Marxism, Labor, and AI

My argument yesterday with the Marxists was rather infuriating, but typical of commies everywhere. When they say:

Capitalism is an employee generating $1,000 of value an hour but being paid $16.

They are talking about the basic tenets of Marxist economics:

  • Workers produce more value than they are paid
  • The difference is called surplus value
  • That surplus goes to owners as profit
  • Therefore, business owners, landlords, etc. are stealing the worker’s value

“Value” ≠ revenue

If a worker “generates $1,000/hour,” that usually means revenue, not pure value created. From that $1,000, a business pays:

  • Materials
  • Rent
  • Equipment
  • Utilities
  • Other staff
  • Risk costs

So the gap between $1,000 and $16 is not all profit. To say that it is ignores the contribution of the business itself. The worker and their labor are useless without the facilities, equipment, and organizational structure needed for the business to run.

In mainstream economics, wages depend upon:

  • supply and demand for labor
  • skills and scarcity
  • bargaining power
  • institutions (minimum wage, unions).

Bargaining power flows from supply and demand, which flows in turn from skills and scarcity. If you are the only person who can do a particular job and that job needs to be done or can generate profit, your wages will be high. See Michael Jordan. If literally anyone can do your job or the job itself doesn’t produce much value, your pay will be low.

Let’s say I am buying a hamburger. I have choices. I am going to buy the burger fitting my needs and requirements, but I am also going to do so at the lowest price point that I can. For the most part, that’s how consumers shop. It’s no different when a business is shopping for labor. That business is going to buy the product (labor) suiting its needs for the least amount of money that it can.

Example: A person is skilled in this job:

  • Pull a frozen hamburger patty from the freezer
  • Put that patty on the grill
  • Push the start button on the timer
  • When the timer beeps, flip the patty over
  • when the timer beeps again, put the patty on the bread
  • Pass the bread/patty assembly to the next person on the line

Note this is a skillset that nearly anyone can do in a competent manner. In fact, the most difficult part of this job is finding an employee who will show up to work as scheduled and not steal everything in the building. That being the case, the employer doesn’t have to pay a high wage. No employer will hire someone for $100 an hour to do a job they can find someone who will do that job in a suitable manner for $12 an hour. The business is going to offer the lowest amount it can that will attract a person with the requisite skills.

However, let’s say you are very competent for this job. You are a Michelin star chef. You still won’t get $100 an hour, because the product you are making (grilled hamburger patties) can’t be sold for enough to recoup your wages.

So that takes care of bargaining power, supply and demand, and skills and scarcity. What about institutions? That’s merely a term for artificial price controls. Call it what you want, whether that be unions, minimum wage, overtime laws, requirements for health insurance, or whatever- it’s an external body attempting to place constraints on the cost of purchasing labor. Price controls don’t work. We are seeing that now in real time with the influx of illegal immigrants to industries most vulnerable to price controls. Why hire a legal construction worker or farm hand when an illegal will work under the table for a fraction of the cost?

The market will always seek ways around price controls. Let’s say the government sets a minimum wage. They can do that with legislation or by requiring a business to deal with a proxy like a labor union. For whatever reason, a business is now required to pay a certain price for labor and no less. Some businesses will hire non-Union or illegal immigrant labor to circumvent this restriction. That will permit them to sell at a lower price on the black market, which gives that business a competitive advantage.

So let’s say the minimum wage is $100 an hour for our fabled burger flipper. The business needs to sell that burger at $85 in order to make money. However, there is a guy selling burgers in a back alley for $4. He has a competitive advantage and will likely sell all of the burgers he can make at that price.

So why doesn’t the government step in? In many cases, they do. When that happens, assuming prices are higher than the consumer wants to pay, people just cook their own burgers at home. Now there are no more businesses selling burgers, and the jobs disappear, making an effective wage of $0, regardless of what the minimum is.

The market always sets the price. There is a demand curve here- as your price increases, the people willing to pay that price steadily decreases. The trick is to maximize profits by balancing production capacity with price.

That excess value Marx claims the business owner is stealing ignores the contribution of the business owner. That owner took financial risks in creating that business and expects to get money (profit) in return. If there is no profit, there is no business, and then there is no job for the worker to perform in exchange for wages. That’s why communism fails- it ignores this truth, even as communist policies destroy every economy that has tried it.

So let’s move on to price gouging. There is no such thing: what is referred to as price gouging is merely the market’s response to increased demand. Let’s say that there is a massive power outage in your area. People rush to buy generators, and the local supply is quickly used up. There are some people who drive 100 miles away, outside of the affected area, to home depot. They buy 100 generators, drive back the 100 miles, and sell the generators for double or even more than what the normal price is. Many people would scream price gouging, but that is merely the market responding to demand and filling it. If you make that illegal, then no one will be willing to make the drive, and now there are no generators available at any price.

We see that all of the time with respect to surge pricing on Uber, the fact that the soda machine outside your office sells at a higher price than the supermarket 10 miles down the road, or even the tickets to that concert you wanted to see that’s been sold out for months, but are selling on resale sites for double their face value.

In each case, the “excess value” that Marx claims isn’t profit to be had, but a business owner taking advantage of workers, isn’t excess. It’s the cost of getting things done. That worker’s value is useless if there isn’t a facility that has the equipment, marketing, management, and other conditions required for that labor to mean something.

Michael Jordan is useless without a court, basketballs, teammates, and opponents, each of which has to be paid for. Each of us makes pay based upon our skills in producing something, the scarcity of that skill, and the demand for the product we produce. If you don’t like how much you make, increase your skill set, gain a skill that is scarce and has value, or assume the risks of starting your own business. Each of those choices has its own risks, pitfalls, and rewards.

Just don’t sit around and complain how someone is holding you back and keeping you from being rich. The only person holding you back is-

you.

Just getting a degree isn’t going to automatically make your labor worth more. If your degree is in gender studies, outdoor recreation, or 14th century French poetry, you have skills, but those skills aren’t in demand. Likewise, if you are an expert craftsman who makes buggy whips, you likely aren’t going to see a high demand for your products.


As a side note, I tried using ChatGPT as an editor to find logical deficiencies in this post. What that AI told me is a great example of the built in biases of these computer programs. It took particular umbrage with the statement “Communism fails.” It argued that true communism has never been tried, so we don’t know if it will fail.

That’s a bullshit leftist talking point- “true communism hasn’t been tried, but we are smarter than those other people and we are going to do it correctly.”

They aren’t true Intelligence. These programs are merely parroting the opinions and thoughts of those who wrote the program. For that reason, they have the same problems and shortcomings as the humans who created them, and that is their greatest weakness.

Arguing with Idiots, Part 2

Then we moved on to landlords. The left claims that, if landlords were prohibited, they would have to sell their homes, and housing prices would fall. Therefore, eliminate landlords, and everyone can afford a house.

My reply? OK, that’s the first year. What happens next year when no homes are built because prices are too low to make it profitable to build? This is no different than the “tax all billionaires out of existence, give their money away, and we can all be rich.”

If you taxed every billionaire, just confiscated 100% of their wealth over $1 billion, here is the math:

~900 billionaires, who have a combined net worth of about $8.2 trillion. So we take everything over $999 million. That’s about $7.3 trillion we can distribute. Each person in the US would now get $20,000 plus or minus.

Only now all of those companies are gone- Domino Sugar, Tesla, Facebook, Amazon, Meta, WalMart, Nike, M&M Mars, Hershey Co., Redbull, Keurig, ChikFilA, Subway, Tyson Foods, Archer Daniels Midway, thousands of companies. Essentially all of the large and mid cap businesses will be wiped out. All out of business because they needed to be liquidated to pay for the confiscation.

In all, about 60 million people just lost their jobs as billionaires liquidated to settle their tax bills.

Now what do you do next year?

Taxing billionaires, destroying landlords, killing your economic engine is the equivalent to eating all of your egg laying chickens, making flour out of your seed corn. Sure you eat well today, but your tomorrows will be lean and hungry.

Your leftist is a child-like moron with little concept of economics or money. To them, someone with money is someone to be robbed without regard for what disruptions the robbery will actually cause.

Tiring

One of the leftist claims going around sounds like this:

Buying and selling is NOT capitalism. That’s trade. Capitalism is an employee generating $1,000 of value an hour but being paid $16.

I reply that an employee selling $1000 of merchandise isn’t the same thing as generating revenue.

An employee doesn’t generate $1000 of value in an hour. Let’s say that employee works at an Apple store. That employee is the clerk who sells a $1000 phone. Did that employee generate $1000 in value? No.

That phone had value when it came into the store. The store had overhead and value.

The owner of that store provided the phone, the store, its operating expenses, the taxes, and the insurance. I point this out, and get this in return:

Awwww did someone never take a business or finance class? Is it hard being so stupid?

It just gets so tedious. Aren’t we at the stage yet where we can toss commies out of helicopters?

Psychotic

This video is truly terrifying. I found it while researching an entirely different and unrelated post. This cop is the scariest one I have seen. Listen to the way he talks. He is treating that man like a THING, an object. I have literally met serial killers, and he sounds just like one of them, IMO. Imagine for a moment, being his prisoner. You are in his power, he can do whatever he wants with you, and judging by the behavior of the other cops, he will get away with it. Now think about how you would act towards him while you were in his custody. You bet your ass you would do what it took to survive. Yes, sir, no, sir, I’m sorry sir. Otherwise, there is a pretty good chance that he will kill you.

I know the video is a bit long, but it’s worth your time. Truly chilling.

As one of the comments to the video said, “Cops don’t become psychopaths, but there are plenty of psychopaths who become cops.”

In this case, the FBI actually investigated and prosecuted him. I don’t know why, because I don’t have access to the trial, but a jury found the cop not guilty of wrongdoing.

The other thing that really disturbs me, is that the other cops (both at the scene and in the jail) just stood there as this guy did this. As far as I am concerned, that makes each and every one of them “bad cops.” If anyone wants to tell me that I shouldn’t say that since the jury found him not guilty, then I don’t want to hear a word when some criminal walks on a technicality or because a jury found them not guilty.

I saw the video shot by the police officers’ own body cams, and I can judge for myself when I see wrongdoing. I don’t need a jury to tell me it’s OK.

When I was in the military, I once had a commanding officer (Captain, O-6 type) who told us that if he had 100 enlisted men with 100 video cameras who said a junior officer had committed a criminal act, but the officer denied it, the Captain would have no choice but to trust in his officer and assume that the enlisted men and their video recordings were wrong.

I disagreed with that statement then, and I disagreed with it in 2023.

In August of ’23, a handful of coworkers and I watched as a cop tortured one of the patients in our emergency room. After we jointly filed a complaint, we were all told that the supervisor had investigated, and the officer involved said that it didn’t happen that way. All of us, we were told, must have misunderstood what we all saw, because we don’t understand police procedure. Besides, the dude who was tortured was not a nice guy, even though he was in jail for a misdemeanor and had an otherwise spotless record. I was so disturbed by this, that I wrote a post about it.

That’s how cops investigate. Cops investigate themselves and find they committed no wrongdoing. It happens all of the time. I have seen it on more than one occasion. In my profession, I meet and see a lot of cops, a lot of scummy people, and a Venn diagram of the two groups would have a good amount of overlap. The prosecutors, judges, and the rest of the legal system need cops in order to keep their jobs. My guess is that the entire system is playing team politics: half of them on one side, half on the other. Justice is lost somewhere in the middle.

I don’t know why the jury let him walk. Maybe they didn’t see the video. Maybe it was heavily redacted. Maybe the prosecutor deliberately tanked the case, I don’t know. I do know what I saw.

I know that some cops try to go right. I also know that, put on the spot, a cop will nearly always side with other cops, even over and above their own families. That makes all of them bad to one extent or another. I get it- you can’t expect a cop to arrest his mother or wife, they’re human with human weaknesses. That’s all the more reason why we can’t treat them as if they are above the law.

Let me close with a funny meme.

Musk

Musk has been claiming AI and robotics will ensure no one needs a job, we will need to hand everyone money in the form of UBI, but everyone will live in a penthouse. Those claims span a range from unlikely to impossible for reasons I would hope we don’t need to elaborate.

I’m going to assume that Musk isn’t an idiot and is aware of this as well. The only reasonable explanation is he is lying. Musk is well known for pump and dump schemes.

AI is nowhere near ready to take over anything. AI isn’t intelligent at all-it’s simply a search engine designed to interact with the user to sound human. The program is still limited by the personality, biases, and thought processes of the people who wrote the program.

I’ve seen the claims and studies: AI is correct more often than human doctors. Why this isn’t the big gotcha everyone assumes it is, is that AI is correct on standardized patients more often than doctors. A standardized patient is one where all of the symptoms are there for a diagnosis to be made. It’s essentially like a test question, because it is. Standardized patients don’t present like real patients: they don’t lie, they don’t have too many distracting symptoms, they are perfect patients. Not real world. In the real world, patients lie about symptoms they have, they add symptoms they don’t have, and sometimes they don’t fit the mold of what their condition should look like. All of this complicates diagnosis.

One of the things we have in the hospital is cardiac and vital signs monitoring. It seems like a straightforward thing- if the patient has vital signs outside the norm, if their heart rhythm isn’t correct, sound an alarm. The computer gets that wrong more times than it is correct. A patient will scratch an itch, and an alarm will sound, saying he is in a lethal heart rhythm. Nail polish of the wrong color, and the machine claims hypoxia. Heart rate high, and the alarm sounds- even though it isn’t a medical condition that caused the heart rate, it’s something benign. That’s why it’s only an alarm that sounds to get someone’s attention- these things still require the judgement of a human to decide whether or not intervention is required.

The same is true in other fields. Remember the Teslas that were slamming into trucks without hitting the brakes? Remember the 737 Max aircraft that crashed because programmers from India put in faulty code? How about the Airbus aircraft that were randomly dropping in altitude due to computer errors just three months ago?

Until they can fix that, AI isn’t ready to take over the world. It’s just not.

Anyone who thinks AI is ready to do more doesn’t understand the way this stuff works. Musk is smarter than that.

However, Musk is heavily invested in his new AI startup, xAI. (He does have an odd fetish for the letter x) His statements accomplish nothing but making people invest in AI. I wonder if that isn’t the reason for this.

Jiggity Jig

The last day of the vacation finally arrived. We got up at 7am, went to breakfast in the hotel, then caught a cab to the airport. The plane boarded at 1030 am. For crossing the Atlantic, I always try to fly first class. Why? Because the seats are large, they can lie down flat to form a bed, and it makes a long day otherwise tolerable.

They take your meal order when you get aboard. Soon after the plane took off at 11:10am, I got served the meal. I had a salad, Lasagna, and a pork loin in a tomato gravy that was really good.

Dessert was frozen yogurt with raspberry and granola topping that was outstanding.

While I ate, I watched John Wick, then after I laid my chair down and took a 3 hour nap. I woke up with about 2 hours to go, and they served us finger sandwiches with walnuts, cheese, and crackers as a pre landing snack.

We landed in Boston just after 1pm local time and began our nearly three hour layover for our Orlando flight. When we arrived in Orlando, we were picked up by family and finally got home just after 8pm, which was 2am in Paris. Despite the 3 hour nap, a 20 hour travel day was exhausting.

Our vacation lasted 21 days, spanned 4 countries and an entire ocean. The total cost of the trip was pretty high at just over $15,000, and at the same time was a great value for what we got out of it. It was a great trip and I don’t regret this first attempt at semi-retirement. A good part of it was while I was in Paris, my boss contacted me and offered me three extra days at work, and to entice me into accepting, offered me a $400 per day bonus. Hey, that’s nearly a quarter of the trip paid for.

It pays to be one of two board certified emergency nurses and one of only 5 nurses certified for ultrasound guided IV placement.

Don’t Talk to the Police, the followup

Look how well this works.

It looks like they are about to try again. They even had a brief talk about how to yank open that second door when she opens the inner door.

Don’t open the door. There are no exigent circumstances, they can’t legally enter your home without a warrant. Tell them through the doorbell cam to fuck off and come back with a warrant.

Honestly, there is a certain point when you are willing to find out if the local police have level IV plates.

Thought Experiment

First, $100k to every US citizen would cost $38 trillion, meaning a doubling the current national debt. That would also instantly insert $38 trillion into the economy. The current world wide money supply is around $150 Trillion. Adding an instant $38 trillion to that would cause an increase in the demand side of our economy, coupled with the loss of production from the idiots who quit their jobs lowering the supply side would cause inflation rates of 30-50%, collapsing the economy.

Keep in mind that the COVID stimulus and PPE loans combined were only $4.6 trillion spread over 2 years. Now take that inflation, multiply it by a factor of 15 or 20, and see what the result is.

within 18 months, it would be cheaper to wipe your ass with $100 bills than it would to buy toilet paper. The only good news is that the national debt could finally be paid off, because paying off that now $80 trillion in US debt would only require two goats, a tank of gas, and a blowjob from a toothless hooker in Georgetown.

The coolest part of all this is the opportunity to add a nearly worthless billion dollar bill to my collection of dead currency.


But let’s carry this idiotic thought through to the end.

Now every house has $100,000 in fresh money. First, every luxury item would be bought the next day, reducing the supply of gold teeth, double wide trailers, and Escalades to nothing. Now you can’t buy any at any price.

An hour later, people are hungry, but since the morons who thought they were now rich all just quit their jobs, there is no food to be had anywhere because every store and restaurant is closed for lack of employees.

To get someone to make a sandwich is going to require him to get off his ass. So now a hamburger costs $10,000.

In fact, everything is more expensive. I know people are generally too stupid to get this, but when everyone is a millionaire, being a millionaire means nothing. That’s why the COVID stimulus coupled with the COVID shutdown caused this inflation everyone is crying about.

  • Businesses closed for two years, restricting supply
  • Landlords being forced to allow tenants to stay without paying, meaning costs need to be recouped
  • Everyone getting large stimulus checks and PEP loans, increasing demand

I honestly believe most leftists have no knowledge of economics, and the rest of them know, but are using it to keep the retards on the farm.

Paris: Day Three

To be clear, this series of posts on our European trip is meant to serve as a chronicle of a trip that we returned from 2 weeks ago. Some people seem confused on that point. For OPSEC reasons, I never discuss our travels until after we return. Don’t want anyone who doesn’t have a need to know being aware of our absence.

So this is about day three in Paris, the 20th day of our trip. Being our last day here, we did a bit of shopping, a bit of packing, and some lying around doing nothing. To be quite honest, we had both reached a point where we were just tired of being on this trip. So we went to breakfast, and I want to show some pictures of what a European (French) breakfast looks like. First, there are meats and cheeses:

Fruit:

Baked goods:

along with the Omelet I pictured in other posts.

We walked a couple of blocks to the Champs Elysees. We didn’t get much, mostly because prices were ridiculous. Here is a purse we saw

Yeah. That purse wasn’t big enough to hold $3500 worth of stuff, making the back worth more than anything you would put in it. We walked into the McDonald’s- not to eat, but to establish prices for my Big Mac index. A Big Mac in Paris costs about $10. Just the sandwich.

We stopped by a French pastry shop and bought some Eclairs (chocolate and coffee flavored, if you are interested). We also hit up the Lindt chocolate store. I bought about $150 Euros worth of chocolate. We are still snacking on it two weeks later.

Then it was dinner time and get ready for bed. Tomorrow is a travel day, so it will be a long one.

On the way back to the hotel, I saw a store with a raisable vehicle barrier to prevent smash and grabs.