Flaming_Maniac wrote:
There is a huge difference between justice and fairness. You try to keep things fair, I try to keep things just.
Suppose a dumb kid who works his ass off studying for a test still fails it. A smart kid passes with flying colors with little work. It is not a fair situation, but it is just. You don't give the dumb kid points just to make things "fair".
What you're discussing is more applicable to affirmative action than to socialized education. If you observe the socialized education systems of most First World countries, your access to education is only limited by ability, not personal wealth. So, a dumb kid still won't get a degree if he can't get through his classes.
With respect to healthcare, it really has little or nothing to do with intelligence and everything to do with lifestyle and genetics (and sometimes, just luck).
When it comes to welfare, it's basically a stopgap measure to keep poverty from being an epidemic. In an environment where all it takes to end up homeless is losing your job while the labor market is flooded, you will see a massive rise in the underclass. By consequence, crime will increase as well. Welfare is there to make it possible for those down on their luck to get back on their feet. Some people do choose to live off of the system, but that's a small price to pay if it means having fewer people in desperation -- and by extension, less crime.
The simple truth of the matter is that the poor don't just disappear. When people get desperate, they use whatever means they can to stay alive. I don't think you'd really want to live in a country without welfare. If you want to see what life is like in a country without welfare and with a large underclass, there are several Central American and South American countries to observe. There's a reason why the wealthy (and tourists) get kidnapped for ransom so often in those areas.
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
but what is stopping anyone from doing it? That is the point. Not that that it is easy, but that it is very possible.
What's stopping them? Multiple things.
On the one hand, some of it is laziness or lack of intelligence.
On the other hand, some of it is not knowing the right people, not having much money to work with, or just plain bad luck.
Everyone's situation is different, but trying to reduce it all down to a lack of effort is just ignorant.
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
In a welfare state that people like you maintain, prohibiting any significant social darwinism. Because people undoubtedly blame their problems on lack of money when they don't have any, and admire those who do solely because they do.
You're describing human nature, not anything that is the fault of social programs. You'll have to change our genes to get away from these tendencies.
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
You don't get it. Money is a means of ability, not a status symbol.
If 2 people are chased by a lion, who lives and who dies? Speed does not mean one deserves to live over the other, only that according to natural law one has the ability to live over another.
Forcing everyone to run at the same speed (particularly because you are slower) is a ridiculous notion.
I would argue that allowing people to die because they lack green pieces of paper is far, far more ridiculous.
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Other countries are not America.
Yes, we are unique, but that does not render the outside world irrelevant.
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
There is nothing wrong with a quick feasibility check. There is a big difference between a 10 second analysis and putting significant time and effort into a lost cause because they "deserve to live".
With modern medicine, it is actually rare to come across a situation where someone is "beyond help." A large portion of people in the ER aren't even experiencing genuine emergencies. This allows most hospitals the leverage to attend to the people who need help the most first. They also tend to give more than a 10 second analysis per patient because of legal liabilities.
Last edited by Turquoise (2009-09-02 19:29:48)