RE: Profits Are Not Confiscated Product

You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

Profits Are Not Confiscated Product

in capitalism •  8 years ago 

So, I can't know what motivates people, but you can?

I agree that the slave paradigm's elite pay enough to keep the slaves mostly on the plantation, but I do not share your pessimistic view of human beings in general.
I don't agree that my accounting techniques would lead to any more shortages or overages than currently happens, I'd use the same folks and practices that they use today.
Except, the excess would accrue to the leisure of the workers rather than the wealth of the greedy, or the comfort of their hired minions.

I have seen good in people that didn't make economic sense, but then I learned the power of love.

Are you saying that you wouldn't change your kid's diaper unless you was getting paid?

You would rather play video games than live a rewarding life?

Break on through, Thomas, the whole truth lies ahead of you.
http://www.abelard.org/e-f-russell.php

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

You missed the point entirely; no, I don't know with certainty each person's motivation. I can know only that each person will seek to resolve his reality to match his motivation, and can only know that motivation by his actions taken in such resolution. That's entirely my point.
There may indeed be people who would rather clean a sewer than beta test video games (I would be extremely skeptical if you told me you'd honestly fall into that category); there are indeed people who value hard work, dirty work and the like. What you're missing is that those are still values they seek to manifest.
You say that you see people do good that makes no economic sense; this is senseless and shows that you only see exchanges of money as "economic sense"; the capitalist understands that any action taken to manifest your values is a profit. If you wish to lose money to feed the poor, for example, then by donating to charity (or paying extra in your taxes, if you prefer the violent and roundabout route to that end) you are still manifesting your values; you are profiting.
So changing my son's diaper, even though I was not paid money, was in fact economically sensible. I desired -- that is, preferred, placed value upon -- the hope that my son would be healthy and comfortable and took actions to ensure that. I was successful; I profited by an increase in my son's wellbeing.
If you see money as the only form of profit and economic sense, then it's no wonder you call it "crapitalism"; you misunderstand what the goal is and how it is achieved.