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Current Events => The DUmpster => Topic started by: Carl on October 10, 2014, 08:33:06 AM

Title: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: Carl on October 10, 2014, 08:33:06 AM
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10025646021

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Fri Oct 10, 2014, 12:00 AM

Star Member True Blue Door (591 posts)

Fun DU homework assignment: Describe your version of Utopian America.
Include the following in your description:

1. Basic economic structure
2. Specific economic policies not covered by the structure (optional)
3. Rundown of public sector priorities, with relative weight
4. Rights and responsibilities
5. Methods of accountability
6. Security and foreign policy
7. Checks and balances
8. Flexibility to allow for future change and unforeseen contingencies.
9. Some vague idea of how to get from here to there. No military solutions, no deus ex machinas, and no inexplicable shifts in human behavior should be required.

Describe how each system you prescribe enhances liberty, equality, and opportunity, the three most basic dimensions of liberal values.

I'll go first:

1. Economic concept: Leverage-neutral capitalism. Business negotiations must be undertaken with counterparts of equal leverage, because leverage operates as coercion and belies the "free" market. Create a system of free-flowing associations in order that arbitrarily-sized groups of businesses or employees or consumers can form to do business on equal footing. This way no one can dictate economic terms to anyone else through market leverage - no more having prices forced on consumers, and wages forced on workers who have no viable alternative but to accept. It's a complicated idea, I know, but I'm just putting out the basic concept. The wealth of ordinary people would skyrocket under such a system without compromising the overall profitability of business. Mandate "leverage parity" in the Constitution if possible.

2. (a)National, state-level, and local dividends to all the people for the profits from national resources. (b)Universal $10,000 trust funds for all American children, to be opened at age 21. (c)100% estate tax on each dollar over $1 million, close all loopholes around it. (d)Civil and criminal fines indexed to income in order to be effective and fair across economic classes - thus, a billionaire who gets a traffic ticket may face a $50,000 fine while someone making median income would pay $50. Should be in the Constitution that penalties for the same offense must be as equal as practically possible relative to their effects on individual human beings.

3. Priorities from highest to lowest, though not comprehensive: Coequal (1): Water, power, transportation, and all related infrastructure. (2)Healthcare. (3)Education. (4)Science and technology. (5)Policing and courts. (6)Military and intelligence.

Points worth mentioning: Water should be desalinated ocean water with the plants powered renewably, and the water piped inland - at large economies of scale, the result would be cheaper potable water at far larger volumes than currently exist, the supply would be far more reliable, and deserts could be cultivated into vast agricultural regions (except for those we choose to maintain as desert preserves for ecological reasons). Power would be 100% renewable with whatever storage media are needed to deal with intermittency. All vehicles would be fully electric-powered - ground vehicles, aircraft, boats, and also other systems that use engines (lawn mowers, chain saws, etc.). The US Science and technology budget should be $100 billion to $500 billion per year, which would yield triple- or quadruple-digit return percentages, as has been noted historically. Policing, courts, the military, and intelligence need to be radically restructured for efficiency and fairness, some of which might require Constitutional amendments.

4. Rights and responsibilities: Aside from existing Constitutional rights, we can positively affirm the right to equal healthcare and education, and to equal justice, leading to the various structural changes I vaguely mention. You have the right to leverage parity, the right to a personal share of the profits from gains made through use of public resources, and the right to use public services (including transportation) free of charge. Your right to vote is inalienable and without qualification. In fact, probably lower the voting age to 12, since plenty of kids that age are smart enough to vote intelligently, and the immature ones are no more so than immature adults who vote stupidly.

Strange,no mention of work in return.

5. Strict codes of uniform conduct must adhere to all public officials from the President of the United States down to the lowest local civil servant. Memorizing this code and passing a test on it must be prerequisite to assuming office. Penalties for violating the code must be far more severe than for average citizens breaking equivalent laws, and must be more severe the higher the office. A police officer convicted of a crime while in uniform must face triple the penalties a civilian would. In administrative proceedings against officials who wield force (which don't have the force of law) and their superiors, the burden of proof is on them to show they did not break the law and should not be fired. All police officers must live in the communities they patrol, and at any time, for any reason, the people of the community can compel their suspension or termination through a local referendum express a vote of no confidence in a specific officer.

Criminal justice must finally officially recognize that punishment is not its purpose: Public protection is. People may only be incarcercated if they have proven they cannot be trusted to respect the rights of others under more lenient penalties. House arrest probation with ankle monitoring must be the default method of incarceration in lieu of evidence of public danger. Actual prisons do not exist to punish criminals, but to house them under controlled circumstances where they will be less dangerous to the public and to each other. They must be constructed and managed with this in mind, and all violence and brutality against prisoners by guards or other prisoners must be thoroughly stopped. No non-violent offender must ever set foot inside a prison. Since the War on Drugs is ended, obviously, and most drugs are either legal or sanely regulated, most prisons would be able to close. The remainder should be strictly monitored by international human rights observers at all times. End the death penalty, because it's evil, immoral, unethical, cruel, arbitrary, racist, counterproductive, and plainly unconstitutional.

The punishment, to the greatest extent possible, must not fit the crime, but rather correct the crime - specifically the crime as it relates to the human victim, not merely to the victim's property. Stealing someone's car has made their lives inconvenient, so now aside from compensating them with money and yourself having to live under controlled circumstances with ankle-monitored probation, you are obliged to make that person's life more convenient in prescribed ways and also help make the community a more convenient place in general. So not just the person you harmed, but the ideal you harmed must be served. Spray paint a swastika on a synagogue, you're going to mop the toilets in the Museum of Tolerance for the next few months.

6. Still need to get rid of nuclear weapons, fast. Even a few hundred left on Earth could send mankind into a Dark Age for fifty years if they were used in war, and there are two thousand. Get rid of them ASAP. Form a new institution beside the UN consisting of all free democracies, and let them all have equal votes in its decisions with rotating executives. Ultimately this body will succeed the UN as its numbers grow, or else be able to exert the influence needed to reform the UN into a more democratic institution. US Intelligence apparatus should be under the supreme command of the State Department, so that the tail isn't wagging the dog. Just a few ideas - I have literally volumes.

7. Use modern communications to radically accelerate the process of checks and balances. Allow Executive policymakers to be in constant contact with courts and legislators to get instant decisions and advice so that some aspects of lawmaking, interpreting, and execution can go from taking several years to perhaps being accomplished in days. Moreover, "fractalize" the process so that each action within the branches carries its own trio of legislative, judicial, and executive representatives prepared to instantly assert branch prerogatives if something appears to be in violation. If a disagreement is intractable, then the matter would be referred to larger bodies in their respective branches for resolution. This would have the benefit of preventing a lot of unconstitutional behavior in the Executive branch from building up over time, and also perhaps deter certain types of shenanigans that occur in Congress and in the courts as well.

8. Institute local, self-governing direct democracy units who can advise more traditional governments, or combine to assert superior prerogatives when a sufficient consensus is reached that a government institution or leader has done something that has to be reversed or is failing to do something urgent. These would "lubricate" the process of democracy considerably, and avoid some of the more dangerous and painful separations between the people and the leaders that lead to cynicism and discontent.

9. I believe in the ground-up approach, since that's historically been how it's usually happened. Try things locally and learn lessons. Then try them in some more local places, utilizing the lessons already learned. Then see how far you can scale it up to counties and states, and then you have a solid foundation for national or even international change.

Readers Digest version:
Give me all I want and let me smoke dope all day.

Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: Carl on October 10, 2014, 08:36:01 AM
One person adds,won`t post it all.

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1 & 2) Essentially capitalism but with a few important alterations.
- Firstly, corporations are banned outright. Businesses can still be formed as small traders or partnerships but a corporation is just a way of achieving private profit while avoiding private responsibility. Small traders and partnerships maintain responsibility.

- Second, minimum wage rises to $17 an hour on the federal level and is henceforth, linked to rise in line with inflation or the CPI, whichever is higher.

- Third, capital gains taxation is abolished entirely. From now, it's all classed as income and taxed accordingly with the sole exception of selling your primary dwelling which is tax-free.

- Fourth, in economics, there is a term called a "captive market". A captive market is one where everyone needs the product (or, at least, the option of it) at all times. That means monopolies and price gouging happen routinely in those sectors. To prevent that, in those sectors which have captive markets (gas, water, electricity, healthcare, mail, telecoms, arguably banking), the state will set up a not-for-profit alternative that provides a minimum level of cash-for-service. That creates a bottom floor below which private industry cannot sink (I call this the "backstop theory" of economics). To use healthcare as an example, that means the state will set up it's own non-profit insurance system (probably be extending Medicare to all) to compete with private insurance. This is roughly how we do things here (UK) and it works pretty well (until the bastard Tories started trying to privatize by stealth).

- Fifth, reorganise the tax structure, adding several new bands at the top end and maxxing out at 50% on household income above $2.5 million.

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4) Rights & Responsibilities. Right to healthcare affirmed. Right to have society support you if you cannot work or find work affirmed. Clinton's horribly immoral gutting of welfare repealed. Goes back to being an unlimited time right but contingent on the recipient actively seeking work. Right to a fair and open trial, no more secret trials, even if it means the jury has to be sworn to secrecy. However, you also have the responsibility to turn up for jury duty and you will be fined (consumerate with your income, we agree on that) if you don't show up without a good excuse.

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Legalize pot.
Now there is a shocker.  ::)
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: Wineslob on October 10, 2014, 10:17:16 AM
Only DUmmies would not find it immoral to be on Welfare.
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: USA4ME on October 10, 2014, 12:15:27 PM
Quote from:
Initech

8. I love the game Civilization for this reason.

I played as America, created a socialist government, an economy that relied on production and technological advances rather than religion, and won a diplomatic victory - and had a surplus and world peace - all things Republicans hate!

 :rotf: :lmao: :rotf:

Yeah, well next time I find myself really living in video game world I'll look you up.

.
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: Wineslob on October 10, 2014, 03:23:57 PM
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Initech

8. I love the game Civilization for this reason.

I played as America, created a socialist government, an economy that relied on production and technological advances rather than religion, and won a diplomatic victory - and had a surplus and world peace - all things Republicans hate!


For this kind of stupid, you should die in a fire.
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: DumbAss Tanker on October 10, 2014, 04:10:06 PM
If they spent as much effort making money as they do writing their idiotic and impossible politico-economic fantasies, they'd be wealthy.
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: JohnnyReb on October 10, 2014, 04:41:28 PM
If they spent as much effort making money as they do writing their idiotic and impossible politico-economic fantasies, they'd be wealthy.
What's his name...Norm Chomsky(sp?)...he's made a good living writing economic fairy tales.
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: BlueStateSaint on October 10, 2014, 05:09:16 PM
What's his name...Norm Chomsky(sp?)...he's made a good living writing fairy tales.

He writes homosexual erotica?  Who knew? :confused: :whistling:

 :tongue:
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: obumazombie on October 10, 2014, 05:23:44 PM
Replace "Cheers" with "Utopia".
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: FlaGator on October 10, 2014, 05:27:42 PM
No phone not lights no motorcar, not a single luxury.
Like Robinson Crusoe it's as primitive as can be
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: JohnnyReb on October 10, 2014, 05:32:10 PM
He writes homosexual erotica?  Who knew? :confused: :whistling:

 :tongue:
Maybe I should have been more clear.....economic fairy tales.
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: 67 Rover on October 10, 2014, 05:32:36 PM
No phone not lights no motorcar, not a single luxury.
Like Robinson Crusoe it's as primitive as can be

I would give that stuff up for a Mary Ann. :-)
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: DefiantSix on October 10, 2014, 06:31:58 PM
If they spent as much effort making money as they do writing their idiotic and impossible politico-economic fantasies, they'd be wealthy.

If they spent as much effort making money as they do writing their idiotic and impossible politico-economic fantasies, WE'D be wealthy as well. (Or at least, MORE wealthy without that parasitic leech on our incomes.)
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: I_B_Perky on October 10, 2014, 07:08:41 PM
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Initech

8. I love the game Civilization for this reason.

I played as America, created a socialist government, an economy that relied on production and technological advances rather than religion, and won a diplomatic victory - and had a surplus and world peace - all things Republicans hate!

I played it too dummie. Strong capitalism that allowed me to fund a big military which I promptly used to stomp your ass into the dust bin of history. Well those cities you had left after they defected.

Moron.
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: 98ZJUSMC on October 10, 2014, 07:19:57 PM
I would give that stuff up for a Mary Ann. :-)

 :cheersmate:

I played it too dummie. Strong capitalism that allowed me to fund a big military which I promptly used to stomp your ass into the dust bin of history. Well those cities you had left after they defected.

Moron.

I jumped past Communism in the game.  Funny how they always assume that there will be no one else waiting to stomp the weak.  I am also assuming that what the idiot is actually saying is he went to "Democracy" (as this is always what they equate with Socialism   :mental: ) and just didn't attack anyone, because feelings and such.

Yep.  The world is a video game....   :thatsright:

Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: 98ZJUSMC on October 10, 2014, 07:33:45 PM
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Describe your version of Utopian America.

It's not yours, which is totalitarianism.  You couch it lofty descriptions that many other dictators have throughout history.

You see, you deny history.  You deny human behavior and you deny free will.

There is only one way to impose your Utopia, and it would be by imposition and theft.


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Right to a fair and open trial, no more secret trials

What?

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(I call this the "backstop theory" of economics)

Uh-huh ......  ::)  I take it I'll find your economic opus on the same shelf as Hop on Pop and Go Dog, Go?
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: delilahmused on October 11, 2014, 03:02:45 AM
No corporations...that's so DUmmie! Yeah, cuz that iphone they're texting on that need to be made by the 1000's for customers all around the world, could just as easily be made by a mom and pop. It's really hard to take pictures at your next protest for peace/vagina rights/gay whatever/racism of blacks or illegal immigrants or whatever the the color du jour is.

Cindie
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: Karin on October 11, 2014, 02:13:15 PM
And here's cali again, sounding like a normal person!
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Response to True Blue Door (Original post)

Fri Oct 10, 2014, 08:17 AM

 cali (96,123 posts)

5. I don't believe in Utopias. Human nature being what it is, there can be no such thing.

and I don't agree with so much in your op. Just sounds like hell to me.

Cindie, that's what gets me too.  All the tech devices and the internet to make them interesting.  This stuff is going to come out of a garage?   Various Occupy dirtbags were asked just this question, and they just had a blank look. 
 
Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: Dori on October 11, 2014, 02:35:00 PM
These idiots need to read William Bradford's journal of Plymouth Plantation.

The pilgrims already tried the socialist communal thing.  It didn't work, and it sure as heck wouldn't work for DUmmies.  Can't you just see all their fights when one of them doesn't pull his own weight or thinks he has a better way of doing things?  What if one of them get's a bigger piece of pie than the other one?  All hell would break loose.  They fight over the dumbest things now on a message board, I could just imagine how they would act if they didn't get their fair share.











Title: Re: Primitives discuss Utopia (warning,very long but entertaining)
Post by: Delmar on October 11, 2014, 03:06:38 PM
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Fun DU homework assignment: Describe your version of Utopian America.

They get to sit around on their fat doughy asses and someone else gets to pay for it.