• @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    No, we are workers exploited by capitalists.

    Unless you are not selling your labour and instead living on the profit derived from the workers, you are not a capitalist.

    It’s a very simple system laid out in Das Kapital and still taught in economics today (at least in the UK):

    Aristocrats - people with wealth by virtue of controlling land

    Capitalists - people who have wealth by virtue of having wealth (i.e. they can invest/speculate)

    Worker (or Proletariat) - people who have to sell their labour to capitalists or aristocrats to survive

    Lumpenproletariat - an underclass that has fallen out of society and resort to the black or grey market to survive

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      To follow up, let’s talk about the names of the system!

      Absolute Monarchy: a system where an individual has absolute control of the means of production (often, though not always, via birth).

      Feudalism: a system where the a wider, though still small, group of people, control the means of production based on land ownership (often, though not always, through an aristocratic class) (fun fact: the Magna Carta changed England from an absolute monarchy to a feudal state, it did not create any kind of democracy, as the myth often goes).

      Capitalism: a system where those with money (i.e. capital) control the means of production. We are here.

      Socialism: used interchangeably by both Marx and Lenin with communism (Lenin specifically states the “socialist” in USSR was aspirational, not literal). However, has now come to denote the “transition” period from Capitalism to communism where the workers control the means of production via what Lenin called a “vanguard party” or worker-controlled legislature

      Communism: where the means of production are no longer controlled at all with no class divide, legislature, or private property (note: personal and private property are two different things; no one wants your toothbrush) based on the principle “From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs”.