originally posted by VLM:
Those are all silly replications of things that governments are designed to do
Ridiculously stupid point which is obvious just from your use of the passive voice.
Wow, great arguments. You clearly should stay in your lane.
Your snideness didn't deserve anything more, and frankly I was juggling 5 things when I saw your post and didn't have the time. But since you're still sitting there so smugly convinced you're right, I'll engage you on the merits.
This nastiness originated in a simple question - how do I personally benefit from someone else's billions? My simple answer was that they provide services I want and reinvest their profits in technologies that will improve my life, among other things. You came in dropping stink bombs and nastily told me I suffer from false consciousness and don't benefit from the services that I've decided I benefit from, even though you have no idea what they are or how or why I use them. The level of ignorance and arrogance it takes to make such a comment is off the charts. Stay in your own damn lane. You then ignorantly added that investing in space and medical research and philanthropy are "silly replications of things that governments are designed to do and that individuals can't really pull off and probably can't even fund." I found your use of the passive voice striking. Who designed governments to do those things? What governments were so designed?
As it happens, I have on my desk a four-volume set containing all the primary source documents related to the debate and ratification of the Constitution. It goes into great detail about what our government was designed to do, as it contains the actual words of the designers recorded in real-time as they were doing the designing. I guess you'll be surprised to learn that no, our government wasn't designed to do any of those things. ("I'm assuming you don't know anything about this sector," you sniffed at me in apparent reference to things miscellaneously Science-y. That's actually another incorrect and ignorant presumption you had no basis to make, but you weren't making any claims drawing on your own expertise; you were making arguments about history (not your lane), law (not your lane), and economics (not your lane).)
As it happens, the word "science" appears in one place in the U.S. Constitution - the patent clause giving Congress power "[t]o promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries." So the extent of the manner in which our government was "designed" to promote technological research was to incentivize it in the private sector. Now, you are fully entitled to think those people were stupid and primitive and if only they had the benefit of the wisdom of Marx and Keynes and Ocasio-Cortez they would have realized that it's way more efficient to confiscate private wealth, shut down the pharma industry, and fund these things publicly. But it is simply wrong and ahistorical to state, as you did, that private R&D is a "silly replication[] of things that governments are designed to do," when the facts are literally the other way around at least when it comes to the government you and I live under. Maybe the design of the Soviet government supports your point better.
And then there is the matter of philanthropy. I mentioned the Gates Foundation, which has done absolutely amazing things to help large numbers of the absolute worst-off people in the world. Maybe your reaction would have been different if I'd mentioned the Clinton Foundation instead. You nevertheless declared that you find this kind of charitable work offensive because you think only the government should be able to make decisions about how to allocate Bill Gates' charitable dollars, and that the government will allocate those dollars better. I have no idea what leads you to believe that this is true. We know how the government allocates the trillions of dollars it already has (vastly more than the Gates Foundation has), and the government doesn't place a high priority at all on the causes served by the Gates Foundation. I am not sure why you think that would change if the government confiscated all the Gates Foundation's assets and shut it down. American voters vastly prefer entitlement programs that benefit Americans to aid programs that benefit the worst-off people in other countries. I appreciate the fact that you think you are the smartest person in the world and that if you were in charge of everybody's money, you'd spend it better. I'm sorry to tell you that you're not the one who gets to be in charge.