RE: [Vo]:[OT] A Commentary re: CAPITAL in the Twenty-First Century, by Thomas Piketty

2014-04-21 Thread Mark Goldes
Vorts,

http://www.foreconomicjustice.org/12000/trickle-up-economics

This commentary by Gary Reber on Thomas Piketty's book CAPITAL opens a path to 
a program offering a dramatic reduction of inequality independent of jobs and 
savings.

Best,

Mark

Mark Goldes
CEO AESOP Institute
Co-Founder CHAVA Energy

www.aesopinstitute.org
www.chavaenergy.com

707 861-9070
707 280-8210 cell

From: OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson [orionwo...@charter.net]
Sent: Monday, April 21, 2014 7:05 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: [Vo]:[OT] But not entirely: Book: CAPITAL in the Twenty-First Century, 
by Thomas Piketty

Vorts,

A book recommendation:

http://www.amazon.com/Capital-Twenty-First-Century-Thomas-Piketty/dp/067443000X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1398126885&sr=1-1&keywords=capital+in+the+twenty-first+century

http://tinyurl.com/l77z5og

I suspect we are likely to hear a lot more about a popular book on economics 
called "CAPITAL in the Twenty-First Century", by Thomas Piketty. The author has 
become somewhat of rock-star celebrity in many economic circles, as well as a 
pariah in others.  The fact that his book has effected so many readers so 
quickly, both pro and con, suggest to me that Pketty is probably on to 
something serious, and we should take note. We in the USA have only begun to 
hear about Piketty's 700+ page book because it has only recently been 
translated from French (his native language) into English. In a nutshell, 
Piketty claims the growing inequality of wealth distribution is due primarily 
to a single economic action:

When the rate of return on capital—the annual income it generates divided by 
its market value—is higher than the economy’s growth rate, capital income will 
tend to rise faster than wages and salaries, which rarely grow faster than 
G.D.P.

...and where does all of this accumulated "capital" end up? Well, that is the 
question!

To quote the New Yorker review:

"If ownership of capital were distributed equally, this wouldn’t matter much. 
We’d all share in the rise in profits and dividends and rents. But in the 
United States in 2010, for example, the richest ten per cent of households 
owned seventy per cent of all the country’s wealth (a good surrogate for 
“capital”), and the top one per cent of households owned thirty-five per cent 
of the wealth. By contrast, the bottom half of households owned just five per 
cent. When income generated by capital grows rapidly, the richest families 
benefit disproportionately. Since 2009, corporate profits, dividend payouts, 
and the stock market have all risen sharply, but wages have barely budged. As a 
result, according to calculations by Piketty and Saez, almost all of the income 
growth in the economy between 2010 and 2012—ninety-five per cent of it—accrued 
to the one per cent."
...

...

The New Yorker Review:
http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2014/03/31/140331crbo_books_cassidy?currentPage=all

According to my understanding a major reason inequality of wealth in places 
like the United States is getting worse and will continue to get worse unless 
something is done about it soon, according to Piketty, is the fact that massive 
amounts accumulated wealth are now being passed down from generation to 
generation. The trend for inherited wealth is increasing. Those who have 
accumulated massive amounts of capital (and the power that goes along with it) 
have been able to successfully rewrite the tax code. Inheritance taxes and 
other taxation equalizer mechanisms that in the past helped redistribute the 
tendency for wealth to accumulate like cancerous tumors that could eventually 
kill the host have been rendered useless. How did this happen? Politics of 
course! Piketty states that economics and politics can't be separated from each 
other.

More from the New Yorker:

"Piketty believes that the rise in inequality can’t be understood independently 
of politics. For his new book, he chose a title evoking Marx, but he doesn’t 
think that capitalism is doomed, or that ever-rising inequality is inevitable. 
There are circumstances, he concedes, in which incomes can converge and the 
living standards of the masses can increase steadily—as happened in the 
so-called Golden Age, from 1945 to 1973. But Piketty argues that this state of 
affairs, which many of us regard as normal, may well have been a historical 
exception. The “forces of divergence can at any point regain the upper hand, as 
seems to be happening now, at the beginning of the twenty-first century,” he 
writes. And, if current trends continue, “the consequences for the long-term 
dynamics of the wealth distribution are potentially terrifying.”

A real irony here is the fact that a couple of centuries ago our forefathers 
escaped Europe to get away from the unfairness inherited accumulated wealth 
wreaked on those who by birthright had not been bequeathed a pile of cash. And 
now, we are on the brink of recreating the very same 

[Vo]:Re: [Vo]:Mallove: "Classic Nasty, Incompetent, and Stupid Statements About Cold Fusion"

2014-04-21 Thread hohlr...@gmail.com
Firefox might require an app to read .pdf

Or an update to the extension.

- Reply message -
From: "OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson" 
To: 
Subject: [Vo]:Mallove: "Classic Nasty, Incompetent, and Stupid Statements About 
Cold Fusion"
Date: Mon, Apr 21, 2014 10:08 PM

Works for me in IE. FireFox... not so well. Go figger.

Steven Vincent Johnson
svjart.orionworks.com

RE: [Vo]:Mallove: "Classic Nasty, Incompetent, and Stupid Statements About Cold Fusion"

2014-04-21 Thread OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson
Works for me in IE. FireFox... not so well. Go figger.

Steven Vincent Johnson
svjart.orionworks.com



[Vo]:[OT] But not entirely: Book: CAPITAL in the Twenty-First Century, by Thomas Piketty

2014-04-21 Thread OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson
Vorts,

 

A book recommendation:

 

http://www.amazon.com/Capital-Twenty-First-Century-Thomas-Piketty/dp/0674430
00X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1398126885&sr=1-1&keywords=capital+in+the
+twenty-first+century

 

http://tinyurl.com/l77z5og

 

I suspect we are likely to hear a lot more about a popular book on economics
called "CAPITAL in the Twenty-First Century", by Thomas Piketty. The author
has become somewhat of rock-star celebrity in many economic circles, as well
as a pariah in others.  The fact that his book has effected so many readers
so quickly, both pro and con, suggest to me that Pketty is probably on to
something serious, and we should take note. We in the USA have only begun to
hear about Piketty's 700+ page book because it has only recently been
translated from French (his native language) into English. In a nutshell,
Piketty claims the growing inequality of wealth distribution is due
primarily to a single economic action: 

 

When the rate of return on capital-the annual income it generates divided by
its market value-is higher than the economy's growth rate, capital income
will tend to rise faster than wages and salaries, which rarely grow faster
than G.D.P.

 

...and where does all of this accumulated "capital" end up? Well, that is
the question!

 

To quote the New Yorker review:

 

"If ownership of capital were distributed equally, this wouldn't matter
much. We'd all share in the rise in profits and dividends and rents. But in
the United States in 2010, for example, the richest ten per cent of
households owned seventy per cent of all the country's wealth (a good
surrogate for "capital"), and the top one per cent of households owned
thirty-five per cent of the wealth. By contrast, the bottom half of
households owned just five per cent. When income generated by capital grows
rapidly, the richest families benefit disproportionately. Since 2009,
corporate profits, dividend payouts, and the stock market have all risen
sharply, but wages have barely budged. As a result, according to
calculations by Piketty and Saez, almost all of the income growth in the
economy between 2010 and 2012-ninety-five per cent of it-accrued to the one
per cent."

...

 

...

 

The New Yorker Review:

http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2014/03/31/140331crbo_books_cass
idy?currentPage=all

 

According to my understanding a major reason inequality of wealth in places
like the United States is getting worse and will continue to get worse
unless something is done about it soon, according to Piketty, is the fact
that massive amounts accumulated wealth are now being passed down from
generation to generation. The trend for inherited wealth is increasing.
Those who have accumulated massive amounts of capital (and the power that
goes along with it) have been able to successfully rewrite the tax code.
Inheritance taxes and other taxation equalizer mechanisms that in the past
helped redistribute the tendency for wealth to accumulate like cancerous
tumors that could eventually kill the host have been rendered useless. How
did this happen? Politics of course! Piketty states that economics and
politics can't be separated from each other.

 

More from the New Yorker:

 

"Piketty believes that the rise in inequality can't be understood
independently of politics. For his new book, he chose a title evoking Marx,
but he doesn't think that capitalism is doomed, or that ever-rising
inequality is inevitable. There are circumstances, he concedes, in which
incomes can converge and the living standards of the masses can increase
steadily-as happened in the so-called Golden Age, from 1945 to 1973. But
Piketty argues that this state of affairs, which many of us regard as
normal, may well have been a historical exception. The "forces of divergence
can at any point regain the upper hand, as seems to be happening now, at the
beginning of the twenty-first century," he writes. And, if current trends
continue, "the consequences for the long-term dynamics of the wealth
distribution are potentially terrifying."

 

A real irony here is the fact that a couple of centuries ago our forefathers
escaped Europe to get away from the unfairness inherited accumulated wealth
wreaked on those who by birthright had not been bequeathed a pile of cash.
And now, we are on the brink of recreating the very same specter we
attempted to escape from. Needless to say, wealth inequality is one of the
major causes of messy revolutions. A lot of people end up getting killed
before the dust settles.

 

Regardless of what side of the fence one might be on, I suspect we are going
to hear a lot more about the ramifications  of Piketty's observations very
soon. I'm sure the debate will cause some interesting polarization.

 

Regards,

Steven Vincent Johnson

svjart.orionworks.com

 



Re: [Vo]:Mallove: "Classic Nasty, Incompetent, and Stupid Statements About Cold Fusion"

2014-04-21 Thread Terry Blanton
Just finished reading it in Chrome.  Idiots.



Re: [Vo]:Mallove: "Classic Nasty, Incompetent, and Stupid Statements About Cold Fusion"

2014-04-21 Thread Daniel Rocha
It's OK to me.


-- 
Daniel Rocha - RJ
danieldi...@gmail.com



Re: [Vo]:Mallove: "Classic Nasty, Incompetent, and Stupid Statements About Cold Fusion"

2014-04-21 Thread Jed Rothwell
OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson  wrote:

Nothing comes up when I try to read the PDF. Blank PDF file.
>

Really?!? I have not had that happen before. It comes up fine on my
computer. Try downloading and displaying it.

I was planning on upgrading my PDF software tomorrow. Maybe that will fix
the problem.

Does anyone else have this problem?

- Jed


RE: [Vo]:Mallove: "Classic Nasty, Incompetent, and Stupid Statements About Cold Fusion"

2014-04-21 Thread OrionWorks - Steven Vincent Johnson
Nothing comes up when I try to read the PDF. Blank PDF file.

Regards,
Steven Vincent Johnson
svjart.orionworks.com




Re: [Vo]:Mallove: "Classic Nasty, Incompetent, and Stupid Statements About Cold Fusion"

2014-04-21 Thread Jed Rothwell
Hmmm . . .  Google mail just tried to send this message to the Spam filter.
I repeat: I just added a document by Gene Mallove to the library:

http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MalloveEclassicnas.pdf

- Jed


[Vo]:Mallove: "Classic Nasty, Incompetent, and Stupid Statements About Cold Fusion"

2014-04-21 Thread Jed Rothwell

I added this document to the library:

http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/MalloveEclassicnas.pdf

- Jed