It will raise wages and reduce crime.
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-08 19:44:06 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854973189623103844
Reply addressees: @USMCLiberal
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854870184802017778
It will raise wages and reduce crime.
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-08 19:44:06 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854973189623103844
Reply addressees: @USMCLiberal
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854870184802017778
–“Men voted this time because it was the easiest way to solve their problems.”– @ThruTheHayes
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-08 17:33:21 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854940284939010310
RT @NoahRevoy: The 6th of November was a political D-day.
A beachhead has been established at great cost.
But the fight is just beginning…
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-08 00:20:58 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854680476553982421
RT @curtdoolittle: @PolybiusOfNorth WHAT GOVERNMENTS DO: (Costs)
Oh. So at eight o’clock in the morning, before I’ve finished my first cup…
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-07 22:51:39 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854657999765487858
RT @GenFlynn: We are hearing an enormous amount of teeth gnashing by some of the “elites” on the left about what @realDonaldTrump , @elonmu…
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-07 22:17:35 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854649425588896208
RT @TaraBull808: BREAKING: 🇺🇸🇷🇺 US President-elect Donald Trump accepts Russian President Putin’s offer for a call to discuss ending the wa…
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-07 21:20:10 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854634977222393889
RT @Twolfrecovery: Some thoughts on the overwhelming passage of Prop 36 in California. Every county voted majority YES. That means the most…
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-07 21:18:44 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854634615434363270
FOLLOWUP TO COSTS
Now that we have that out of the way. Governments can attempt to accelerate the production of informal and formal commons that will achieve these cost reductions. However the negative affects compound with the number of people and degree of authority necessary to alter the behavior of the population – ie: secret police are a really bad idea but they work in the short term.
The solution for all polites is develop a nationalist military with greater alliance to the common good than to the family or clan, and once this is produced, use the same people to gradually produce rule of law by the natural law until the rest of the polity adapts out of simple self interest.
Until you create nationalism you cannot create the absence of corruption necessary for a high trust polity that is in turn necessary for the prosperity that produces that reduction of risk and increase in choice that all peoples desire.
Cheers
CD
Reply addressees: @PolybiusOfNorth
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-07 17:22:45 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854575228426534912
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854559349445722286
WHAT GOVERNMENTS DO: (Costs)
Oh. So at eight o’clock in the morning, before I’ve finished my first cup of coffee, you want me to answer a really hard question? lol 😉
Here:
Effectively, all governments maximize the use of existing technology to monitor and regulate the behavior of all citizens the the point of diminishing returns and then into burdensome costs that reverse the utility of centralizing costs (government) for the purpose of suppressing the hierarchy and network of rents (frictions) that occur in its absence.
This is a universal law of government behavior. Governments suppress the hierarchy of rents (unearned takings on the work of others) in exchange for producing monetary and trade velocity, reducing transaction and risk costs (and the many other costs).
It’s this reduction in costs that makes economies capable of producing trust in a complex division of labor over longer and more complex production cycles.
It’s hard for we humans to think in the ‘via negativa’ like this – but we can understand that we can think in gaining knowledge (positiva) or removing ignorance (negativa). The same is true in economies. We can think in terms of facilitating trust and cooperation or removing costs that impeded trust and cooperation.
Just for yucks, here is a hierarchical list of costs that people, polities, and governments can seek to reduce in order to create prosperity:
1. Transaction Costs (Immediate, Perceptible)
Costs of negotiating, executing, and enforcing agreements. These include direct expenses like fees and the time spent on bargaining.
2. Opportunity Costs (Immediate, Perceptible)
The value of the next best alternative foregone when making a decision. These are often felt as a direct trade-off in resource allocation.
3. Information Costs
Costs of obtaining, processing, and verifying necessary information for decision-making, including research and communication overhead.
4. Coordination Costs
Costs of aligning efforts, goals, and activities among individuals or organizations to ensure smooth execution.
5. Compliance and Regulatory Costs
Costs associated with meeting legal, regulatory, or internal policy requirements, such as audits, documentation, or legal counsel.
6. Switching Costs
Costs incurred when changing suppliers, technologies, or operational dependencies. These can be tangible (training, setup) or intangible (loss of integration benefits).
7. Agency Costs
Costs arising from conflicts of interest between principals and agents, including monitoring, incentivizing, or resolving misaligned objectives.
8. Adaptation Costs
Costs of adjusting operations, strategies, or resources in response to external changes such as market shifts, regulations, or technological advancements.
9. Sunk Costs
Costs that have already been incurred and cannot be recovered. Though economically irrelevant for future decisions, they often psychologically influence actors.
10. Redundancy and Buffer Costs
Costs of maintaining excess capacity or resources as insurance against uncertainty or risk.
11. Complexity Costs
Costs that arise from managing increasingly intricate systems or processes, leading to inefficiencies and reduced agility.
12. Intertemporal Costs
Costs resulting from decisions that affect future states, such as delayed investment returns or the erosion of future options due to present commitments.
13. Externality Costs
Costs or benefits imposed on third parties due to an economic activity, often unnoticed or unaccounted for by the primary actors.
14. Cultural and Social Capital Costs (Remote, Imperceptible)
Costs associated with building, maintaining, or repairing trust, reputation, and relationships, which are crucial but often difficult to quantify or perceive immediately.
Cheers
CD
Reply addressees: @PolybiusOfNorth
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-07 17:16:21 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854573617511907328
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854559349445722286
Victor Davis Hanson on the Irregular Attempts to Stop Trump https://youtube.com/shorts/-3BHm7nAbEI?si=I088OYuLEJ68R3wO via @YouTube
Source date (UTC): 2024-11-07 10:01:08 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1854464091945111734