Ive seen a lot of references to socialism, or even Marxism in some cases, on various political threads here. I know the users here average pretty far to the left, especially compared to the average population, so that isnt all that surprising. With that said, I saw a post on PoliGAF that said Bernies youth support basically shows that within younger age groups, people have their foot on the throat of capitalism.
I guess it made me curious just how widespread this idea is. Do many people here want us to move on from capitalism? Why or why not? What system do you think would work better and why? If you are in support of capitalism, why?
I know people search post history here, so yes, if you look at my post history, I consider myself a moderate Republican. I may not agree with most of the views about this topic here, but I am interested in knowing why people feel this way. Reading about all sides of an issue are vital to being informed and educated on the issues. I dont really see the point of consuming news or information that only confirms what you already believe. So please dont think this is some attempt at a troll. I just want to read an interesting discussion about GAFs views on capitalism, either for or against.
The key is to abolish bosses. They are the issue - they extract profit they do not earn from laborer.sNot sure what the bolded has to do with capitalism, that sounds like a corrupt and cruel government. As to your other point, even if all of their options are considered bad, the only way the set of options could be improved is if they become more valuable as a worker or if they hurt others to improve their own conditions. Excessive working conditions create higher costs for employers, which results in them hiring less, which would cause other workers to suffer. This is the same reason why the minimum wage is bad at reducing poverty compared to some other options like wage subsidies or tax credits.
This does not make sense. Ok, we have privately owned means of production, but Welfare, Universal Healthcare, Free Education are a means of collectivizing the fruits of private ownership. How is that not Socialism?
Capitalism is evil.
It's basically a system that favors "fuck you, got mines". If you're not born rich, you are pretty much damned for being on this earth.
I agree with most posters in this thread, I guess. I'm for capitalism that's thoroughly regulated and checked.
Competition in a marketplace can be a great thing - it drives prices down, increases the rate of technological progress, and generally increases wealth.
The problem is that unless you have strict watchdog organizations, many marketplaces will fall to a monopoly, which undoes much of the good of a capitalist system.
A bunch of drug companies competing against each other to provide the best possible drugs at the lowest possible prices? Awesome!
Drug companies using patents so they have an effective monopoly on certain drugs for decades? Severely limited competition keeping prices high? Not so awesome.
Every time a company manages to monopolize a market, consumers see less of the benefits of a free market system. Look at Intel and the way their CPUs produce smaller gains as each generation is released. Hell, look at EA and some of their sports franchises like Madden or FIFA. Not having a system in place to prevent anti-competitive practices makes capitalism a drag for everyone except the monopolizers.
Monopolies are a result of government intervention on the free market. Eliminate patents, allow piracy, stop bailing out corporations, and you get a nice competitive free market
Capitalism is evil.
It's basically a system that favors "fuck you, got mines". If you're not born rich, you are pretty much damned for being on this earth.
I'm just wondering: if we keep going at the rate we are going, when will the 1% have 99% of the words wealth?
It has to happen eventually, if nothing changes.
Capitalism is evil.
It's basically a system that favors "fuck you, got mines". If you're not born rich, you are pretty much damned for being on this earth.
Nay, no matter how much you regulate Capitalism the workers will still end up being exploited.
Nay, no matter how much you regulate Capitalism the workers will still end up being exploited.
Yup. Here's an accurate representation of trying to regulate the issues of capitalism:
Monopolies are a result of government intervention on the free market. Eliminate patents, allow piracy, stop bailing out corporations, and you get a nice competitive free market
Regulation of capitalism isn't the only way a government can mitigate its negatives, though. You can have a largely capitalist economy, but socialist programs and progressive taxation can significantly reduce the impact of that exploitation. We just aren't there yet in the US.
I do think everyone should have access to healthcare, but public healthcare? No way, I think it is better if the goverment gives vouchers to the poorer so he can have as good healthcare as the richer one (who can afford by himself)
Why have exploitation at all? Why are we just accepting back some of what was stolen from us in the first place? Why not just abolish the exploitative ruling class?
Yup. Here's an accurate representation of trying to regulate the issues of capitalism:
https://i.imgur.com/UNhWQiV.webm
Can't embed webms why![]()
Why have exploitation at all? Why are we just accepting back some of what was stolen from us in the first place? Why not just abolish the exploitative ruling class?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_democracy said:Social democracy is a political ideology that supports economic and social interventions to promote social justice within the framework of a capitalist economy, and a policy regime involving welfare state provisions, collective bargaining arrangements, regulation of the economy in the general interest, measures for income redistribution, and a commitment to representative democracy. Social democracy thus aims to create the conditions for capitalism to lead to greater egalitarian, democratic and solidaristic outcomes; and is often associated with the set of socioeconomic policies that became prominent in Western and Northern Europeparticularly the Nordic model in the Nordic countriesduring the latter half of the 20th century.
Monopolies are a result of government intervention on the free market. Eliminate patents, allow piracy, stop bailing out corporations, and you get a nice competitive free market
What's silly is ignoring the context of capitalist society and pretending that deals between employers and workers are made on balanced terms. That displays an astounding level of naivety about the way the world works. There are no equal contracts between kings and peasants.The employer/employee relationship is not inherently exploitative. As with any deal, ideally, both parties feel they're getting the better end of it; the worker values their pay more than their labor, and the employer values their labor more than their pay.
Your argument is silly.
Are there exploitative relationships? Yes. But that can be corrected. It's not inherent to the system.
Because it is entirely unrealistic that such a society (pure equality of wealth and everything that entails) would ever actually come into being, let alone function for any extended period of time.
Honest question to the people who want communism. Do you like owning stuff?
Capitalism is evil.
It's basically a system that favors "fuck you, got mines". If you're not born rich, you are pretty much damned for being on this earth.
You don't need pure equality of wealth to not have exploitation. ?
Communism does not state that people should not have personal property. When communists use the phrase "private property" they are referring to productive property that is used socially but controlled privately, i.e. the means of production. It's a terminology difference stemming from Marx's works that doesn't translate well into English and confuses everyone.
We don't want to take away your toaster or your tv or whatever, we want our workplaces to be democratically controlled. How you go about doing that is what is always up for debate among socialists.
I constantly see people say "communism was tried and it failed therefore it's all bad!" but this is nonsense. What was tried was Marxism-Leninism and the various strands of communism that branched off from it, for the most part. That was an ideology that was born out of certain circumstances and, being the first and most powerful socialist state, it went on to influence - whether through force or soft power - other socialist states to be born in its image. That was an ideology that was tried and did not survive, and so it is the task of socialists to learn from it what worked and what failed. Could socialism not made in the style of MLism have succeeded? Hard to say when the Soviets kept beating down pro-socialist-but-anti-Soviet uprisings like in Hungary!
One of the main problems with the USSR and everything that came after it was that it was not socialist enough, that is to say the working class did not have enough say in the economy. It was party dictatorship rather than proletarian dictatorship, and I don't think the original concept of the soviets (workers councils) was a bad one. It's unfortunate that we can't see what the USSR would have been like had the Old Bolsheviks gotten their way instead of Stalin murdering them all, but what we're left with is a malformed state nearly strangled after birth by internal and external forces, leaving it paranoid and aggressive in its attempt to survive. With the US being much further economically and technologically advanced than Russia was at the time of its revolution, and with a much stronger democratic tradition stuck in the minds of its people, if were we able to achieve socialism here it would probably go much more smoothly and in accordance with actual socialist principles.
You only need equal control of productive property. Put personal wealth can vary based on the work someone puts into society.I can't think of any example in which this is accurate. The type of exploitation you are talking about is a direct result of the inequality caused by disparities in wealth. Whether that wealth is money, land, or any other desirable thing someone can have more of than someone else. Unless wealth inequality itself was abolished (an impossibility, if we are being realistic), there is always going to be some potential for someone who has more to exploit someone who has less.
What's silly is ignoring the context of capitalist society and pretending that deals between employers and workers are made on balanced terms. That displays an astounding level of naivety about the way the world works. There are no equal contracts between kings and peasants.
Really? In what way do we have a mix of both systems? The means of production are privately owned and used to extract profit from the working class. That's capitalism pure and simple. Where does worker ownership of the means of production fit into that? They are inherently contradictory.
Welfare is not socialism. Government utilities are not socialism. Universal healthcare and free college are not socialism.
Norwegian style = Yay
American style = Nay
healthcare should be a right, not a privilege
Ok, then what are they? They sure aren't capitalism. And what we have isn't pure capitalism either. Sure, maybe they aren't a pure definition of socialism. But that goes back to my thing, pure capitalism and pure socialism aren't good. I don't think it should be all one way or all another.
Contracts don't need to be equal for the system to be fair. Workers need to make living wages. They need to be properly compensated for their time. Ideally private companies should be offering ESOPs. Why are you being so patronizing? You're just speaking in platitudes and postures.
"In a higher phase of communist society, after the enslaving subordination of the individual to the division of labor, and therewith also the antithesis between mental and physical labor, has vanished; after labor has become not only a means of life but life's prime want; after the productive forces have also increased with the all-around development of the individual, and all the springs of co-operative wealth flow more abundantly -- only then then can the narrow horizon of bourgeois right be crossed in its entirety and society inscribe on its banners: From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs!"
Ok, then what are they? They sure aren't capitalism. And what we have isn't pure capitalism either. Sure, maybe they aren't a pure definition of socialism. But that goes back to my thing, pure capitalism and pure socialism aren't good. I don't think it should be all one way or all another.
Truth for realI believe Norway also has lower corporate taxes and less red tape than people know.
Casting Scandinavia as this pure socialist utopia is naive.
They aren't necessarily one or the other. But they are only necessary because capitalism creates poverty. Capitalism = private ownership of the means of production. Socialism = worker ownership of the means of production. Everything else in society is built around that fundamental system of ownership.
Capitalism is evil.
It's basically a system that favors "fuck you, got mines". If you're not born rich, you are pretty much damned for being on this earth.
In socialist theory it is exploitative because the workers themselves should simply be in control of the means of production and therefore don't need some external bosses offering them wages. The ultimate goal of communism is the abolition of private property and wage labor, when the productive forces are so highly advanced that labor is no longer necessary for each worker to perform but something that they can do of their own accord. Or as Marx would say:
We don't believe that businesses/enterprises/whatever you want to call them should be privately owned. If the workers feel they need to continue using money until the post-scarcity economy (should a thing be achievable) be reached, then it should be up to them to democratically determine their wages.
The key is to abolish bosses. They are the issue - they extract profit they do not earn from laborer.s
What if there's no other options? If they are easily replaceable, someone else will just replace them and then they end up just being unemployed.Your comment was about "abusing" workers, not their wages. Different subjects.
If people feel they arent getting a fair wage, they can quit. The factory offers a choice that wasnt there before. They can choose to work there or do whatever else they would have had a factory not come into existence.
They aren't necessarily one or the other. But they are only necessary because capitalism creates poverty. Capitalism = private ownership of the means of production. Socialism = worker ownership of the means of production. Everything else in society is built around that fundamental system of ownership.
There is a reason why it doesn't make sense for workers to organize themselves, and that's because they can't. They will elect one of their own to direct them. As they go off and figure out how to best engage with the world at large, they meet with other organizations of labor. Then concessions must be made between the other organizations of labor. Some of which control more valuable resources, which is ultimately decided by the demand that the labor force puts on it through their socio-economic behavior. It becomes impossible for labor to set their own wages.
Your system assumes that everyone has good intentions and that no one would be good at manipulating others and getting themselves put on top.
Look, no system is perfect. There is always a way to exploit it. Which is why it's ridiculous to think that we should all go one system or other for everything. Use what works in the area it works in. use something different in a different area. Our system already shows you can have different systems working with each other (our system is definitely not pure capitalist).
Yes, capitalism does need checks. But honestly, of all the systems, the ideas behind it are probably the best to keep human nature in check. But we do need regulations on it because there are definitely ways to still exploit it. And it's not good for everything (stuff like health insurance or stuff like roads just don't work so well that way).
Pure capitalism would probably work fine if everyone was good natured and wanted the best for everyone. But they don't. And that's the same problem with going to your system. Except that your proposal has even less balances to keep these people from finding ways to abuse/exploit it.