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Old 10-14-2008, 02:28 PM   #21
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

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Originally Posted by devonin
This silly idea that the laws of nature shouldn't apply to us anymore is the cause of most of the problems facing the world. Frankly we could stand to lose a billion or so people.
Dear Devonin,

I'm sorry that science has been doing what it can to improve our quality of life. Next time we'll just let people develop parasites, diseases and have to hunt or gather their food so the laws of nature will apply more.

Sorry again for the inconvenience.

Insincerely,

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Old 10-14-2008, 04:38 PM   #22
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

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Originally Posted by Vendetta21 View Post
Okay, I hate to bring in a pet subject here, but unfortunately this is based on a pet subject of mine, and something that is a central focus in my daily life, so here it goes.

1.) Rich people controlling the market does not create poverty. This is historically, and probably even empirically, wrong. Poverty can be created by inadequate management, an unstable social group or individual incapable of supporting a successful social structure, lack of ability to create something worth value to others, and prohibitive barriers to entry into a market. All of these things are theoretically solvable. Group solutions targeted at areas dense in poverty are more productive than solutions targeted at specific individuals who are in poverty.
Inadequate management of what or who? Do people incapable of supporting social structure = people who dislike the current social structure? Almost everyone provides value to others, even bums on the street, so I can only conclude that this 'reason for poverty' is not true. Not like it matters because I don't really agree with your points because you haven't backed them up at all, but something being 'theoretically solvable' is quite different from actually being solvable. Theoretically, we can never have poverty.
As far group solutions go, I didn't say anything about them specifically. I attacked the idea that a country should be considered a 'group'. However, you've not backed up how solutions which target dense areas of poverty are more 'productive', whatever that means. From what I remember from my textbooks, intense work with each individual who are in a targeted group is what makes anti-poverty type interventions work in solving household poverty, drug-use, abuse, etc. I'm not even sure you'd have much 'individual' data beyond that, because hardly anyone does studies on 1 individual, so I really don't know how you can make the comparison you do. Perhaps all you're saying is if you fund an anti-poverty movement, giving it to people who all live close together, that money seems to go further than if you did that with the same number of people all over the country. No ****!


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Originally Posted by Vendetta21 View Post
2.) Having the government redistribute wealth does not solve poverty, it satiates it. In wealth distribution schemes it has been traditionally shown that the greater wealth redistribution is, the higher the poverty line goes, while also taking away incentives to move up the economic food chain. If someone is rich it is because what they do brings an immense amount of value to others, otherwise they wouldn't be rich. It is true that some people get rich by cheating others, but this is the special case, not the standard..

I hate that I have to clarify what I say always. I never said that having the government redstribute wealth would get rid of poverty...I said that the OP said that. Secondly, half of this is reiterating what people have already said, and which I agree with! Thirdly, I don't believe money and value necessarily add up very well, despite what we try to do, and this also goes towards the fact that some rich people, who aren't cheating others, are not creating that much value. And as to people getting rich by 'cheating' others being uncommon, well, that's a matter of opinion in regards to what counts as cheating.

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3.) Charity does not solve poverty unless it is targeted succinctly at causes rather than symptoms. A symptom of poverty is hunger. By giving people food you target a symptom rather than a cause. Causes of poverty are lack of jobs, lack of growth, and low upward mobility. Solving these issues requires improved infrastructure, improved education, and a socioeconomic structure which aims to operate best when the group it is designed for acts in their best interests. But we cannot solve issues of poverty where we implement solutions like these and the people under these solutions do not utilize them. The biggest problem in eliminating poverty in the world is usually infrastructure, and a close second is education. In cases where there is little infrastructure and little education it is impossible to move forward without them. These are not resource-limited areas, but they are severely impeded by a culture which rejects them in one way or another..

As to the first part of this paragraph, please don't make it look like it's targeted towards me. As I said earlier, I was talking about the OP. I totally agree with you that you have to fix causes and not symptoms.
"Low upward mobility"...what does this mean? How does a socioeconomic structure contain 'aims'? What a socioeconomic structure is, is a result of what you make, not the other way round. As far as not having infrastructure or education impeding wealth, have you ever thought about who determines that you need to be educated and that you need to have 'infrastructure' to have work? Can you not see that these themselves are something that the wealthy of society have forced as prerequisits for wealth? You say that rich people don't impede non-rich people at all, but yet you list 2 very good impediments that wouldn't exist in order to be wealthy, if the people who were rich didn't make them a requisite for being wealthy.
As far as poverty on a larger scale goes, if a culture rejects this way of life, who are we, as a rich nation, to enforce it? Unfortunately, we do enforce it, because if a group does not have education and infrastructure to support them, they will be exploited.

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Originally Posted by Vendetta21 View Post
4.) Communism doesn't work, and socialism isn't about solving poverty. Socialism is about boosting up the middle class. If it was about solving poverty then it would reduce international trade barriers, because this is the biggest roadblock in eliminating poverty. But it doesn't. Do not confuse the so-called "goals" of socialism with the actual results of socialism. Socialism favors trade barriers as an effective solution to boost up the current middle class in the short-term while sapping the long-term prospects for an industry. Part of the problems of these barriers are that they make goods more expensive, and they lower the net purchasing power parity for the overall country. To help combat this issue, socialism redistributes wealth in order to help keep the amount of purchasing power the average middle and lower class family has the same. Socialism also favors lots of government programs that take away the need for private sector solutions. The idea is that if something is free for everyone through the government we all benefit, but in Europe it is more often than not true that a particular program is targeted towards a small group of individuals rather than targeted at everyone, and the solution they have for everyone that non-socialist countries don't have (health-care) are usually not as good as those non-socialist countries. The goal here is what is called by socialists the idea of "people over profits," but what it does is lowers efficiency and keeps productivity more stagnant, thus lowering growth. Growth is the solution to poverty, make no doubt about it, but this isn't about solving poverty.
Did I talk about socialism or communism? Did I put such a label on anything I said? No.
I understand that taking away profits and money from the people who would use them to make more profit slows economic growth. And I suppose I can see that growth is needed on the part of the people in poverty, in order for them to not be poor. However, overall growth is not needed to reduce poverty. In fact, there can totally be economic growth and an increase in poverty at the same time. Likewise, there can exist economic decline and with a decrease in poverty. With all your bitching about socialism preventing growth, it in fact did not address anything about poverty, except that you say it help put low (poverty stricken, in other words?) and middle-class income people in the same playing field. I don't quite understand how you can blame socialism for each country's individual decision about trade laws. (I also surely hope you've never pointed out that communism doesn't work for the reason of 'just look at Cuba!', because they've been under a trade embargo for years.)

Last edited by Cavernio; 10-14-2008 at 04:41 PM..
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Old 10-15-2008, 02:08 AM   #23
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

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Originally Posted by Cavernio View Post
Inadequate management of what or who? Do people incapable of supporting social structure = people who dislike the current social structure? Almost everyone provides value to others, even bums on the street, so I can only conclude that this 'reason for poverty' is not true. Not like it matters because I don't really agree with your points because you haven't backed them up at all, but something being 'theoretically solvable' is quite different from actually being solvable. Theoretically, we can never have poverty.
Inadequate management of people to make use of their resources. If areas of poverty or individuals in poverty produced a good or service capable of bringing them money their poverty would be less profound or nonexistant. Poverty exists because of a lot of reasons, but the chief among them being people living in an socioeconomic structure which requires them to be a part of that structure to survive, and for various reasons people either don't or cannot integrate themselves successfully into that structure. It has nothing to do with liking or not liking, but simple the fact that people in poverty cannot trade a good or service others needs in exchange for the goods and services they need.

As a side note my points are not personal, and taking them personally begets a misunderstanding and an adversarial debate style. You are not my adversary in this debate, poverty is. And it doesn't matter if either of us are the smartest and most superior debaters who ever lived if what we propose isn't a viable solution to poverty. Please don't take anything I say personally, because you are not the scope of my points.

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As far group solutions go, I didn't say anything about them specifically. I attacked the idea that a country should be considered a 'group'. However, you've not backed up how solutions which target dense areas of poverty are more 'productive', whatever that means. From what I remember from my textbooks, intense work with each individual who are in a targeted group is what makes anti-poverty type interventions work in solving household poverty, drug-use, abuse, etc. I'm not even sure you'd have much 'individual' data beyond that, because hardly anyone does studies on 1 individual, so I really don't know how you can make the comparison you do. Perhaps all you're saying is if you fund an anti-poverty movement, giving it to people who all live close together, that money seems to go further than if you did that with the same number of people all over the country. No ****!
In any economic situation you get marginal returns for each extra dollar spent. Targeting areas dense in poverty nets a better return for the amount invested, whereas targetting areas with less density of poverty has a lower return on investment. If the goal is eliminating poverty in the World, it is going to cost quite a lot more per capita to decrease the poverty rate by 5% in America than it is going to cost to do so in say, Sierra Lione. Likewise this holds weight if you're targeting poverty in America, that you will have a higher return per capita on your investment if you are targeting poverty in the Appalachian region than if you are targeting poverty in Seattle.

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I hate that I have to clarify what I say always. I never said that having the government redstribute wealth would get rid of poverty...I said that the OP said that. Secondly, half of this is reiterating what people have already said, and which I agree with! Thirdly, I don't believe money and value necessarily add up very well, despite what we try to do, and this also goes towards the fact that some rich people, who aren't cheating others, are not creating that much value. And as to people getting rich by 'cheating' others being uncommon, well, that's a matter of opinion in regards to what counts as cheating.
I never said that you did. I was simply making a point, and I felt that it was still in context. And unfortunately we don't have a good objective metric for non-money values, and therefore we use the metric that has a high correlation with non-money value increase in life, which unfortunately is money. People are generally happier when they have enough money for subsistence plus a little extra. You can phrase this however you want and increasing income for the lower quintiles is still the most effective objective solution we can implement on a broad scale; the goal is to reduce poverty, the goal is to increase happiness in a utilitarian sense, the goal is to reduce income inequality, the goal is to improve humanity.

If your point is that macro solutions can't solve all the problems, then I will say the exact thing that will cease all further debate on this point: you're right.

Macro solutions are utilitarian in that they are trying to solve problems in a pragmatic broad way, but these macro solutions are just trying to make the most effective use of a large investment. And it's utilitarian, and no it doesn't solve everything. But that's not the point of a macro solution: the point of a macro solution is to implement a baseline solution which has the most effective return on investment, but not be the end-all be-all solution. These macro solutions are broad infrastructure spending and education spending.

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As to the first part of this paragraph, please don't make it look like it's targeted towards me. As I said earlier, I was talking about the OP. I totally agree with you that you have to fix causes and not symptoms.
It wasn't intended to target you. I apologize. The point of my whole post is trying to limit the scope of this discussion to that which is capable of being understood without expert knowledge, and keep it focused on those aspects of poverty which are solvable on a broad scale.

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"Low upward mobility"...what does this mean? How does a socioeconomic structure contain 'aims'? What a socioeconomic structure is, is a result of what you make, not the other way round. As far as not having infrastructure or education impeding wealth, have you ever thought about who determines that you need to be educated and that you need to have 'infrastructure' to have work? Can you not see that these themselves are something that the wealthy of society have forced as prerequisits for wealth? You say that rich people don't impede non-rich people at all, but yet you list 2 very good impediments that wouldn't exist in order to be wealthy, if the people who were rich didn't make them a requisite for being wealthy.
Low upward mobility means if you get a job at a firm, you have no chances for improving your income or getting a better job because the job doesn't have any prospects for "moving up." Also called commonly "dead end jobs." That the best job you could possibly hope to get in your sphere is one that has static income and no prospects for promotion.

A socioeconomic structure has a purpose or reason for existence, and that is its aim.

Who decides that you need education and infrastructure to work? Well no one and everyone. You need infrastructure in order for businesses to feel comfortable investing in an area. Without infrastructure businesses will have a huge amount of trouble obtaining any reasonable amount of success. Education? Well businesses traditionally want educated people, as well as the fact that educated people have a larger range of options in society.

It's not about telling people how to live their life, it's about giving them the ability to choose between a variety of lifestyles. If a person has no choice in their life about what they do and are forced into every decision while still remaining underfed and in fear all the time, our empathy and altruism urge us to believe that this is a poor lifestyle. It is not judging these people, but rather feeling sympathetic to their external conditions, and putting ourselves in their place. There is no reason that this is necessary the morally right way of looking at it, it's just that a large majority of people have empathetic sentiments like these.

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As far as poverty on a larger scale goes, if a culture rejects this way of life, who are we, as a rich nation, to enforce it? Unfortunately, we do enforce it, because if a group does not have education and infrastructure to support them, they will be exploited.
It is not that we are enforcing it, it is that we are doing our best to improve the range and quality of choices that people have. The US certainly does exploit other countries and their citizens, but it's also true that we increase the range of choice a lot countries and their citizens have. Whether or not we're more good or more bad is subjective and up to you.

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Did I talk about socialism or communism? Did I put such a label on anything I said? No. I understand that taking away profits and money from the people who would use them to make more profit slows economic growth. And I suppose I can see that growth is needed on the part of the people in poverty, in order for them to not be poor. However, overall growth is not needed to reduce poverty. In fact, there can totally be economic growth and an increase in poverty at the same time. Likewise, there can exist economic decline and with a decrease in poverty. With all your bitching about socialism preventing growth, it in fact did not address anything about poverty, except that you say it help put low (poverty stricken, in other words?) and middle-class income people in the same playing field. I don't quite understand how you can blame socialism for each country's individual decision about trade laws. (I also surely hope you've never pointed out that communism doesn't work for the reason of 'just look at Cuba!', because they've been under a trade embargo for years.)
Well I didn't say anything about you talking about communism, I was just clarifying points about communism and socialism. True communism doesn't work because it is dependent on an omnipotent central planner to be effective, and this is a really complicated economic idea so you'd honestly have to research it to understand, but essentially communism is not very good at allocating resources. Contrary to what one might believe, greed is not the number one reason communism is ineffective.

As for socialism, I was merely trying to illuminate that socialism has a humanist agenda but in effect has targets of limited scope. Just because someone has good intentions and aims to achieve a specific goal doesn't mean they will accomplish that goal in return for a diligent effort. The truth of the matter is that if your plan isn't good enough it won't work, even if it has the noblest of intentions. This is my personal belief about socialism, and I'm pretty sure that no one on this forum has the capacity to change my mind here, so the point is henceforth moot.
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Old 10-15-2008, 10:51 AM   #24
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

I only thought you were targeted against me because you quoted me at the top of your post.

"Poverty exists because of a lot of reasons, but the chief among them being people living in an socioeconomic structure which requires them to be a part of that structure to survive, and for various reasons people either don't or cannot integrate themselves successfully into that structure."

This point is what I want to talk about in regards to saying that having rich people causes poor people. It touches on a point I almost put in in my first post which I decided to remove, but I want to touch on it again. We are both agreed the quoted sentence above. So surely you must see that if that infrastructure weren't there, there'd be no problems of trying to fit into it.
By definition poverty cannot exist without richness existing, because poverty is a comparison in resources. For instance, if you go to a secluded tribe in a jungle, they don't think they're impovershed until they have a comparison of what they don't have. Now, this does not mean that merely having wealth itself causes poverty, but its pretty damned close. Poverty would be much less of a concern if people could simply stay in poverty if they chose, and keep a lifestyle they're used to that they like, or climb the ladder of wealth if they wanted. Unfortunately, people can't do that, because people who are wealthy and who are climbing the wealth ladder, take control of vaste quantities of resources and dictate how they are used. For instance, owning and running a personal farm is not feasible for the majority of people. Another example is that of any small company where there's a megacorp that provides the same service/makes the same thing. It's really hard to get your foot in the door once there's massive control of that specific thing, where they'll always be able to undercut your price. People are forced to work for large companies whether they want to or not. Furthermore, the wealth that exists in pretty much any large corporation relies heavily on a huge amount of low-wage workers who have little to no prospect of advancement, where the jobs are often incredibly boring. With enough low-wage workers, they pretty much have to buy the cheap goods, and you've got a catch22.

You say that economic growth gives people more of a choice, but it also closes doors to some choices too.

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Old 10-15-2008, 04:55 PM   #25
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This point is what I want to talk about in regards to saying that having rich people causes poor people. It touches on a point I almost put in in my first post which I decided to remove, but I want to touch on it again. We are both agreed the quoted sentence above. So surely you must see that if that infrastructure weren't there, there'd be no problems of trying to fit into it.
This is an astute point, but which poverty are we talking about? Are we talking about poverty in America? Because poverty in America happens as a result of other factors, not the fact that infrastructure is imposed on people.

If we're talking about poverty in Africa your point has some weight, but what has greater weight is the fact that the flow of goods that give power to the few has been unimpeded. Guns have done more harm than infrastructure ever would. And it is other elements like these. If we could stop every gun from going into Africa and allow Africans to live as though there wasn't anything going on in the rest of the world, we just might, but that is not the case.

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By definition poverty cannot exist without richness existing, because poverty is a comparison in resources.
Poverty is a metric which is not measured in relativity but based on the minimum cost of things necessary for healthy life. There may be inadequacies or errors in the metrics we use to determine the poverty line, but the point holds true the same, even if the line we have set is too high or too low.

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You say that economic growth gives people more of a choice, but it also closes doors to some choices too.
What? Wait please illuminate. Growth is pervasive, but not so much so that people will invest in a place that isn't welcoming to the investment. It's not like we're like "Shit! A subsistence jungle tribe! That's poverty! Let's make them succumb to our lifestyle!" and then force them all to work in factories. When job prospects come into an area that is traditionally deemed impoverished people flock to get jobs there, and there is a huge demand for those jobs. There is a lot of subsistence farmers in the world, and traditionally all the investment that the West tries to give them is clean water and maybe some farming tools, but mostly we just try to build wells in farming communities so they aren't drinking hazardous water.

I mean when we're being altruistic we're being realistic about it as well. And when a business is searching for investment prospects they are searching for places where there is stability and a possible workforce that is enthusiastic about working hard.

Actually to be honest I'm curious if you have a romantic view of the past, and you see modern culture as anathema to the better nature of humanity. I get the hint of this in what you say but I'm not sure if it's just misinterpretation based on the way you've phrased things.
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Last edited by devonin; 10-16-2008 at 02:59 PM.. Reason: Man, you're a double-posting fiend.
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Old 10-16-2008, 03:04 PM   #26
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

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Dear Devonin,

I'm sorry that science has been doing what it can to improve our quality of life. Next time we'll just let people develop parasites, diseases and have to hunt or gather their food so the laws of nature will apply more.
Science has done a wonderful job improving our quality of life and should continue to do so as much as possible. The whole point of my statement to which you were responding was to point out that we redirect a great deal of the energy and commodities that contribute to improving quality of life to people who aren't actually contributing anything back into the system.

I don't know where you got the impression that my statement regarding the laws of nature still applying to us meant ignorant savagery or the cessation of scientific endeavour.

I just mean that I hope when I'm 85, in the hospital, dying that nobody will feel obliged to dump 60 or 70 grand a year worth of treatment, machinery and hospital space into keeping me going until I'm 95, in the hospital begging to be let go.
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Old 10-16-2008, 06:53 PM   #27
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

Although it is completely tangential: I prefer the double post. It signifies to the reader that there was a gap in time between the two thoughts.
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Old 10-17-2008, 07:29 AM   #28
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I know and understand why it makes a certain kind of sense to post again instead of editing a post, but it would still be better to edit, and then either preface your edit with "Edit:" or seperate the content with a line of *****'s or something, considering I'm pretty much going to be obliged to merge them all anyway.
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Old 10-30-2008, 11:48 AM   #29
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Vendetta: Ever study the social effects of the industrial revolution? Suicide rates soared, at least in England. And yet job prospects of working in a factory within countries undergoing industrialization were what drew people to live in ****-holes of cities. My own romantic view of the past, perhaps, but I've learned facts to back this up. But again, I don't even need this. People like nature. People vacation in the wilderness, along beaches, and take pictures of sunsets because they like them and are drawn to them. Oh, there's also the suspiciousness of current staggering rates of depression in the developed world too. Don't get me wrong though, I'm no luddite. I wouldn't be sitting here, talking on the internet from my home computer if I were. I do imagine how nice it'd be to be able to own a small farm and actually make enough money to not live in poverty. That's the extent of it.

When I've written my posts, I've generally been thinking of poverty within North America, and I doubt that you can say that our lifestyle has been fully embraced by everyone. And what I was trying to say is that rich people DO force certain life choices on those who aren't rich enough to resist, and make other choices an impossibility. You laugh that no one forces jungle-faring tribes to work in factories only because the possibility to have such a lifestyle in North America is so far gone you failed to even think (probably) about it.

I understand that generally people will plop down jobs where they're wanted, but that in no way fixes or helps poverty when those are dead-end jobs.

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Old 10-30-2008, 05:55 PM   #30
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Ever study the social effects of the industrial revolution? Suicide rates soared, at least in England. And yet job prospects of working in a factory within countries undergoing industrialization were what drew people to live in ****-holes of cities.
If you haven't, you need to watch this right now: http://blip.tv/file/855937 or at least the first 2 or 3 minutes.

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Old 10-30-2008, 07:09 PM   #31
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Vendetta: Ever study the social effects of the industrial revolution? Suicide rates soared, at least in England. And yet job prospects of working in a factory within countries undergoing industrialization were what drew people to live in ****-holes of cities. My own romantic view of the past, perhaps, but I've learned facts to back this up. But again, I don't even need this. People like nature. People vacation in the wilderness, along beaches, and take pictures of sunsets because they like them and are drawn to them. Oh, there's also the suspiciousness of current staggering rates of depression in the developed world too. Don't get me wrong though, I'm no luddite. I wouldn't be sitting here, talking on the internet from my home computer if I were. I do imagine how nice it'd be to be able to own a small farm and actually make enough money to not live in poverty. That's the extent of it.

When I've written my posts, I've generally been thinking of poverty within North America, and I doubt that you can say that our lifestyle has been fully embraced by everyone. And what I was trying to say is that rich people DO force certain life choices on those who aren't rich enough to resist, and make other choices an impossibility. You laugh that no one forces jungle-faring tribes to work in factories only because the possibility to have such a lifestyle in North America is so far gone you failed to even think (probably) about it.

I understand that generally people will plop down jobs where they're wanted, but that in no way fixes or helps poverty when those are dead-end jobs.
So it's that you want things to be your way based on your belief that people like nature, and you would prefer to not use industrialization so people can get real food instead of sifting through garbage? What about the fact that people living in poverty overwhelming want the crap lifestyle of America? You may want people to live in some romantic naturalistic culture, but unfortunately most of the world wants American garbage, and I'm about free-choice over forced individual Platonism, and I'm not trying to judge American garbage, I'm just trying to give people who are struggling a choice between two alternatives. Do you believe people choose things within their best interests?

I understand the effects of industrialization, sir, but I also know that industrialization is a stepping-stone for cultures. China went through and is going through huge industrialization, but they are trying to move forward from that. They implemented a universal health care system last week. People are willing to submit to industrialization, by their own choice, because they are willing to sacrifice for what they believe is a better future, and because life with food and water is better than life without, whichever way you slice it.

I honestly think you're arguing from some Platonic seperation of reality in your head, sir. And I'm not trying to be mean, I'm just trying to be honest. I would wholeheartedly suggest you watch some documentaries about what it's like to live in other places in the world, and maybe take some classes on other cultures, or maybe read or listen to a world news service. When you understand what goes on in the developing world, everything in your heart and mind can't help but be wrenched into a horrible knot as you sit there on the couch and tears well up in your eyes from the portrayal that has been given you from Anderson Cooper or Ken Burns or some other person. And it's not as important how these situations arose in the world as it is important that you get rid of them. It's about real, plausible solutions, not about getting angry at the ways of the world but having empathy for your fellow human.

I have thought about this. I think about this a lot. I'm going into development and foreign aid as a career (which is why this is such a pet subject for me), and one thing I know for sure is that wherever I will go in the world, my skills will be in demand, because most people in the world want better things, they want the 21st century, they want a better life by their own terms.
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Old 11-12-2008, 08:16 PM   #32
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

Ok...
I clearly don't want what's best for people. Also, I specifically implied and stated that "I want everyone to live 'naturalistically', and that this is best for everyone". This was made clear in my post when I said that the extent of what I'd like to be able to do is be able to own a farm and not live in poverty. I also have never taken an anthropolgy class, or have read, watched or heard any media that talks about people in third world countries. When I say that I was thinking about modern day North America and developed nations, I was actually talking about the third world countries, obviously. I also said that I'm against any industrialization or development, particularly for starving people, all because industrialization isn't perfect.

Unsarcastically now though, you said yourself that you thought you were getting a hint of a 'romantic view of the past'. My following post to that statement merely addressed something that you brought up. You railroaded yourself into into seeing what you think to be my philosophy.
You say "it's not as important how these situations arose in the world as it is important that you get rid of them." Solving solutions almost always involves understanding how they come to be. Otherwise the solution is usually just be a bandaid.
As long as when you develop and give foreign aid in your career you make sure you're not forcing yourself on others, all the power to you.
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Old 11-14-2008, 04:55 AM   #33
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

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Ok... I clearly don't want what's best for people. Also, I specifically implied and stated that "I want everyone to live 'naturalistically', and that this is best for everyone". This was made clear in my post when I said that the extent of what I'd like to be able to do is be able to own a farm and not live in poverty. I also have never taken an anthropolgy class, or have read, watched or heard any media that talks about people in third world countries. When I say that I was thinking about modern day North America and developed nations, I was actually talking about the third world countries, obviously. I also said that I'm against any industrialization or development, particularly for starving people, all because industrialization isn't perfect.
I didn't say that you didn't want what's best for people, it's not a boolean operation. It's not black and white. It's not strictly positive and strictly negative. But you seem to have a set of terminal goals that are in conflict with each other, and while you think you know what's best for people, I think they know what's best for themselves better than I do, and that's why the core of my philosophy is choice. I cannot offer them unfettered existence in a naturalistic subsistence environment, and neither can the world. But what we can offer them is a job, and gradual improvements.

There are some tenets of the interventionist philosophy that are not based on choice, such as tyrannies, dictatorships, and insurgents that are ruthlessly killing others. We assume that the abuses of those in power are not the will of the people, even if the group has popular support, and we intervene. Now you can argue that this can been done well or it can be done poorly, and that is true. Our intervention in Iraq was a poor idea from a stability and well-being standpoint. Our intervention in other countries, such as Czechoslovakia, was a good idea.

Quote:
Unsarcastically now though, you said yourself that you thought you were getting a hint of a 'romantic view of the past'. My following post to that statement merely addressed something that you brought up. You railroaded yourself into into seeing what you think to be my philosophy. You say "it's not as important how these situations arose in the world as it is important that you get rid of them."
My belief here is purely philosophical and evidence neither supports nor denies this belief, but I personally believe that history blackmails us. It tends to lead us to bad decisions because we act in a way that is "trying to make sure we don't repeat the mistakes of the past."

Using History as a standard is weak because our understanding of history is often not empirical but anecdotal. We have historical records of things from the 70s forward in businesses, who keep long backlogs of information to act on and analysis of that information, and I would call that empirical history: it's worth using because it's based on verifiable true evidence, and the contingents in the decisions in the past closely resemble the contingents now.

We also have a wealth of information on the Great Depression which is not evidential but anecdotal. We like to use the Great Depression as a model for understanding the pitfalls of every financial crisis and how to act in response to the crisis, but the problem is that our knowledge of the great depression is still limited in terms of the pertinent financial information, and it does not help us in solving our current financial crisis; it is anecdotal history. This is the problem with using anecdotal history to try to understand things. It's a straw man argument. The two cases often superficially resemble each other but the pertinent contingencies are completely different.

There are different ways to view the past, but I treat history as a potential data set, just like I treat conversation like a potential data set, and I treat the internet as a potential data set. Each of these sources has a chance of giving me good information and bad information, and all that is important is good information towards making the best decision. And where that information comes from doesn't matter, all that matters is that it is verifiable true information or that it is verifiable efficacious philosophy.

Quote:
Solving solutions almost always involves understanding how they come to be. Otherwise the solution is usually just be a bandaid.
Solving problems is not about how they came to be but where the problem's root causes are. These two things superficially resemble each other but are entirely different. I don't need to know the History of the Congo to solve the problems in the Congo, I just need to know the pertinent social, economic, and political information and the root causes of the problems.

Quote:
As long as when you develop and give foreign aid in your career you make sure you're not forcing yourself on others, all the power to you.
I'm not giving my services away, they are going to be bought. So you can be sure that this will never happen simply because of the way I do business.

I urge you to thumb through http://www.devex.com

It's Monster.com for development and foreign aid professionals. This is how most of the world's foreign aid is done: by professionals who are hired by the country or by firms in the country. Charity does not even come close to doing what development does. Charity is an issue of band-aids, not surgery. Development is not. I do not like charity because I think charity can make things worse, but I do like development and foreign aid, and the distinction here is the goals of the two things. Charity often solves a surface problem, like hunger or sickness, but often tends to feed into the causal problem. Development offers things that are not directly useful in solving the surface problem, like roads. People are more willing to give to something that solves hunger or sickness, which is why charity exists. Not many people are willing to give to road-builing, bank formation, police force stabilization, agriculture experts, and investors because they don't think this will solve the problem, but it seems to be the only way to solve it for good.
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Old 12-21-2008, 09:32 PM   #34
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Post Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

It all has to start with the little ones. Teach the younger children if they want a change they need to use there voice. Their voice is very strong. As a little child I was thought to help anything and everything from a bug to a crying elder. I wanted a change and still do. See when you want to change something and tell someone about that change it is like a pandemic, it spreads so rapidly. But in this case of poverty in 3rd world countries or poverty period, people really don't get the full picture. I donate every chance i get. I don't like to see poor people on the streets or on the television. It hurts and i don't take things for granted.
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Old 12-31-2008, 02:57 PM   #35
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

http://www.thevenusproject.com/resource_eco.htm

You can read about a recource based econemy, as well as many other wonderfull and inovative ideas presented in the Venus Project here.

There is more then enough food, and other needed resources needed for EVERYONE on this planet to be fed and housed. There are enough resources for everyone to have a computer, a phone, a car, an Iphone. I could go on, but this subject bothers me. Its is only the greed and ignorance of men that stops our society from leaving a monetary system based on scarcity, when there is in fact, thanks to modern technology THAT EXISTS TODAY, no scarcity left, but still the barter ( or money system ) still holds on as " needed ", just becuase one wants more then another, when there is more then enough for all.
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Old 01-2-2009, 12:21 AM   #36
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

This may be kind of a short answer, in my opinion, as a Christian, eradicating poverty is impossible. Jesus said in the bible "The poor you will always have with you, and you can help them any time you want." Mark 14:7 (there is also another part of this verse that will cause many arguments, but that's for another time)

Does this mean that we shouldn't try? No. Jesus does say that we can help them, and says that we should (see Luke 12:33).
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Old 01-2-2009, 10:24 AM   #37
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

So what you're saying is that God has made "Keeping part of the population in abject poverty" part of His divine plan? For what purpose? To give the wealthy a chance to engage in some good acts? To give the poor a chance to suffer quietly?

It really sounds to me like you're saying "God has MADE it so there will ALWAYS be poor people" Pardon me if that sounds like a pretty crappy plan.
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Old 01-2-2009, 01:28 PM   #38
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

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This may be kind of a short answer, in my opinion, as a Christian, eradicating poverty is impossible. Jesus said in the bible "The poor you will always have with you, and you can help them any time you want." Mark 14:7 (there is also another part of this verse that will cause many arguments, but that's for another time)

Does this mean that we shouldn't try? No. Jesus does say that we can help them, and says that we should (see Luke 12:33).

So is it " God did it " or " Man did it " ?

I personally lean more towards man when presented with it like that.

Just a thought.
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Creeps in this petty pace from day to day
To the last syllable of recorded time,
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That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more: it is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing. " ~ W.S
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Old 01-2-2009, 10:18 PM   #39
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Default Re: Solutions to World-Wide Poverty?

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So what you're saying is that God has made "Keeping part of the population in abject poverty" part of His divine plan? For what purpose? To give the wealthy a chance to engage in some good acts? To give the poor a chance to suffer quietly?

It really sounds to me like you're saying "God has MADE it so there will ALWAYS be poor people" Pardon me if that sounds like a pretty crappy plan.
In Christian religion, God is all-knowing (I mean, come on, wouldn't it be kinda weird if God didn't know something?). It's more of a prophesy thing than a condemning thing. Like shaydow said, it's more of a "man did it" kinda thing, like, we brought this upon our own kind.

There was actually a debate on this that I saw. If I find it, I'll link it, but I'm not sure where I could find it.
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