Re: MMT Has No Clothes
Name one country that does this. Please I will be waiting because none of them do.
Does what?
>>The basis of MMT is that the government that can issue it's own currency can do so without ramification.
BS.
>>that the country in theory can never go broke because it can just print money to pay for everything.
Likely true. Avoiding default is not the same as "without ramification."
>>If this were the case then government would do this now. they wouldn't worry about borrowing money and issuing debt.
And what if you don't have the first clue of what yer talking about?
>>they would just print off the budget that was needed and pay for it. so why don't they actually do that?
Because they operate in a political environment.
>>please inform us.
Done.
>>You have failed to answer my last question as well. why don't countries implement this now?
Yer either unwilling or incapable of accepting/understanding the answer.
>>CAP and tax does nothing for pollution.
It's a market-based solution. I thought you liked those.
>>it is another trading scam implemented to make people feel good about themselves when it is nothing more than another government tax on industry that a few insiders make a ton of money on.
Yeah, most people
do feel good about maintaining a reasonable level of air quality. I suppose some are too stupid to reach that conclusion.
>>it does nothing to actually lower or stop pollution.
Ridiculous, empty-headed, rhetorical BS.
>>it is easy implement better technology.
Cap-and-trade places a cost on the negative externality of carbon emissions, and thereby an incentive to develop and invest in "better technology." A carbon tax is an alternative, but that's not as market-oriented.
>>car insurance is a requirement to drive a car.
And the individual mandate in the ACA is designed to make health insurance a requirement for a lot more people to have access to very expensive healthcare. Do you support freeloading?
>>car insurance is not there for you but to protect other people from you.
Is that right? I figure my car insurance protects me from losing my house if I do a lot of damage while driving.
>>this fallacy has been debunked more than once but still get repeated.
Nah, yer just blind to the reality involved.
>>Nope not how it works. need to read the constitution more.
Perhaps you could point out for me the section that supports yer view. I'm going with the enumerated powers in Article I, Section 8 — "lay and collect taxes" and "regulate commerce … among the several states."
>>we all know that letting criminals run the streets is safer than locking them up.
I'm of course not advocating that. Yer perception of the criminal justice system is characteristically childish.
>>the government was supposed to have limited power not the power that it does.
Too bad for you that you don't like it.
>>the anti-federalist fears came true.
Well, there are always the options of amendments, another convention, or overthrowing the gubmint you find so oppressive.