by phaster » Wed 06 Aug 2008, 01:25:23
like it or not "Culling the herd" is the natural selection response of an economic or environmental system out of wack (i.e. unsustainable).
I was just trying to point out using a darwin observation, that survival of the strong over the weak has always happened in the past and morality questions aside, in the future the strong (physically, economically and intellectually) will survive at the expense of the physically weak, economically poor and intellectually challenged...
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('CarlosFerreira', 'D')ear phaster,
I'm afraid I will be cracking down on some of the issues of your post. Please beware I am doing it form an ideological point of view, and that even if I sound harsh at some point, I respect your opinion and thank you for creating this thread.
Now. First we agree that symptoms, either in markets or in the environment don't come out of nowhere. They are mostly man-made. And I agree these problems are - as you said twice - small. They will, however, turn to big problems as energy and raw materials grow more expensive (the cost of extraction grows higher because the cheaper, easier to extract stuff was extracted earlier, and growth in demand causes "Peak Everything"). Here our agreement starts to fade. Social darwinism brought about a lot of ideas - like fascism(s) - that I believed were long extinct. Social darwinism is nothing but a metaphor created by those on the top of the social and economic "food-chain" to rationalize the exercise of power over the ones "below". Pretty much like a lion telling a gazelle to stop running, since it is below on the food chain.
Darwinist evolution, in itself, is just a description of a natural process. It cannot be translated to human social life. Culling the herd is not an option.
A real free market, with not externalities, would see everyone start with the same value of a resource and compete from there. I predict most would easily kill for the resource in such a competitive, rules-free environment. Hell, much easier than negotiation, and bound to produce better ROI!
We absolutely agree that environment and economy are related. This is probably the first crisis where than fact is really visible for everyone. "People", that undistinguished mass of greyness, will not act to counter it; as MrBill and others have remembered us all, if there are no incentives, people's behavior won't change. The system is still programed (today, as we speak) to reward consumerism and punish powerdown. Why? Simple: if it wasn't, we wouldn't be consuming our way to nothingness. When incentives come, powerdown will ensue. Ideology is (mostly) a product of real, physical conditions. As Marx (or was it Lenin?) put it, it's the objective conditions. The recycling example was a particularly happy one: you have examples of places where recycling is taken as a boring, dull thing, because the government takes care of it, and examples where it was turned into a profitable activity, giving jobs (albeit, not desirable and happy jobs, that fulfill human nature) to a lot of people. So, that's an example where government intervention can be, in fact, worse. People "forget" externalities. If the government takes care of something, we forget that thing and give the responsibility to someone else. No information about value from the market.
On the other hand, government relaying all the responsibility about things on private initiative can be very harmful. My grandma used to tell than, during the fascist regime, there was no garbage, no overgrowth around trees in the forest - people became real scavengers, pretty much like those people in Cairo, and would take anything that resembled wood to use as fuel for stoves. Do we desire that kind of future? I, for sure, don't.
A word about apple: I am a marketeer. I say, screw "fashion" companies. Sure, that's just a personal opinion BUT brands (they're not companies) like apple, Harley-Davidson, Ferrari or Manolo's are just living in a (long-term) lie. Of course, they provided value and differentiation, and the market responded buying their increase in value. Great profits and margins, great investor return, great value. But I don't see them investing that capital in development of real value, alternative ideas for when the economy comes tumbling down. They are spending it on brand awareness, consumer satisfaction, communication, selling the dream. They create tribes around them; the tribe will starve when the leaders neither provide nor encourage sustainability.
The illusion of free markets has produced a debt and growth-addicted economy, one that is deeply unsustainable. I understand, however, that stopping growth and defaulting on debt will cause a serious systemic implosion, the possibility of massive unemployment, disruption in the supply and distribution chains and will leave a lot of people (like me), that probably can't provide for themselves, looking for answers and solutions that aren't there. All I know is this regime. That scares me a bit. Social collapse is probable if we stop current "free" markets too quickly, and inevitable if we keep on blindingly growing and accelerating.
As for the Doha rounds, I posted a thread on its collapse around here somewhere. Care to merge?