Vinzer Deling
Banned
and fuck you too for trying thinking you have the "right" to my hard earned money.
whytemyke said:...point one finger at someone else, man, and you've got 3 pointing right back at you.
I notice that none of these anti-socialist arguments take into account the incredibly successful socialist tendencies of scandinavian states.
No... just... no.Mandark said:Raoul's social-political philosophy is just shallow anti-authority posturing; it was a coin toss whether he'd turn out like this or as a Randroid. Since it's so silly, the board's right-wingers flock to it. It lets them go to bat for the home team without having to defend Bush's self-parodying series of fuckups.
Oh, dude, you're totally right with that. You have to have money before you can start converting over to socialism, and unfortunately (or fortunately, depending where you're sitting on the food chain) capitalism is the best economic model for that. But I wasn't even really commenting on what you said. It was what Guileless said with his "Socialist Leader sending us to prison farms" type bullshit that he can't back up.Deku said:Well I never said socialism was incompatible with capitalism. I quite explicitly noted in an early post socialism is a successful feature of capitalism, but for it work, it has to be working under a capitalism system and not replacing one.
My argument isn't anti-socialist, it's merely pointing out the problems of another poster's post.
whytemyke said:Oh, dude, you're totally right with that. You have to have money before you can start converting over to socialism, and unfortunately (or fortunately, depending where you're sitting on the food chain) capitalism is the best economic model for that. But I wasn't even really commenting on what you said. It was what Guileless said with his "Socialist Leader sending us to prison farms" type bullshit that he can't back up.
believe me. I know what you're talking about, haha, and I don't think anything like Marx.Deku said:You're thinking linearlly like Marx. Capitalism isn't the stepping stone to a better model, it is the only model to create wealth. Societies can then introduce socialist systems under the market economy to divert some of that wealth generated to benefit the people.
I said this several posts ago, the danger is to think socialism is the end all and a nationalized socialist economy becomes quasi communist since although you have firms austensibly still for profit, the ultimate owner is the government and it will be the sole investor and owner and will allocate funds ineffectively. This problem manifests itself all the time in heavily regulated or government owned industries where all the firms are under national control. wealth is destroyed as the government has no real incentive to create any wealth.
economic models aren't black and white, but the only point I wanted to get accross was that capitalism is the way to go in terms of 'dominant' economic systems. You can have subserviant economic models working in symbiosis with the capitalist model as well since capitalism is also very flexible.
McMoron said:and fuck you too for trying thinking you have the "right" to my hard earned money.
Deku said:You're thinking linearlly like Marx. Capitalism isn't the stepping stone to a better model, it is the only model to create wealth.
whytemyke said:believe me. I know what you're talking about, haha, and I don't think anything like Marx. ...
Your idea about a capitalist supersystem feeding off into command subsystems is a very tangible idea. The problem with it, as I see it, is that you'd almost necessarily have to have a governmental system built as a confederacy, with even more liberality given to the states/provinces in regards to power to run their microsystems, if that is indeed what you're saying when you mention having command economies exist in a free-market milieu.
xabre said:How can you call Karl Marx linear when you've basically showed your obvious short-sightedness and claimed capitalism as the ultimate economic system huh, on what basis and whose authority?
The market is the only system that can generate the MOST wealth. I've said it at least once before in this thread. You're right, it's not the only system that can generate wealth since theretically, despotism can also generate wealth but it would be very little wealth.And apparently it is the only system that can create wealth huh, since when?
That's a terribly short-sighted position to take and I dont think you are in any position to say that capitalism cannot be a stepping stone to more advanced economic systems because you won't be around 500 years from now to see how well a capitalist system would work in a highly automated and technologically developed society.
I want to ask you though, what do you think wealth actually is and why do you think it can only be created through capitalism? I also made a post earlier making the point that capitalism is not the ultimate form of socio-economic organisation, but rather, as Marx stated very rightly, that socio-economic systems are in a constant state of evolution and their development is driven primarily on the basis of technological development. If modern day early 21st century technology is the most advanced we ever develop then perhaps you have a point somewhere in there, but it obviously isnt going to be, and thus your argument is one of short-sightedness.
xabre said:Boo hoo, please save us the melodrama. You probably sit on your arse in some cosy office job reading gaming age forums half the day while the people who damn well do earn their money bust their cunts off 24/7 to make ends meet.
Deku said:I can also ask you on whose authority do you think that capitalism ISN't the ultimate economic system. But that would just be counterproductive.
Whytemike made a comment which I took to meant that socialism will worked AFTER capitalism has generated the wealth. I replied that it is a linear system and that you need continual wealth generation to keep up the standard of living. But it seems like whytemike didn't mean it in that way.
Marx had suggested that capitalism is just a phase in economic development with the next level being communism and that's highly unworkable. The wealth that is generated under capitalism would not be replenished once the economic system is shifted and standards of living will fall and the economy.
The market is the only system that can generate the MOST wealth. I've said it at least once before in this thread. You're right, it's not the only system that can generate wealth since theretically, despotism can also generate wealth but it would be very little wealth.
When humans become different creatures altogether in 500 years then it might be possible. When we all have computer implants and there's a giant super computer that can read our mind and set prices based on this data it has collected, then perhaps the market will take a back seat to more direct forms of planning. Until then, the most effective means of directing capital to the profitable industries and setting prices as well as production is the market system where individuals act collectively to set prices and production.
Well, it's not so much short sighted as practical. Markets have existed in all of history and it won't disappear anytime soon. And Marx was right to point out that socio-economic systems are related to technological development, but his conclusions are wrong. The communist system was actually quite blatant in its rejection of markets, private property and profit, all of which have been part of 10,000 years of human development and technological evolution.
The more narrow question of whether corporations or the market system as we know it will exist in 200 years is certainly open to debate. 200 years ago, the world operated under the mechantile system and before that most economies have been agrarian and industries were small scale with production based in the home. It's not only techonological development but also political development.
The global economy, integrated as it maybe, is lacking political leadership. There is a global economy, but not global politics. And hence, the next level of development is infact to move the politics globally. And I don't mean a UN style consultative body, but either under a federal system of government or under the imperial rule of a great power that has somehow managed to unite the world economy under one political body which would allow labour and capital to move freely like labour and capital moves freely inside any modern capitalist economy. That's going to be the next level of development.
It might seen like a pipe dream, but not so long ago, people in Italy or in Japan thought of their city or their prefecture as their country and there were intense rivalries on all sides.
It is given our technological development being none of the alternatives we have can do better.Zaptruder said:Capitalism is not the ultimate form of the economy.
Ultimately, an economy's job is to fairly distribute resources. not wealth, but resources across the population, such that the overall access to resources for everyone is maximised, accounting for diminishing returns of resources for any single individual.
In that sense, in a pure free market, along with human behaviour, means that a huge chunk of wealth, and control of resources (social, technological, material) ends up with a very small group of people, and alot of their wealth has a large diminishing returns, even in terms of been able to spur the economy and general advancement on.
The perfect economy would be a meritocracy that through some devine mechanism determines the most suitable jobs, supply, demand and people to meet those needs and the amount that they should be compensated.
Of course, a meritocracy in practice is still a little more difficult, but it's what a freemarket should also be, ideally.
But in practice it (the freemarket/capitalism) works out to be more like a very inefficient meritocracy, similar to evolution; in very general terms, the more talented you are the better your chance at success. In real terms though, they're many other factors that combine to skew such outcomes.
Deku said:I can also ask you on whose authority do you think that capitalism ISN't the ultimate economic system. But that would just be counterproductive.
Whytemike made a comment which I took to meant that socialism will worked AFTER capitalism has generated the wealth. I replied that it is a linear system and that you need continual wealth generation to keep up the standard of living. But it seems like whytemike didn't mean it in that way.
Marx had suggested that capitalism is just a phase in economic development with the next level being communism and that's highly unworkable. The wealth that is generated under capitalism would not be replenished once the economic system is shifted and standards of living will fall and the economy.
Well, it's not so much short sighted as practical. Markets have existed in all of history and it won't disappear anytime soon. And Marx was right to point out that socio-economic systems are related to technological development, but his conclusions are wrong. The communist system was actually quite blatant in its rejection of markets, private property and profit, all of which have been part of 10,000 years of human development and technological evolution.
xabre said:I make that claim myself on the basis that capitalism is a vastly flawed system of economic resource management, both in theory and in practice. There are the classical flaws ...incredibly wasteful and inefficient system, it is a good generator of wealth, but it also represents the production of vast amounts of goods and services that go unsold in the marketplace or products the marketplace doesn't otherwise need. Furthermore, it also represents an incredible misallocation of resources....
There is a good reason for the social democracies of Europe, which as you pointed out are strong mixed market economies, and while not as socially oriented, even in the US there is often need for the government to regulate the market.
That is a social development and resulted in what I just described as an augmentation of purely free markets into mixed economies. It however doesn't really exclude the fact that capitalism itself remains viable despite predicitons it would implode and or that it is not ideal.The reason for the prosperous living standards of the western world today are largely as a result of social reform, the institution of programs by the state to protect its workers and citizenry against the brutality of late 19th industrial capitalism. ..
I don't dispute that capitalism generated the wealth and innovation necessary to procure technological development throughout the last 150 years, yet capitalism also generates and continues to generate an animosity toward the system in many places of the world that has lead to the implementation of many of the social policies listed above that protect the worker and the common man from the raw brutality of the system.
The point I am making is that your viewpoint in this regard is stagnant, and that it will be technological development which undermines the present capitalist model. In the current global socio-economic climate there is need for mass human input to drive manufacturing and development, the technology does not yet exist to automate housing construction, or logging or farming, yet that is not to say some future society within the next few hundred years wont develop advanced robotics and nanotechnologies to augment such processes and largely undermine the human element necessary today in economic development. In such a scenario where there is a significant portion of the population unemployed how are they to be supported by society? How are they to support society through tax revenue? In this situation the nature of society has evolved, driven by technological development and as a consequence systems of economics must also evolve as they have in the past and as they will in the future.
That is not to say specifically that this is the path human society will take over the course of the next few hundreds years, but the point is that technological development will drive socio-economic change. Even the capitalist system has changed vastly since its inception; it is now a global system that could barely be contemplated by commentators in the mid 19th century.
That's a red herring. I could argue that you can't say what you're saying either since you haven't been able to observe how a true capitalism economy performs. It's a debating trick I see often used by supporters of communism by arguing that the communism we've seen is not real communism. Libertarians and classical economists would likewise argue the laissez faire capitalism we've seen wasn't the true form and they have the formula for the right economic system. Everyone has a formula. But let's just stick to our experiences.The problem in making this statement is that you have no real historical parrels with which you can draw a basis as to how a true communist society may perform.
This is not really an issue of markets as it is one of incentive.
Discussing alternative economic systems to modern day capitalism is always an incredibly broad thing to do. The reason this is done to attempt to correct the many problems prevalent in the nature of the capitalist system, particularly class division, a posit an alternative. The model I described is on the collectivist spectrum and is similar to what I would describe as the classical dictionary definition of what a true communist society supposed to be, a stateless and classless society with social ownership of the means of production. I'm not discussing the means on how to create such a society, be it through Marxist principles or more along the lines of anarcho-communism, only that I believe such a society can be a viable alternative to the current prevailing capitalist system. Incentive is a key aspect as I mentioned, but that is just one aspect and as I said it is a vastly broad topic and how the scope of political organisation (must be thoroughly democratic of course) and large scale social infrastructure would work among other things are worth thinking about also.