@F_alk:
@cystic:
again - the rights of the property/equity holder i think should surpass your desire to see everyone “earn” their inheritance.
Gov’t is everyone’s business. Lennon’s progeny is Lennon’s business.
@Deviant:Scripter:
This really has little to do with economy, F_alk, and more to do with personal property. Okay, so if I want to give my teenage kid a car instead of making him take the bus to school, I shouldn’t be allowed to?
…
That money wasn’t pulled out of thin air. Somebody had to work for it, whether it be the father, great-grandfather, etc. it was earned at some point and time, which made it that person’s property, which allows them to give it to whoever they want.
Ok, to subsummize:
(a) The right of personal possession is among the most important human rights, and more important than other economical principles. Why on the other hand are there human rights which are less important than my right to possession, rights that have to bow to the rules of economy?
It’s about something much more important than simple personal possession. It’s about autonomy. Whether it’s my property, my thumb, my freedoms - whatever - keep your hands off of it. For all you know i paid for my property WITH my thumb, my life’s work, whatever. I’ll acknowledge my gov’ts contribution and that of my labourers, but that is determined by specific contracts written up between us (i.e. i pay X% taxes for the privilege of conducting business here etc.). You make me look very selfish and simplistic reducing fight for personal rights to simple money hoarding. That’s really not fair.
(b) We might want to rethink the principle of capitalism, which are thought to be that personal desire to accumululate personal wealth possession. (That’s why see there is a connection between personal possession and economy. Economy is driven by investments and consumptions. Both have to come from somewhere, and at least in former times this was done by persons to gain more wealth). Gaining personal wealth does not seem to be the driving force behind the econmy anymore.
It never was the driving force behind the economy. It may have been one of the wheels of the vehical driving the economy (in addition to politics, success, creative energy, war, security etc.), but not the sole driving one.
© There is a difference between getting something for nothing depending on wether you get it by your parents/family or wether you get it from your people/society. (I wonder where tribal societies would fit in here, where the tribe/society usually consists of your -very extended- family).
The only time i really have a problem when someone “gets something for nothing” is if it comes as a result of theivery, or defrauding the gov’t. This is based on priniciple far too simplistic to waste time on.
Getting money from social security systems somehow is totally different from getting money through heritage, because the first is a matter of “everyone” (as it comes from the gov’t), and the second is a matter of choice of the deceased one…. And that changes the fact that both gain a benefit for no apparent reason and no work.
It is different. One is a social contract between Everyone and Gov’t, the other is simply a gift. Also there are apparent reasons. With social systems - this has been determined as necessary by legislature as being in the best interests of the nation (or at least its “soul”). The other is because daddy felt like it.
(d) The gain of personal possession through illegal means and the uyse of personal wealth against my or other societies still have to be discussed. Why do you lose your so very important human right in these cases?
because you’ve robbed people of their own autonomy. Either through robbery (i’ve lost my security, as well as those items i’ve worked for), or through fraud (again - some of my equity in this country has been taken from me outside of the contract i’ve joined).
No, i don’t seem to understand your mindset.
then you’re not trying hard enough.