Smart gun laws

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Re: There are no smart gun laws

Post by BroncoBot »

jvquarterback wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2018 12:27 pm But real education, just like transportation, communication and every other good would improve in quality, safety, and volume if we got the government out of the industry. And the data support this to a greater degree than the data support any sort of gun control, which, once again is my point.
I think the real reason people are hesitant to get on board with this idea, is that certain services may get more expensive. It wouldn't be subsidized. However, I believe that govt involvement in upper education is a huge reason we are having such enormous amounts of debt coming out of school. Schools know they can increase tuition every year and the govt will continue to pay the loans. It gets to the point that the degree isn't worth it, not even close in some cases.

Let the market decide.


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Re: There are no smart gun laws

Post by ABYUFAN »

First, I didn't understand "stopped subsidizing" to mean the same as "yielding to private markets." I see where you believe that those things mean the same thing, but in my mind they are actually not the same.

Specifically I'd like to hear one market in the united states that you believe that the government doesn't subsidize.

Second

jvquarterback wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2018 12:27 pm But real education, just like transportation, communication and every other good would improve in quality, safety, and volume if we got the government out of the industry. And the data support this to a greater degree than the data support any sort of gun control, which, once again is my point.
You're saying that when the government gets out of an area of regulation that area becomes safer? That's the opposite of my experience


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Re: There are no smart gun laws

Post by BoiseBYU »

BroncoBot wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2018 12:34 pm
jvquarterback wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2018 12:27 pm But real education, just like transportation, communication and every other good would improve in quality, safety, and volume if we got the government out of the industry. And the data support this to a greater degree than the data support any sort of gun control, which, once again is my point.
I think the real reason people are hesitant to get on board with this idea, is that certain services may get more expensive. It wouldn't be subsidized. However, I believe that govt involvement in upper education is a huge reason we are having such enormous amounts of debt coming out of school. Schools know they can increase tuition every year and the govt will continue to pay the loans. It gets to the point that the degree isn't worth it, not even close in some cases.

Let the market decide.
I do not believe the data supports the notion that the market always produce a better result in every instance and in every market, and I am a firm believer in the marketplace. But consider higher education. There has been a lot of growth in for-profit higher education institutions and yet I think the lasting legacy flowing from these schools is significantly higher debt. Right now, for what I am aware, of the schools where students have the worst debt problems, 13 come from for-profit institutions. And the quality of the education these students received is such that many of them cannot find employment. Publically funded higher education has been a benefit to our country. Is it perfect? No. But there is no evidence I am aware of that States defunding their universities would result in a better outcome.


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Re: Smart gun laws

Post by jvquarterback »

What does for profit or not for profit have to do with anything? They're all subsidized by government loans to the students, or directly owned and operated by the states or federal government.

Find me any area where there is data to show a government controlled industry provides a better product than a privately run industry. So far I've heard railroads, hospitals, and this is no joke - some guy said the postal service is better than private competitors. I guess I'll keep waiting.


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Re: Smart gun laws

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There are a lot of positives about private schools. Government doesn't exist to provide what people already have due to economics. It exists to provide for the needs that cannot be supplied otherwise (roads, military, free public education, etc). Private schools don't supplant the need for public education any more than my nice driveway supplants the need for highways.


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Re: Smart gun laws

Post by BoiseBYU »

jvquarterback wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2018 7:04 pm What does for profit or not for profit have to do with anything? They're all subsidized by government loans to the students, or directly owned and operated by the states or federal government.

Find me any area where there is data to show a government controlled industry provides a better product than a privately run industry. So far I've heard railroads, hospitals, and this is no joke - some guy said the postal service is better than private competitors. I guess I'll keep waiting.
I was responding to a comment that the market always does better in all situations. In higher education, the results are decidedly not so, at least when it comes to for profit institutions of higher learning.
More generally, it is very difficult to measure what you ask. Public schools HAVE to take every last student, disabled or disruptive included. Private schools don’t. USPS HAS to deliver mail at .$49 per letter to the last spot on the map. FedEx does not. Parks ARE open to all the public for free. Privately owned land does not have to be made open to all. So it is hard to really measure which way is better. I will see if I get your goat with this one, but Canada’s health service provides health care at one half the cost we spend in the US, yet the World Health Organization ranks Canada Better than the US when it comes to overall health. So we are spending twice as much for an apparent worse product. I know I know I know this makes me a socialist so you all can spare the spilt ink, but you asked..... if the market is so much better, why is our health care outcomes and expenses so much greater?


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Re: Smart gun laws

Post by jvquarterback »

BoiseBYU wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2018 9:30 pm
jvquarterback wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2018 7:04 pm What does for profit or not for profit have to do with anything? They're all subsidized by government loans to the students, or directly owned and operated by the states or federal government.

Find me any area where there is data to show a government controlled industry provides a better product than a privately run industry. So far I've heard railroads, hospitals, and this is no joke - some guy said the postal service is better than private competitors. I guess I'll keep waiting.
I was responding to a comment that the market always does better in all situations. In higher education, the results are decidedly not so, at least when it comes to for profit institutions of higher learning.
More generally, it is very difficult to measure what you ask. Public schools HAVE to take every last student, disabled or disruptive included. Private schools don’t. USPS HAS to deliver mail at .$49 per letter to the last spot on the map. FedEx does not. Parks ARE open to all the public for free. Privately owned land does not have to be made open to all. So it is hard to really measure which way is better. I will see if I get your goat with this one, but Canada’s health service provides health care at one half the cost we spend in the US, yet the World Health Organization ranks Canada Better than the US when it comes to overall health. So we are spending twice as much for an apparent worse product. I know I know I know this makes me a socialist so you all can spare the spilt ink, but you asked..... if the market is so much better, why is our health care outcomes and expenses so much greater?
Part of the problem is that people see the words for-profit and they automatically think free market. A for profit university makes all of its money on government subsidies. No one in their right mind can say a for profit university in the united states is a a free market alternative to government schools. It's a dishonest way to present the subject. You'd have to find a non-government subsidized school (ie one that does not take federal student loans and there are several out there, of which BYU will probably someday be one) to make your argument.

The USPS has a monopoly on a box on your property in which you are not allowed to refuse the trash they leave there. Without that monopoly the USPS price for a letter (which the market has effectively replaced with email) would be astronomical. Still private industry (Amazon, Fedex, etc) effectively competes with the USPS for parcels. Furthermore, by subsidizing prices to Alaska and Hawaii, the USPS inflates the prices locally, decreasing the local volume of mail. What should cost a few pennies to send across town now costs 49 cents.

The US health industry is anything but a free market. And using the WHO to evaluate national health care systems is like taking the Soviet Union's official production numbers at face value. I'll just leave it there, but again if you'd like to debate this, I'd be happy to in another thread.

You may be presenting socialist ideas but the real problem is that you don't recognize that you are presenting other forms of socialism as your argument against the free market. If you are going to argue against free markets at least present examples of the free market rather than worse examples of socialism.


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Re: Smart gun laws

Post by BoiseBYU »

jvquarterback wrote: Wed Feb 28, 2018 10:44 am
BoiseBYU wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2018 9:30 pm
jvquarterback wrote: Tue Feb 27, 2018 7:04 pm What does for profit or not for profit have to do with anything? They're all subsidized by government loans to the students, or directly owned and operated by the states or federal government.

Find me any area where there is data to show a government controlled industry provides a better product than a privately run industry. So far I've heard railroads, hospitals, and this is no joke - some guy said the postal service is better than private competitors. I guess I'll keep waiting.
I was responding to a comment that the market always does better in all situations. In higher education, the results are decidedly not so, at least when it comes to for profit institutions of higher learning.
More generally, it is very difficult to measure what you ask. Public schools HAVE to take every last student, disabled or disruptive included. Private schools don’t. USPS HAS to deliver mail at .$49 per letter to the last spot on the map. FedEx does not. Parks ARE open to all the public for free. Privately owned land does not have to be made open to all. So it is hard to really measure which way is better. I will see if I get your goat with this one, but Canada’s health service provides health care at one half the cost we spend in the US, yet the World Health Organization ranks Canada Better than the US when it comes to overall health. So we are spending twice as much for an apparent worse product. I know I know I know this makes me a socialist so you all can spare the spilt ink, but you asked..... if the market is so much better, why is our health care outcomes and expenses so much greater?
Part of the problem is that people see the words for-profit and they automatically think free market. A for profit university makes all of its money on government subsidies. No one in their right mind can say a for profit university in the united states is a a free market alternative to government schools. It's a dishonest way to present the subject. You'd have to find a non-government subsidized school (ie one that does not take federal student loans and there are several out there, of which BYU will probably someday be one) to make your argument.

The USPS has a monopoly on a box on your property in which you are not allowed to refuse the trash they leave there. Without that monopoly the USPS price for a letter (which the market has effectively replaced with email) would be astronomical. Still private industry (Amazon, Fedex, etc) effectively competes with the USPS for parcels. Furthermore, by subsidizing prices to Alaska and Hawaii, the USPS inflates the prices locally, decreasing the local volume of mail. What should cost a few pennies to send across town now costs 49 cents.

The US health industry is anything but a free market. And using the WHO to evaluate national health care systems is like taking the Soviet Union's official production numbers at face value. I'll just leave it there, but again if you'd like to debate this, I'd be happy to in another thread.

You may be presenting socialist ideas but the real problem is that you don't recognize that you are presenting other forms of socialism as your argument against the free market. If you are going to argue against free markets at least present examples of the free market rather than worse examples of socialism.
While I welcome discussion, I am not interested in debating. You have given me some things to ponder. If you understand the metrics used, there is no problem in my book with referring to the WHO as a reporter of things. I would not equate them with the Soviet Union. The challenge I see to having a discussion with you is that you have defined away any ability to compare. I mentioned for-profit schools, and health care in the US, and the post office in efforts to explain the challenged of saying in every instance the market would produce a better result than the "government." If I understand your position, it is that these are all false comparisons because the "governement" is involved in the form of subsidies, regulations etc. And for you any such government involvement is socialist. I do not share that definition of socialism, but if your demand is to do only comparisons between pure market based activity with NO government influence whatsover v. what we have today, well I do not see how that comparison would be done. Today the government IS involved in every matter, whether it be cosmetologists needing a license (which I think is silly) to the EPA banning lead etc. So your demand to show is impossible to meet because of the parameters you have set. So I doubt we can have a really productive conversation on that. FWIW it do not think I am dishonest for mentioning the examples I mentioned above. One marketplace issue where perhaps having the government involved is a good thing is in the realm of natural monopolies. Perhaps you'd disagree even there and contend that an unfettered natural monopolist is better than the govt getting involved to regulate the monopolist's conduct?


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There are no smart gun laws

Post by jvquarterback »

There are examples close to free market in all of categories you've listed. Colleges exist that refuse title iv and don't accept students trying to use pell grants or federal student aid. There are many parcel delivery services that operate on the market without the enormous subsidies and direct ownership of the USPS, and there are plenty of free market health care options (cosmetic and ocular surgery, cash only businesses, etc). It's your choice not to address how those instances of the free market all provide better pricing, better services, and safer options than their socialist or otherwise government subsidized competitors.

You seriously don't think it's dishonest to call a for profit college that gets all of its funding from the government a problem with the free market? It's a problem, but not with the free market. It's a problem with the government subsidy, which by its very definition is not a free market. The other colleges are fleecing taxpayers just as much as the for profit competitors, but for whatever reason people are ok with professors, teachers, and administrators getting paid way more than the free market would determine is the true value of their services but cause an uproar when the shareholders do the same thing.


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Re: There are no smart gun laws

Post by BoiseBYU »

jvquarterback wrote: Wed Feb 28, 2018 6:33 pm There are examples close to free market in all of categories you've listed. Colleges exist that refuse title iv and don't accept students trying to use pell grants or federal student aid. There are many parcel delivery services that operate on the market without the enormous subsidies and direct ownership of the USPS, and there are plenty of free market health care options (cosmetic and ocular surgery, cash only businesses, etc). It's your choice not to address how those instances of the free market all provide better pricing, better services, and safer options than their socialist or otherwise government subsidized competitors.

You seriously don't think it's dishonest to call a for profit college that gets all of its funding from the government a problem with the free market? It's a problem, but not with the free market. It's a problem with the government subsidy, which by its very definition is not a free market. The other colleges are fleecing taxpayers just as much as the for profit competitors, but for whatever reason people are ok with professors, teachers, and administrators getting paid way more than the free market would determine is the true value of their services but cause an uproar when the shareholders do the same thing.
I lost my post somehow and am too tired to repeat it. But it was brilliant! I share your concern with how govt loans for higher education have played out, especially when it comes to for profit education entities. The data shows the loan guarantees haven’t produced very good results. And I know that nonprofit schools and govt schools are equally competing in the marketplace for students and Charina what they think the market will bear. And govt loans etc affect that market. No real surprise. We see govt interventions all over the economy. Where I was coming from is in response to a comment from a poster that we should let the market decide and in my view at least when it comes to higher education, as an example, for profit entities, employing market place principles of profit and loss etc., it has not turned out well for students I do not think that is dishonest to point that out or say that. Anyways no intent to be dishonest here. Sorry if you took it that way.


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