Brucemaster said:
Why should your personal preferences have any bearing on another individual's life.
Why should their decision to produce oranges impact on my life in the form of protectionism they enjoy which I pay for in terms of taxes and higher prices?
Just because you specifically do not want an Australian farmer to produce oranges does that automatically make his work invalid. No, of course it doesn't because it is HIS life work and to him and to many others it is vital and important.
It is not me specifically not wanting him to produce oranges it is the market as a whole.
If he can find a market for australian oranges as distinct from oranges period then this market may ensure he survives as an orange farmer. However why exactly do I care if oranges are his life? So what? Why should I (as a consumer in the market and a taxpayer) support him (through protectionism and taxes) in producing something I don't want? Or something I can get for a better price elsewhere?
You keep saying we should support orange farmers however you do not say why, beyond because the exist.
They grow oranges for money, its not their lifes passion. If no one wants to give them money then why should the government step in and give them money - our money; your money and my money - on our behalf. As a market we have already chosen
not to give them money yet you suppose that the government should
go against the wish of the populace and give them money anyway.
Very true, i am talking in hypotheticals here. I will try and find a specific figure for you but remember that it is not only the farmers but their families that are affected.
Again with the families, a nice emotive touch but we all have families professionals in sydney are as much supporting their families as farmers in 'the bush', the difference is you seem to accept this
majority of non-farming familes to support farming families through welfare and protectionism (suprised katie hasn't made an appearance yet).
Also, converting the land to being able to produce apples instead will take a considerable amount of time (I would imagine) thus there will be a period when farmers have no source of income. How is this problem going to be addressed?
So straight after backing down from one assumption (one after another after another if you count the uranium and iran threads) you make another that you "imagine" it will take a long time to convert.
In this limited instance you are semi-correct that it would take time to convert to apples because they need to grow to a level at which they can be picked. However the apples could equally be wheat, rice, canola, tomatoes, capsicums, cucumbers, lettuce or any number of other crops which do not need to grow to maturity in such a manner.
No, of course you can't but this argument is entirely hypothetical and i am arguing the detriments of the system as a whole through this example which is applicable to any situation in a free trade vs. protectionism debate.
It would take numerous theses to argue sufficiently the benefits/detriments of these theories so unless you're willing to wait a few years for my next response lets be realistic about this.
So perhaps my point is you can't win. Many people have written many thesi (made up plural) attacking the theories waf and I are operating under and they have had a couple of hundred years to do so. But
no one has succesfully disproven it, if you've read Das Kapita,l Marx has a pretty good go but as I'm sure you've gathered from USSR, N.Korea, China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Yugoslavia, Poland, East Germany, Hungary, Romania, Chezhoslovakia, Cuba, etc that communism doesn't work. In fact I invite you to try the maths, you can mathematically prove these theories you just need abit of calculus. Infact if you look at history abit Lenin was re-introducing capitalism when he died, the vietnamese sat down and set this isn't working its back to capitalism for us and that whole chinese surge of recent years has been abit of good old fashioned capitalism.
In short capitalism, free trade, economic rationalism, etc wins. It wins, theoretically, mathematically and historically.
I don't quite understand how this works are you talking about your tax dollars? If you are then i could just as easily say that you're family doesn't provide me with anything useful so why should i support you? Then we get stuck in this vicious cycle where everyone doesn't provide someone with something so why should anyone support anyone?
Well why should anyone support anyone? They should support someone if they get something out of it, and they should provide support no more than they get back.
I invite you not to support my family, cut the various welfare handouts they get and cut the tax they pay, this is simpler, more efficient and cost effective.
I say strip back all welfare especially rural, middle-class and unemployed and with it strip back taxes - hey presto we've got some growth stimulous.
This is the fundamental flaw in your argument it perceives individuals as a whole. You cannot ascribe universalities to the individual for the precise reason that they are individuals who ideals, beliefs and values vary greatly.
What don't you understand about aggregate? You take everything and add it up, the market (and society) is the sum of its parts. Individuals ideals, beliefs and values are sufficiently the same for all to be represented according to their proportion of the population.
What you are suggesting is akin to counting some groups twice which is the same as drawing a line and saying "rural people over here are worth twice as much as urban people over there", got equality?
Your ideas on the individual in fact fail to respect the individual at all because they view all individuals without discrimination.
You want me to say sorry for failing to discriminate and for taking everyone as equal???
everyone is different and has different needs and wants and yet your ideas treat the individual as if this were not the case.
Already covered.
Furthermore you have this idea of "societal demand' and everything should work towards society's need and we should be completely utilitarian.
Again you fail to respect the individual in this case becasue you deny the differences amongst humans that make us individual. You cannot expect every individual to conform to your ideas on what society needs, its just not feasible.
Your ideas about societal demand and respect for the individual are in direct contradiction with each other.
Refer to above, refer to waf.
The individual is society, society is the individual. I believe in a free society and a free market, not only are these in harmony they are intrinsicly linked, you can't have one without the other.
Humanity is diverse, people are different with different ideals, needs and wants. Your philosophy in this instance shows a blatant disregard for the diversity amongst humans and thus a disregard for humanity itself...[/quote]