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  • Posted by ObjectiveAnalyst 11 years, 8 months ago
    When the price is driven high enough because of strikes or minimum wage laws, machinery/ robots will replace the workers, or the grapes will be imported.
    What was your son supposed to do with this?
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    • Posted by Non_mooching_artist 11 years, 8 months ago
      I found that in the Chavez page, "Force" is the operative word. The second, there are unskilled, presumably, workers, happy to be working, not living at the Ritz, but again, glad to have a job, at a family farm, which is going to be limited in scope, as its not a huge commercial operation.
      This is wonderful emotional fanning. Lets get kids worked up over "unfair". Life isn't fair. It takes brains and keeping ones wits about them, to make rational decisions. All if these jobs are at will. I cannot wait to read what is turned in!
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      • Posted by 11 years, 8 months ago
        I'd like to see them all myself.... My son raised his hand today while the teacher was giving a power point presentation to the class and asked if Chavez was a communist. The teacher said, "Um...no comment". Somebody else said, "That's a yes."
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    • Posted by 11 years, 8 months ago
      Make an argument for both sides: The Chavez Unionization and the Farmer.
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      • Posted by ObjectiveAnalyst 11 years, 8 months ago
        I see. I also see quite a few replies that are distractions and promote unionization. Unions despite opinions to the contrary are Marxist by nature. Force should not be employed by either side. If the farmer can't attract workers with fair wages and working conditions his farm will fail, or he will be forced to automate. The same result will occur if he can't supply his crop at a marketable price in face of world competition, because of labor costs, or excessive regulation. In either case there would be fewer or no jobs at all. When workers are turned to slaves and have no right to leave or educate themselves for better jobs, that is a different story. The story of Eli Whitney's cotton gin is typical and without it we would find work clothes much less affordable. This would impact the poor laborer the hardest. Technological progress can't be stopped.
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      • Posted by preimert1 11 years, 8 months ago
        Actually it looks like an interesting assignment to me, provided the teacher doesn't introduce his/her own bias as to what they want to hear. What grade level? What else did they learn in class before and after the assignment?

        The bracero system seemed to be working pretty well in California when I first came here fifty years ago. There are certain skills required even for menial jobs and the growers preferred experienced workers and paid them more. Most were able to send money home where it went a lot farther. There were labor contractors arranging for legal guest workers then, not coyotes and illegals like now.
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        • Posted by Robbie53024 11 years, 8 months ago
          Correct. And the workers went back home after the crop picking was finished. They didn't stick around on unemployment/welfare sucking up "benefits" that they didn't contribute to paying for in the first place.
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          • Posted by Notperfect 11 years, 8 months ago
            My Uncle back in the sixties was a peanut farmer. He hired those boys that came from Mexico to work his farms and paid $5.00/day plus bought all their food. Never seen him treat those boys badly at all. They worked and sent money home and when the season was over they went back home. Returned when season began. I know this because I worked those fields only I received $7.00/day plus food and a hot bed. He had a small travel trailer out on the farm for the Mexicans and they knew how to be frugal better than any person now that I can remember. Me getting $7.00/ day never bothered me because I got paid every 10 days and $70.00 to a 10 year old was like gold. Getting cash was even better.
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    • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years, 8 months ago
      GEEZ I wish you people would hush up... just kidding...

      This was to be part of the plot of "Continental Drift".

      Must... write... faster...
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  • Posted by $ AJAshinoff 11 years, 8 months ago
    Racist agenda driven hogwash. Chavez was an American citizen who detested illegal immigration and was pro-union. Sadly the best source I could find is from Ottawa and it points out how little we know of one of our own cultural heroes.

    http://www.ottawacitizen.com/entertainme...
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    • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
      Seems to me like the assignment is just a summary of Cesar Chavez's life. How is that a racist agenda?
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      • Posted by $ AJAshinoff 11 years, 8 months ago
        If it were truly about his life why is there no mention that he was a US citizen? Why would there be ANY mention of skin color at all? The bracero program was a temp worker comprised of mexican citizens would worked along the border picking crops - were those people, who were legally employed, not brown skinned? Why mention skin color? Or for that matter paint a farmer who is trying to make a living and employing dozens of people as bad?
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        • -1
          Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
          So would you prefer that all racial conflicts be scrubbed from the history books? Do you want schools to ignore the fact that racism has existed in the past? Do you want to whitewash history? Do you think mistreatment of workers should be ignored?
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          • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
            How were they mistreated? They wanted more money but there were workers willing to take their place. Are you capitalist or not? Sheesh those communist meetings are rubbing off on you. We need to do an intervention
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            • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
              Wow... amazing the level of inept understanding of what was going on. Farmers were not required (and many did not) even provide fresh drinking water in the fields... or latrines... the thinking was that if they didn't have anything to drink, they wouldn't have to pee very often either.

              Working conditions were terrible, temperatures were 110 to 115 typically (I live here in the California Central Valley), there were no bathrooms and a many-mile walk to use one, but they were also prohibited for health reasons of relieving themselves in the field, so many had gastro problems from going all day without being able to defecate.

              You are also assuming these were all adult males, they were not, these were entire families employed. My wife's family was contracted and taken to a farm in Davis, CA when she was 7 years old, and she and her parents worked in the fields. During the winter months, she did go to school instead (as it was the law, but not the choice of the farmer), and she earned scholarships to private schools and eventually graduated with an engineering degree and a scholarship from NASA. Nothing was easy for her though. Her family lived in a plywood shack for migrant farmers on the farm without running water or sewer, only outhouses. She generally couldn't bathe to be clean at school, so it was very easy to identify & segregate the migrant children. I've seen where she grew up as a little girl, reminded me very much of the slave housing on plantations in the South, in many ways, it was worse, as it was definitely not intended as permanent housing... just flat-roofed plywood sheds, basically, and an entire family in each one of them.

              Did they have work, when there was nothing for them in Mexico? Yes. But we are Americans, we can do much better than that.

              California has many ills in its past... like how we "conveniently" interned Japanese-descended farmers during WWII, many with hundreds or thousands of acres and had been here for generations... and "auctioned" the land to well-hooked-up political families... many of the strawberry fields of the central coastal lands for instance..

              How about the deed to a 1925 rental house that my wife and I owned..? The CC&R's indicated "This is a white-only neighborhood, blacks, latinos, " etc. " are strictly prohibited from owning or occupying any parcel of land." It was a row-house in downtown Sacramento.

              I love Reagan for his presidency... but as a governor, many forget that he argued to the California Supreme Court on behalf of a major (agricultural) donor that a ketchup packet adequately met the state's requirement for "fruit" in a daily school lunch.

              Cesar Chavez was less about unionization, than about human rights... many of what he led the workers to demand were conditions less than what the United States was demanding of foreign countries to treat their own people... actually...

              This was before social media, before the Internet, and many in the program were minimally educated. They had no idea, and couldn't read about, the conditions that awaited them when they signed the labor contracts. They also couldn't leave, and were forced to watch their family work in the fields and suffer in filthy conditions. How do you do that as a man and a father?

              I'd recommend watching the documentary about Cruz Reynoso, (my wife's uncle actually), that was made by PBS and documented his life... Cruz was originally a farm worker, went to law school and became Cesar Chavez's attorney, and eventually became a California Supreme Court Justice and was short-listed / vetted for the US Supreme Court. He talks very plainly about the challenges, the strife of the time, and the oppression of the people - generally born out of racism and extreme greed.

              Ever noticed how farmers tend to oppress peoples? Ever see any slaves in US history "outside" of a farm? Not many... I don't buy that "nobility" in farming crap myself. My wife and I have been fortunate to be successful and "2%'ers" through hard work, education, and working for ourselves.. not oppressing other people.

              http://www.vidaenelvalle.com/2011/09/21/...
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              • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
                I certainly am not promoting a noble farmer angle, but it's not like there are not large farms and ranches in Mexico. The fact is, they were paid more. I cannot speak to the conditions at the fields, but were there even porta potties back in the early 60s? I am sorry for the hard life your wife had, but sounds to me as though overall her opportunities were better than staying in Mexico and I congratulate her on her success. I am certainly willing to watch the PBS production about her uncle, but I notice you don't mention that Mr. Chavez was recruited and trained by Alinsky and sent back to get people to join a union. Striking is one thing, force keeping other people from working and damaging property another.
                http://www.latimes.com/books/jacketcopy/...
                "Cesar's cousin, Manuel Chavez, working for Chavez and the UFW, hired thugs to beat up migrants at the border in Arizona and bribed local police to let the vigilantes do their work, a project, as Pawel notes, decidedly at odds with Cesar's "steadfast commitment to nonviolence."
                Slaves in US History outside a farm. railroads and mining and dock workers and servants
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                • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
                  In all honesty, in a situation like that, the only way the conditions would probably improve would be to stop the stem of people coming across the border... otherwise, you wouldn't be able to organize the labor.

                  I'm not a huge fan of unions, and I think they are mostly ridiculous for office workers or IT in the public sector, but the working conditions were not any better for immigrant labor as late as the 60's than they were for say Irish textile workers during the industrial revolution. In both cases, the families had no choice but to take 7 year olds out of school and put them to work in the mill to be able to afford food and pay the rent for the shared room also owned by the mill owner. Incidentally, the farmers were charging rent and deducting from the wages for the farm workers to live in the plywood shacks.. They had their choice, live in the camp, or pay "more" than the rent, for the daily ride to the fields from living elsewhere. Since the communities refused to allow migrant workers to live in their neighborhoods, living in the shacks out in the fields were the only option.

                  Obviously, you don't advertise that in a labor contract brochure overseas... so I highly doubt the expectation was there. In fact, the "rumors" that were circulated in Mexico at the time were that American roads were paved with gold (literally). All they had to do was move to America and they would be millionaires.
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                  • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
                    some have become millionaires. After all, in the US, as corrupt a crony system we have, there are more than 10 families dominating the stock market. as onerous as our regulations are, we promote a strong patent system and do not (yet) govt own all rights to oil and other industries in the US which are considered private. In all honesty, people who want to immigrate often throughout US History come to find work, a better life. Children being allowed to work was important to those immigrant families to stave off starvation. I am in no way condoning poor working conditions. But when we passed child labor laws, it's not as if these immigrants' problems were solved. From extreme poverty to the next step is a brutal existence including migrant and immigrant workers. I think about the African refugee camps where there is no work and people slowly starve or die of disease. Working out of the Malthusian trap and having an opportunity to do so is preferable.
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                    • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
                      They did... but asking for a ports-potty at the job site, or drinking water access... isn't exactly an extreme request that a farmer couldn't afford.

                      The issue is that they were treated as sub-human, and the discontent boiled into confrontation. Any time you have a captive labor force, and an oppressive and organized employer (the farm owners were definitely a cartel), those issues are bound to happen.

                      Could they have walked to the next farm to get a job? No, because the farmers would refuse to hire someone that was looking for better wages than they were getting down the street... the farmers had formed their own collectives to keep wages low by refusing to compete with each other for labor. Interestingly... Google, Apple, Intel, Sun, etc.. just got sued and lost for the same thing in Silicon Valley... for black-listing each others programmers to never give them an interview if they were working somewhere else within the "agreement" to artificially deflate salaries.

                      Free markets are supply & demand... but the same people screaming for it never seem to want to be on the wrong side of the demand curve themselves.... and actively seek to manipulate it actually.
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                      • Posted by Robbie53024 11 years, 8 months ago
                        Those are examples of "un-free" markets - or markets that are being manipulated by one side. The same can happen when the workers strike, except in that instance with a union, the action was agreed to by the employer (often - there are some contracts that distinctly prohibit striking, usually dealing with public safety).
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                        • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
                          When one side imposes "un-free" alliances, often the only way for the other side to respond with with their own "un-free" alliances.

                          Or a lawsuit. Lawsuits work, too.
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                      • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
                        agreed.
                        That's interesting about the software engineer suit. I hate cronyism in all of its forms. But I also hate socialism. Everyone seeks to manipulate the demand curve. The question is are you colluding. and collusion is illegal in the US. Bringing attention to the workers' plight is fine, beating up migrant workers at the border is immoral. Not providing basic accomodations at the job site is immoral in my opinion. But the shanty towns? I'm not sure about that. In Colorado springs, after the financial crisis, hobo towns sprung up overnight. The city dispersed the tents and communities as an eyesore. But many were families who needed a month or two of no rent to get back on their feet. It's easy to say -people shouldn't live like this-many people felt safer in those "communities" than going to the homeless shelter.
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                        • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
                          Well... theoretically... until the parents fall sick or die, and the girls get sold into pre-pubescent prostitution... of course... there was plenty of a market for that too among the dirty old white guys that didn't have a lot of regard for the brown-skinned girls as human or not.

                          The sins and history of California roots as the frontier are pretty unfathomable to people from the East Coast or midwest corn farmers or whatever.

                          This isn't walking through corn fields in 80 degree Nebraska humidity and a comfortable rain in the afternoon.... this is being on your hands & knees in 115 to 120 degree heat in extremely dry conditions, meticulously trimming grape vines... making $130 a day for a married couple and the farmer's "market" charging $50 of that back to babysit the children too young to work in the fields yet...

                          San Diego had the "rape groves" where 7, 8, or 9 year old girls were pimped out to a dozen 45 year old men a night to double-team or whatever at a time. Pretty much until they die of diseases..

                          Still think there is no room for regulation?
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                          • Posted by 11 years, 8 months ago
                            Total lack of morality. I don't think can be regulated..no matter the skin color.
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                            • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
                              The discussion though is about whether Cesar Chavez was right to instigate the as he did... I would venture to say that yes, in light of the suffering of his people, if I were him I would have gone far further I'm sure.

                              We hold up MLK as a leader and a hero, and he was, but the plight of the migrant laborers was worse I think and a very well-orchestrated attempt to conceal the conditions at every level politically.

                              Farmers have enormous political power in California... these are not the bumpkins that you might see elsewhere... they have hundreds or thousands of acres have extremely high-producing, high-value cash crop.. Walnuts are up to $6.00 a pound... do you have any idea how many walnuts you get out of say a 400 acre grove?

                              Let's take plums... I have a single plum tree, and I give away around 400 lbs of plums a year to friends that have horses to eat the stupid things. I give away hundreds of pounds of oranges from only a few trees, and I've been using RoundUp on the grape vines for a decade to try and kill them off.

                              This isn't growing alfalfa...
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                              • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
                                you mean the same farmers who were denied water due to the smelt? the dust bowl valley right now? really? "bumpkins you might see elsewhere" what the heck? I grew up in Iowa...not sure I appreciate the reference...
                                Yes, Nancy Pelosi, the "farmer" has taken no grief for employing illegal migrant workers for her vineyards.
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            • -1
              Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
              Honestly, they usually just end up talking about history at the Communist meetings. Only occasionally do they ever actually discuss the theory of Communism itself. Out of all their meetings I've attended, I think the only one in which they actually directly addressed economic theory at all was that time when they discussed Adam Smith's "The Wealth of Nations," and compared Adam Smith's theories to those of Karl Marx. Smith and Marx both have an economic concept called "the labor theory of value," though Smith's version is a little different from Marx's, but they do have some commonalities, and I think Marx's theory was actually built on top of Smith's. But that's all beside the point, which is that I don't feel like attending the Communist meetings has actually changed my opinion about economic theory at all. They still tend to say a lot of stuff I disagree with (and I do mean a lot), but that's part of why I attend the meetings. In fact, that's also part of the reason why I keep coming to this forum – because I so frequently disagree with the people here. To quote Dudley Field Malone, "I have never in my life learned anything from any man who agreed with me." And I want to learn as much as possible. If anything, all the meetings have really done is provide me with new knowledge about historical events which I had previously been unaware of, which is actually pretty useful knowledge. History is always good.

              If anything has been influencing my thinking lately, it's probably the fact that I just recently finished reading Saul Alinsky's "Rules for Radicals," which I actually enjoyed quite a bit. Yes, I admit I enjoyed a book written by a Neo-Marxist Socialist. So sue me. :P

              Of course now you're probably wondering what made me decide to read "Rules for Radicals." Why would I do such a thing? No, it wasn't recommended by anyone in the Communist/Socialist club, and honestly I don't know whether any of them have even read it themselves (maybe they have, I don't know, but I'll ask the next time I attend one of their meetings). The reason I read it is because about a month ago, Eudaimonia made a topic in which he accused the Southern Poverty Law Center of being an Alinsky front group. You can read that topic here:

              http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/6d...

              At the time Eudaimonia made that topic, I admit I didn't really know anything about Saul Alinsky, nor did I know what sort of things he advocated in his (in)famous book. But I did know that I disagreed with what Eudaimonia was saying, and that he was attacking an organization which I consider to be respectable. Plus, ever since I read "The Naked Socialist," by Paul B. Skousen (a book which is essentially nothing more a bunch of conspiracy theories masquerading as legitimate history) back in 2012, I've developed a heavy skepticism of any and all accusations of Communist/Socialist/Marxist connections that conservative-leaning individuals tend to make. If you accuse someone of being a Communist, then you better be able to prove it. Otherwise you get labeled as a conspiracy theorist, and lose a significant amount of credibility. I call it my anti-McCarthyism filter, and I use it to prevent myself from being mislead by manufactured bullshit and lies. I actually find it kind of sad that such a conceptual filter is even necessary, but apparently that's just how these things go when you're dealing with something that so many people have such strong feelings about. Just look at the sort of nonsense propaganda about Communism that gets churned out by conservative sources:

              Snopes.com – Communist Rules for Revolution:
              http://www.snopes.com/history/document/c...

              Snopes.com – How to Create a Social State:
              http://www.snopes.com/politics/quotes/al...

              When there's stuff like that getting thrown around, being spread through email chain letters of unknown origin and dubious credibility, can you really blame me for being skeptical and demanding evidence for any accusations? I certainly hope not.

              Anyway, thanks to Eudaimonia's topic, I decided that I wanted to read this Alinsky guy for myself and see what he actually said. That way, if anyone else ever tried to claim that someone was influenced by Alinsky, or that some organization was an Alinsky front group, I would know what Alinsky's actual policies were and what he stood for, and could call people out if their claims didn't match up with Alinsky's writing.

              But as I read "Rules for Radicals," I have to confess something else happened which I didn't expect – I found myself agreeing with Alinsky. This surprised me, as I had expected Alinsky's ideas to be in relatively the same line of thought as those of Karl Marx, or to at least to bear some resemblance to Karl Marx's theories. But they didn't. Reading Alinsky was a totally different experience from reading Marx. When I read Marx, I can usually dismiss his theories as complete and utter nonsense with relative ease. I can't do that with Alinsky. The things Alinsky writes... they seem to be true.

              Unlike Marx's writings, which are dull, dry, and boring, Alinsky's writing has a spark of life to it – an enthralling, almost mystical quality, the kind which only the most talented writers posses. Now you may say, "Oh, sure, maybe he's a good writer, but he's still a Marxist, and he's still advocating Communism." This is the natural response I would expect from you, given what you've probably been told about Saul Alinsky if you get your information from people like Newt Gingrich or Glenn Beck. But here's something you may not be aware of if all your information about Alinsky is from second hand sources and conservative commentary: although it is true that Saul Alinsky was a Neo-Marxist, the book "Rules for Radicals" doesn't actually promote Communism, Socialism, or even Marxism at all. A few paragraphs here and there may briefly touch on the topic, but the main focus of book is actually about community organizing. That is, persuading large groups of people to join your cause (whatever it is), organizing them effectively, and directing them in ways to achieve a social or political agenda. "Rules for Radicals" is not about Marxism, it's about people, and the tactics which Alinsky lays out can be used to promote virtually any ideology, even capitalism or Objectivism. Saul Alinsky even says in the book that he intentionally divorced the tactics themselves from Marxist theory, as he thought the world was in desperate need of a handbook for revolution which could be used by anyone, since nearly all revolutionary material prior to that point was published exclusively by and for Communists. In my opinion, the tactics he describes feel very reminiscent of Sun Tzu's "The Art of War," transposed into modern times and applied to politics instead of combat.

              Alinsky openly acknowledges the tyranny and despotism of Communist China and the Soviet Union, admitting that it's better to live in a free country like the United States, where at least he has the freedom to speak out against the government and bring about what he thinks are positive changes in society without fear of being arrested and thrown in a gulag for the rest of his life. Of course now you're probably wondering why he would want revolution if he realizes that it's better to live in a free country. But here's the thing you've got to understand: in Alinsky's terminology, the word "revolution" doesn't necessarily mean overthrowing the government. It could *potentially* mean that, for people who actually do happen to live under a tyrannical dictatorship, but it could also simply mean "change." Unlike Marx, Alinsky does not believe in a utopia, but rather says that every positive has its negative, meaning that nothing in life is perfect, and there will always be both good and bad sides to every choice you make. The analogy he makes is one of climbing a mountain where the peak is shrouded in fog, and once you get to what you thought was the peak, the fog lifts, and you see that the mountain continues upward still, with another peak above, also shrouded in fog. If you wish to progress, you must continue your climb. It's a perpetual process of constant improvement, ceasing only at death, at which point the torch is picked up by the next generation, who will make improvements of their own.

              By now you may be thinking, "Okay, so Saul Alinsky deviates from Karl Marx on several key points (many, many points, in fact), his book 'Rules for Radicals' doesn't actually promote Communism, he recognized that Red China and the Soviet Union were tyrannical and corrupt, and he didn't even want to overthrow the U.S. government. But he still believed in Socialism, and a Neo-Marxist is still technically a Marxist!" To that, my only response is, so what? So what if he believed in a misguided and incorrect economic theory like socialism? Are we going to say that he's automatically wrong about everything else, that every idea he ever had and every word he ever wrote is inherently evil, simply because he happened to believe in the wrong economic theory? Albert Einstein was also a socialist, yet we still recognize the Theory of Relativity as a valid scientific concept, and the equation E=MC^2 was a tremendous leap forward for scientific understanding of the subatomic universe, without which nuclear fission would not be possible. If we are capable of acknowledging that Albert Einstein was right about some things, in spite of being wrong about economics, can we not do the same for Saul Alinsky?

              Here's another thing: Glenn Beck and Mitt Romney are both members of the Mormon church. The Mormon church contains within its canonical doctrine a social-economic theory called "The Law of Consecration," which is virtually indistinguishable from Communism. Given Beck and Romney's membership in the church, the chances are pretty high that they both believe in The Law of Consecration, and think it's a good thing. Should we therefore automatically dismiss everything they say because of this belief they hold? Is that enough to say they're always wrong? This is just a hunch, but something tells me you'll probably say, "No."

              Yes, Saul Alinsky was a socialist. But I say that we would all do well to take to heart the wisdom of Will Rogers, and recognize that "Everybody is ignorant, only in different subjects." If you dismiss someone entirely simply because you happen to have knowledge in an area where they are ignorant, you'll never know what gaps in your own knowledge that person could have filled. In the words of H. Jackson Brown Jr., "Every person that you meet knows something you don't; learn from them."
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              • Posted by preimert1 11 years, 8 months ago
                Your a good guy, Maph. Banging along through life llike a pin ball machine, but taking away something from each encounter. I like that. I started to read Das Kapital once, but it was too boring. I have a good friend who is a retired Teamster and I kid her a lot (and she, me) But she says I shamed her into reading Libertarian and Objectivist stuff. Now I'm going to read Alinsky to see what the other side has to say.
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                • -1
                  Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
                  Haha, thanks. It's always nice to encounter people who haven't completely "drunk the koolaid," so to speak.

                  I just picked up Alinsky's "Reveille for Radicals" yesterday, which is his older book, written roughly 20 years prior to "Rules for Radicals." So it was written at a point when he was younger and less experienced, but had a more youthful zeal about him.

                  Anyway, let me know what you think about "Rules." ;)
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            • -1
              Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
              Communism is the abolition of private property and money, neither of which are things I advocate or endorse. :P

              Labor Unions, on the other hand... well, I don't think those are necessarily antithetical to capitalism. In my mind, labor unions and communism are two totally different things. Are you trying to equate them with each other?
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              • 11
                Posted by $ stargeezer 11 years, 8 months ago
                I'd suggest you spend a few years working in a industry under union control (and it is about control) then spend a equal amount of time working in a similar business minus the union.

                After that little test you can tell me how you feel.

                Since I have done both, I feel properly positioned to give my observations. In the interest of saving time, I'll just say unions suck. Unions are a small taste of communism.

                When I was running my construction firm in ElPaso TX, we were a nonunion shop. We were not a union shop. Any of my employees who wanted to unionize were free to go look for work elsewhere. TX is a right to work state and I interpreted that as you have a right to be in a union or you have a right to work, if I tell you I want your services.

                Since I paid more than the local union wage rates, had better benefits for my men and took care of them, they stood by me.

                In my office I kept several firearms and since my shop was outside the city in the desert east of the city we had the perk of a small shooting range in back of the shop. All of us were welcome to use it as long as work was done. So at any moment, I might be found cleaning a pistol in my office.

                One hot July day the local BA, business agent (union thug) decided that I'd been a nonunion shop long enough and rounded up another muscle builder type from the hall to "lean" on me. After parking outside my lot (10 acres surrounded by 8' chainlink fence with barbed wire top, one truck gate, one walk gate) and walking past two No Trespassing" signs to enter the walk gate that was a double gat with 8' space between and another warning about armed guards, they came strolling into my office like they owned it. I had a gun rack behind me and on my desk was a 1911 torn down that I was cleaning.

                After he introduced himself and the thug he proceeded to tell me that my men wanted to unionize, but when I asked him which man, he ony knew the first name of the guy who showed him to my office - who hated unions worse than I did. As he was telling me how things were going to change and that I'd not be taking advantage of my men like I had been and so on. The entire time he was talking, I kept cleaning my 45 and then assembled it. As he was finishing I finished assembling the pistol and slid a full mag into it, racked the slide and set the safety. After that I set it over to the side (not pointing at them or me) and pulled up the double barreled shotgun I kept under my desk, opening it, removing the slug rounds I kept in it and started cleaning it.

                As I did that I called the four men who were in the shop into my office and I asked them if they wanted a union, which they said no to. As I dismissed them to go back to work, I told the BA that they didn't want to unionize because if they did they'd lose far too much. At this point I pulled out a fresh box of shells and reloaded the old side by side and closed it up and slid it back into it's holster under my desk.

                Next I took down a AR15, unloaded it, and started to inspect it. It had not been shot, but in that dusty environment you need to keep your maintance up, As I reloaded it and had it in my hands I looked up at them and said, "Oh, you're still here. Do you need help finding your way out?" He said "no" and they left with far more haste than when they arrived.

                Unions exist to feed on the soft under belly of society and are only separated from the mafia by legal recognition. In the six years I operated that shop no employee ever had a bad word about how they were treated. They were well paid, but I was paid better and had a standing offer then on any day if they felt they could do my job better and can prove it to my, the job was theirs. When we left there 16 years ago I sold the business to my lead man and even financed it for him - a loan he paid back early

                It's still not a union shop.
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                • -3
                  Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
                  That's a fascinating story, but it doesn't really explain what's wrong with a labor union. All you really did was recount a personal experience you had with a dishonest union rep. That might tell us about the personal and individual moral integrity of that particular union, but it tells us absolutely nothing about the broader functioning of labor unions in general.

                  Unless you can somehow demonstrate that all unions always engage in that sort of behavior, and that employees are always worse off under a union, you don't have much of an argument going for you.
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                  • Posted by $ stargeezer 11 years, 8 months ago
                    When you start out with the premise that unions are honest and do have the employees affairs at heart, you're right, I'll never be able to prove that unions are corrupt organizations that parasitically feed on the membership dues to support themselves as they feed the liberal wing of the democratic party as it works to subvert everything and every value most workers hold dear.

                    Again, once you have some life experience to base your own decision on, enjoy the union that you pay dues to while it's working against you.

                    Unions exist to tell the business owner how he can operate his business. If you are the better worker than a lazy bum who has two days more seniority than you do and there's a promotion coming for somebody, the lazy bum will get it instead of hard working mapf who shows up on time and does his work quicker and better than anybody else. The owner might like to give you the promotion, but because there's a union involved, he can't promote based on merit - he MUST promote based on seniority because that's how unions write their contracts.

                    Next thing, maph has worked hard all year and the boss wants to reward good employees. In a non union shop, the boss might walk up at the end of the year and hand you a check for $5,000, because YOU made him a lot of money. In a union shop with the same company statistics and hard working maph and sloppy, lazy clide, the boss cannot give you ANY better bonus than clide gets. So you worked hard, made the company money but clide blew a major deal and lost thousands of profit - but because of the union, clude will get $2,500 and hard working maph gets $2,500. Everybody is all equal right? Except you worked hard and helped the company stay in business but clide, who got the same bonus (you both got half of what you would have gotten without the union) as you did - pushed the company closer to going out of business. Tell me, next year with everything being the same, are you going to work as hard?

                    Next thing - unions take workers dues and fund political candidates. Everybody knows I'm big on the 2nd Amendment and owning guns - lots of guns. If I'm a member of a union that takes my union dues and gives those dollars to a gun grabbing anti-gun liberal zealot, they are campaigning AGAINST my personal political stand. In effect, using my 1st Amendment free speech rights to fight against myself.

                    Fortunately this has been found unconstitutional and now I may demand a reduction in my union dues to offset the dollars taken from dues and given to my opponent. But the union will still give as much to my opponent as they can get away with.

                    Perhaps life will open your eyes to what unions really are before our nation is ruined, I'll be gone in a few years and you will be stuck with the mess you support today. History is a merciless bitch - you need to learn what mistakes have already been made BEFORE Obama's thugs finish rewriting the books to reflect what a glorious age this is as we bask in his wondrous grace to us little people. Him and the union bosses that put him where he is.
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                    • -1
                      Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
                      Actually, I don't start with the premise that unions are always honest and have the employees' best interests at heart. Rather, I start with the premise that the quality of the union is dependent upon the people in charge of it. If you've got bad people in charge, then you've got a bad union. But if you have good people in charge, you could potentially have a good union.

                      It also depends on whether the union was formed for a legitimate purpose, or just formed to exploit the workers and make a profit for the union. Either situation is possible.

                      Oh hey, look what I found...

                      Atlas Society – Would an ideal Objectivist society allow labor unions?
                      http://www.atlassociety.org/labor-unions...
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                  • Posted by $ stargeezer 11 years, 8 months ago
                    I forgot to add that this was exactly how EVERY BA I ever met behaved. In their mind you don't own your business, they do. They tell you what jobs you can take, how much you can charge, how many men you will work on the job. If you think the job requires three men, but the BA tells you that you will work 5 men, that's how many you will pay to work - and pay the union for their cut of the job.

                    The Mafia is more fair than a union.
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              • Posted by Robbie53024 11 years, 8 months ago
                You really need to live a bit more life before commenting on such things. Let's see: Union, everyone gets the same wage based on seniority regardless of productivity. Union, you pay a portion of your wage - the same amount regardless of actual paycheck, talk about regressive - to a communal pot where you don't get to decide what is done with that money, the union bosses do. Union, if you voice a difference of opinion from the union bosses you will find yourself a subject of at least scorn and ridicule up to an including physical intimidation and harassment. Union, blocks teamwork by insisting on maximum number of trades to be present for any job so as to maximize union workers.

                Never have I seen those things happen in a non-union shop.
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                • Posted by $ jlc 11 years, 8 months ago
                  I have never been in a union. (The first attempt to unionize medical technologists ended when the putative organizers absconded with the funds. For some reason, the profession has not been receptive to the idea since then.) But, reading history, it seems to me that unions are a lot like acne. They arise when you have a particular set of maturation conditions in effect: A population that is not easily mobile and which has few skills is being abused by their employers because they are a captive audience and have no alternatives.

                  A union inverts this structure and makes it evident to the employer that they too have no alternative but to treat their employees better.

                  Once alternatives are available to both the employer and the employee, a union is a parasitic attachment whose purpose is to falsely maintain no-alternatives structure. It does this to the loss of both sides, I think. I do know of two people who have worked union/non-union and both of them are firmly pro-union, however. Perhaps there is some benefit I am missing.

                  Jan
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                  • Posted by Robbie53024 11 years, 8 months ago
                    Let's see - higher pay for less work, nearly impossible to get fired, others think for you - hmmm, for the sheople, seems like a good thing.
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                • Posted by 11 years, 8 months ago
                  The dues goes to fund politicians who then turn around and push for more unions, who get more money for politicians who then.... ... It's a corrupt crony cyclone.
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              • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
                I agree, while Labor Unions are a component of the labor market in a communist country, its not really any different than say a guild or a skilled-labor plumbers' union or equipment operators labor union here for example. The linkage is the popularity of communist beliefs among organized labor proponents. Otherwise, one has little to do with the other from a functional perspective.

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          • Posted by $ AJAshinoff 11 years, 8 months ago
            The bracereo people were legally here, they weren't mistreated, adn they never demanded a damn thing from America except their fair wage before returning home. You see, I enjoy history, and I know about that too. Chavez was against the bracereo's and illegal aliens because they drove down he wage. His vocal opposition to illegal aliens and day workers would have made him the one pointing out the skin color. Again you imply meaning. I write exactly what I mean 90% of the time so there is no need.
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          • Posted by 11 years, 8 months ago
            How were the workers mistreated by the farmer? People aren't responsible for themselves or their own happiness? That's the employers job? "Kept poor" , "force the owners..", "factory workers get paid vacation...." THEN GET A JOB AT A FACTORY! I supposed you're also for McDonald's workers making 15bucks an hour too.
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            • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
              A minimum wage just tends to make business owners outsource work overseas, replace workers with machines, or hire illegal immigrants (or any combination of those things). It also has a tendency to prevent business owners from hiring teenagers and other low-skill workers.

              So I think we can safely dismiss the minimum wage as having more downsides than benefits. The other things, however, I'm not so sure about...
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              • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
                So what's the minimum wage for the children (of the farm workers), also forced to work in the fields?

                By the way... California farmers are notoriously inefficient... machinery... almost non-existent.. it's all hand-labor. They don't really even bother with irrigation systems, just dig big 3 & 5 foot trenches and shoot the water through those and whatever soaks into the ground or evaporates off... oh well... perfect for a state with serious water supply problems... Now they are crying about not getting enough water deliveries, when they have also never bothered to efficiently irrigate their land either..
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                • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
                  I support child-labor laws. I don't think children need to be working in the fields.
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                  • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
                    well, luckily we are wealthy enough that your statement makes sense in teh US> BUt in countries where people are living on the edge of starvation, whether a child can work or not may be the difference between whether their loved ones starve or not. Child labor laws never stopped child labor. Economics stop it
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                    • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
                      That's a good point. Whether a particular law is good or not often depends on the society, and the same law which is good in one society may be bad in another.

                      I guess what this shows is that most regulation should be enacted by local governments, because only they will be able to accurately asses the needs of their own community.
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                      • Posted by $ stargeezer 11 years, 8 months ago
                        My Dad worked in a local factory third shift and worked as a general contractor during the days. From the time I was seven years old I carried a hammer around behind him until by the time I was 12yo I knew what to do with it when he told me to do something.

                        The result of "working" with my Dad as child labor, I can build a home or shopping mall. I have ALWAY'S had a trade that paid well for as long as I wanted to claim it. It lead me to start my own construction firm and to acquire a civil engineering degree. I built (my company at least) all sorts of buildings on military installations. From barracks to flight simulator buildings to small bridges. Even test targets at White Sands NM. I could always provide for my family.

                        It was also a very happy time with my Dad, who, it seemed was always working.
                        .
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                  • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years, 8 months ago
                    That depends on who is working them.
                    If it is a family farm, then of course the children should join in the work of the farm.

                    After much persuasion, 3 weeks before I turned twelve, I managed to convince my father to let me work with him; weekends, holidays and summers. My job was to hand him brick, and to act as 'gopher'. Another job was to clean his trowel at the end of the day. He paid me 25 cents an hour. And I was safer on the jobsite with him than I was in the playground at school.

                    The days after a particularly tiring day, he would try sneaking out of the house without me, so I could rest, and then patiently deal with my ire at being almost left behind. For the first time, thinking back, remembering the expression on his face, I made him feel proud of me those mornings; and that memory is worth all the gold of Cathay to me. During those years, my most effective punishment wouldn't be spanking or "time out"... but to be threatened with not being allowed to go to work with him.

                    One summer day we were working, just the two of us for some reason. I was up 3 scaffolds high, withering in the heat; he was below making more mortar, which I would land on the scaffolding as he pulled it up. I remember suddenly being about 2 feet shorter, and, seemingly instantly, there was my father atop the scaffold, pulling me up from the planks I'd fallen between. On that same job, after working in that summer heat all day, I had mentioned never having played "kick-the-can". He must have been exhausted, but at the of the day he dug out a coke can, and the two of us played kick-the-can together in the parking lot before going home.

                    Years later, foolish laborers had disassembled scaffolding, leaving the walk plank hanging over. I stepped off them, and by twisting managed to fall between two cubes of concrete block rather than on them. Before I could get to my feet, before the men within arm's reach of me could react, my father who was 40 feet away down the scaffolding was the one who picked me up.

                    Your "child labor laws" would have denied me some of the best and most meaningful memories of my life, at a time when I have little else.
                    I thank you, no thank you, and again, I thank you.
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                    • Posted by airfredd22 11 years, 8 months ago
                      Re: Hiraghm,

                      A truly wonderful story about your relationship with your father, but it also demonstrates how a father in the home is so important. Sadly I lost my father as a 9 year old and didn't have the chance to experience that kind of relationship with him.

                      Fred Speckmann
                      mailto:commonsenseforamericans@yahooo.com
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                      • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years, 8 months ago
                        I'm very sorry that you lost yours at such a young age. I was 38 when I lost mine, and much to my surprise I was devastated by my loss. I can only imagine how hard it must have been for you at 9.
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                    • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
                      Alright, you make a good point. Child labor laws should not apply to small family farms. I was really thinking more about large industrial farms owned by a corporation, anyway.
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  • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
    Some considerable inaccuracies in the second one... the "wages" for the worker were actually for the entire family... the wife & kids also had to work to get that income... Since it wasn't a full-time job (only a few weeks from harvest season), the families had to move from farm to farm with whatever crop all year. The kids generally attended 17 schools (the average) in a given year. They were 'slow' because they had no idea what was going on, and were only there for 2 weeks anyway. My wife ended up self-schooling herself, as she learned nothing in school until her father finally escaped from the farm worker labor contracts and got a job in construction. (keep in mind, a contract is not "at-will"), the labor is required, as is the payment for it. Most of them were multi-year with whatever the farming labor contractor was.
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  • Posted by teri-amborn 11 years, 8 months ago
    ...and to think that when I was young I would actually have succumbed to this communistic nonsense.
    This is simply an exercise of emotion over reason in a venue where the children have no mental power to see through the veil of rhetoric.
    I would put my child in private school. Children need to be taught to think. They already know how to emote.
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  • Posted by KYFHO 11 years, 8 months ago
    Back in the sixties, before this history was rewritten for today's standards, Mexicans came to America for a season of grapes, lettuce, and other produce and worked their butts off and then went back home to mexico for the rest of the year. They were able to live well in their villages for 6 months of the year for 6 months of work. They were given migrant worker housing while here and even though conditions were not great, they were better than they were given as workers in mexico. Even as short a time ago as the eighties migrants worked the ornamental (trees, bushes, etc.) fields here in Oregon. They still do, but they are no longer migrant, and their families are on welfare. Their children get head start and free school lunches. They are also given a free heated and air conditioned building to meet in so they can do day labor for contractors and the city is considering providing day care for that venture. They shop at Costco and drive great big fancy trucks, wear expensive leather boots and belts and real levis, yet somehow they qualify for state medical and dental. I will not shed a tear for what was but I sure will grit my teeth over what is.
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  • Posted by Herb7734 11 years, 8 months ago
    Chavez's organization would picket supermarkets, grocery stores and fruit stands that carried California grapes. Often, they would rush into such places, throwing merchandise off the shelves and creating as much chaos as the could before the police arrived or the employees shooed them out. I was part of a group of Objectivist activists who picketed the picketers. We called it "going graping." It didn't amount much, but it made a tiny squeak in the weird time of the 60's. By the way, Chavez was a hero in the same way that horror, Che Guavera was. Take my word for it -- I was there.
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  • Posted by DaveM49 11 years, 8 months ago
    Hmmm.....revisionism!

    I have often seen Cesar Chavez as the anti-John Galt. He gave a voice to the voiceless, but the voice he chose was that of someone who felt "entitled" to the share of an employer's profits and property that HE dictated. Have often wondered why he did not start a collective farm for his followers.

    On the other side of the coin (though this does not connect directly to Chavez), a number of years ago, I recall a group of California fruit growers marching on Sacramento and demanded an increase to the minimum wage. They complained that the sort of workers they could get for the minimum wage were not worth having.

    It does not seem to have occurred to any of them that they were free to pay whatever wage they believed needed to get competent employees.
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    • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
      That's actually rather interesting. Could you provide more information about that incident? When did it happen? Who were the people involved?
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      • Posted by DaveM49 11 years, 8 months ago
        Unfortunately, all I have is the memory of a story aired on TV news some time ago (definitely pre-internet). I haven't tried an internet search but I suppose it could be out there somewhere.
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  • Posted by plusaf 11 years, 8 months ago
    From November 2004 Reason Magazine...

    "Should the taxpayers -- or concerned supporters -- put up with anything in the name of Cesar Chavez and United Farm Workers? Should they countenance deception? UFW officials, with Chavez's signed approval, said there are Campesino Centers; the ones that actually exist are union hiring halls....They said the credit union makes loans at one percent; it makes loans at 12 percent....Isn't it clear that fraud is involved?"

    -- Patty Newman, "Who's Bankrolling the UFW?"

    http://reason.com/archives/2004/11/01/25...
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  • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
    Seems like a pretty accurate (albeit brief) summary of Cesar Chavez's life, if you ask me.

    http://www.biography.com/people/cesar-ch...

    Are we objecting to the fact that the assignment places the student in the position of a labor union leader making demands to a company?
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    • Posted by 11 years, 8 months ago
      All of the workers problems are presented as if the farmer is to blame. And the way to fix all of their problems is to force the farmer. But you, maph, have made it blatantly clear repeatedly that you are all for forcing business owners so I'm not surprised you missed the point.
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      • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
        Actually, what I've said is that I don't think all regulation is inherently bad. Technically, that's not quite the same as saying I'm all for using force.
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        • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
          Regulation is force imposed on industries which often cannot anticipate what or when it will strike. The larger the company, the easier the absorption. Make no mistake regulation does not create wealth it diverts and most often costs jobs. It creates barriers to entry for small busisness. Regulations are developed and imposed by govts which are notorious for their ineptitude at understanding free markets. Often the largest companies in an industry lobby for increased regulation as a way to push out smaller competitors. The best to be said is some are necessary evils. But they are all inherently anti capitalism.
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          • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
            Not entirely accurate... Many industries require a lot of capital to operate safely... others don't, in fact the government makes those easy with small-biz set asides for government professional services contracts for example. Would you want the local mom & pop shop with $25k in capital to open a coal mine on the property behind your house and start drilling with whatever crap-equipment they can buy for $150? Do you think that petro or coal extraction for that matter would be remotely-safe without some regulation? Society has a vested interest in safe operation of industry, because when workers are hurt, we end up supporting them through disability / social security / etc.

            I'm not a liberal either, but I am extremely successful in business... and I've worked in many industries. "barriers to entry" are just cliches from the same politicians being criticized in the same breath about over-regulation... Would you prefer to have an unregulated banking system? Or maybe a lack of real estate land titles... so we would be like every other third-world banana republic with warlords running their feudal havens? Maybe each state should just coin its own money? How about if we issue health insurance policies like a car warranty with 50 pages of 6-point fine print, and a specific list of which diseases are covered, and which ones are not and it's up to you (the buyer) to do your own genetic research on what you will likely have in life...

            Over-regulation can be bad, obviously, but is there really something wrong with prohibiting child labor... or outlying segregated schools based on skin color (which was very much a part of this story).

            Even now, we live in one of the most affluent areas in northern California, and when we first moved in 11 years ago, our neighbor - some 80 year old white bag knocked on the door, my wife answered, and she asked "if the woman of the house is home" - my wife said "I am", and the old bag said "no, I mean the wife of the owner, not the housekeeper". We slammed the door and never talked to the old b*tch again. This was in 2004 by the way.

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            • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
              Not entirely accurate... Many industries require a lot of capital to operate safely... others don't, in fact the government makes those easy with small-biz set asides for government professional services contracts for example. Would you want the local mom & pop shop with $25k in capital to open a coal mine on the property behind your house and start drilling with whatever crap-equipment they can buy for $150? Do you think that petro or coal extraction for that matter would be remotely-safe without some regulation? Society has a vested interest in safe operation of industry, because when workers are hurt, we end up supporting them through disability / social security / etc.
              life and liberty are risky businesses. communities are free to make their own rules. I abhor HOAs but they can be effective-also evil.
              I gave my philosophical answer to child labor elsewhere in the thread.
              I'm sorry you had that encounter. There are dumb jerks everywhere, in every community, in every little hideaway . Hardly endemic of everyone.
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              • Posted by Robbie53024 11 years, 8 months ago
                Regulations aren't necessary. At best they are created by the very people they are meant to regulate (and generally are merely barriers to other's entry) and at worst are crafted by morons with absolutely no idea of what they are regulating, and merely want to "protect ...." in which case they create inadvertent barriers which drive up the costs for everyone.

                In a free market, the market itself will self regulate.
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              • -1
                Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
                No, its not endemic, rare in fact... Just saying that it does still exist even today... a lack of attention to it would probably let it flourish.

                Look at the knucklehead farmer in Las Vegas... Bundy... crying about losing his cattle because he didn't pay his grazing fees for 60 years, had some sympathy, until he opened up his pie-hole and started talking about how the blacks would be better off still being slaves to farmers than to be in prison and homeless and whatever else he was dreaming up.

                It's pretty amazing, but when you venture a little ways from civilization, it gets pretty weird out here pretty quickly.
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                • Posted by 11 years, 8 months ago
                  That's not what he said and it has nothing to do with how he's being bullied by the BLM. I think you need to start your own post if you want to talk about "dirty old white men" and "weird knuckleheads" who "cry" about losing their cattle (and livelihood). Keep in mind..if they can go after Bundy, they can go after you too.
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                  • Posted by ObjectiveAnalyst 11 years, 8 months ago
                    I agree LS. I don't see the Bundy argument as supporting Bundy so much as disapproval of the heavy handed government tactics. On the other hand the government subsidizes losing propositions like Solyndra at taxpayer expense, but changes regulations and fees to put ranchers out of business when the cows eat grass that costs the taxpayer nothing and regrows...
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                  • Posted by airfredd22 11 years, 8 months ago
                    Re: LetsShrug,

                    Well put, Bundy's comments were ill advised and inarticulately stated. as you said, his comments also don't change the fact that the BLM acted with force when force was unnecessary. There is of course also the question of the real reasons behind these actions.

                    Fred speckmann
                    commonsenseforamericans@yahoo.com`
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                    • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years, 8 months ago
                      As I understand it, what Bundy said was little different from my blog post a few days earlier (I even wondered if he'd read it).

                      In my blog, I asserted that, based upon the priorities of the left, the black slaves were better off under slavery than they were free, by pointing out that they had everything the left wants to give them today; free food, free housing, guaranteed employment and health care. Of course, under slavery, as under the ideal progressive government, someone ELSE gets to decide the appropriate food, housing, employment and health care one gets...
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            • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
              OMG, you think some regulation is necessary and good!? I bet you're a Marxist! Because only a damn Commie would ever say such a thing!

              Nah, just kidding. Glad to see at least one other poster here who has some sense about this issue. ;)
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          • Posted by Maphesdus 11 years, 8 months ago
            I don't think all regulation is inherently anti-capitalism, and I think it's just a tad ridiculous to make such a claim. Sure, some specific regulations may be bad if their effects are counter-productive, but to say that regulations can at best never be anything more than a necessary evil is illogical. Some regulations may in fact be genuinely good.

            I agree with much of what scojohnson said.
            http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/79...
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    • Posted by scojohnson 11 years, 8 months ago
      I had the same debate class assignment when I was a kid... the view of the lumber / timber owner in the California redwoods, versus the environmentalist view.

      I learned to see both sides of arguments in those exercises... and it has served me well in business. In the Redwood timber question, the trees are not "replaceable" like they are in the midwest where I grew up... our birch & pine trees in Minnesota grew like weeds and forests renew themselves in 20 years. Redwood forests can take 3 or 4 centuries to re-establish and the trees are critical to the soil stability along the coastline.

      At the same token, the lack of harvest tends to lead to dryer fuel conditions and forest fires... so obviously a balance is needed.

      Both sides will tend to over-exaggerate their needs... Just as in the labor question, the farmers always over-exaggerate their financial problems, while eluding to there being 'all kinds of options to work elsewhere'... Unfortunately, when you are trapped in a foreign country, 450 miles from the border with a wife and children, don't speak the language, and are legally prohibited from working anywhere else than on the labor contract you were brought here for... and have like $8 in your pocket.. what exactly are your options?

      They had none, the option was to "keep plugging away" until they were awarded a permanent residency card... as was the case for my wife's parents... She was born in Los Angeles, but grew up living in a 3rd world country... despite the fact she was a US citizen and spoke perfect English, public schools barred her from participation or entry. She applied for and was granted a scholarship by the Catholic Diocese for parochial school and by the time she reached high school, worked year round to pay her own tuition. It saved her life, I'm very sure.
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      • Posted by Kittyhawk 11 years, 8 months ago
        Thanks for sharing your fascinating viewpoint, based on your wife's experiences. I had no idea about the awful conditions that existed in California for migrant farm workers. I hope it is all in the past.

        People have a natural and constitutional right to freedom of association, and I think the workers were surely entitled to meet and plan together, and ask the employers for better conditions. They didn't have a lot of options, the way you describe the situation. I was thinking that many people would have objected and wanted to help -- why didn't some reporter let the public know? But I think you said "the system" (the media and politicians in league with the wealthy farmers) wouldn't let the truth get out.

        There are some real sociopaths in charge of our country who let people suffer like that. I'm not sure that asking those same sociopaths for regulations is a viable solution, as some have suggested.

        I feel for the workers who were lured to a foreign country with false promises, and treated badly, with no real way to change it. But I do agree that a line was crossed by using violence against innocent immigrants, which was apparently either arranged or condoned by Chavez.
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    • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years, 8 months ago
      I would.

      I consider it on a par with a school assignment placing the student in the position of a pimp making demands of his "ho"s.

      Well, the pimp b-slapping his ho might be slightly less immoral than being a labor union leader.
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