cinepro wrote:If the government "shifts" $1million and builds a road that provides a benefit of $10million to a community, then they have "created wealth".
As I pointed out above, you are now playing a semantic game, which is not going to count as a logical argument unless you define your terms and their usage with some degree of rigor. You have also just played into the "you didn't build that" mentality of the Left, in which the state is the actual foundation and source of all wealth, and to which proper gratitude must then be shown.
Claiming that a government constructed bridge "provides a benefit" of $10 million to a community sounds little different than simply saying that the bridge's presence itself was the cause - the actual creative element itself - of that new $10 million, and hence, the bridge = government is to be understood as the actual source of the new $10 million. You see,
you didn't really build that. The state did. You were just standing there waiting to pick up the acorns on the ground but you didn't have the baskets. The state gave you the baskets, and a bridge so you could get to the acorns that were on the other side of the bridge (as if private citizens and/or companies couldn't and wouldn't have built a toll bridge anyway if the acorns were really worth collecting).
A bridge does not "provide"
x monetary "benefits" to a community. That is nothing more than the traditional thought processes and language of state worship. The free, creating, working, saving, and investing people of that community in a free, contractual, competitive market create the new $10 million. The bridge, at the very best, can be understood to have
facilitated such wealth creation (just as a civil court system and body of contract law do) but to claim that the bridge can be understood as having, itself, by its presence,
created $10 million of new wealth is to engage in logical slight-of-hand. The bridge did not, and does not represent a government
creation of wealth since, without the people in that community actually saving, investing, working, and producing, the bridge represents nothing more than an artifact constructed of concrete and steel; public museum piece assimilated from transferred private capital.
A government constructed bridge can be said to facilitate, promote, encourage, foster, accommodate, mitigate, and potentially positively condition an economic environment toward greater wealth creation, but it cannot - and hence, government cannot - be said therefore to have created new, net wealth. The people of that community within competative free markets did that, not the state. The roads I use do not create new wealth. Those that use those roads, themselves created from private sector wealth, do create that wealth through productive economic
activity (work).
The idea of politicians taking credit for the wealth created by the people of a society because of the core infrastructure they constructed
out of preexisting wealth generated by that very private sector is morally and economically perverse.
Yes, the original $1million may have been taken compulsorily, the $1million may have been better spent elsewhere (to benefit the community $50million),
Or in vote-buying pork, or down the welfare state/poverty industry/special interest bureaucracy/corporate welfare sinkhole - just as, if not the more likely scenario.
and private industry may have been able to build the same road for $500k, but all those issues don't change the fact that "wealth" has been "created".
NO! The bridge itself is a shifting, a reallocation, not creation. The wealth that the private sector generates because the bridge is there is the only new net wealth "created" in the entire economic process. Government didn't create that new wealth, and can morally, ethically, and economically, claim no credit whatsoever for it.
Can they claim credit for facilitating or making new wealth creation more likely or removing some obstacle? Sure, let them take credit for that, but not for creating wealth, which the state cannot do by definition as
government has no money. Everything government "owns" and utilizes, from tanks to paper clips was designed, created, constructed, and distributed from within the private sector with funds generated within that very sector. Government is
purely parasitic in nature, by the very nature of government itself. If its confining itself to its limited constitutional functions, and staying within realms where it is at least nominally competent, then there is little to criticize save questions of efficiency and fraud.
It's okay to admit it.
"Oh Holy Father government, give us this day our daily bread..."