BotanyBoy
Fuck Your Safe Space
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2012
- Posts
- 52,256
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Wrong on both counts. Senior Party members were rich in the USSR, as were Chinese Communist Party leaders. Both had standards of living that were hundreds of times more wealthy than the workers.
All that has changed is that some of them can now take their wealth out of their countries.
Whatever the declared political system, there are a few very rich and a majority who are at a basic level. That basic level might be much higher in Western countries, but compared to the really rich the basic level is poor.
Sigh. The first OLIGARCHS appeared during Yeltsin/Gorbachev's period of market liberalization. The oligarchs started from nothing and made use of their connections to Government officials to buy into the voucher-privatization programs going on then. The oligarchs, by definition, were the ones who bought entire infrastructure being sold by the former USSR for a song: such as the oil industry under Gazprom, etc.Wrong on both counts. Senior Party members were rich in the USSR, as were Chinese Communist Party leaders. Both had standards of living that were hundreds of times more wealthy than the workers.
All that has changed is that some of them can now take their wealth out of their countries.
Whatever the declared political system, there are a few very rich and a majority who are at a basic level. That basic level might be much higher in Western countries, but compared to the really rich the basic level is poor.
Extreme capitalism IS social darwinism.You should hear Herbert Spencer's theory of social darwinism before you immediately start bashing extreme capitalism.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3FmEjDaWqA4
I'm glad that you made this comment, as I am keen to push the conversation further.
I believe that people here keep combating the initial theoretical aspect of ideologies (the idealists ie Marx )
- whereas the real problem came a bit further down the road, with those people who put them in practice (the power-hungry ie Stalin, the "Elite" etc.)
I personally like some Marxist concepts - I am referring to those re modern alienation of the wage-worker and many other that are seen reflected in kiterature.
Meanwhile, in England, the working class made actual major improvements such as universal health care (which the rich are now trying to dismantle).Marxism has never been applied in a country.
"From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs."
Why not?
Because it doesn't work in practice. The leaders of any country want more than the rewards paid to the proletariat, usually much more. The rich tend to maintain their wealth because they still have power or can buy or bribe whatever government is in place.
Even in the French Revolution when Aristocrats were being guillotined, much of their wealth was exported to England, Austria and elsewhere. Individuals might have died. Their wealth didn't.
Even that French wealth in land and property that was confiscated by the government was then sold at reduced prices to the government's friends and supporters until they too faced the guillotine and new rich people took their place, buying at cheap rates from the government.
People want rewards for their skills, their knowledge, their investment. They want more rewards than the basic minimum otherwise why should they bother to exert themselves?
Revolutions are made by the middle classes, the bourgeoisie, if they feel oppressed or exploited by the governing classes. The bourgeoisie have the organisational skills and the resources. Thr proletariat are just cannon fodder for the revolution's leaders and once the revolution is over, the proletariat are still at the bottom of the heap.
"The workers have nothing to lose in this (revolution) but their chains. They have a world to gain."
Sorry Marx. History demonstrates that the workers just end up with new chains. The bourgeois win every time, and a different set of rich people end up with the power. Or even the same set of rich people with new titles.
Meanwhile, in England, the working class made actual major improvements such as universal health care (which the rich are now trying to dismantle).
After the next world war when the global economy has collapsed and resurrected itself, there will be a basic guaranteed income in several re-emerging first world nations. (That is, if the rich don't, in their moment of political defeat, make the next world war a nuclear affair.)
Marxism has never been applied in a country.
"From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs."
Why not?
Because it doesn't work in practice. The leaders of any country want more than the rewards paid to the proletariat, usually much more. The rich tend to maintain their wealth because they still have power or can buy or bribe whatever government is in place.
Even in the French Revolution when Aristocrats were being guillotined, much of their wealth was exported to England, Austria and elsewhere. Individuals might have died. Their wealth didn't.
Even that French wealth in land and property that was confiscated by the government was then sold at reduced prices to the government's friends and supporters until they too faced the guillotine and new rich people took their place, buying at cheap rates from the government.
People want rewards for their skills, their knowledge, their investment. They want more rewards than the basic minimum otherwise why should they bother to exert themselves?
Revolutions are made by the middle classes, the bourgeoisie, if they feel oppressed or exploited by the governing classes. The bourgeoisie have the organisational skills and the resources. Thr proletariat are just cannon fodder for the revolution's leaders and once the revolution is over, the proletariat are still at the bottom of the heap.
"The workers have nothing to lose in this (revolution) but their chains. They have a world to gain."
Sorry Marx. History demonstrates that the workers just end up with new chains. The bourgeois win every time, and a different set of rich people end up with the power. Or even the same set of rich people with new titles.
I might ask you to switch hats for a sec. and to approach things from a writer's perspective :
I was quite fascinated by a couple of books that I read accidentally, for ex. :
- ie Dan Swain's "Alienation; an introduction to Marx's theory"
- Richard Schmidt : "Alienation and freedom"
These books (espec. the last one) are easy to read and brilliant : they illustrate the manner in which Marx drew upon existentialism's too abstract theoretical concepts, and then applied them in practical ways to the day-to-day living.
These books also introduced me to a concept that I find fascinating : "Meaninglessness and man's Alienation in the modern capitalistic society".
Moreover, R. Schmidt also applied these concepts and did a literary analysis of "Madame Bovary" and "The death of Ivan Illich. Emma Bovary" (of course, # times, # docisl systems, but similar issues)
Ask yourself -which were more alienated, peasants in Russia before the revolution, slaves in the USA, French peasants before the French Revolution, or Jews in Medieval Europe?
None of them were alienated by the modern capitalistic society.
You're joking, right?None of them were alienated by the modern capitalistic society.
You're joking, right?
The larger poor class would have been louder about this than the middle class - their efforts to improve themselves would have suffered an even greater impact. They wouldn't have gone to the hospital at all and died earlier in life - like here in the US.The working class? No. It was the middle classes who saw their efforts to improve themselves frustrated by unforeseen medical costs. The National Health Service was introduced after a massive majority vote, as was National Insurance.
Because eventually those thousands of dollars you're racking up on your debit card are going to bleed you dry?The rich trying to dismantle the NHS? No. The rich can and do buy their own health care either directly from private hospitals or through health insurance. I have health insurance and I have used our local private hospital for X-rays and tests when needed, paying by debit card. I use a private physiotherapist and my dental care is funded by insurance. I could use the NHS for all that, but if I can afford it, why wait, and why use NHS resources when I don't need to?
I sincerely doubt this assertion. What it really appears to be is they want to put people back on the American-style system.The NHS is unsustainable in its current model. It needs to be reorganised and and drastically modified otherwise the costs will outrun any feasible funding. What has happened is that universal health care now encourages unreasonable demands on it.
No. If you define 'modern' as Post-Marx.
If you define 'Modern' as post the year 1000, then they might have been.
But so much that has been written about Marx and Marxist theory is nothing but academic bullshitting.
Alienation? When the worker owns a car, a large screen TV, has a modern place to live with heating etc.
Compared with past ages, alienation in Western Democracies is just hot air.
You're forgetting the homeless folks, a problem which is growing here in the US.No. If you define 'modern' as Post-Marx.
If you define 'Modern' as post the year 1000, then they might have been.
But so much that has been written about Marx and Marxist theory is nothing but academic bullshitting.
Alienation? When the worker owns a car, a large screen TV, has a modern place to live with heating etc.
Compared with past ages, alienation in Western Democracies is just hot air.
There is no spirituality in colleges - they are all now degree mills and glorified trade schools. EVERYONE is going to college to position themselves for a job.material-wise, we are doing much better, I agree.
But almost everything now is commodified, viewed as a "brand" or 'product'. Even "higher learning in colleges and universities, or some churches - which are supposed to be about spirituality- have adopted some of these habits.
I do. And many of my co-workers feel the same -alienated-. (or maybe things in Au/Nz might be a bit #).
...
There is no spirituality in colleges - they are all now degree mills and glorified trade schools. EVERYONE is going to college to position themselves for a job.
You can, in theory, change your employer.
You can, in theory, withdraw your labour.
You might think you are 'owned' by your employer but by comparision with those I mentioned above, you are not.
A French peasant before 1789 was owned. His Lord could kill him without any incurring any penalty except loss of that peasant's labour.
A slave in the US was property, owned by the estate. His value could be measured and he and his family could be bought and sold.
A pre-revolution Russian peasant could starve to death and his owner wouldn't necessarily know or care.
A Jew in medieval Europe was a non-person. He could be attacked in the street by a mob and killed, especially if the local Lord owed the Jew money. Magna Carta in England was revolutionary because it established justice for 'all men' - that included Jews, foreigners, serfs, villeins and property owners.
Whether the drafters of Magna Carta really knew what they were saying is a moot point, but the principle was established - all men (which definition included women at that time) - had rights.
French peasants, Russian peasants, US Slaves had nothing. They didn't even own their own bodies, nor their offspring.
You're forgetting the homeless folks, a problem which is growing here in the US.
We have something like 14 million vacant homes and 3 million homeless. Capitalism perpetuates this 'starving in a land of plenty' problem. Under Socialism we would have put those homeless people in those empty homes.
no, I was comparing capitalism to socialism
Where is there a genuinely socialist state?
I don't know of any. There have been many that claim to be 'socialist', sometimes along with 'democratic'. They are usually neither.
That's a part of socialism. Otherwise the private market would be the solution for these indolent bastards*Local authorities have a duty to house the genuinely homeless.