01-3-2011, 02:15 PM
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#64
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x'); DROP TABLE FFR;--

Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 6,332
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Re: A world without money.
Quote:
Originally Posted by mhss1992
I did a mistake when I said that everything was essentially free. I was trying to mean something else but, seriously... Whatever.
You don't have the capacity to deal with people you disagree with without being an arrogant, obnoxious jerk. I've discussed with people who believed the same as you or me, and they weren't like this. And I'm talking about doctors and people who have read thousands of books.
There is more than one possible approach at the cost issue, and I was trying to find something. You treat the system as idiotic even though it was never experienced before.
I was trying to say that certain limitations would not necessarily exist in every economical system. Even if I was actually wrong or ignored something I shouldn't have, all of this anger was completely unnecessary.
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I'd absolutely love to meet a doctor or scientist who has read "thousands of books" claim to agree with the sort of retarded economic logic you've tried to invoke in this thread. What kind of crap are they reading -- the Bible?
Your system has already been "experienced before" and we understand the economic implications well. You simply just *do not understand the basics yet.* It makes you sound like a complete asshole when you try to defend something that is clearly flawed for a variety of reasons you either ignore or circumvent. You can't just back out and say "I made a mistake that everything was free" when that's the entire thrust of this thread and debate.
If you don't understand what you're arguing, then stop pushing misinformation so vehemently. Your system doesn't solve anything or result in any real wealth generation or cost savings.
We determine value and cost as a result of market forces and consumer demand profiles. It's called "marginal benefit," or the amount of extra utility I derive from utilizing your output. Cost is simply the utility loss (marginal cost) incurred from providing said service/item. We measure this utility in terms of money, which is our translation base between what we exchange and what we want. Market forces determine these values as an equilibrium resultant of the interplay between all the various profiles.
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