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- Jan 20, 2022
i wish we could have the glitter feature all the time, not just on holidays

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The critical difference is neither of you are personally liable for the business' debts under the corporate structure. Your equity investment is at stake but that's it. It also means you can quickly sell your investment for other uses vs. the situation you're describing, where it would all be tied up in land, inventories, buildings, etc. that take a lot longer to wind down.That was always the case though. In the past you had to rope some noble/merchant for money and if you fucked up the noble would claim ignorance. If you succeeded the noble got a good chunk of the money. If anything today liability is way larger since possible adverse affects can be massive.
I'd say that's more of a effect of advancements in technology than deliberate ideological decisions.The critical difference is neither of you are personally liable for the business' debts under the corporate structure. Your equity investment is at stake but that's it. It also means you can quickly sell your investment for other uses vs. the situation you're describing, where it would all be tied up in land, inventories, buildings, etc. that take a lot longer to wind down.
More specifically advances in contract law and the perceived benefit of the structure to investors. The medieval guilds were close in concept but not quite there yet on the legal side.I'd say that's more of a effect of advancements in technology than deliberate ideological decisions.
The critical difference is neither of you are personally liable for the business' debts under the corporate structure. Your equity investment is at stake but that's it. It also means you can quickly sell your investment for other uses vs. the situation you're describing, where it would all be tied up in land, inventories, buildings, etc. that take a lot longer to wind down.
Capitalist is a socialist pejorative for the liberal proponents of free market economics. None of the progenitors of what we now call 'capitalism' ever used the word themselves.because capitalism isn't real, it's a catchall term for "when you don't give me your stuff"
The term was popularized in English 200 years ago by David Ricardo who was a huge proponent of free trade and was in every way a classical liberal.Capitalist is a socialist pejorative for the liberal proponents of free market economics. None of the progenitors of what we now call 'capitalism' ever used the word themselves.
That helps, but even if we assume that the government's information systems are functional, that leaves the problem of the many kinds of information that are not accessible to the computer systems. Things like how much people want a certain good (as revealed by their willingness to pay for it), or the ideas that an entrepreneur would have. And all of this for what purpose?How about a planned economy turbocharged by AI, computers and the internet?
It could be argued that problem with the planned economy in the SovietUnion was not just the immense man power needed to plan everything from nuts and bolts to jet turbines, but also that the market had no real way to set prices without supply and demand.
A planned economy where you have computers to do forecasts and planning, databases and instant communication would likely work far better.
And before you say that market economies are always better, don’t forget about how much government planning, subsidies and price controls there is with agriculture.
Capitalism didn't build your infrastructure or your highways buddy, the government did that.imagining is one thing, implementing is another. just look at history for more than five seconds and without a homosexual lens.
without capitalism, homosexuals wouldn't be free to start imagining things in the first place. they would be eating bugs in the dirt, or enslaved, or dead. like in a third world country without capitalism. to accomplish things, you need capital. it's basically required. If you try to split this up equally, you will come up with something that probably isn't as fair as what you had originally. example: let millions of migrants into your nice capitalist country because you assume you can afford it. reality: you just steal money (from your socialist programs of social security!) to pay for these new people you feel should be given a better life. But again, this was only possible because of capitalism in the first place. the boomers engaging in capitalism, paying into the system, creating massive wealth by contributing to fractional reserve lending 401ks, etc.
True corporatism in the modern day would be cyberpunkI want to see Corporatism be a thing again.
I mostly agreed with you but what about the shit that happened with the 2008 housing market crash? There were a shitton of banks handing out risky loans left and right and when it was all said and done they just got bailed out anyway.Capitalism is also one of few systems that genuinely prioritizes responsibility by refusing to bail out the lazy and the foolish.
AI might well be the technology that causes the replacement or radical change of capitalism. Command economies are bad at market optimization, and it seems like for every sort of good that they produce on par with capitalist economies, they've got something that they fall down on. The obvious example is military materiel vs consumer goods in the USSR. But there were plenty of bad outcomes that were just as bad as their capitalist counterparts, some of which were unique to a planned economy**.How about a planned economy turbocharged by AI, computers and the internet?
It could be argued that problem with the planned economy in the SovietUnion was not just the immense man power needed to plan everything from nuts and bolts to jet turbines, but also that the market had no real way to set prices without supply and demand.
A planned economy where you have computers to do forecasts and planning, databases and instant communication would likely work far better.
And before you say that market economies are always better, don’t forget about how much government planning, subsidies and price controls there is with agriculture.
That was the government, so not capitalism. "True capitalism" would've purged the entire system and absolutely fucked over FAR more people and caused a FAR worse crash, but once recovery set in within a few years, we would've been good and the economy would have been a lot healthier. Or perhaps it never would have recovered, because when you operate capitalism in a globalist economy, the optimal thing is to ship jobs overseas and make convoluted supply chains to save a buck.I mostly agreed with you but what about the shit that happened with the 2008 housing market crash? There were a shitton of banks handing out risky loans left and right and when it was all said and done they just got bailed out anyway.
Ironically, true capitalism of the sort libertarians and ancaps speak of is one of these too. It can't exist because it inevitably welds itself to the government. This has been true since the days of the East India Company spendingn a fortune lobbying the British Parliament and of course outright taking over the Indian states in which it operated for the sake of doing business.And those alternatives usually rely on humans being other than what we observably are. And pointing these issues out to a proponent of an alternate system will often end with said proponent uttering a variation on 'Why can't you just believe that something better is possible?'
The problem is that you need to define "better." We don't need a better system than capitalism like the mythical automated luxury gay space communism, because it's a disgusting, perverted system that would make people even more degenerate. Capitalism is already good at turning people into degenerates, hence the porn industry, Big Pharma/psychiatry/plastic surgery industry pushing transgenderism, and sex toy entrepreneurs like the people who invented the balldo. The line going up forever, societal progress, all of that isn't a good thing, quite the opposite in fact when you realize where it will take us. Remember that communist countries are generally very conservative, because communism doesn't believe in pushing diversity in hopes of selling things to minorities.Now, something better is possible. And likely. Human history shows that 'things get better - eventually' is how things tend to work. But trying to force 'something better' at gunpoint has thus far resulted in 'something worse'. I could be wrong, and there may well be some guns that get pointed in order for something better to actually happen. But I'm thinking that any system that can successfully replace capitalism will do so because it's able to generate better outcomes overall than capitalism, and this will likely happen in response to technological and political developments (much as the Industrial Revolution cause the shift from mercantilism to capitalism).
yes they did because in america the economic system is capitalism. dumbass nigger.Capitalism didn't build your infrastructure or your highways buddy, the government did that.
Ah yes, the "Capitalism is when the government/private companies does things I like, communism/not real capitalism is when they do things I don't like"yes they did because in america the economic system is capitalism. dumbass nigger.