Guest guest Posted February 19, 2005 Report Share Posted February 19, 2005 In a message dated 2/17/05 12:57:10 AM Eastern Standard Time, slethnobotanist@... writes: > > >[] " The remedy is simply to enjoin anyone from injecting pollutants > into > > > the air, and thereby invading the rights of person and property. Period. ______ This doesn't strike me as a remedy. The enforcement of such, and the adjudication of disputes regarding this dictum is riddled with problems. First, " pollutant " must be defined. Doing anything at all, even living itself, will change the air around you. By merely living I change the composition of my downwind neighbor's air to contain less oxygen and more carbon dioxide. If I burn anything at all I will release a vast array of chemicals into the air that will change its composition. If these are pollutants, the enjoinment above would prevent me from cooking food and heating my house, among many other things. Then, we must consider whether a chemical's status as a pollutant is dependent only on its qualitative characteristics, or on its quantitative characteristics as well, such as its concentration in the air. Since certain concentrations of some otherwise noxious chemicals are certainly innocuous, either a court or a legislative body is going to have to set some standard by which we must differentiate between that chemical's two possible statuses. But then we are back to sqaure one. Any such standard is going to be somewhat arbitrary, in contrast to Rothbard's attempt to make an eternal and objective law rather than an arbitrary decree out of the situation. Chris ____ " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the truth, and for those who do them wrong. " --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2005 Report Share Posted February 20, 2005 ChrisMasterjohn@... wrote: In a message dated 2/17/05 12:57:10 AM Eastern Standard Time, slethnobotanist@... writes: > > >[] " The remedy is simply to enjoin anyone from injecting pollutants > into > > > the air, and thereby invading the rights of person and property. Period. ______ [Chris] - This doesn't strike me as a remedy. The enforcement of such, and the adjudication of disputes regarding this dictum is riddled with problems. First, " pollutant " must be defined. [] - Of course, but that is not a problem unique to this remedy but *any* remedy. Today, when the EPA charges people or companies with a violation of the clean air act, for example, they do so on the basis of some definition of pollutants which they deem harmful. So you are only stating something which is true *regardless* of the approach. You might be reading this too literally since I couldn't link to the full article to provide the necessary context. In the context of the article from which the quote is taken, Rothbard grants that the environmentalists are essentially right (thus taking the then current operational definition of pollutants for granted) but argues that their solution is wrong, full of unnecessary hyperbole and hysteria, and then suggests that the answer is not a taxpayer funded program based on some arbitrarily decided allowable level of pollutants, or for the courts to find harm but then try balancing property rights in the name of the " public good " but simply to defend property rights when they are violated. [Chris] - Doing anything at all, even living itself, will change the air around you. By merely living I change the composition of my downwind neighbor's air to contain less oxygen and more carbon dioxide. If I burn anything at all I will release a vast array of chemicals into the air that will change its composition. If these are pollutants, the enjoinment above would prevent me from cooking food and heating my house, among many other things. [] - See answer above. Also you seem to be assuming that technology is static, and that even if these activities were found harmful, ways could not be found to mitigate or remove their impact. Clearly there would be economic incentive to do so if such activities as *currently constituted* were found to be harmful to a particular person or property. Inherent in Rothbard's understanding of pollutants is something that *harms* not just something that is created or already exists. [Chris] - Then, we must consider whether a chemical's status as a pollutant is dependent only on its qualitative characteristics, or on its quantitative characteristics as well, such as its concentration in the air. Since certain concentrations of some otherwise noxious chemicals are certainly innocuous, either a court or a legislative body is going to have to set some standard by which we must differentiate between that chemical's two possible statuses. [] - They have to do that now so I'm not sure what your objection is. In the scenario posited above, if harm can be proven (i.e. the pollutants in the air entered my body *and* caused damage) then compensation must be made for damage to my body. If not, there is no case. Farting might cause temporary unpleasantness to the air I breathe, but one would be hard put to prove harm in a court of law. As it stands right now, companies and people are allowed to pollute, regardless of whether it damages or not, as long as it doesn't go beyond what some court or legislative body has decided *arbitrarily* as constituting the " public good. " I don't see anything arbitrary about needing to prove harm to my person or property in order to have a case, rather I see all kinds of arbitrariness in the current system which allows a court to decide whether that harm is justified in the name of the " public good. " [Chris] - But then we are back to sqaure one. Any such standard is going to be somewhat arbitrary, in contrast to Rothbard's attempt to make an eternal and objective law rather than an arbitrary decree out of the situation. [] - The only standard that would apply is whether you can prove harm or not, short of that, there is no case. In other words it is not the pollutants per se that is the issue, but what, if any, their negative impact upon someone else's person or property. Throw Away Your Vote! If you must, vote for a third party http://snipurl.com/a8od " In The Abolition of Man, C.S. observed that the modern schoolboy is conditioned to take one side in a controversy which he has not learned to recognize as a controversy at all. That is, he is trained to assume a materialist and Darwinian outlook, without realizing that materialism and Darwinism have been subject to thoughtful criticisms from their first appearance. " Joe Sobran __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2005 Report Share Posted February 21, 2005 > -----Original Message----- > From: Heidi Schuppenhauer [mailto:heidis@...] > > I don't know about " true " libertarians (seems like it's the > same argument as for " true " Christians, no one agrees on who > the " true " ones are!). But recently in my neck of the woods > we had our electricity rates skyrocket because of so-called > Libertarian " free market " strategies, when Enron was given > free reign. I've been trying to stay out of the these political arguments, but someone has to address this: Pointing to the problems with a heavily-regulated industry is not a valid indictment of the free market. If anything, it's an argument in favor of the free market. By the way, you tried to pull the same trick the last time we were discussing health care, and it wasn't any more valid then, but I never got around to pointing out the fallacy. > Have you HEARD the Enron tapes? They are truly > what I would describe as " sicko " . The PUD (our local energy > grid, who is now stuck with this high-rate contract) procured > the tapes and aired them in court. The " P " in " PUD " must stand for " private, " right? I thought it stood for " public, " but it just wouldn't make sense to blame the free market for a public utility district's decision to sign a long-term, high-rate contract. > In theory, yeah, folks would care about the long term and > would be more prosperous etc. etc. History has shown though, > that humans are, in general, very poor at caring about the > " long term " and adopt short term strategies that backfire. History has shown that your ideas about what history has shown aren't always accurate. I have, in the past, given you examples of corporations doing things that won't pay off for years or decades to come (e.g., some of IBM's research, timber farms, and some medical research), so I'd appreciate it if you'd stop advancing this false generalization as an argument for entrusting the state with more power. Besides, your argument hinges on the assumption that government will for some reason be better at long-term planning than corporations. This is almost certainly backwards. Politicians just have to fool the typical voter to get away with sacrificing long-term good for short-term personal gain, but corporations have to fool investors who have billions of dollars on the line and accountants who make a living looking for signs of bookkeeping fraud. Neither is perfect, but I know whom I'd rather trust. > If you don't believe me, listen to the Enron tapes. There are over 2,000 corporations in the United States with a market capitalization of $1 billion or greater. That opponents of free markets have for the last few years been pointing constantly at Enron, which wasn't even operating in a free market, tells us a lot about those other 2,000 large corporations. Enron is an exception, and that it was able to wreak such havoc was arguably a result of government regulations. In short, why should anyone take your arguments against free markets seriously when you clearly don't know what a free market is? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 > RE: POLITICS - Supporting WAPF or Not > > > >So are chapter contacts on the web page? (yeah, I know, I can check myself) Yes. http://www.westonaprice.org/localchapters/locallist.html Your local chapter leader(s) should be able to help you locate pastured meats, raw dairy, etc. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 > Re: POLITICS - Supporting WAPF or Not > Also, I am curious >how many physicians are active in WAPF besides Tom Cowan, MD. I think >it helps add credibility to the nutritional approach, for SAD folks >set in a mainstrean mind set especially. I don't know for sure, but I thought there were quite a few mainstream docs at the 2003 conference on the lipid hypothesis. One of the most memorable people I met there was Dr. Rubin Ong, a surgeon. His wife, a pyschologist (or something like that), was also there. Dr. Ong has since become a chapter leader and I think he or other members of his clinic do educational outreach about WAPF/traditional nutrition. There are also some practitioners with conventional credentials on the WAPF practitioners' list like a D.O., a vet and some chiros, IIRC. I don't recall having seen an MD. But I'm not holding my breath for them to sign on, nor do I think very many will give up the drug pushing palliative paradigm for one of true healing and preventative medicine. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- “The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times.” -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 At 12:33 PM 2/22/05 -0500, you wrote: >There are also some practitioners with conventional credentials on the WAPF >practitioners' list like a D.O., a vet and some chiros, IIRC. I don't recall >having seen an MD. But I'm not holding my breath for them to sign on, nor do >I think very many will give up the drug pushing palliative paradigm for one >of true healing and preventative medicine. I know one MD who is at least a WAPF member - he's part of my food/dairy group. He's now practicing more along the ND path, but still holds his MD license. MFJ If I have to be a grownup, can I at least be telekinetic too? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 Chris- >What would happen to Big Agro if >they lost the 30% of their income that is paid for by tax money? Where on earth do you get that figure? - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 Irene- >I think we also need to keep in mind that there might also be other >factors. Price's natives also did not have to deal with the toxic assaults >that modern people do. Toxins, pollution and pharmaceuticals might also >play a role in who can and cannot tolerate foods. Excellent point. Inasmuch as precise mixtures of gut flora become more and more important the more carbs are in your diet, the modern environment, in which everyone consumes antibiotics and other pollutants in water and food and is exposed to all sorts of other pollutants via other vectors, probably makes an extremely starchy diet much harder to pull off successfully. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 Chris- >Also, please explain the obvious counter-evidences to your hypothesis >such as Dr. Mercola's private practice. It would appear he's doing >everything >in his power to prevent disease. Economic theory generally (and not entirely accurately) holds that people simply do what they believe is in their own economic best interest. This is far from purely true, but Mercola's not exactly what you'd want in a true, pure exception to the rule. First, the US population is stuffed full of ailing and sickly people. There's really no way Mercola could possibly change things such that he'd run out of prospective patients, and thus income, any time in the foreseeable future. Second, he doesn't make money just through patients via his practice. He sells books and other products, does speaking tours, etc., and to put it somewhat crudely, he makes more money by enduringly helping more people. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 Chris- >It's relevant because it's an example of a private organization that spends >money for causes that are not monetarily profitable. There's no question that some people act in ways that aren't in their direct perceived self-interest some of the time, though often what seems altruistic isn't. (Charitable donations are often made to much fanfare, for example.) But there's no question that people often act in their perceived short-term self-interest, so the fact that sometimes some people don't is hardly a rebuttal to the statement that where there's an opportunity for profit, people will take advantage of it. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 Deanna- >What WAPF work are you feeling mixed about, if you don't mind my >curiosity? Primarily their promotion of sugar and starch, and their modest dilution of what I would consider the true definition of " grass-fed " . - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 22, 2005 Report Share Posted February 22, 2005 --- Dr. Arden (might be mispelled). He writes for Acre's and speaks at International Ag Labs seminars. He possibly supports WAPF. He was reared on a dairy farm. I haven't had the chance to google his adress or location. Heard him recently on tape speaking at an International Ag labs seminar. BTW he is a practicing physician. Dennis Kemnitz In , " Suze Fisher " <s.fisher22@v...> wrote: > > > Re: POLITICS - Supporting WAPF or Not > > > > Also, I am curious > >how many physicians are active in WAPF besides Tom Cowan, MD. I think > >it helps add credibility to the nutritional approach, for SAD folks > >set in a mainstrean mind set especially. > > I don't know for sure, but I thought there were quite a few mainstream docs > at the 2003 conference on the lipid hypothesis. One of the most memorable > people I met there was Dr. Rubin Ong, a surgeon. His wife, a pyschologist > (or something like that), was also there. Dr. Ong has since become a chapter > leader and I think he or other members of his clinic do educational outreach > about WAPF/traditional nutrition. > > There are also some practitioners with conventional credentials on the WAPF > practitioners' list like a D.O., a vet and some chiros, IIRC. I don't recall > having seen an MD. But I'm not holding my breath for them to sign on, nor do > I think very many will give up the drug pushing palliative paradigm for one > of true healing and preventative medicine. > > > > > Suze Fisher > Lapdog Design, Inc. > Web Design & Development > http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg > Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine > http://www.westonaprice.org > > ---------------------------- > " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause > heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- > Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt > University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. > > The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics > <http://www.thincs.org> > ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2005 Report Share Posted February 23, 2005 > Re: POLITICS - Supporting WAPF or Not > > > > >--- Dr. Arden (might be mispelled). He writes for Acre's >and speaks at International Ag Labs seminars. He possibly supports >WAPF. He was reared on a dairy farm. I haven't had the chance to >google his adress or location. Heard him recently on tape speaking >at an International Ag labs seminar. BTW he is a practicing >physician. Dennis Kemnitz > > He's a D.O. in fact (and also has a Ph.D.). Dr. Andersen is also a practicing ag consultant, if I'm not mistaken. I've got his book " Real Medicine Real Health " but haven't read it yet. Don't know if he supports WAPF, but he most certainly supports eating nutrient-dense food. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- “The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times.” -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2005 Report Share Posted February 23, 2005 In a message dated 2/22/05 10:15:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: > >What would happen to Big Agro if > >they lost the 30% of their income that is paid for by tax money? > > Where on earth do you get that figure? ____ _New York Times_ editorial, but I just remembered that that is for Europe. I think it was about 20% for US. Chris ____ " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the truth, and for those who do them wrong. " --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2005 Report Share Posted February 23, 2005 In a message dated 2/22/05 10:38:41 PM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: > Economic theory generally (and not entirely accurately) holds that people > simply do what they believe is in their own economic best interest. This > is far from purely true, ____ I agree. This could be shown to be absurd by extreme counter-examples such as ascetics who live in the wilderness, or the monastics of various religions. People do what they perceive to be in their own interest based on their own values. They will only do what is in their financial interest insofar as they value money. _____ > but Mercola's not exactly what you'd want in a > true, pure exception to the rule. First, the US population is stuffed full > of ailing and sickly people. There's really no way Mercola could possibly > change things such that he'd run out of prospective patients, and thus > income, any time in the foreseeable future. Second, he doesn't make money > just through patients via his practice. He sells books and other products, > does speaking tours, etc., and to put it somewhat crudely, he makes more > money by enduringly helping more people. _____ I'm not sure what you're getting at. My point wasn't about making money or market dynamics or Mercola being a valiant exception to human nature. It was that private individuals and groups can pursue long-term goals and those in the health field can and do give people strategies to achieve true health and keep them from needing the doctor. That Mercola is able to do this and make it profitable might help such a strategy spread to show how it is economically feasible for other doctor's to pick up, but it is beside my point, which was that the difference between doctors that hook people on pills so they can endlessly pay them bills and doctors that give people real health to avoid the doctor like a stealth does not correspond to the difference between private and public. Private groups can and do do good and bad, beneficial to others and not, short-term and long-term, and public groups can and do do just the same. Chris ____ " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the truth, and for those who do them wrong. " --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2005 Report Share Posted February 23, 2005 In a message dated 2/22/05 10:41:50 PM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: > >It's relevant because it's an example of a private organization that spends > >money for causes that are not monetarily profitable. > > There's no question that some people act in ways that aren't in their > direct perceived self-interest some of the time, though often what seems > altruistic isn't. (Charitable donations are often made to much fanfare, > for example.) But there's no question that people often act in their > perceived short-term self-interest, so the fact that sometimes some people > don't is hardly a rebuttal to the statement that where there's an > opportunity for profit, people will take advantage of it. ____ 1) I did not comment on altruism, and I agree. I commented on monetary profit. To donate to charity could be self-serving because it makes the donor feel good about her or himself, too. Yet, it is not monetarily profitable (generally) to donate to charity. 2) People do often act in perceived short-term interest, but this usually isn't profitable, so should be dissociated from your last statement. Profit usually requires at least some degree of long-term consideration. For example, even if one purely speculates on the stock market with saved income, one must first spend some time (with exceptions for people born rich, of course) accumulating that money by decreasing perceived short-term interest (that is, consumption), and increasing savings. 3) I was not attempting to rebut the statement that where there is an opportunity for profit, someone will take advantage of it. I was attempting to rebut Heidi's apparent association of " private " with short-term self-serving thought and action as opposed to " public " with long-term everyone-else-serving thought and action. Chris ____ " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the truth, and for those who do them wrong. " --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2005 Report Share Posted February 23, 2005 - >Besides, your argument hinges on the assumption that government will for >some reason be better at long-term planning than corporations. This is >almost certainly backwards. Politicians just have to fool the typical voter >to get away with sacrificing long-term good for short-term personal gain, >but corporations have to fool investors who have billions of dollars on the >line and accountants who make a living looking for signs of bookkeeping >fraud. Neither is perfect, but I know whom I'd rather trust. Perhaps a little remedial logic is in order. First, WHOSE INTERESTS are we debating? Your assertion is that corporations are better at long-term planning than governments, but in whose interests? Second, to the degree government is separated from the corporate sphere and beholden to the public (a degree which has, admittedly, been radically diminished in these days of revolving-door regulatory employment and vastly expensive campaigns, and which can never be raised to anything remotely resembling an ideal level) government is likely to be BETTER at long-term planning because it has to be. Our government cannot afford to go out of business (though that's basically the neocon agenda) but businesses go bust all the time. > > If you don't believe me, listen to the Enron tapes. > >There are over 2,000 corporations in the United States with a market >capitalization of $1 billion or greater. That opponents of free markets have >for the last few years been pointing constantly at Enron, which wasn't even >operating in a free market, tells us a lot about those other 2,000 large >corporations. Enron is an exception, and that it was able to wreak such >havoc was arguably a result of government regulations. No, Enron is the most visible and well-known example, that's all. Surely you're not suggesting that people harping on Enron proves that other large corporations are good? Why, that would be tantamount to pointing to the problems with a heavily-regulated industry as a valid indictment of the free market! - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2005 Report Share Posted February 23, 2005 Thanks for your responses, . You've articulated the opposing side much better than I did. Tom Idol wrote: > Chris- > > >>It's relevant because it's an example of a private organization that spends >>money for causes that are not monetarily profitable. > > > There's no question that some people act in ways that aren't in their > direct perceived self-interest some of the time, though often what seems > altruistic isn't. (Charitable donations are often made to much fanfare, > for example.) But there's no question that people often act in their > perceived short-term self-interest, so the fact that sometimes some people > don't is hardly a rebuttal to the statement that where there's an > opportunity for profit, people will take advantage of it. > > > > > - > > > > > <HTML><!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC " -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN " " http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd " ><BODY><FONT FACE= " monospace " SIZE= " 3 " > > <B>IMPORTANT ADDRESSES</B> > <UL> > <LI><B><A HREF= " / " >NATIVE NUTRITION</A></B> online</LI> > <LI><B><A HREF= " http://onibasu.com/ " >SEARCH</A></B> the entire message archive with Onibasu</LI> > </UL></FONT> > <PRE><FONT FACE= " monospace " SIZE= " 3 " ><B><A HREF= " mailto: -owner " >LIST OWNER:</A></B> Idol > <B>MODERATORS:</B> Heidi Schuppenhauer > Wanita Sears > </FONT></PRE> > </BODY> > </HTML> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2005 Report Share Posted February 23, 2005 Chris- >_New York Times_ editorial, but I just remembered that that is for Europe. I >think it was about 20% for US. I'd still like to see some documentation on that. It just seems ludicrously high. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2005 Report Share Posted February 23, 2005 Chris- >My point wasn't about making money or >market dynamics or Mercola being a valiant exception to human nature. It was >that private individuals and groups can pursue long-term goals and those >in the >health field can and do give people strategies to achieve true health and >keep them from needing the doctor. Yes, they can. But that has no bearing on whether people also exploit profit opportunities which don't involve long-term improvements in people's health. >That Mercola is able to do this and make it profitable might help such a >strategy spread to show how it is economically feasible for other doctor's >to pick >up, but it is beside my point, which was that the difference between doctors >that hook people on pills so they can endlessly pay them bills and doctors >that give people real health to avoid the doctor like a stealth does not >correspond to the difference between private and public. Private groups >can and do do >good and bad, beneficial to others and not, short-term and long-term, and >public groups can and do do just the same. True as far as it goes, but in order to put the larger picture together, you have to look at the incentives. In the public domain, to the degree it's truly public (and today's massively corrupt government is obviously not even close) profit is substantially removed from the incentive space. In the private domain, the sicker the populace the more opportunities there are to profit from providing people with permanent health improvements, but there will always be more total directly available profit through " sickness care " as it's often called. Our form of government has obviously proven eminently corruptible, and I expect there's no such thing as a corruption-proof system, since systems and the entities which make them up evolve, meaning corruption will always evolve too. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2005 Report Share Posted February 24, 2005 In a message dated 2/23/05 5:51:17 PM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: > >_New York Times_ editorial, but I just remembered that that is for Europe. > I > >think it was about 20% for US. > > I'd still like to see some documentation on that. It just seems > ludicrously high. ____ Unfortunately I don't have any. The editorial was discussing NAFTA and Mexican agriculture, how the Mexican government views small family farms as " inefficient " and deserving of economic death, so they open up to more " efficient " US companies that outcompete them. It pointed out that Mexican farmers receive about 2% of income from subsidies, Americans about 20%, and Europeans about 30%. Therefore, outcompetition couldn't be any guage of efficiency. It advocated the Mexican government doing more to help its farmers, including increasing subsidies to match American levels. Chris ____ " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the truth, and for those who do them wrong. " --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2005 Report Share Posted February 24, 2005 In a message dated 2/23/05 5:59:21 PM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: > >My point wasn't about making money or > >market dynamics or Mercola being a valiant exception to human nature. It > was > >that private individuals and groups can pursue long-term goals and those > >in the > >health field can and do give people strategies to achieve true health and > >keep them from needing the doctor. > > Yes, they can. But that has no bearing on whether people also exploit > profit opportunities which don't involve long-term improvements in people's > health. ____ Agreed, and for the second time, I don't think that was Heidi's point and that was not the point I was rebutting. I was rebutting the point (at least, the point as I perceived it) that public and private health care practitioners differed by virtue of their respective statuses in their approach toward long-term improvements in people's health. ______ > >That Mercola is able to do this and make it profitable might help such a > >strategy spread to show how it is economically feasible for other doctor's > >to pick > >up, but it is beside my point, which was that the difference between > doctors > >that hook people on pills so they can endlessly pay them bills and doctors > >that give people real health to avoid the doctor like a stealth does not > >correspond to the difference between private and public. Private groups > >can and do do > >good and bad, beneficial to others and not, short-term and long-term, and > >public groups can and do do just the same. > > True as far as it goes, but in order to put the larger picture together, > you have to look at the incentives. In the public domain, to the degree > it's truly public (and today's massively corrupt government is obviously > not even close) profit is substantially removed from the incentive > space. In the private domain, the sicker the populace the more > opportunities there are to profit from providing people with permanent > health improvements, but there will always be more total directly available > profit through " sickness care " as it's often called. _____ Putting aside profit for the moment, since the incentive to balance the books involves essentially the same incentives (namely to minimize costs and increase revenue) and is more applicable in the public sector than is profit itself, I think there is a substantial incentive for either private or public practitioners to offer " sickness care " over health care. But more importantly, and removal of profit incentive is going to be opposed by a very thick and enormous bureacracy. Worse, unless there is an abolition of all private individuals and groups, private individuals and groups that have considerable power and financial stakes in certain kinds of health care can much more easily affect public bureacracies and will work to do so much more relentlessly than their smaller counterparts. No public institution exists in a vacuum. It consists of private individuals and interacts with private individuals and groups necessarily, all of whom have their own interests. Public institutions through their massive layers of bureacracy will magnify the power of whatever private individuals manage to hold sway over them. Anyway, let's look at what happens in the real world. I don't see any evidence that public hospitals are practicing health care over disease care any more than private hospitals, or that Medicare is more liberal towards health care practicies versus disease care than are private insurances. Do you? I do, however, see many private practitioners that are part of a growing movement of health care rather than disease care practitioners, and they will become a significant private force (arguably are already) long before they will ever be able to influence the layers of public bureacracy to adopt their views. Chris ____ " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the truth, and for those who do them wrong. " --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2005 Report Share Posted February 24, 2005 In a message dated 2/24/05 7:30:32 PM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: > OK, but there's a humungaloid difference between farm subsidies and overall > agribusiness subsidies. Among other things, General Foods buys cheap grain > and turns it into high-margin products. Yes, the grain is cheaper because > of farm subsidies (and IIRC, it was Nixon who really screwed up our > agricultural system's finances) but they're not getting 20% of their > revenue in the form of tax dollars. That's a huge error. ___ Could it be that 20% of their *costs* are paid for by subsidies? Chris ____ " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the truth, and for those who do them wrong. " --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2005 Report Share Posted February 24, 2005 In a message dated 2/24/05 7:30:32 PM Eastern Standard Time, Idol@... writes: > OK, but there's a humungaloid difference between farm subsidies and overall > agribusiness subsidies. Among other things, General Foods buys cheap grain > and turns it into high-margin products. Yes, the grain is cheaper because > of farm subsidies (and IIRC, it was Nixon who really screwed up our > agricultural system's finances) but they're not getting 20% of their > revenue in the form of tax dollars. That's a huge error. ___ Oh, and who is the " they " to whom you are referring? Farms or junk food companies? Chris ____ " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the truth, and for those who do them wrong. " --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2005 Report Share Posted February 24, 2005 Chris- >It pointed out that Mexican farmers receive >about 2% of income from subsidies, Americans about 20%, and Europeans about >30%. OK, but there's a humungaloid difference between farm subsidies and overall agribusiness subsidies. Among other things, General Foods buys cheap grain and turns it into high-margin products. Yes, the grain is cheaper because of farm subsidies (and IIRC, it was Nixon who really screwed up our agricultural system's finances) but they're not getting 20% of their revenue in the form of tax dollars. That's a huge error. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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