tangledblue11: 1. Increasing the likelyhood of tax fraud, increasing the cost of tax enforcment, and further disencouraging people from working are "nebulous"? This is not a new idea; NIT has been discussed widely since the 60s. I guess you have all the answers that have somehow eluded academics, administrators, legislators and municipalities for decades. You can even Wikipedia this... it's not revolutionary by any means.
2. Ok, so we disregard the entirely history of human civilization, the very nature of man, and assume we'll find people "to do their job" and just give away trillions of dollars of wealth. Good luck with that. Maybe once we're done with that we can go party with some unicorns and leprechauns.
3. I'm not following your logic here but are you somehow saying that things today are exactly as they were at the dawn of human civilization? Are you saying that human advancement is some far-fetched gamble? I'm not sure where you've obtained your figure regarding 1/3 of humanity starving but if you have a source I'd sure like to see it. Also, can you clarify what you mean by "check with anyone who works on this stuff"? What stuff are you referring to? LIke most of your statements that's very vague and lacks substance.
4. Funny you mention that. Turns out it's easy to prove facts (e.g. Norway's oil production) but not so easy to prove made up statistics. I suspected you wouldn't be able to provide a source.
5. If I'd heard about it or cared I'd be more interested. No offense, but if it were some breathtaking model of excellence it'd be more popular. To me it just sounds like a public venture that ultimately funds public endeavors. It's not something unique or special and you're just trading corporate players for politicians in the enrichment scheme if that's the case.
1) This is pure bologna, Warren Buffet said it best, no one's ever been discouraged from making more money by having to pay more taxes. Keeping 80% of 10,000,000 USD is still more than 80% of 5,000,000 USD. Seriously, this sounds like it came straight from an episode of Rush Limbaugh.
2) There's ample anthropological and psychological evidence that people are extremely generous to those in their own "tribe". Even skinflints like the average conservative American are capable of great generosity under the right circumstances. Even in the US today we exploit resources for the common good all the time. Government isn't some necessary evil, it's how we do the things together that we cannot do on our own, and largely it's successful. Every day you benefit from massive undertakings that we do "together" through government. The worst educated PBR swilling red neck, loading up his guns in his truck for a weekend of hunting, fishing, drinking, and bitching about big, bad "daddy gov" still reaps the fruits of the government by having a place to hunt, fish, and swill beer and animals to kill.
3) If you think the situation today in any way reflects the vast majority of human history than I just don't know what to say. It doesn't (and btw, the 1/3 thing was just an off the cuff observation that if a scientific breakthrough happens too late it's no good, it's not a prediction, I thought that was clear). It's not even like the dark ages. What you're saying amounts to, "we've managed to feed ourselves so far", ignoring the fact that there's actually been many times that we haven't, our situation today bears almost no resemblance to any other time in human history. The energy density of hydrocarbons was a one time windfall for humanity, our radical progress in the last century is directly correlated to our exploitation of said energy source. Replacements for it, if they can be found and built, won't magically spring up overnight. Furthermore, basic math illustrates the truth unequivocally, there is no resource on this planet that isn't finite (technically solar energy is, but we'll give that one a pass since the sun has a lot of fuel left - our ability to exploit it, though, is finite), you cannot use ever more of every resource, be it land, fresh water, hydrocarbons, etc. and not expect to eventually run out. If we found 4 new earths worth of coal and oil, fresh water, arable land, whatever the resource, it wouldn't even last as long as the first earth's supply did: BECAUSE arithmetic growth.
I'll give you an example of this problem (it's called the doubling problem, if you want to google it), in 1970 our surveys said we had 500 years of coal in the US. The survey had two caveats: we can only ever get to half of it and at our current rate of mining. Let's pretend we mined 1 ton of coal in 1970 and we've increased our mining rate at 7% per year (which is our actual rate of growth for coal mining, btw): How much do we mine per year now? Do you want the napkin math answer? Over 16 tons. That's right, that's 16 times the 1970 rate. By 2020 it'll be over 32 times the 1970 rate. By 2030 it'll be 64 times the 1970 rate. Go ahead, double check on your calculator, (I'm using the rule of 70 trick, so your answers may vary slightly).
4) No, I just don't know why I should provide a LMGTFY link when you're perfectly capable of doing so yourself. Are you really saying you don't know where the US maintains this information on their public websites? I suppose we could just move on from Norway, if you'd rather not do anything at all, and you can explain why I'm wrong about Sweden and Finland as well, or maybe even Switzerland.
5) And yet you're talking nonsense, because it's not what you imagine. Through this whole debate you've done absolutely nothing but trade the talking points with me I'd expect to hear on AM radio. I have seen no indication that you'd ever look anything up or change your mind if you did. But I don't really care if you resist finding out anything more, I'm pretty sure I'll be making that bowl of popcorn regardless of you changing your whole world view or not, because right after you are marching millions more that think exactly like you. The US will remain on its present course, statistically Obama will serve a second term (but it doesn't really matter if he doesn't), and bad stuff will happen while most of the population suffers one indignity or another, during a unique time in human history when we've actually had the power to prevent them. How very sad for us...