Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by KnightShade
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It's a riddle. Bear in mind, collectives in the past have not been kind to the differently-abled -- we were offed along with the other undesirables in just about every genocide in history. Frankly we're more trusting than we ought to be, and any disabled person with any kind of experience in social healthcare (be it VA, NHS, or elsewhere) has the scars to prove it.


No matter how shitty your experiences with the VA, implying socialised medicine is in anyway comparable to communist genocide is bullshit. I'm disabled and have used the NHS my entire life. I have scars from two life saving operations and one test for a life threatening illness, they were all performed without complications, so while I literally have scars I also have zero complaints. It's also nice not to pay for the medication that stops me having constant seizures. You can also pay for private medicine if you'd prefer here, it's not taken off the table as an option. Surely if you're going to compete with free healthcare it you have to work pretty hard too, which is to the benefit of their patients.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by canaryrose
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why the fuck is this in spam
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Vilageidiotx
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jesus shit this thread became a mess. im not going to read it all because i'm not made out of spare time

Actually, it kind of does. When you remove a figure head like that via revolution, to replace it with a new government, you are taking the previous society apart and rebuilding it with the recycled bricks. This has been going on for ages, and is the reason we DON'T have kings right now. But you're comparing kings and business owners in the wrong way. Some kings did just live a privileged life, letting the church or advisers rule their country while they relaxed. Other kings made laws, managed the economy, discussed military strategy during times of war, etc.


And there were Kings who were actually quite good, and did a decent job, and society was better for them. And there are members of the capitalist elite that don't contribute anything but prior privilege. Remember that many people within the elite are not active managers, but simply investors, who's only contribution is that they have money to invest. I have a hard time swallowing the idea that privileged gambling is the ideal format for a civilization.

Someone will always step up and take charge, because there's no way everyone can control the economy at once. Everyone needs a representative, who will look like the leader and, like it or not, that person will have more power over the economy at that point onward. That's how I view it, anyways.


When I say democratic, I don't mean that literally everything is voted on all the time. I mean that power within a civilization is invested in the people directly, even if that means they appoint managers. The system we have now invests the people in a parallel way, but holds them at arm's length. It is better that the strict nature of feudalism, but it still wastes human energy through the corruption and class-defensive nature of the rich.

This is a gripe I have with talking about the current state of things, and talking about politics and the economy. A lot of people seem to think that the US is currently undergoing its demise- we're on our deathbed, even though we have been chugging along fine for years. Our death won't happen because of our current economic system, and it wouldn't happen if we were communist, or socialist, or lived in a dictatorship. Our death would happen when we tried to change all of that, because switching our economic ideology will make us very weak, as we're suddenly getting rid of people that make a lot of money they use to fund the government.


We're not on our deathbed, but we are ticking off some uncomfortable boxes when it comes to the development of civilization. We've got stagnation in the working classes, a gap between rich and poor that is rising rapidly, political upheaval, and an upcoming automation revolution that will likely mirror the economic uncertainty of the industrial revolution. That's a lot of shit on our plate. Considering how many civilizations have stories of turmoil that start with "...and then the rich took all the wealth and the poor got mad", I am very concerned.

Now let me clear one thing up though - I don't think it's Fallout time. That's possible, since global turmoil can do that sort of thing, but I don't think it's automatically to be expected. An American Caesar is just as plausible though (That was my main concern with Trump, but he's turned out to be more of an America child king, so Trump is no longer on my danger radar tbh). What I'm saying is we are heading for a civilization defining moment, and that moment will most likely be a negative one.

I think everything's going to be fine, for at least another 100 years.


I really really hope so. Like, seriously, I'm not in this shit for Neetbux, I'm willing to put in my forty hours at the salt mines. But I want to know that the salt mines will be there all my life, and that my forty hours there will pay my way. And I just don't have faith in any of that. This is not an unusual feeling amongst people of my social class in my experience, regardless of age or political persuasion. It's that angst, I think, that got Trump elected. Also that angst that made Bernie popular. Extremism isn't rising in America because of the media, or something in the water. Extremism is on the rise because of this growing economic angst. And economic angst, historically speaking, is a major powder keg.

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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by DepressedSoviet
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why the fuck is this in spam


Honestly, I expected more Shitposting replies.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Vilageidiotx
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<Snipped quote by canaryrose>

Honestly, I expected more Shitposting replies.


Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by mdk
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by jbeil
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Fuck off, comrade commissar.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by The Nexerus
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@Dinh AaronMk This message you relayed is about someone who is in a political minority ranting that the majority of society doesn't agree with them. It is not the case that everyone in Britain in 1992 wanted Neil Kinnock to win and Major pulled through only from system inertia. The policies of John Major, as disdainfully stale as a young socialist of the time might have found them, were the ideas favoured by the British electorate over any other ideas expressed.

The elite did not kill socialism because they feared it. The people killed socialism because they were against it. All genuine socialists of today, at least in the West, are necessarily in the vein of Blanqui, wanting to enforce the workers' liberation upon them whether they'd like it or not. It is true that democracy cannot be relied upon to produce socialism: not because of the irrevocability of the existing system, but because there is no democratic will for socialism.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Nytem4re
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@Dinh AaronMk

Isn't the Australian statistic skewed because there is a penalty for NOT voting there? It's better to merely vote anything than have " a fine and potentially a day in court." I'm sure we could higher the voting population in the US if we said you have a fine/jail time if you don't vote.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Dinh AaronMk
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@Dinh AaronMk This message you relayed is about someone who is in a political minority ranting that the majority of society doesn't agree with them. It is not the case that everyone in Britain in 1992 wanted Neil Kinnock to win and Major pulled through only from system inertia. The policies of John Major, as disdainfully stale as a young socialist of the time might have found them, were the ideas favoured by the British electorate over any other ideas expressed.

The elite did not kill socialism because they feared it. The people killed socialism because they were against it. All genuine socialists of today, at least in the West, are necessarily in the vein of Blanqui, wanting to enforce the workers' liberation upon them whether they'd like it or not. It is true that democracy cannot be relied upon to produce socialism: not because of the irrevocability of the existing system, but because there is no democratic will for socialism.


Yet looking at the table political involvement did drop very significantly after his election. Which isn't so much a "the socialists lost, boo-hoo". They had already lost when Margret Thatcher was elected. That was the point in the Election Cycle when the strength and solidarity of British Labor had faded away because of generational distance between the generation that had grown up during the Depression and London Blitz and the generation that was voting then. The power structure that had given the UK the NHS and clobbered Churchill's government after the war.

From the greater conversation I pulled it from, that election would have been the point the post-Soviet, neo-liberal dream was still high. But then produced apathy.

@Dinh AaronMk

Isn't the Australian statistic skewed because there is a penalty for NOT voting there? It's better to merely vote anything than have " a fine and potentially a day in court." I'm sure we could higher the voting population in the US if we said you have a fine/jail time if you don't vote.


It's one of the interesting metrics to be sure, but given that every other country I listed still has a higher turnout rate on some level additionally suggests that with or without a threat of going to court a majority of the population is still going to the polls, either because the candidates up for grabs feel they matter more and their view is more represented, or because it's easier than going in on a Tuesday afternoon.

Hell, to add more to the list, German rate of participation was at 71% in 2013, Austria was at 74%, Dutch turnout for 2012 was much the same rate and was last election as high as 80%.

We have an involvement issue, plain and simple.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by The Nexerus
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Turnout rates differ not only between countries but between types of elections. Legislative elections in Europe may be impressive compared to the United States' presidential elections, but take a look at the turnout for the last EU Parliament election. I don't think the cause of turnout woes is the lack of a viable Marxist-Leninist on the ticket.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by mdk
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it's.... so..... LONG!

...is what she said. Anyway. Moving on, and gratuitously cropping the discussion just so we're manageable going forwards (if I don't comment, assume the default answer is a chin-rubbing nod and a gentle "Hmm," but in like a sophisticated way, befitting the srs naychur of Spam threads)

Communists and Anarchists partook in part during the Spanish Civil War in the thirties and among the Republican ranks held considerable sway and actually administrated their own land. I have heard in cases they were more productive in their use of land and labor than before and George Orwell has written positively about the revolutionary egalitarian spirit found in Anarchist Spain at the time, calling it the mystique that attracts men to Socialism in the first place.

...

More recently we have post-Bookchin groups like the Zapatistas in Southern Mexico advocating for absolute horizontal democracy among the population there and the Rojava Kurds asking very much the same


Basque finally surrendered its last arms, and Spain is cool now I guess, but for the record, Spanish revolutionaries didn't stay cool forever. Granted, all I really learned of the Spanish Civil War came from Pan's Labyrinth, and at least in that depiction the government wasn't exactly cool either. I can find absolutely nothing negative to post about the Zapatistas, and as much as I generally appreciate Kurdish efforts to blast away at nasty people in the middle east, apparently lots of Kurdish groups are themselves terror networks and it's goddamn impossible for me to separate all the who's from all the other who's over yonder. Confuzzling. Anyway. I only commented to throw some more gas on that 'revolution fetish' catchphrase I pseudo-invented in the previous post, primarily because romanticizing the nobility of any one particular quasi-terrorist struggle is inherently dangerous. I'm sure Spanish anarchocommunists were generally sweet from (at a minimum) a few perspectives -- just saying.

Tito's major flaw though would probably have been his penchant for allowing greater and great autonomy among the constituent nations of Yugoslavia and/or a failure to ensure a stable government for after his passing and failure to negate nearly an entire region's history of animosity towards one another.


Yeah Yugoslavia didn't really, ah, break that whole genocidal mold we were worrying about, in the end.... But you're certainly (implicitly?) correct that it's pretty unfair to lay THIS PARTICULAR mass-slaughter wholly at the feet of communism.

To tackle this: good for you. However, it doesn't do much to change the fact there's a wealth shift going on in this country. Peter Temin of MIT has released a study on this, here's an article. And here's another. The basic idea is we're falling apart fast, and as he's even quoted:

“America is not only reverting to developing-country status, it is increasingly ripe for serious social turmoil that has not been seen in generations.”


Real quick -- people have been arguing that since about 1782, so let's not put too much stock in the fear-mongering.

And while the area around a new mall has repaved the highway to make it first world, Detroit, Baltimore, Appalachia, and Newark are falling apart as the eyes and interests of the nation leave them behind because now they got to spend on the fashionable coast where the middle class are going. [+some more snipped stuff, but let's highlight this part first and then seamlessly flow]


NOTABLY: cities run by leftists are also the ones falling apart and/or literally shooting themselves and/or burning themselves down while packed into a warehouse because they can't afford their own inflated rent and/or rioting about the damage in the city while damaging their city. Texas, Salt Lake City, Colorado Springs.... they're doing just fine. Which of course begs the (admittedly pretty partisan) question, why the fuck would we listen to the other guy here? Ya know? I mean that's harsh, yeah, but.... come on now. The world's orange-est capitalist took power 100 days ago and the industry in these old manufacturing towns has been on a non-stop skyrocket ever since, slowing only when rumors began to swirl that he was't going to deregulate quite as much as people thought he might. Who left who behind again? The Rust Belt made their opinions on the matter quite clear, much to the chagrin of -- well, basically everybody else in the world. My own stated perspective aside, I'm taking their word for it.

To answer the end question first: my primary concern over the course of things is letting such a small group of people have such control over our lives, and to without necessary input of labor by the consuming body of the population enjoy a quality of life in excess of the rest of us. This may either lead to a sort of hardcore Swedish-”Socialism” by necessity with living wages granted to every individual irregardless of activity, or we riot and everything goes full post-Rome as Vilage doesn't want to happen in his life-time.


Or any number of things in-between, or nothing. Teach a man to fish and he'll drink on weekends, give a man a living basic income and he'll eat forever. Give a man a 105" UHDTV and he'll forget he's supposed to eat. Inequality only matters in a context of scarcity. You walk past some untold number of Starbucks mugs every day, and even if you're not currently holding a starbucks mug yourself, it's simply not a big deal -- of course, if you're on a life raft in the middle of the ocean and the other guy is holding a snicker's bar, that's worth killing for.

The point being this: in a distant future where work is no longer required for production, even first-world problems are (logically and presumably) as rare as an actual genocide. Case in point -- nobody goes to war for control of emojis. You can already have as many emojis as you need, want, or accidentally utilize. Scarcity of emojis does not exist. The concept of struggling over them is ludicrous (at least it should be, I'm sure there's a guy). In the future we're talking about, basically everything is as readily available as emojis. I'll grant you that capitalism isn't prepared to deal with that -- sure. Communism DAMNED SURE isn't ready either; nobody is. It just so happens that Capitalism is taking us there, and for the life of me I can't think of a reason we should stop. Shit man that's gonna be awesome.

....and I started going forwards and realized you addressed some of that, but fuckit, we're doing long srs posts in spam now, this am me srs face.

But we could still fulfil certain conditions of communism by way of workers control of the means of production with some adaptation.


...but like, why? We're in the garden of Eden, arguing over who gets to name the apple. Just fucking take some, have a bushel, call them Krauttestes if you want.

But this argues that reward is necessary for something to become better. But the recent trend towards opensource/open access software and hardware. While perhaps it may not survive a nuclear blast, Easton LaChapelle's open-source prosthetic hand is totally open and free to tinker with on your own time. Just like the code for the internet. It's not going to be massive an noticeable sweeping change like with what you would get for getting a DARPA grant, the method of open sourcing effectively means that the product will be gradually improved over time, and in the spirit of open source may even become part of the product for free for the next guy.


I absolutely get what you're saying -- it's just that this is so radically and empirically inferior to this. And I'm not, like, super patient about the gradually-improved-over-time process for like my actual limbs. I say that with the utmost respect and appreciation for all you small-arms dealers out there -- you're doing an awesome thing, and I hope someone's paying you lots of money to do it. Just.... you know. We've had, what, all of human history to figure out prosthetics? Then in the last fifteen years we started throwing actual money at it, and went from hooks and strings to fucking Evangelion in a decade. As the interested party, I'm going with money on this one.

It would be argued that disability in east and west traveled on much the same course so attempting to compare the two is a strained effort because it's comparing something from the 40's or 70's to today.


I mean compare it to the similar period east/west counterparts. Capitalism generated wealth and Meemaw got to eat Chef Boyardi from her microwave oven. Communism generated poverty and Babushka got buried in a mass grave with political dissidents (assuming she hadn't been executed by the state for wearing glasses).

At consistently below 50% of the population participating in elections at all, it might be said that government in the US has a very low mandate to even exist.

...

It would be supposed then that if the country's democratic process has become dysfunctional, then action is needed.


Dysfunctional is a strong word. For all we know, American politics is just boring (preposterous suggestion after last year, I know). Nonparticipation is only an issue if it's compulsory, and in the US it's only compulsory in the case of convicted felons. I'd hardly call that a crisis. In short: let's not spend too much effort trying to straighten the horns on a bull here. Maybe they SHOULD be curved.

Violence if [sic -- "isn't," I think] preferable, but of the actions it's one that produces results, it's just the political management after and how the pre-existing structure of the previous state is managed to conduct what ends are needed.


I'm jumbled a bit. Sounds like what you're saying is essentially that the tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots. My meme-level response is that Communism doesn't equal liberty and AntiFa ain't patriots -- flesh that out in your mind, what I'm driving at is Franklin, Jefferson, Washington, et al agonized over the decision to go to war with England -- not out of cowardice or their inability to be effective, but out of wisdom. More frequently than the proponents of glorious revolution would care to admit, the goons running around cracking skulls are just that -- goons.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Kratesis
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More frequently than the proponents of glorious revolution would care to admit, the goons running around cracking skulls are just that -- goons.


Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Vilageidiotx
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NOTABLY: cities run by leftists are also the ones falling apart and/or literally shooting themselves and/or burning themselves down while packed into a warehouse because they can't afford their own inflated rent and/or rioting about the damage in the city while damaging their city. Texas, Salt Lake City, Colorado Springs.... they're doing just fine. Which of course begs the (admittedly pretty partisan) question, why the fuck would we listen to the other guy here? Ya know? I mean that's harsh, yeah, but.... come on now. The world's orange-est capitalist took power 100 days ago and the industry in these old manufacturing towns has been on a non-stop skyrocket ever since, slowing only when rumors began to swirl that he was't going to deregulate quite as much as people thought he might. Who left who behind again? The Rust Belt made their opinions on the matter quite clear, much to the chagrin of -- well, basically everybody else in the world. My own stated perspective aside, I'm taking their word for it.
mdk


Iiiiii think there is a bit of selection bias going on here. I mean, for Salt Lake City and Colorado springs there are the obvious confounding factors; those cities are are tiny as fuck. My city had a troubled government under a conservative regime, and has started growing under a liberal one. I suspect any conversation of this sort is going to become a matter of throwing examples out.

Also, short term growth in the market isn't really the problem. Republicans have always been great sprinters, they just can't run a long race to save their asses. Through deregulation, we are sowing the next recession, and if it is as bad as the last one, god help us all.

It just so happens that Capitalism is taking us there, and for the life of me I can't think of a reason we should stop. Shit man that's gonna be awesome.


Industrialism certainly is. I'm of the opinion that any global economic system that was thoroughly industrialized would have achieved the same results. I base this on the fact that, rather than crumpling in the twenties as the conservative theory would require, the Soviet Union continued to grow and had to be outmaneuvered politically in order to collapse. If the Communists had politically outmaneuvered the US, we'd be talking (in Russian I suppose) about how capitalism didn't work.

The main fear now is that the capitalists, like the Senators of Rome or the Aristocrats of France, have so monopolized the economic structure of society that it is slowing us down. The greatest innovation of western civilization is civil participation, especially symbolized by democratic values. My fear is that democracy is being slowly stifled by the needs of capitalism, and the inevitable result will be stagnation.

Dysfunctional is a strong word. For all we know, American politics is just boring (preposterous suggestion after last year, I know). Nonparticipation is only an issue if it's compulsory, and in the US it's only compulsory in the case of convicted felons. I'd hardly call that a crisis. In short: let's not spend too much effort trying to straighten the horns on a bull here. Maybe they SHOULD be curved.


Is it corrupt or is it not corrupt? You are waffling, sir.

I'm jumbled a bit. Sounds like what you're saying is essentially that the tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots. My meme-level response is that Communism doesn't equal liberty and AntiFa ain't patriots -- flesh that out in your mind, what I'm driving at is Franklin, Jefferson, Washington, et al agonized over the decision to go to war with England -- not out of cowardice or their inability to be effective, but out of wisdom. More frequently than the proponents of glorious revolution would care to admit, the goons running around cracking skulls are just that -- goons.


AntiFa would be patriotic if they saw themselves as fighting for their countries freedoms or some shit like that. I think that their plan to go around popping tweakers at Trump rallies is politically useless, and they are largely puffing up their own importance and being melodramatic, but Samuel Adams was a puffed up fucker too. The American Revolution wasn't a matter of the wise old gods coming down to bless the country with their own perfection. That conflict had its brawlers, it's self-important nerds, its skull cracking goons, and all that fun shit.

The Boston Tea Party is a good example. There was some blow back to that. I couldn't find it on the internet, but I recall reading a letter written by a loyalist during the Boston Tea Party to the effect of (paraphrasing from memory here) "We couldn't get a loyalist militia together last month, but after the Boston Tea Party, we can't find enough guns to arm all the people who want to join up." After all, the Boston Tea Party was a bunch of people disguising themselves (cowards) and vandalizing a privately owned ship which they had held at dock the last few days (or weeks) through terrorizing the captain and the port officials. The Tea Party was a galvanizing event, arguably one that was harmful to the American cause in the short term, but one that ended up becoming a positive in the long term only because Parliament overplayed their hand as a result and occupied Boston.

I suppose I can summarize my opinions on this thread in a statement; one of the dumbest things Marxists argue is that their philosophy will "End history", that they have the key to fixing every problem forever and always. I think the most alarming things coming from the capitalist apologist crowd nowadays is exactly that same thing. Capitalism has ended history. This is it. All of our current problems are not problems at all, but instead are the way things are supposed to be.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by mdk
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Through deregulation, we are sowing the next recession, and if it is as bad as the last one, god help us all.


Insofar as growth is a necessary precursor to 'lack of growth,' sure.

Industrialism certainly is.


Just saying, "You didn't build that." Yeah, I get it, we should be careful about how we assign credit for all these wonderful things, but at the same time, the argument that capitalism has NOTHING to do with all these wonderful things is wholly unsupportable. Especially in light of all those command-economies in industrialized nations that failed miserably. Hypothetically, sure, we coulda got here without it in a thought experiment -- but we're here, and capitalism got us here.

My fear is that democracy is being slowly stifled by the needs of capitalism, and the inevitable result will be stagnation.


All fears are valid, I suppose. Mine is that we're increasingly saying "fuck democracy, we'll just do it with administrative or judicial power." If anything is killing democracy, in my estimation, that's it.

Is it corrupt or is it not corrupt? You are waffling, sir.


Not waffling. Pointing out that raw participation statistics in a free society (especially in a liberal democracy) don't mean what you are arguing. A basketball team can only manage to put five players on the court at a time, but soccer can put eleven. Is basketball FAILING?

AntiFa would be patriotic if


I'm gonna not, lol, this has been civil.

I suppose I can summarize my opinions on this thread in a statement; one of the dumbest things Marxists argue is that their philosophy will "End history", that they have the key to fixing every problem forever and always. I think the most alarming things coming from the capitalist apologist crowd nowadays is exactly that same thing. Capitalism has ended history. This is it. All of our current problems are not problems at all, but instead are the way things are supposed to be.


My argument is simply "this is working." Communism never has, and with the RoboLabor Singularity right around the corner, I think it's pretty silly to switch from a winning horse to a losing horse in the middle of the race.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Dinh AaronMk
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Basque finally surrendered its last arms, and Spain is cool now I guess, but for the record, Spanish revolutionaries didn't stay cool forever. Granted, all I really learned of the Spanish Civil War came from Pan's Labyrinth, and at least in that depiction the government wasn't exactly cool either. I can find absolutely nothing negative to post about the Zapatistas, and as much as I generally appreciate Kurdish efforts to blast away at nasty people in the middle east, apparently lots of Kurdish groups are themselves terror networks and it's goddamn impossible for me to separate all the who's from all the other who's over yonder. Confuzzling. Anyway. I only commented to throw some more gas on that 'revolution fetish' catchphrase I pseudo-invented in the previous post, primarily because romanticizing the nobility of any one particular quasi-terrorist struggle is inherently dangerous. I'm sure Spanish anarchocommunists were generally sweet from (at a minimum) a few perspectives -- just saying.


One man's terror group is another person's freedom fighters. This is the entire notion of insurgency, what matters is degree of insurgency. Are you bombing targets associated to the state and going on a guerrilla campaign against assets that serve to safeguard the power that be in that you're hitting the military and police in that they put themselves in the way of the government so considered detached from street-level reality as your group believes, in the vein as Basque, Catalonian, or Irish insurgency?

Or are we bombing everything because literally everything not you is literally the enemy like ISIS?

Yeah Yugoslavia didn't really, ah, break that whole genocidal mold we were worrying about, in the end.... But you're certainly (implicitly?) correct that it's pretty unfair to lay THIS PARTICULAR mass-slaughter wholly at the feet of communism.


It's so of hard to go about things when specific cases aren't used. Though I also don't want to sound like I'm someone to try and defend the Holocaust, because I don't. But in most situations as I have learned about them it's less active malevolence on the part of the state (unless we're discussing someone like the Tatars, then there was a targeted effort there). In most cases it's inactive ability of bloated government being too incapable of acting in the interests of oversight against itself because there's no over-sight mechanism. But I while I'll admit Stalin's Holdomor and Mao's mass famines during the Great Leap Forward did exist, they're not exactly anything that wouldn't have happened if the basic ideology of the state was any different. If the Communist Party of China was a new phase in Chinese dynastic heritage with the same modernization vision then it would have been just as likely they would have fucked up.

Much in the same amorphous sense Captialism and factors associated have created its own disasters through willful ignorance.

NOTABLY: cities run by leftists are also the ones falling apart and/or literally shooting themselves and/or burning themselves down while packed into a warehouse because they can't afford their own inflated rent and/or rioting about the damage in the city while damaging their city. Texas, Salt Lake City, Colorado Springs.... they're doing just fine. Which of course begs the (admittedly pretty partisan) question, why the fuck would we listen to the other guy here? Ya know? I mean that's harsh, yeah, but.... come on now. The world's orange-est capitalist took power 100 days ago and the industry in these old manufacturing towns has been on a non-stop skyrocket ever since, slowing only when rumors began to swirl that he was't going to deregulate quite as much as people thought he might. Who left who behind again? The Rust Belt made their opinions on the matter quite clear, much to the chagrin of -- well, basically everybody else in the world. My own stated perspective aside, I'm taking their word for it.


I live near one of those major industrial American, rust belt cities.

I haven't seen shit.

But here's the thing: the American economy has been on track for growth for the passed couple years. Irregardless of Trump, the activity we're seeing right now has had its roots back long before him.



Trump likes to brag too about obliging companies to not go overseas, but we have to really consider that such decisions in such industries are not ever snap decisions. They take several years to consider, so if they agreed to pull out of going to Mexico they probably had already been reconsidering or weren't wholly dead set on it. And even in the case of the Ford deal nothing would have changed anyways since it was only one line moving somewhere and it wasn't even decided yet where it would go, and per the plant in Kentucky the line workers would have just started work on the Escape which had come to more-or-less fully replace the previous model.

But this doesn't change the nature of the Auto Industry, workers are used to regular lay-offs for model year changes. Saying you convinced Ford or GM to hire on a thousand new workers isn't a big victory when you step and consider they would have hired those same thousand hands once the changes had been made and those people laid off come back from an effective vacation.

Or any number of things in-between, or nothing. Teach a man to fish and he'll drink on weekends, give a man a living basic income and he'll eat forever. Give a man a 105" UHDTV and he'll forget he's supposed to eat. Inequality only matters in a context of scarcity. You walk past some untold number of Starbucks mugs every day, and even if you're not currently holding a starbucks mug yourself, it's simply not a big deal -- of course, if you're on a life raft in the middle of the ocean and the other guy is holding a snicker's bar, that's worth killing for.

The point being this: in a distant future where work is no longer required for production, even first-world problems are (logically and presumably) as rare as an actual genocide. Case in point -- nobody goes to war for control of emojis. You can already have as many emojis as you need, want, or accidentally utilize. Scarcity of emojis does not exist. The concept of struggling over them is ludicrous (at least it should be, I'm sure there's a guy). In the future we're talking about, basically everything is as readily available as emojis. I'll grant you that capitalism isn't prepared to deal with that -- sure. Communism DAMNED SURE isn't ready either; nobody is. It just so happens that Capitalism is taking us there, and for the life of me I can't think of a reason we should stop. Shit man that's gonna be awesome.

....and I started going forwards and realized you addressed some of that, but fuckit, we're doing long srs posts in spam now, this am me srs face.


As I'm sure I already pointed out before, this too is the goal of communism. The difference being when its achieved I'm not paying Applebucks to get an Applecoffee, or that I need a basic income anyways to get what's needed because the system has already been altered where every means of production is now the public property and if there's any one thing I want I can get it. What's different is how the approach is made.

Marxists (or in this case, Marxist-Leninists) would argue there needs to be a strong state to oversee the change from A to B while Anarcho-Communists argue there needs to be immediate change from A to B since the transitional period is irrelevant. Where-as Market Communists would suggest that in order to effectively shift to communism we need to - for a while - play nice in the global market place because there is at the moment still capitalist countries that can derail the revolution in much the same way Napoleon derailed the Revolution and when he got deposed Europe just replaced the entire French power structure with a king (to then depose).

...but like, why? We're in the garden of Eden, arguing over who gets to name the apple. Just fucking take some, have a bushel, call them Krauttestes if you want.


Because it shouldn't be Steve Job's property if he isn't laboring to actually grow the apple, and if in the future is laboring to grow the apple then it stands that no one should own the apple.

Fucking eat the apple and stop worrying about spooks, you'll feel better.

I absolutely get what you're saying -- it's just that this is so radically and empirically inferior to this. And I'm not, like, super patient about the gradually-improved-over-time process for like my actual limbs. I say that with the utmost respect and appreciation for all you small-arms dealers out there -- you're doing an awesome thing, and I hope someone's paying you lots of money to do it. Just.... you know. We've had, what, all of human history to figure out prosthetics? Then in the last fifteen years we started throwing actual money at it, and went from hooks and strings to fucking Evangelion in a decade. As the interested party, I'm going with money on this one.


By market rules the most accesible product on the market is the most succesful. There's a reason Apple's iPhone actually doesn't lead the smart phone revolution despite being in some ways the superior product because it's such a carefully crafted self contained environment. But it's the Android and phones like it because they used open source Linex as its operating platform and didn't spend so much money for people to stare at paper on polished wooden tables in highly polished fiber-glass office-labs while sipping twenty-dollar mocha-capacinos. Android just did it and it's a tool that works well enough, can be used as a future platform for other shit, and is cheaper than the iShit.

I mean compare it to the similar period east/west counterparts. Capitalism generated wealth and Meemaw got to eat Chef Boyardi from her microwave oven. Communism generated poverty and Babushka got buried in a mass grave with political dissidents (assuming she hadn't been executed by the state for wearing glasses).


Can I get a helicopter ride?

Dysfunctional is a strong word. For all we know, American politics is just boring (preposterous suggestion after last year, I know). Nonparticipation is only an issue if it's compulsory, and in the US it's only compulsory in the case of convicted felons. I'd hardly call that a crisis. In short: let's not spend too much effort trying to straighten the horns on a bull here. Maybe they SHOULD be curved.


Last I checked folks like Jefferson wanted more people to be involved because if there weren't more people involved then the system isn't valid.

He may have told slaves and women to fuck off, but at the least he wasn't saying the bankers and speculators should be the only ones to be involved.

[/quote]
I'm jumbled a bit. Sounds like what you're saying is essentially that the tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots. My meme-level response is that Communism doesn't equal liberty and AntiFa ain't patriots -- flesh that out in your mind, what I'm driving at is Franklin, Jefferson, Washington, et al agonized over the decision to go to war with England -- not out of cowardice or their inability to be effective, but out of wisdom. More frequently than the proponents of glorious revolution would care to admit, the goons running around cracking skulls are just that -- goons.
[/quote]

what I'm driving at is Franklin, Jefferson, Washington, et al agonized over the decision to go to war with England


This sounds like you're implying that the Founding Fathers were of one mind and that George Washington totally wasn't impatient to get the ball rolling and that the Peace Delegate should really stop beating their meat over appeals to King George to save them from Parliament. Or at the least in opposition to the Stamp Act. They didn't send a strongly worded letter. They fucking committed what we would happily call terrorism today.



The Olive Branch petition wasn't really unanimously regarded as a positive move by anyone. There was plenty support against it and cynical attitudes against it doing any good, particularly by John Adams. And Thomas Jefferson had written the original draft so offensively it had to be changed before sending it off.

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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Dinh AaronMk
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Just saying, "You didn't build that." Yeah, I get it, we should be careful about how we assign credit for all these wonderful things, but at the same time, the argument that capitalism has NOTHING to do with all these wonderful things is wholly unsupportable. Especially in light of all those command-economies in industrialized nations that failed miserably. Hypothetically, sure, we coulda got here without it in a thought experiment -- but we're here, and capitalism got us here.


Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by mdk
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One man's terror group is another person's freedom fighters.


And vice versa, and anon, and so forth or whatever. To me that sounds like a good reason to be leery of political models with revolution at their core. Humans don't have a great track record with revolutions or freedom fighters for that matter. America too. Shit I bet we spent more than 100x the equivalent funds of the Sons of Liberty to help those brave and noble Al Qaedas fight off the Soviets).

If I'm gonna back a revolution, odds are, it's not gonna be the one proposed by hundreds of troglodytes who spend most of their days debating whether or not selling a unicorn frappuchino should count as a hate crime. And I bet the plastic thing it came in is made from recycled Kony 2012 friendship bracelets.

It's so of hard to go about things when specific cases aren't used. Though I also don't want to sound like I'm someone to try and defend the Holocaust, because I don't. But in most situations as I have learned about them it's less active malevolence on the part of the state (unless we're discussing someone like the Tatars, then there was a targeted effort there).


Is that, like.... better, though? "Someone else probably would've also killed a shitload of people out of incompetence" isn't exactly a roaring endorsement.

I live near one of those major industrial American, rust belt cities.

I haven't seen shit.


Damn it, I've Trumped the thread. Unregard that tangent, I realize now I'm doing a red-herring thing.

As I'm sure I already pointed out before, this too is the goal of communism.


I'm just.... sorry, I'm hitting on this like every other sentence this time around but..... the goal of communism in the past has been to, like.... feed people, and have them be not dead.

The difference being when its achieved I'm not paying Applebucks to get an Applecoffee, or that I need a basic income anyways to get what's needed because the system has already been altered where every means of production is now the public property and if there's any one thing I want I can get it. What's different is how the approach is made.

Marxists (or in this case, Marxist-Leninists) would argue there needs to be a strong state to oversee the change from A to B while Anarcho-Communists argue there needs to be immediate change from A to B since the transitional period is irrelevant. Where-as Market Communists would suggest that in order to effectively shift to communism we need to - for a while - play nice in the global market place because there is at the moment still capitalist countries that can derail the revolution in much the same way Napoleon derailed the Revolution and when he got deposed Europe just replaced the entire French power structure with a king (to then depose).


I need to learn more about the different sects? Sects, right? Whatever. I think we're overstating the role of the government. Innovation isn't.... well, isn't USUALLY a product of the state. I don't know enough about like Roman aqueducts and that sort of thing. Wild horses don't need to be led to water, or, like, some other folksy metaphor for "fuck it we're prolly fine."

Because it shouldn't be Steve Job's property if he isn't laboring to actually grow the apple, and if in the future is laboring to grow the apple then it stands that no one should own the apple.

Fucking eat the apple and stop worrying about spooks, you'll feel better.


Dammit I told you once, it's called a Krautteste. Don't make me tell you a third time. I am the krautteste baron. Don't question it.

By market rules the most accesible product on the market is the most succesful. There's a reason Apple's iPhone actually doesn't lead the smart phone revolution despite being in some ways the superior product because it's such a carefully crafted self contained environment. But it's the Android and phones like it because they used open source Linex as its operating platform and didn't spend so much money for people to stare at paper on polished wooden tables in highly polished fiber-glass office-labs while sipping twenty-dollar mocha-capacinos. Android just did it and it's a tool that works well enough, can be used as a future platform for other shit, and is cheaper than the iShit.


Soooooooooooooo peg leg?

We can drop this thread if you like. I don't think we're arguing prosthetic development on equal, uh.... footing god damn it kill me.

Can I get a helicopter ride?


I still don't fully understand this meme.

Last I checked folks like Jefferson wanted more people to be involved because if there weren't more people involved then the system isn't valid.

He may have told slaves and women to fuck off, but at the least he wasn't saying the bankers and speculators should be the only ones to be involved.


Just the white landowners though lol. Okay, so maybe I should dial down the founders-worship a touch. BUT -- the people who got a say, back in the day, were the ones who had a financial stake in things. That worked great, right? Pay no attention to the slavery or civil war or repression or clubbings. Yeah. Okay. Yeah definitely dial back the founder-worship.

They didn't send a strongly worded letter. They fucking committed what we would happily call terrorism today.


Oh, posh. That's an act of petty vandalism, fit for the cover of Enquirer at the worst. The start of the American Revolution is more accurately (probably) attributed to the already-ongoing wars of the French and British within the context of global colonialism. If it weren't for all that, honestly our shenanigans never really rose to a level which should've warranted a war. Except maybe that Declaration... I guess that would probably merit a royal bitchslap.

I'm rambling. The Tea Party would never pass for terrorism. Unless you consider pouches of Earl Gray as citizens...... wait are you British?
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Vilageidiotx
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Insofar as growth is a necessary precursor to 'lack of growth,' sure.


I mean more in the sense that the capitalist class makes short term decisions more so than long term, and as a result they are very quick to construct bubbles. The housing market collapsed because the regulatory structures had been gutted by the Clinton and Reagan administrations and the banks got in the habit of "Illegally" packing high risk loans with low risk and then selling those packages as entirely low risk. When these trojan high risk loans went, so did the housing bubble, and then the economy. Obama didn't regulate the system nearly enough, so deregulating even further now just guarantees we are all going to get our asses roasted again. And Trump better hope he is out of office by then, because knowing how antsy people are on the bottom of the pyramid, another 2008 and everyone in Washington might get their asses roasted in a more literal sense.

Just saying, "You didn't build that." Yeah, I get it, we should be careful about how we assign credit for all these wonderful things, but at the same time, the argument that capitalism has NOTHING to do with all these wonderful things is wholly unsupportable. Especially in light of all those command-economies in industrialized nations that failed miserably. Hypothetically, sure, we coulda got here without it in a thought experiment -- but we're here, and capitalism got us here.


I disagree with this tbh. This requires Communism to have wholly failed at everything, which is to confuse it with the wholly unsuccessful and very brittle nature of Fascism. The Communist countries did a rather good job of industrializing what had been very very backwards nations. If capitalism specifically, as opposed to global industrialism generally, was to be credited with the upgrades of the last two hundred years, it would require all other economic forces to lack growth whatsoever, and that just isn't true. Capitalism won because the West outmaneuvered the East politically, and as a result Capitalism ended up with the bigger resource market.

Actually, I'll go further than that. Communist Russia was the most impressive form Russia ever took in terms of political power. They managed to go toe to toe against the United States for several generations. That's something they couldn't wish to do in WW1, when they made it a point to be pathetic in every way, and it's something they only seem able to do now because they aren't really challenging American interests enough to heat things up.

All fears are valid, I suppose. Mine is that we're increasingly saying "fuck democracy, we'll just do it with administrative or judicial power." If anything is killing democracy, in my estimation, that's it.


That can get ugly, but that's the way the system was designed to work, and isn't new. If anything this fits into my narrative of "The founders and capitalism was a step in the right direction, but it cannot be our final step."

My argument is simply "this is working." Communism never has, and with the RoboLabor Singularity right around the corner, I think it's pretty silly to switch from a winning horse to a losing horse in the middle of the race.


I'm not arguing we should create a Leninist state. What I'm arguing is that the translation from industrialized to automated requires change, or else there will be some sort of implosion. Capitalism requires human labor to be a market commodity, and if that goes away, what do we have? Rich people throwing us bones from the machines that they own, as the liberals seem to think? That's dystopian. Democratization of the means of production on some level will be necessary to keep the majority of people in the game. Which is to say that at some point, the non-Marxist variation of communism will have to seep in, or we are fucked.

I'm rambling. The Tea Party would never pass for terrorism. Unless you consider pouches of Earl Gray as citizens...... wait are you British?


There was terror in the terrorizing of port officials and the guy who owned the ship, who were threatened with violence. And in general, there was a lot of terrorism in pre-Revolution in terms of people burning down the houses of government officials, and threatening others to resign. Not to mention good ol' tarring and feathering. This is before we get into the war itself, which involved so bloody shit off the battlefield, especially in the south.

If it weren't for all that, honestly our shenanigans never really rose to a level which should've warranted a war. Except maybe that Declaration... I guess that would probably merit a royal bitchslap.


The definition of terrorism isn't "Purposeless violence". The cause itself was valid, but that doesn't elevate the initial means.

Can I get a helicopter ride?

I still don't fully understand this meme.


Isn't that the /pol/ thing about dropping leftists from helicopters? I dunno, I'm always behind on this shit.

I need to learn more about the different sects? Sects, right? Whatever. I think we're overstating the role of the government. Innovation isn't.... well, isn't USUALLY a product of the state. I don't know enough about like Roman aqueducts and that sort of thing.


The strict distinction between government and the rich is kinda sorta a modern thing (though I think the division is sort of artificial tbh, and that right libertarianism is flawed because it has too much faith in the distinction.) Roman innovations, as many throughout history in general, were funded by rich people as part of their political agendas. They wouldn't have existed without the state, but they weren't necessarily funded by taxes (at least not until the later empire when the rich people fucked off).

anyway, fuckit, this is all i feel like getting into tonight.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Keyguyperson
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You know, I'll be totally honest. I think communism could work in the future. With automation and AI I think it's possible. But I certainly wouldn't support it now. Communist regimes have killed too many people and the communists around the Guild talk about violence against their political enemies so much that it makes me feel violence is a feature of communism, not a bug. Plus there's the fact that communist economies often do so poorly people end up starving to death and I have to eat.

Even if communism is theoretically possible with some major advancements in technology I don't see any reason to risk being killed by an oppressive regime or starved by a failed economy. Nobody in this thread has even proposed answers to the failures of communism.


Here lemme give you some piles of bullshit because its 4 AM and I'm an insomniac.

First off, communism has never been achieved. Tried? Yes. Achieved? Not even close, at least not since that one bastard went and figured out how to grow plants. Fuck that guy. He screwed it all up.

Communism isn't "Big government taxes everyone" or "Daddy Stalin owns you" or even "Free everything duuuuuuuuude", its dozens of different systems that all share the same heritage from Marxism and simply state that the workers should own the means of production. Most every state that has had the stated goal of achieving communism has at some point said "We'll have an intermediary stage between capitalism and total communist anarchy, and we'll channel the worker's power through an authoritarian government to avoid democracy fucking things up." and then someone inevitably comes along and fucks everything up (the USSR after WWII is a good example, since its system during the war was excusable since it was facing an existential threat and needed to function as a well-oiled machine, but the fact that it continued to operate as such after the war was fucking pathetic tbh).

China is the saddest example. Almost had a functioning vanguard after the inevitable crash-industrialization famine (combined with all the local leaders acting like it was still feudal times and reporting higher harvests to make the central government happy, resulting in all their people starving to death), then a big line of fuckheads comes along and makes it capitalist but still fairly authoritarian. Thanks Deng, you piece of shit.

The main problem is that communist revolutions usually tend towards authoritarianism as an intermediary stage, since its perceived as a more solid defense against capitalism. In reality, it's more like putting all your eggs in one basket. If the central government suddenly goes "you know, that whole 'letting the USA build sweatshops here' thing was pretty alright" then the party's over. Honestly, if the USSR had just structured its government after America's after WWII it probably would have avoided its slow descent back into capitalism.

As for violence, are you REALLY going to make an argument against an economic system by saying that it used violent revolution to come about? Would you be opposed to a revolution in, say, Iran? Do you support moderate rebels in Syria? Would you have sheltered minutemen during the American Revolution? Would you have supported the war effort in WWII? Or would you have written a witty opinion piece about Hitler missing a ball while he slaughters millions across Europe? Would you have turned revolutionaries into the British, knowing they'd get beaten and their information would be used to kill others?

Violence is not an inherent evil. You should know this by now. The only reason you see it as a valid argument against communism is because you see communism as bad and don't think you'd shoot someone else. Every political ideology has used violence to achieve its goals, as has every nation. Violence is necessary to defeat that which cannot be defeated through peaceful protest, which is a whole hell of a lot of things I can tell you that right now.

"Communist" economics don't do poorly, the economic conditions communism appears in do poorly. China wasn't some nice happy land of plenty before Mao came along. Famines happened and people died. Russia wasn't full of fat people and McDonald's on every corner before Stalin came along, famines happened and people died. The famines in China and the USSR don't display the problems of communism, they display the problems the intermediary systems set up by both the PRC and USSR FIXED. Famines started to be seen less and less going further into the 20th century.

Honestly, these famines are just another example of how you're selective with where you apply arguments. I doubt you care about the 21,000 people that starve to death every day (7,665,000 or so a year) beyond liking facebook posts and maybe sending 20 bucks to some charity that takes 15 of them for itself. When 7 million people die under communism because of a famine, its a "failing of the system" and "proof it can't work". When 7 million die under capitalism it's just a fact of life, it's inevitable, there was no way around it.

We have enough food to feed everyone in the world. I'm sure you know that by now. And the problem ISN'T that "it's hard to transport", it's that our economic system prevents it from getting to where it's needed because it wouldn't be profitable to the people selling the food. And no, your 20 bucks a month isn't helping.
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