Jubbergun wrote:
The tale of the widow's mite comes to mind: 21 And He looked up and saw the rich putting their gifts into the treasury, 2 and He saw also a certain poor widow putting in two mites. 3 So He said, “Truly I say to you that this poor widow has put in more than all; 4 for all these out of their abundance have put in offerings for God,[a] but she out of her poverty put in all the livelihood that she had.”
Give me a break. God is dead, and has been dead for a long time now.
Jubbergun wrote:
Is he a good guy for tossing cash at worthy causes? No doubt, but I seem to recall someone (probably Aestu) saying that rich people only make these donations to buy goodwill. I don't believe that, but it's funny to watch how the attitude changes when the rich guy in question agrees with some people's political views.
It absolutely does. You're trying to make the "political views" part sound arbitrary. The difference is the difference between a world view based on selfishness and a world view based on responsibility.
Jubbergun wrote:
I've never heard the term "social justice" used to mean anything other than ignoring actual justice to do things that certain people think are a good idea. In fact, I think it's funny that there are so many people who use the idiotic phrase that wouldn't be happy with Buffett or anyone else making a voluntary donation because they believe those people shouldn't really be given a choice about whether or not give in the first place.
You're damn fucking right it shouldn't be a matter of choice. Making it a matter of choice puts generous people at a disadvantage against selfish people.
You might as well argue the draft should be optional for the same reason. You know why it wasn't? Because the irresponsible should not be free to be irresponsible. Everyone has an obligation to contribute whether they want to or not.
Jubbergun wrote:
The kind of people who think people who produce the kind of income Buffett does should only be allowed to keep a small fraction it, because "nobody needs that much money." It's a phrase for the sort of short-sighted half-wits that think that everyone needs to be exactly the same, and the only way to make that happen is to make everyone equally poor and miserable.
That's a strawman. No one has said "a small fraction" or anything like that. You believe this because you are brainwashed. If it's not because you're brainwashed, then why do you believe this?
Jubbergun wrote:
I don't entirely oppose entitlement spending, but I do think we spend too much on entitlements (among other things). I think most of the entitlement programs are mismanaged, and in a lot of cases don't help the people they should really be helping. I don't think there is enough "hand up" in these programs, the kind of steps that would eventually lead to the beneficiaries of these programs being able to support themselves adequately without aid, and because of that these programs make those beneficiaries dependent on those programs. I don't think that should be our goal. It's not good for the people we're trying to help, and it's not good for society in general.
Why do you think we spend too much, if we spend less relative to our cost of living than any other country in the Western world? What sort of entitlements are you even talking about? Free medical care? Free housing? Free water and power? Free education?
Again, it's an irrational view, at odds with factual reality, that is purely the product of brainwashing.
Jubbergun wrote:
I'm not calling all of Buffett's charitable efforts "bunk," I'm simply saying that it's not really that impressive to leave your fortune to anyone/thing after you've died and can no longer enjoy the benefits of it, especially when your estate has already enriched the people to whom most people would leave their wealth.
Dagery already established this is both false and a strawman.
Jubbergun wrote:
I don't know anyone who wants Buffett, or anyone else for that matter, to be "unregulated," but that is the charge that is usually leveled when anyone criticizes regulations that are pointless, counter-productive, excessive, or otherwise harmful/unnecessary. I think a big part of the problem is that some people think we're not supposed to judge those regulations on their results, but on the basis of the intentions behind those regulations, especially when they're being passed in the name of meaningless phrases like "social justice."
Regulation isn't responsible for our social problems. Other countries have far more and are not suffering our problems. So why do you believe this if it isn't true? Again: media brainwashing at work.
If you would claim otherwise, again: what regulations are you talking about, and how are they causally responsible for our economic problems?
Jubbergun wrote:
But hey, it's easier to just think people who disagree with you and your "social justice" are evil "double-thinking drones" than to have a conversation about any one of these subjects on the merits of what either side is trying to do and/or the things they oppose.
This is a false symmetry. Your factually wrong beliefs don't become somehow more valid because they oppose positions that are factually correct. Just because libertarians are hypocrites doesn't mean that those they oppose are.