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Spazz Arcane wrote:If birds could swim and fish could fly I would awaken in the morning to the sturgeons cry. If fish could fly and birds could swim I'd still use worms to fish for them.
saxitoxin wrote:I'm on Team GabonX
Niceluns101 wrote:People should be free to make as much $$ as they want without anybody pronouncing moral condemnation against them. They should be able to enter into as many economic relationships as they feel like. As long as the relationship between employer and employee is consensual there should be nothing prohibiting them from pursuing economic happiness.
Spazz Arcane wrote:If birds could swim and fish could fly I would awaken in the morning to the sturgeons cry. If fish could fly and birds could swim I'd still use worms to fish for them.
saxitoxin wrote:I'm on Team GabonX
Agreed - as long as you take advantage of no-one, you have the right.luns101 wrote:People should be free to make as much $$ as they want without anybody pronouncing moral condemnation against them. They should be able to enter into as many economic relationships as they feel like. As long as the relationship between employer and employee is consensual there should be nothing prohibiting them from pursuing economic happiness.
In business, sometimes you have to be lucky. There is a gentleman who had a cleaning product introduced recently in the UK. He went from a loss to a massive profit in a very short time because of the influenza.I make paper.
I use trees, I plant others, I do not take advantage.
I use electricity, I pay for it. I do not take advantage.
I offer pay, my employees accept it, I do not take advantage.
I sell my paper at a profit, this is my right, I do not take advantage.
Exactly. That is where the balance and valuing of companies comes in. Someone has to be paid at the end of the day for work done. It is rare that someone maintains a business if they can't make a good sum of money from it because the labor of love only goes so far. To make a satisfactory ammount of money, people want to be earning more than the company is worth. They want that mustard-seed effect. They will do the work and plant the seed and tend to that seed... but they want the revenue of a large tree.Remember, every time you make a profit, you ARE taking advantage of someone or something, that is the fact of the system.
You have not addressed my main point. The world and financial system is a closed system. If you profit, somewhere there is a loser. Mostly this has been "the earth" and "people who can't fight against it" up to now. Just because it's a complicated system that removes you directly from responsibility, doesn't make you less responsible.KristenAmazon wrote:In business, sometimes you have to be lucky. There is a gentleman who had a cleaning product introduced recently in the UK. He went from a loss to a massive profit in a very short time because of the influenza.I make paper.
I use trees, I plant others, I do not take advantage.
I use electricity, I pay for it. I do not take advantage.
I offer pay, my employees accept it, I do not take advantage.
I sell my paper at a profit, this is my right, I do not take advantage.
That is circumstancial climate of the business.
Using your example:
Say I make paper as well
- I use trees, I also plant them or support them. This is not just to "avoid taking advantage" but rather to ensure the sustainability of my own business. It is good business to ensure sustained growth and the ability to return for more later.
agreed, and possible, but not common practice - why?
- I use electricity as well to operate my business. Without it, my business does not operate, I generate no revenue. If I go for a lower quality provider, I affect the calibre of my business. I enhance the chances of something going wrong, I am gambling by utilizing something very low key. Regardless of price, the cost of an accident will hurt my business much more than paying the same high calibre company you would pay for electricity.
I'm not talking quality, I'm talking "taking advantage". If your company is morally perfect, but you use a company that is not, you are still implicated in their crimes.
- I offer pay as well. It is required as term of employment. The workers accept it based on their need for income. If they can make more money elsewhere and have greater job security, they will turn me down or pass that back to me to re-negociate what I am willing to pay to have them work for me.
**** If circumstance dictates that as of now these people cannot turn me down and go elsewhere, that is not the concern of my company. They have the same right to resign and go elsewhere in hope of a better deal as they would if times were good. Kevin O'Leary is famous for saying (while looking to aquire equity in up-and-coming companies requiring his investment): I will invest the 300,000$ you need, but for that, I will want 50% of the company because it's not worth 1,000 000$ now, It really is only worth 500,000$ or so and I will need to put in work to help you grow this. There's no way you can get money from a bank for this, they're just not lending to this stuff now, that's why your heads have to be squeezed occasionally, It's not my fault that the markets are cruel. So that's the deal I offer, embrace it for what it is - real cash that will help you achieve something that is otherwise unachievable due to market conditions that are "again - not my fault"****
In this case, if I am willing as an employer to pay X ammount of dollars for work to be done, it comes down to the workers to decide whether or not they want to "accept" or go elsewhere. If times are good, the confidence in going elsewhere is higher if the pay is lower. If times are hard, the confidence in going elsewhere is lower, regardless of pay at my company. In good economic times, I would probably sustain lesser workers than I would in hard economic times for paying average wages.
Right, but there is a moral side to this. In the bad old days when people worked down t' pits in N. England they were paid a wage they could barely support their families with, worked 6 days a week and regularly died due to poor conditions. Just because the mines could pay low wages and not care, doesn't mean they should. It is taking advantage, and you are justifying it by saying "I take advantage because I can." The fact is, it is not a victimless crime.
This is a case of the market circumstance being "cruel". Note also that in tough times, my business will incur to me additional expenses that will directly affect what I am able to pay employees.
No, it's not "the market"'s fault - you as the employer decide the wages, it's your decision. As above, just because you can, doesn't mean you should.
- I sell my paper at a profit, that is my right (our right) and I do not take advantage. My margin of profit can be molded based on my electric company bills, payments to workers and remaining expenses. Depending on those items, my pricing can undercut other paper companies and take more marketshare. As my company increases it's business due to selling more by undercutting other companies who can't sell as low as me due to higher expenses, I can then re-evaluate my wages and such.
I don't understand where your profit comes from? How are you undercutting other companies and not taking advantage somewhere? The system rewards those who take more advantage, by definition.
Sometimes finding a less expensive electricity producer does not mean you sacrifice that much quality, especially in hard times people are willing to provide the same product (often the exact same performance-wise) at lesser profit just to ensure that they get the sale. Again, market circumstance. I would rather make 30% of what I would have made at full profit than 0% because someone else got your money.
I do not think a profit necessarily comes from cutting back in certain areas. Most profit comes from selling at a higher price to make sure that you recieve a profit. As long as there is enough demand then this prodit will come with the higher price.xelabale wrote: You have not addressed my main point. The world and financial system is a closed system. If you profit, somewhere there is a loser. Mostly this has been "the earth" and "people who can't fight against it" up to now. Just because it's a complicated system that removes you directly from responsibility, doesn't make you less responsible.
I do not remove myself from this, I am responsible as a consumer just as much as the companies themselves, and I must do everything I can to not take advantage.
I agree, profit is not intrinsically bad.Titanic wrote:I do not think a profit necessarily comes from cutting back in certain areas. Most profit comes from selling at a higher price to make sure that you recieve a profit. As long as there is enough demand then this prodit will come with the higher price.xelabale wrote: You have not addressed my main point. The world and financial system is a closed system. If you profit, somewhere there is a loser. Mostly this has been "the earth" and "people who can't fight against it" up to now. Just because it's a complicated system that removes you directly from responsibility, doesn't make you less responsible.
I do not remove myself from this, I am responsible as a consumer just as much as the companies themselves, and I must do everything I can to not take advantage.
Also on the supply side you could reduce costs through technological innovation, changing working practices (ie. Ford), outsourcing expensive operations, getting raw materials from a cheaper supplier (who could also be reducing their costs in lega/moral ways), etc...
I do agree that most business's do try to cut costs however they can, whether it is exploiting workers or cutting corners on health and safety, but the simple notion of a profit does not mean that the company is committing a crime.
Titanic wrote:Yer in theory it would all work that way. That is pretty much what a perfect market is desribed as and it is used as a key theoretical tool in economics. However, in real life there a huge amounts of factors that affect this, and whilst I do agree that most companies do try to find as many ways as possible to break the perfect market to increase their profits, a good regulator of the market would still let them keep that profit but also make sure that they do not exploit labour or have hazerdous policies.
We can make it so.Timminz wrote:I wish to express my disapproval with the fact that this thread is not about Salt'N Peppa.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Who will be the one to reply to Timminz? Not me... Nothing against the lifestyle, but I don't swing that way.Neoteny wrote:We can make it so.Timminz wrote:I wish to express my disapproval with the fact that this thread is not about Salt'N Peppa.
Let's talk about sex, baby.
Let's talk about you and me.thegreekdog wrote:Who will be the one to reply to Timminz? Not me... Nothing against the lifestyle, but I don't swing that way.Neoteny wrote:We can make it so.Timminz wrote:I wish to express my disapproval with the fact that this thread is not about Salt'N Peppa.
Let's talk about sex, baby.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Let's talk about all the good things and the bad things...Neoteny wrote:Let's talk about you and me.thegreekdog wrote:Who will be the one to reply to Timminz? Not me... Nothing against the lifestyle, but I don't swing that way.Neoteny wrote:We can make it so.Timminz wrote:I wish to express my disapproval with the fact that this thread is not about Salt'N Peppa.
Let's talk about sex, baby.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
luns101 wrote:People should be free to make as much $$ as they want without anybody pronouncing moral condemnation against them. They should be able to enter into as many economic relationships as they feel like. As long as the relationship between employer and employee is consensual there should be nothing prohibiting them from pursuing economic happiness.
