The government produces nothing... if it steals from someone and builds something I would say that "thing" was built by those who the money was stolen offAnd even if Obama was talking about infrastructure and the wider economic system (which I suspect was the case) it is taxpayers who fund infrastructure creation, and the overwhelming majority of businesses and business owners (other than the bailed-out financial institutions and similar) contribute heavily to tax revenue.
Whichever way we look at it tax-paying business owners past and present particularly small businesses, who create far more jobs than their larger corporate counter-parts built not only their businesses, but also contributed to and funded the wider economic system and the institutions of the state.
thatguy said:The government produces nothing... if it steals from someone and builds something I would say that "thing" was built by those who the money was stolen off
bordsilver said:Obama: "The Internet didn't get invented on its own. Government research created the Internet so that all companies could make money off the Internet."
Who really built the internet? Xerox.
Who really built the internet
Even today, almost none of the connections between Internet nodes are ethernet. Your home broadband connection is not ethernet - it's DSL, cable modem, or fiber. Back in the day when most Internet nodes didn't have dedicated connections, they used dialup modems over POTS, not ethernet. Most dedicated connections used the X.25 network provided by the phone companies for dedicated data lines.
What enabled the Internet was the idea of layering communications [wikipedia.org]. That way your applications saw the same packets coming from the network regardless of whatever software or hardware lay underneath. That is, rather than try to translate TCP/IP packet data into ethernet packet data, then translate that into DSL packet data, etc. for this post submission to get to slashdot, each layer just encapsulates the higher layer's data. So the TCP/IP packets never know they've been split up into 1542 byte chunks to be transmitted along ethernet to reach my DSL modem. They don't know they've been converted into whatever tortured protocol DSL uses, and so on all the way to slashdot's servers.
You just have underlying layers treat the above layers are data streams. Then the higher levels (e.g. apps) can interoperate completely agnostic to what underlying layers are used. Ethernet was one of those underlying layers, so had nothing to do with it. Ethernet's simplicity and versatility had a lot to do with it being adopted at the hardware level for LANs (as opposed to, say, Token Ring), but it had nothing to do with the Internet.
An Internet is a connection between two or more computer networks.
...for 30 years the government had an immensely useful protocol for transferring information, TCP/IP, but it languished. . . . In less than a decade, private concerns have taken that protocol and created one of the most important technological revolutions of the millennia.
Big A.D. said:thatguy said:The government produces nothing... if it steals from someone and builds something I would say that "thing" was built by those who the money was stolen off
Er, no, the government still builds the "thing" but the money to build it comes from the taxpayer.
Both are just as important as each other.
And I think its rather ironic that the meme pics of the Wright Brothers, Steve Jobs, Henry Ford and Alexander Graham Bell all feature "inventors" who borrowed heavily from others to build the things they're now famous for.
The Apple Macintosh Steve Jobs is leaning on, for example, featured a Graphical User Interface that he "borrowed" from Xerox Corp. Oh, and a mouse for input, which was invented by Doug Engelbart from SRI.
Meme fail.
bordsilver said:Steaming horsecrap is a bit strong. The WSJ specifies a range of influences as well as its definition of what the "internet is". Whether the current internet is in any way related is irrelevant.
An Internet is a connection between two or more computer networks.
...for 30 years the government had an immensely useful protocol for transferring information, TCP/IP, but it languished. . . . In less than a decade, private concerns have taken that protocol and created one of the most important technological revolutions of the millennia.
Agauholic said:Big A.D. said:And I think its rather ironic that the meme pics of the Wright Brothers, Steve Jobs, Henry Ford and Alexander Graham Bell all feature "inventors" who borrowed heavily from others to build the things they're now famous for.
The Apple Macintosh Steve Jobs is leaning on, for example, featured a Graphical User Interface that he "borrowed" from Xerox Corp. Oh, and a mouse for input, which was invented by Doug Engelbart from SRI.
Meme fail.
"Apple" is the use of available resources, specific to Apples philosophy (whatever that may be). Now ofcourse Apple borrowed from many... they used wheels, they used paper... clearly borrowed heavily from the egyptians, but this "borrowing" was done by trading at market price. It was Apple's ideas, initiative and risk taking made use of all those available resources (money, loans, market technology), to develop products the market (anyone) can VOLUNTARILY use if they see a mutal gain. (ie: I get the iphone, you get my gold coin.)
This is called a market. This is basic economics.... which Obama and the rest of you statist punks still don't get...... so the rest of us get to laugh at you.
BULL DUST the government "builds the thing". They build nothing. The Government is nothing more and a coercive guider of available resources, away from where the market would've placed them VOLUNTARILY, TO where the vested interest wants them BY FORCE.
Big A.D. said:Agauholic said:Big A.D. said:And I think its rather ironic that the meme pics of the Wright Brothers, Steve Jobs, Henry Ford and Alexander Graham Bell all feature "inventors" who borrowed heavily from others to build the things they're now famous for.
The Apple Macintosh Steve Jobs is leaning on, for example, featured a Graphical User Interface that he "borrowed" from Xerox Corp. Oh, and a mouse for input, which was invented by Doug Engelbart from SRI.
Meme fail.
"Apple" is the use of available resources, specific to Apples philosophy (whatever that may be). Now ofcourse Apple borrowed from many... they used wheels, they used paper... clearly borrowed heavily from the egyptians, but this "borrowing" was done by trading at market price. It was Apple's ideas, initiative and risk taking made use of all those available resources (money, loans, market technology), to develop products the market (anyone) can VOLUNTARILY use if they see a mutal gain. (ie: I get the iphone, you get my gold coin.)
This is called a market. This is basic economics.... which Obama and the rest of you Statist punks still don't get...... so the rest of us get to laugh at you.
Hey, I'm not saying Apple didn't ever do anything revolutionary or that it hasn't been an extremely successful business, but Apple has used plenty of ideas that originated outside of Apple. They haven't always paid money for them, let alone market prices and they shouldn't always have to either, just like others should be able to borrow ideas from Apple and modify, adapt and change them to make them better.
So because something is a waste of resources, time and money it is best to get the government to steal money from someone else to do it??!?!fishball said:BULL DUST the government "builds the thing". They build nothing. The Government is nothing more and a coercive guider of available resources, away from where the market would've placed them VOLUNTARILY, TO where the vested interest wants them BY FORCE.
I highly doubt the private sector (which focuses intently on ROI/ROE) would invest in capital intensive and non-profit projects. Do you seriously believe private companies would voluntarily do something which gives them & their shareholders no benefit?
The free market is nice in theory but there are non-profitable things which are beneficial to the society as a whole which need doing.
The government is a perfect candidate to fill this gap, either through 'force' or 'legislation'.
I agree more often than not government spending is inefficient & distorts market forces (ie. waste of money) but there's still a place for them somewhere.
Imagine if private companies could do whatever they wanted, any infrastructure outside of Sydney & Melbourne would not be built because it is cost ineffective. The last mile is expensive and offers low returns.
You would not have internet in Byron Bay because population density is low. You would not have cellular signals in the outskirts of Sydney because it takes too many towers to cover the area and not enough people to justify the cost etc.
Also, governments do make things which other people then go on to use:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NASA_spin-off_technologies
Apple on the other hand, is suing Samsung for round rectangles. Go figure.
Agauholic said:Whether they do something revolutionary or not is irrelevant. You have missed the point of the thread.
The point here is.... Apples profit is their own. Profit is the motivator for their philosophy, initiative and activity.
What Obama is getting at, is that this profit when it appears can be confiscated by Force, for the common. This is the putrid, vile, cancerous mindset of the Statist-Punk.... which is just so darn funny cos of how stupid it is.
You have described a voluntary association. I have hope for you.Big A.D. said:Steve Jobs was famous for not caring about what his investors and shareholders thought. If you bought in, you bought into whatever Steve Jobs wanted to do and you bought in knowing that whatever Steve Jobs wanted to do, it was more than likely to change how everybody, everywhere engaged with the technology involved.
Go ask Apple/Jobs for a billion to be transferred to you right now. Let us all know how you go.You really think he gave a toss about money after the first few billion?
This is the combaya sales pitch that attracts the army of the Statist Punk..... It's funny cos they actually believe the filth, and don't follow through the consequences of his legislation.No, what he's getting at is that if people don't recognise that nothing gets achieved independently in isolation, we're stuffed.