All paid by the government to exist and obviously that suggests whose side they'll take in every instance.
(Deeply inside joke lol)
Why yes, you may touch my hand so you can say you touched the trillionaire. (But that'll be 20 American dollars)
I don’t think that the concept that economics (and by extension economic systems) is fundamentally about scarcity is a remotely controversial statement. I bet you any money that most econ 101 courses would say the same thing. Ultimately people have unlimited desires and there are limited resources, and so we have to figure out how to allocate those limited resources. That is true under capitalism, it’s true under socialism, it’s true under tribalism, it’s true when there’s no humans around whatsoever and single-celled organisms need to figure out how to use materials around them most efficiently.
Nothing about economics says that value can’t be created. What it says is that we have to deal with scarcity. To create value, you need to take limited materials, limited manpower, limited equipment, and use it to produce something new. It’s just clever use of resources to take something that is abundant and turn it into the thing that you can trade with other regions that are not as abundant in that thing, and that is also been the basis of global trade for most of human civilization. People didn’t cross treacherous seas so they could buy wheat and transport it to places with plenty of wheat. They would end up trying to get rare things such as silk and spices.
Says law is explicitly about scarcity. It’s saying that there isn’t enough of everything to go around, and so if there’s more of a certain thing then more of that thing will get used. If anything, if economics is about limited resources and unlimited human desires, Says law shows that human desires will always expand to fill available resources.
An example of this would be aluminum. When it was first isolated, aluminum was considered a precious metal more valuable than gold. One of the descendants of Napoleon had the aluminum silverware that he only brought out for his most esteemed guests. The tip of the Washington monument is covered in aluminum, and at the time it was considered an ostentatious display of wealth and used up a good chunk of the free aluminum available on the planet of the time. Later on, a process came about for extracting aluminum from more or less regular rocks, and aluminum became much more abundant in metallic form, and as such the price went down and the demand for it when way up. An old retiree would never have purchased an aluminum boat in the days of that Napoleon, but today it’s common and maybe even considered less desirable than a fiberglass boat. I would say that the aluminum example is a perfect example of says law, and shows how the less scarcity there is the more thing gets used, requiring scarcity to be a major factor in how much a thing is used.
Smith maybe thinks that air has no value, well… he’d be wrong. There was once a time that the air contained many atmospheres worth of carbon dioxide. That was the most important thing in the world for the vast oceans of plant life that existed about 2 billion years ago. At that point, however, oxygen was a toxic by-product of photosynthesis, and a combination of the toxicity of oxygen and reverse greenhouse gas effect resulted in the largest Extinction event ever, with approximately 95% of all life being destroyed. At that point only forms of life that had some tolerance to oxygen could survive, but eventually forms of life came about that were able to make use of this oxygen to produce larger amounts of energy than would have been possible otherwise. So there was a scarcity of energy, and a abundance of oxygen, and so life itself ended up making use of the oxygen to deal with the lack of energy problem. In this way, even in the absence of humans, life itself dealt with scarcity and abundance. In the Graysonian ethic, I talk about how economics don’t require money to apply. This is an example of that, where life itself ends up making unintentional economic decisions to make use of abundant resources and economize scarce resources.
Even today, hundreds of millions of dollars are spent every year on getting air to where it needs to be, showing that it isn’t something without value and it isn’t something that people aren’t willing to pay for. It all depends on the circumstance. You may be able to pull enough air out of your local surroundings to survive, but if you are underwater, or underground in a mine, or in space, or in the midst of the house fire, or you’re trying to run a gasoline or diesel engine really hard, or you’re trying to run a coal boiler to run a power plant, you will be willing to pay a premium for air.
One final thing, is that value isn’t really determined by scarcity or abundance per se, it is relatively subjective. If we go back to the oxygen catastrophe, all life on the planet at that point considered oxygen to be a toxic by-product, and it wanted that byproduct gone, it didn’t want it around. What it wanted was the carbon dioxide that was plentiful. Today, animal life desperately wants that oxygen, to the extent that we will die without it after a few minutes, and an excess of carbon dioxide will be toxic to us and to kill us. In spite of its utility, most people don’t want or need any amount of chlorine gas, but there’s a large market for it.
Capitalism per se peaked about 150 years ago, and for the past 110 years has been on the decline. A lot of people who don't know economics would fight me on this, but. Depending on the country, the government used to be maybe 1 to 5% of GDP and now it can be as much as 60% of GDP.
The fundamental problem that any economic system is trying to solve is scarcity. Now people blame capitalism scarcity, when in reality they need to be blaming the universe. There's a limited amount of energy, there's a limited amount of stuff, and when that stuff is turned into other stuff there's a limited amount of other stuff. Indeed, this is one of the problems that capitalism solves the best, because it directly creates incentives to create more stuff so that you can get more money and get more stuff. This is an improving in systems such as socialism where the only way to make socialism work is to keep market systems so that individuals are incentivized to do a good job. When China opened its markets and stopped being quite so pure communist they went from starving 100 million people to being one of the most productive countries on the planet.
People end up looking at the problems are today, particularly political corruption and crony capitalism, and they want to blame the capitalism part of things, but both are problems of the state that would not go away even if you completely abolished capitalism. Crony capitalism might go away, but cronyism would get worse because there would be no mechanisms for people who aren't in bed with the state to succeed.
Elon Musk didn't become the world's richest man by being the best capitalist, he did it by making the best use of the state's distortions of the market. As a capitalist he's a bit lame, his car company is small and barely profitable.
I think I would be the first to admit that just because our system today isn't pure capitalism doesn't necessarily mean that that's what's wrong with it. I think it's safe to say most people wouldn't want to live under pure capitalism, which is one reason why most of the world has moved away from it. My core argument here rather than being a defense of capitalism is more that we need to understand what we have when we are criticizing what we have.
It reminds me of people who drive on ice for the first time in a rear wheel drive vehicle. The back end breaks loose, and they want to steer hard to correct, but what they don't realize is the problem isn't that there's aiming the wrong way, it's at the rear wheels have lost traction and their front wheels are pointing in the wrong direction, so rather than doing what you think might be the right thing and trying to correct by steering in the direction you want to go, you have to steer in the direction that's going to straighten out your wheels and let your vehicle recover from the loss of traction.
I will say though, don't you want a guy like that putting electrodes in your brain? Lol
Different parts of the coalition will have different goals, and those goals are not going to fully align.
Of course the industrialists want low taxes, little regulation, and a workforce that can be paid next to nothing and treated like virtual slaves under the threat of going back to their third world country. This is in direct opposition to the populist nationalist elements of the movement which of course want to keep jobs in the US for US citizens. Social conservatives may or may not have an opinion on the matter, libertarians probably don't really want the state intervening and labor at all, and the disfected liberals probably lean closer to the populist nationalist elements.
Part of the work of having a coalition is the fact that there's going to have to be negotiation. Not everyone in the coalition is going to get everything that they want, but everyone should get something, and hopefully enough that everyone can agree to stick together in that coalition.
The fact that autistic Elon is representing the industrialists is kind of nice, because he doesn't bother trying to be sneaky about it, he's just saying straight up what he wants -- more h1b workers. Considering that Tesla has some of the lowest wages not just in Tech but also I think in the Auto industry, this shouldn't be surprising to anyone.
If certain elements of the coalition don't feel like they're getting what they bargained for, then it falls apart. Trump has developed a pretty broad coalition, and it'll be his job, not Elon musk's job, to ensure that the different parts of his coalition feel like they are getting enough to justify continuing to support it.

Which makes me strange in at least 3 ways...
Of course that doesn't mean I have a CD drive ready to go anywhere...
CRT Simulation in a GPU Shader, Looks Better Than Black Frame Insertion
Link: https://blurbusters.com/crt-simulation-in-a-gpu-shader-looks-better-than-bfi/
Discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42506211