound policies come with a price tag as well. Those who are willing to cut corners on safety and pollution are going to have a competitive advantage over those who are conscientious about safety. In a marketplace where survival of the fittest is the rule, and where and expensive conscience is a weakness, companies who provide more safety, when the competitors are not required to do so, are less likely to survive. Regulatory requirements of essential safety measures level the playing field for those companies who insist on doing the right thing. 5) Contractual law is only going to protect those in privity of contract. The contract will not protect innocent bystanders. Moreover, if one party to a contract realizes that the cost of litigation will make it cost ineffective for the other party to enforce its full rights under a contract. I've seen this way too many times. The party with the greater financial resources will screw someone out of five or ten thousand dollars because it's expensive to take the steps to recover that money. The market is not necessarily immoral - it is amoral. Nevertheless, what the market values does not necessarily reflect the values that provide the best place for most people to live. Your and others have referred many times to China as an example of what you believe the left wants. To the contrary, China reflects the worst of capitalism. They invite business to operate without regard to environmental impact or the health and welfare of the workers. That attitude is attractive to businesses for whom the bottom line is the only concern, which is why we have seen so much manufacturing move there. What we with a leftward tilt advocate here is a system where we can balance the bottom line motivation with such concerns as safety, honest representation of products, fair competition and a cleaner environment. Regards, D-Ray |
Good grief what insanity.....................
Dave |
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