-->
@3RU7AL
Not enough apparently if they are electing these idiots.
Nordic countries got it right. Tax the poor, and idiots and crony crooks don't run the government.
If you think criminals file taxes you're a dip shit.
Socialism doesn't need to be an economic system. Chinese economy is pure capitalism, but its whole system seems to be socialist. Every government in the world intervene to different degrees its economy in order to distribute its wealth so to reduce inequality
Please elaborate.No taxes on the poor has rotted the government to the core.
I listened to this over the weekend. [LINK]Enjoy.
It's not idiotic, what's idiotic is letting some rich dickhole kill around 100,000 people and retire into the sunset with generous stock options.
You fail to realize that a system like the one which Taleb advocates would restructure incentives.
People jaywalk less in Singapore, because instead of getting a fat payout from lawsuit if a car hits you and zero consequences if it doesn't, you get up to $1,000 dollars in fines if you step out onto the pavement and if you get hit outside of a crosswalk you don't have right of way. If you argued against the Singaporean system by citing the frequency of jaywalking in the US and then trying to argue that X amount of people would be bankrupted by fines or mowed over then you are making either a dishonest or an ignorant argument.
This is because when you introduce a risk to a decision, people decide differently. The end result of not shielding people for economic risks is that they would take fewer economic risks, which means that there are a whole lot of stupid risks which the system no longer needs to absorb.
Another example of this is student loans. Make student loans dischargeable in bankruptcy again, and you would see a lot less lending, and colleges would charge a lot less in tuition. This is because you would introduce risk into the equation, and the bank would actually have to ask themselves 'will this girl with no capital be able to pay back a loan using the skills obtained during her undergraduate in feminist studies with a minor in lesbian basketweaving?' Combine that with the revocation of tax-free status on endowment capital gains and you could fix the student loan debt problem overnight.
People jaywalk less in Singapore, because instead of getting a fat payout from lawsuit if a car hits you and zero consequences if it doesn't, you get up to $1,000 dollars in fines if you step out onto the pavement and if you get hit outside of a crosswalk you don't have right of way. If you argued against the Singaporean system by citing the frequency of jaywalking in the US and then trying to argue that X amount of people would be bankrupted by fines or mowed over then you are making either a dishonest or an ignorant argument.Gross bodily injury and possible death is not enough risk for you? You make it sound like people are jumping in front of cars in order to get a free paid tropical vacation. Please cite your sources.
This is because when you introduce a risk to a decision, people decide differently. The end result of not shielding people for economic risks is that they would take fewer economic risks, which means that there are a whole lot of stupid risks which the system no longer needs to absorb.The problem isn't with the pedestrians "taking stupid risks". Do you have any thoughts on the automobile designer who makes a vehicle capable of traveling 120kph over any speed limit in the country? Do you realize that it is possible to design vehicles that drastically reduce pedestrian injuries?
That's part of the problem. When people like this start talking about "personal responsibility" it always seems to focus on the people who have the least. Doesn't the driver have "personal responsibility"? What about the city planner who builds hundreds of blind corners into their street plan?
Another example of this is student loans. Make student loans dischargeable in bankruptcy again, and you would see a lot less lending, and colleges would charge a lot less in tuition. This is because you would introduce risk into the equation, and the bank would actually have to ask themselves 'will this girl with no capital be able to pay back a loan using the skills obtained during her undergraduate in feminist studies with a minor in lesbian basketweaving?' Combine that with the revocation of tax-free status on endowment capital gains and you could fix the student loan debt problem overnight.You don't seem to understand how money works. The banks have lobbied to get government guarantees for student loans. Not to "help" anyone, but in order to boost their profit margins. It's not the student's own personal failure. The banks are in a rush to loan to any student regardless of their potential earnings simply because they've (the banks themselves) lobbied to have those loans guaranteed. I agree this also inflates tuition. I would love to see an end to guaranteed student loans. I just don't blame the students for any of this mess.
Gross bodily injury and possible death is not enough risk for you? You make it sound like people are jumping in front of cars in order to get a free paid tropical vacation. Please cite your sources."For not to know of what things one should demand demonstration, and of what one should not, argues want of education."- Aristotle -You ask someone to cite sources when they're referencing an event or a statistic. When they make an argument from analogy, you either pick apart one of their points or the structure of their logic. That's exactly what this example was: an analogy to show the principle of behavioral psychology which underlies the phenomenon in question, and to illuminate why arguments attacking changes in risk from the assumption of persistent trends in behavior are misguided.
How many automobile-pedestrian collisions are at 120km/h are over?
How many pedestrian-heavy areas even offer the physical possibility to accelerate to those speeds before running into traffic or a stop light?
Which is easier on society at large: for everyone to drive 55mph on the freeway, or for idiots to not step into a road outside of a crosswalk?
That's part of the problem. When people like this start talking about "personal responsibility" it always seems to focus on the people who have the least. Doesn't the driver have "personal responsibility"? What about the city planner who builds hundreds of blind corners into their street plan?The driver does have personal responsibility. When the pedestrian is in the cross walk, the driver has the responsibility to stop. When the driver is on the road, the pedestrian has the personal responsibility to stay on the side walk.
As for city planning, Singapore receives a lot of complaints from certain corners, but it's usually considered one of the best planned cities in the world.
Another example of this is student loans. Make student loans dischargeable in bankruptcy again, and you would see a lot less lending, and colleges would charge a lot less in tuition. This is because you would introduce risk into the equation, and the bank would actually have to ask themselves 'will this girl with no capital be able to pay back a loan using the skills obtained during her undergraduate in feminist studies with a minor in lesbian basketweaving?' Combine that with the revocation of tax-free status on endowment capital gains and you could fix the student loan debt problem overnight.You don't seem to understand how money works. The banks have lobbied to get government guarantees for student loans. Not to "help" anyone, but in order to boost their profit margins. It's not the student's own personal failure. The banks are in a rush to loan to any student regardless of their potential earnings simply because they've (the banks themselves) lobbied to have those loans guaranteed. I agree this also inflates tuition. I would love to see an end to guaranteed student loans. I just don't blame the students for any of this mess.Where did I blame the students? I rather explicitly said that the banks had divested themselves of risk and that said risk should be returned. The students are mostly dumb kids, society should protect them, not throw them to these fucking usurious vultures. If the bank gave a student a loan of $70,000 to pursue a degree in queer theory, then the bank deserves to lose every single penny.
People jaywalk less in Singapore, because instead of getting a fat payout from lawsuit if a car hits you and zero consequences if it doesn't, you get up to $1,000 dollars in fines if you step out onto the pavement and if you get hit outside of a crosswalk you don't have right of way. If you argued against the Singaporean system by citing the frequency of jaywalking in the US and then trying to argue that X amount of people would be bankrupted by fines or mowed over then you are making either a dishonest or an ignorant argument. This is because when you introduce a risk to a decision, people decide differently.
and then trying to argue that X amount of people would be bankrupted by fines
Just to be clear, are you suggesting that drivers bear no responsibility for injuring pedestrians?Lol, why aren't drivers bankrupted today for driving out of their driving lane?
What is rhetorical about the question? Drivers get fined for driving outside of their lane. That is not a hypothetical.