Tag Archives: capitalism

More evidence capitalism/the free market is not the way to run the world

The Friday Podcast: Death Saves You Money : NPR from July 16, 2010.  I listened to this the other day and my heart sank to hear it. Yes, humans were willing to point out that “If people die, it costs the government less.”

And some people think corporations aren’t immoral psychopaths. 

Here are more details from NPR.org:

The Friday Podcast: Death Saves You Money

06:24 pm

July 16, 2010

cigarette
Mel Evans/AP

A decade ago, Philip Morris commissioned a study that found smokers in the Czech Republic were actually saving society money.

A big part of the savings: Smoking tends to kill people while they’re still young, saving society the long-term costs of caring for them as they get older.

via npr.org

Hit up that npr.org link to listen to the entire Planet Money podcast (which sometimes comes across a bit on the amoral side, in my mind, but is still worth listening to) and learn about how the study bit Philip Morris on the ass.

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Good News! We’re Polluting the Atmosphere with Plane Exhaust at Increasing Levels!

underpaidgenius:

GOOD NEWS: Global Air Traffic Surges Above Pre-Recession Levels And Is Accelerating

This idiot thinks it’s good news that air travel is increasing.

A plane flying from Australia to London, for example, will use more than 200 tonnes of jet fuel and pump out more than 500 tonnes of carbon dioxide. On a flight from London to Miami, one person will be responsible for climate change emissions equivalent to one car doing 12,000 miles. Multiply that by 350,” reports Melanie Reid, Down Under. [Sydney Herald. Sept 13/05]

(via stoweboyd)

This reminds me of one time, back in the late ’90s, when I was listening to the KNX Business Hour in Los Angeles and the host reported “Good news for Phillip Morris investors, the stock jumped today…” 

I was so caught off guard by the dichotomy of that statement, so much so that I based a screenplay around a person who’s “Batman” moment I had just experienced.  Think about the moral dissonance there: the company is doing well, which means more people are becoming addicted to cigarettes, which means more people will eventually die of lung cancer AND THAT’S GOOD NEWS!!

The reporter might as well have said:

“Good news if you’ve invested in murder, more people died thanks to your money and that means you’ve just made more!”

Amazing what capitalism can do.

Religion only wishes it could be this subtle and efficient.

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thetechpete:You’ve heard of “blood diamonds,” now learn what “blood minerals” are :(Found via newsweek.tumblr.comThe sad truth :(Still, it’s not the consumer’s fault that Apple and friends get use “blood minerals” in the gadgets we lust for.  Big electronics companies could try finding alternative sources or alternatives, charge a little more and make a big deal about why the price is higher.  Guilt the public into being OK with spending more money.OR, electronics companies could make less money and still do the right thing… ;)Nah, I doubt they’ll do that.This speaks to the greater exploitative character of capitalism.  Essentially, there’s only one moral way for you to get rich using the capitalist system.  You must be able to produce a product or provide service that allows it’s source (or your employees) to make a decent living and still allow you to hike the price up enough so that you’re making a profit while not ripping off your customers.Unfortunately, that’s not how it’s done these days.  The “smart” business person finds a person who is willing to work for as little pay as possible—even if the business person knows it’s a pittance.  Then, the he does his or her best (usually, his best) to spend as little as possible in the process of making the product or providing the service.  Then, he hikes up the price as high as it will go without charging so much that no one is willing to buy it—he doesn’t want everyone to buy it right away—he wants to be able to expand sales over time.  Charge too little now and you cannibalize future sales.  ALSO: he makes sure some features are left out of the product/service (even if they are cheap or inexpensive to implement) so that when they are added,  more sales and even upgrades can occur.The goal is NOT to create a perfect product or service, but to create the illusion of approaching perfection—if he creates a perfect product or service, people would buy it and then sales would level out—the “smart” business person can’t let that happen!With modern capitalism, everyone gets exploited—some more than others, of course. Isn’t that great?>_<

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Think you don’t help pay for violence, rape and murder? You do, so does anyone with a mobile phone or computer.

Congo is a classic victim of the resource curse. Its bountiful deposits—in everything from copper to diamonds—are brazenly plundered by corrupt governments and regional warlords while the population goes without basic services. Today, most violence—including mass rape, slavery, mutilation, and possibly even forced cannibalism—is concentrated in the war-ravaged eastern Kivu provinces, where the Congolese Army and ethnic militias bludgeon each other over the right to trade in mineral ore. One study estimates 5.4 million people have been killed since 1998;

via newsweek.com

That’s just an excerpt. Hit that Newsweek link for more depressing realities about where our tech comes from or just watch the fun parody video from RaiseHopeForCongo.org:

via raisehopeforcongo.org

I’m not giving up my tech, but reblog/retweet/repost this story, or just talk about it so we can raise awareness and pressure tech companies to build their products without minerals minded under the threat of violence. You can also check out the RaiseHopeForCongo.org website to see if there’s more that you can do.

Sadly, this is just one example of violence paid for by we in the developed world—I could go on and talk about how every time we buy a Chiquita banana a terrorist smiles, but I won’t. :)

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It’s Website666.com’s 666cast: episode 14—how capitalism is breaking it’s promise to innovate. It’s the “Capitalism Doesn’t Innovate” rant. You know it had to happen—look around you—do you see any jet packs? Any flying cars (OK, so that’s ONE.) No, of course, you don’t—because capitalism doesn’t innovate like we were all promised it would.  Have a listen to the latest episode of the 666cast and find out why I think this is so. Please subscribe to the feed.

It’s Website666.com’s 666cast: episode 14—how capitalism is breaking it’s promise to innovate.

It’s the “Capitalism Doesn’t Innovate” rant. You know it had to happen—look around you—do you see any jet packs? Any flying cars (OK, so that’s ONE.) No, of course, you don’t—because capitalism doesn’t innovate like we were all promised it would.  Have a listen to the latest episode of the 666cast and find out why I think this is so.

Please subscribe to the feed.

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Were AT&T’s overtures to current iPhone users a precursor to a Verizon iPhone?

newsweek:

“The truth is, Apple needs to get on Verizon, and fast, or it risks losing customers to Android. If Verizon gets the iPhone, I’d expect a huge exodus from AT&T. Which probably explains some of AT&T’s recent behavior. With the release of iPhone 4, AT&T made an unusual offer to current owners of iPhones, telling them that even if their contracts weren’t close to being over, they could still push up their expiration date and upgrade to the iPhone 4—as long as they signed a new two-year contract. Many people jumped on that offer, and some even viewed it as a case of AT&T being generous. Um, not likely. More likely it’s that AT&T knows its exclusive lock on iPhone is coming to an end, and so it sought to lock in as many iPhone users before the deal with Verizon happens. To those folks who waited in line for hours and hours to take advantage of AT&T’s “generous” offer, I can only offer my condolences and point out that, given AT&T’s past behavior, you should have known better.”

Lyons, on the latest Verizon iPhone rumors

Oooor they might just want to stay with a carrier (and a phone) that they can use on other SIM-based networks.  When I heard the Verizon rumor, I thought: “Do I want to switch to Verizon? And get stuck with Verizon forever? Not really…”

Just my ¥2, of course.

via life.thepete.com

Meant to post this here first, but Tumblr was tweaking on the bookmarklet. Ah well.

Personally, I’m getting sick of this contract shit. It’s just a con-game. I’m sick of letting myself become a slave to a wireless plan. Just let me pay as I go—some months I don’t need wireless, some months I do. We’re all being taken advantage of by a bunch of white guys in suits.

Why do we put up with this crap? It’s like we’re only worthy of experiencing innovation if we’re rich enough.  I’m fine with paying for things, but it seems to me that the profit margin is so crazy high. I get that they should make money, don’t get me wrong.  The thing is, the whole system could be a lot more fair than it is.  The big communication companies could be making a less money per person from way more people if they’d give people more the freedom to choose who they want to be with.  I want to ask each big telecom one question: Do you want the industry to be healthy? Or just YOU?

And they can’t answer “just me” since that is anti-American, anti-competition and flies in the face of basic concepts that we built our economy on (that competition fuels innovation).  If anything tells us that innovation isn’t being fueled, it’s Apple’s mobile industry business plan.

Let’s release a phone with 10x the design of most other phones, but with 1/5th the features.  The phone is capable of doing the same things [as hackers have proven] but we’ll make sure the software won’t allow it.  This way, we can offer a better phone a year later that will cost us next to nothing to develop but we’ll get rich giving people what pure innovation would have allowed us to give them in the first place.

Aka: release a hobbled phone, then partially unhobble it and pretend it’s a whole new product, then repeat!

It took four iterations of the iPhone for Apple to actually give us something we can’t get anywhere else—their new retina display thingy.  Of course, the iPhone 4 is NOT a 4G phone.  So, it’s still a hobbled phone. Where can you get a 4G phone? Sprint—or any number of countries that aren’t in America.

OK, I could keep this rant going for a while, so I’ll just stop it there on the assumption you get my point.

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Why are there 40 million poor people in America? When you begin to ask that question, you are raising questions about the economic system, about a broader distribution of wealth. When you ask that question, you begin to question the capitalistic economy.

Why are there 40 million poor people in America? When you begin to ask that question, you are raising questions about the economic system, about a broader distribution of wealth. When you ask that question, you begin to question the capitalistic economy.

- Martin Luther King Jr

(via thecollectedworksof)

(via underpaidgenius)

Martin Luther King Jr. was much more than just a civil rights leader.

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Here it is! The 666cast #7, THE CHRISTMAS EPISODE! (So, it’s late and May, whad’ya expect? We’re CONTRARIAN!) Yep, it’s been a long time coming—an other episode of the 666cast, that is—not the Christmas Episode.  In this episode I explain why this is so late, why this Christmas episode is here now, and of course, how I don’t understand how you can know there is no Santa Claus, but still believe in a God. Oh, and there’s also some stuff in there about Christmas being co-opted by capitalism to help make Christmas an economic issue. Please subscribe to the feed. Enjoy!  Also: what did you think of the podcast or anything I said?


Here it is! The 666cast #7, THE CHRISTMAS EPISODE! (So, it’s late and May, whad’ya expect? We’re CONTRARIAN!)

Yep, it’s been a long time coming—an other episode of the 666cast, that is—not the Christmas Episode.  In this episode I explain why this is so late, why this Christmas episode is here now, and of course, how I don’t understand how you can know there is no Santa Claus, but still believe in a God.

Oh, and there’s also some stuff in there about Christmas being co-opted by capitalism to help make Christmas an economic issue.

Please subscribe to the feed.

Enjoy!  Also: what did you think of the podcast or anything I said?

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