V
vern_humphrey
Guest
I really don’t think you have a good grasp of either economics or the Constitution.Our American revolution was a revolt by capitalists. They wanted to create a limited (some may say libertarian) government.
I really don’t think you have a good grasp of either economics or the Constitution.Our American revolution was a revolt by capitalists. They wanted to create a limited (some may say libertarian) government.
You are confusing home builders with land speculators who buy homes and land, sit on it, and wait for prices to go up.That’s dead wrong. “Speculators” build the roads and infrastructure in areas where homes are to be built. If individual home-owners had to build their own roads, sewers and so on, home costs would be much higher.
(For those who don’t know how it works, the developer builds the streets and infrastructure and then gives it to the local government, which assumes ownership and maintenance responisbilities.)
How so?I really don’t think you have a good grasp of either economics or the Constitution.
Tariffs are like taxes. When you are faced with a depression or recession the last thing you do is raise taxes.Wrong again. Just for laughs, look up “the Great Depression” + “Smoot-Hawley Tariff.” Tariffs have slowed our growth, acerbated economic downturns, and were one cause of the Civil War.
Europe is a social welfare state, which is where this country is gradually heading.Europe on the other hand is so ethical about workers standards of living that they have massive unemployment.
You’re not making sense.You are confusing home builders with land speculators who buy homes and land, sit on it, and wait for prices to go up.
I love home developers, they are great for the economy.
I agree completely. I am opposed to minimum wages. In the end, they hurt workers.Get a grip on facts before you start sprouting slogans. If you want government policies that create misery take a look at regulations, minimum wages and the like. All they do is reduce employment.
Now you’re getting it. Tariffs have a depressing effect on the economy. They make it difficult for people in other countries to drag themselves out of poverty and they force the poor in this country to pay more than they should pay for goods.Tariffs are like taxes. When you are faced with a depression or recession the last thing you do is raise taxes.
You have never heard of people buying homes and land in booming markets to sit and wait for the prices to go up… and in 6 months come out with a good profit?If people buy “homes and land, sit on it, and wait for prices to go up” they lose money – because unoccupied homes deteriorate and go down in value.
I have always gotten it.Now you’re getting it. Tariffs have a depressing effect on the economy. They make it difficult for people in other countries to drag themselves out of poverty and they force the poor in this country to pay more than they should pay for goods.
Give me a cite for someone doing this – buying homes and sitting on them doesn’t make sense.You have never heard of people buying homes and land in booming markets to sit and wait for the prices to go up… in 6 months and then come out with a good profit?
You view cooperation in the context of the capitalistic system. It is true, this system is ordered to seek enormous profit, not the common good.How do you know co-operation would help to make better products at lower prices?
From your previous posts, I think I might be pardoned for thinking you meant it when you said you didn’t “believe in free trade” and wanted tariffs to prevent other countries from selling goods that could be produced here.http://forums.catholic-questions.org/images/icons/icon12.gifI have always gotten it.Tariffs are like taxes. I’d prefer tariffs and sales taxes over property and income taxes.
I am for international trade, with low/moderate tariffs.
They hurt people who want to buy homes at more affordable prices.And in the end, who’s hurt if they do it?
When you buy stocks, you invest in a company, you add value to it, make it more (viable? - lack of a better term), etc. Collectors of art can buy whatever they want. High priced antiques is does not make it much harder for people to own homes, etc.People buy all sorts of things, from stocks to antiques on the expectation that the value will increase. How is this wrong?
That is what many rich people have done in this economy. Especially in this housing market which has experienced increases in housing values for years on end.This claim of yours that people routinely buy homes and sit on them
If Canada has a socialized health care system, then we Americans have a socialized education system. Vouchers would help break our social educational system and give Americans more freedom of choice. Catholic schools produce a high quality education at a relatively low price. This is not achieved through competition, but cooperation.Can you give me a real world example or is this just the wish making the reality?
That cannot be done. But you must know the origin of our current economic system.As has been said before those who set out to create heaven on earth end up in hell on earth.
Ou government does outlaw certain professions and ways of making a living. Some areas outlaw pimps and prostitutes. The nation criminalizes the sale of alcohol to adults ages 18-20. Bar owners can be fined (or worse) for selling more alcohol to obviously very drunken individuals. We outlaw the sale of tobacco and pornography to children. Although, the Supreme Court has ruled pornography is a freedom of speech issue. Therefore, smut peddlers are free to make money off of selling smut.If you want government policies that create misery take a look at regulations, minimum wages and the like.
My apologies.You obviously don’t know what it means.
Let me explain. In the scenario you paint, the profit is the effect. The rise in price is the cause. If prices do not rise, there is no profit. But since the prices must rise before the profit, the cost to those who want to buy affordable homes is already high.They hurt people who want to buy homes at more affordable prices.
A good example of confused economic thinking. I’ve already explained how your scenario would fail.When you buy stocks, you invest in a company, you add value to it, make it more (viable? - lack of a better term), etc. Collectors of art can buy whatever they want. High priced antiques is does not make it much harder for people to own homes, etc.
You’ll have to explain this to me – you support no property taxes, which you say will drive up the cost of homes?I support real home ownership. That means no property taxes… thus more people would be tempted to own land and do nothing with it, sitting on it and increase the cost of buying one of the most vital things in a person’s life - a home.
Aside from the fact that the scenario you paint can’t work – as I have shown – you have failed to show that any significant number of houses are being kept off the market.That is what many rich people have done in this economy. Especially in this housing market which has experienced increases in housing values for years on end.
And if we don’t seek justice, we will be heading that way.And every one has failed because economics follows its own laws and those who break them are condemned to economic stagnation.