ID: WookieeMark @EvilGenXer posted:

"OK so look, Capitalism is right wing.

Period.

If you are pro-capitalism, you are Right Wing.

There is no pro-capitalist Left. That’s a polite fiction in the US that no one can afford any longer as the ecosystem is actually collapsing around us."

  • @[email protected]
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    52 hours ago

    Keynesian economic policy resulted in unprecedented prosperity for 60 years. It ended by Reagan’s trickle down supply side economics.

    Seems now there’s a false dichotomy between supply side economics (which is an obvious failure) and communism (which was an obvious failure).

    Crazy idea, maybe we should consider using economic policy that was proven to work? I guess that makes me hated by both the “right” and the “leftists” (two peas in a pod). So where would that put me in your made up political spectrum?

    • @[email protected]
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      52 hours ago

      I remember reading somewhere that one of the main reasons for the USSR’s failure was that they immediately shot down any idea that had the tiniest bit in it that could be interpreted as capitalism-related. Even a suggestion that’s 100% communist values but was using some capitalist-sounding terminology would get immediately disqualified and place it’s supporters in hot water.

      I think the USA - even if not as extremely - is doing the same thing but from the other side.

      With such a mindset, “using economic policy that was proven to work” is outright impossible. Any policy that works (and not just in economy) will need to address the problems raised by all major ideologies - because even if an ideology got the solution completely wrong, at the very least that problems it was born from are real. Refusing to acknowledge these problems on ideological basis will not make them go away.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 hour ago

        You’re getting close, but you’re still not quite there. The solution isn’t to address all of the concerns of all the ideologies since that would be impossible. The solution is for people to realize that ideology is the problem. When we get to the point where we realize capitalism and socialism are tools that are good for different purposes we could have a healthy economy and we’d all be prosperous. But as long as we continue think in ideological terms which centers around creating false dichotomies that prevent us from using the best tool for the job we’re always going to be living in a failed economy.

        We’d be no better off living in a failed socialist economy run by the ideology obsessed than we are living in a capitalist economy run by the ideology obsessed.

        In the end politics is always tribal, ideologies are just rationalizations made by a tribe to make them feel like they’re the rational ones while the other tribes aren’t. It’s all bullshit.

        • @[email protected]
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          15 minutes ago

          The solution isn’t to address all of the concerns of all the ideologies since that would be impossible.

          I disagree. Completely solving all the problems is indeed impossible, but it should be possible to address them. Or, at the very least, acknowledge them. At least the major ones.

          And I do agree that ideologies should be treated as tools. More specifically - tools for analyzing the existing and desired structures and for framing the problems. There is no reason not to try viewing the world through the lens of each major ideology in order to get the most complete perspective. These views may not agree, and that’s fine - the disagreements may provide some interesting insights.

        • @[email protected]
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          149 minutes ago

          I think what you’re saying is true of modern politics (probably for the last few hundred years in state bureaucracies. I don’t think it’s necessarily true universally though. We seem to think that global politics has explored all the options, they all suck, and now we have to choose between them. But there’s infinite possibilities for how a society can be structured, and it’s fairly likely that there are many that are better them the ones we’ve tried over the last few centuries. The section in Wengrow and Graeber’s The Dawn Of Everything that describes political debate and decision making in Wendat society really hammered that home for me.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 minutes ago

        Kneejerk rejection of forbidden trigger words is rampant today as well. Liberals are rejecting “gray area” concepts the way conservatives have rejected science. It’s a binary world where you’re either a hundred percent right or a million percent wrong.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 hours ago

    Politically speaking, I don’t believe there’s such thing as “right” or “left” except in the relative sense. Even then it’s questionable.

    Edit: I’m really curious about what people downvoting think it fundamentally means for there to be an absolute political “center” from which there is an objective “right” wing and an objective “left” wing. Furthermore, I’d like to know what advantages this model has that makes you value it so much.

    • Spaniard
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      5 hours ago

      I agree, politics aren’t a line where some are in the right, some in the left and the center is some kind of mythological beast (if they are we are screwed, but they aren’t)

      Politics are complicated, politicians are simple. Capitalism isn’t an ideology it’s an economic system, it’s as good or as bad as the mechanisms put in place to govern/control/rule it. It’s supposed to be free but it can’t be because no one can’t trust corporations, it’s also not supposed to be controlled by the State but when they inject money in it that’s what they are doing.

      Capitalism can work in any kind of environment, and fail too.

      Personally I believe democracy is failing, technofeudalism is coming in hard for it. In my country we replaced nobility with politicians and they are the caste, the president is the King, if you defy the party stand you are kicked out, they claim to be socialdemocrats but all the social aspects are worse than 5, 10, and 20 years ago and although keynesian economics plays a part on the reason I believe it’s democracy’s fault.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 hours ago

        Capitalism isn’t an ideology it’s an economic system

        Well, it’s both. All economic systems are ideologies with specific values and concerns.

        it’s as good or as bad as the mechanisms put in place to govern/control/rule it

        This implies that economic systems can’t be good or bad in themselves. But every implementation of capitalism (or any other economic system) is going to reflect that system’s values, and those values can be judged to be good or bad. So I think it’s reasonable to label different economic systems as “good” or “bad”, so long as you precisely define the system and its values before judging it.

  • @[email protected]
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    1414 hours ago

    What is Finland though? Social democracy seems pretty good but still fits in with capitalism as far as I can tell

    • @[email protected]
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      65 hours ago

      Finland still pollutes the world at unsustainable levels, exploits the global south for raw materials and cheap labour, and is on a downwards trend to fascism like all of Europe. Liberal democracy only has one conclusion, and it’s fascism.

    • @[email protected]
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      109 hours ago

      Since people don’t work for free and some people have more money than others, finland is obviously an extreme right wing faschist oligarchy where people live in miserable slavery and needs the proletariat red army invasion like right now. Wouldn’t even be hard for a landlocked nation. The capital Reykvetsvhik would fall in minutes thanks to the liberated people welcoming their saviors.

      Yes im American, how could you tell? /S

      • @[email protected]
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        18 hours ago

        Well, now that Simo is dead anyway, they couldn’t take Finland last time! They uh…also didn’t fight the nazis until '44-'45, there was also '41-'44…

    • @[email protected]
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      68 hours ago

      Whatever social safety nets and programs they have will be dismantled as Western capitalism devours itself. As is happening all around Europe

          • @[email protected]
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            2 hours ago

            So there is nothing saying that it will happen and that all welfare will be gone.

            Will we be worse off for a while? Yeah, Europe isn’t in a great situation now with the fairly recent COVID outbreak, economic problems, the attempted invasion and ongoing war in Ukraine, energy problems, and climate change. While the future isn’t all rainbows and unicorns, it isn’t as bleak as you made it in your earlier comment. There isn’t anything pointing to the total collapse of welfare and/or the entire economy.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      13 hours ago

      Neoliberal, just like the rest of the “socialist” nordics (E: having socialised aspects to the state and or economy, or even being a “social democracy” does not socialism make), which are all on the exact same trajectory as the rest of us, only a few years behind.

    • @[email protected]
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      3122 hours ago

      “Perfect being the enemy of good [enough]” is also rhe argument republicans use against any liberal/social policy. If there are any flaws, we should do nothing at all.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 hours ago

        Liberals also love saying that to justify “vote blue no matter who.” But what have the Democrats been doing differently other than giving breadcrumb policies?

        Sorry liberals, but the truth is that you guys also benefit from the status quo at the expense of the working class but don’t want to admit. Senior Democrat leader, Nancy Pelosi is, after all, the biggest player in the stock market earning millions. If America has a multiplural party system and could articulate their positions better, the Democrats are centre right and would be very much described as close to centrist French president’s Macron neoliberal ideology. Socially liberal but economically conservative, and he’s one of the most unpopular president in French politics. He dislikes the far right, and yet does nothing policy-wise to alleviate the working and middle class concerns which only slowly nudges them to the far right. Doing nothing economically and telling people to support the status quo is tacit support for the far right despite hating them on the outset.

        • @[email protected]
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          20 hours ago

          Look at you. Just throwing stuff at the wall to see what sticks? Why don’t you just go ahead and mention the Clinton’s while you’re at it. Someone who has retired from politics and someone who isn’t even a US politician is your argument? “Butwhatabout! Look! Over there! Someone else did something!” If you’re going to span the globe for comparisons I’m sure I could find plenty of right wing theo- or other fascists who have destroyed countries.

          • @[email protected]
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            20 hours ago

            Well the retired Democratic leaders still benefit from it. “You scratch my back I scratch yours.” Hillary Clinton got the DNC nomination in 2016 primaries because she paid off DNC’s debt; even though Bernie Sanders is the more popular candidate. The Clintons are out of politics but they are comfortable retired from the money they made while the country burns.

            Speaking of Clintons, it is under Bill Clinton who started the outsourcing. Hence, why Trump ran on the platform of re-shoring jobs and is one of the main reasons he won out of many (but his approach to it is very brash by imposing tariffs in order to coerce American companies to re-shore). Neoliberal policies did not offer any alternatives and cast aside their concerns, which made the working class welcome the embrace of a demagogue. Ancient philosophers have made the same observations before about what makes demagogues popular but people never learn.

            Anyhow since you are asking if there are any current liberals in politics who can be blamed, why not ask the current DNC on why they haven’t picked Alexandria Ocasio Cortez for the Oversight committee? That’s right, they don’t want a progressive so as not to ruffle the feathers of the same oligarchs who support Republicans.

        • @[email protected]
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          20 hours ago

          I don’t think you’ll find anyone here defending Nancy Pelosi, she can go against the wall with the rest of them.

          I’m not even sure the liberals you’re talking to are on lemmy honestly.

          • @[email protected]
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            20 hours ago

            There are many on Lemmy, but they tend to be down voting instead responding when you criticise the thirty years of neoliberal policies of outsourcing and de-investment of public services is what made the working class, especially those in rust belt and others, embrace the far right. Instead, liberals blame people as being plainly stupid. Even if some respond, they shy away when you mention that jobs outsourcing without offering alternatives, and lack of affordable healthcare and houses are what made the poor vote for Trump. American liberals are remarkably similar in behaviour with those in Europe. They wonder why the far right is gaining ground, but are tone deaf even from experts who say the lack of jobs and affordable housing is what makes populist on the rise. The most obvious reason is that liberals don’t want affordable housing because it brings down the value of their property. In California, it’s the same NIMBYism and so is here in Europe. It’s the socially progressive and yet economically conservative (this is what liberalism in the classical sense means) property owners do this as much as the right does. The former express sympathy for the homeless, but when there is proposal to build affordable housing they would object. Liberals just don’t want to admit it.

  • @[email protected]
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    20 hours ago

    Capitalism is the fundamental belief in private ownership. That I can own a factory, a store, a restaurant, and therefore be entitled to the profits produced from them. Modern capitalism is inextricable from consumerism, from business, and from stock exchanges.

    Capitalism is any resource or good harvested or produced that is not shared by all who produced it. Capitalism is the idea that some labor is more deserving of the fruits of production than other kinds of labor. Capitalism is violence against the working class. Capitalism is the means by which a new ruling class was created over the past 200 years that presently controls the entire world while utterly ravaging our environment and wasting more resources than we literally every could have thought possible.

    You are NOT a leftist if you support capitalism. You are ANTI-WORKER if you support capitalism. If you want to support workers and if you want to support progressive leftist causes, ORGANIZE. Join your local anarchist community. Agitate, push leftist politics. Start mutual aid networks for vulnerable workers in your community. Support unionization efforts. Support striking workers. Participate in civil disobedience. Show up at protests. Organize demonstrations.

    The world has never been changed by accepting the crumbs they threw at our feet. It was changed by those who refused to bow their heads. By the communities who resisted oppression and fought for their fellow workers. By people who fought for us all to live better lives. Count yourself among them.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 hours ago

      Meh, I don’t necessarily disagree with the sentiment, but don’t like black/white dichotomies (though I’m personally anti-capitalist). Unions most definitely care the businesses they work for make money. The more money the better, since union members can bargain for more. They have incentive to be pro-consumerist and to protect their business/industry. Even at the expense of others.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 hours ago

        Unions are workers coming together to advocate for their rights. I don’t know what you mean by the unions having an incentive for companies to make more money. Companies making more money does not translate to increased wages for workers. It translates to increased profits for shareholders. And unions do not own companies. Unions are a form of collective action against the capitalist ruling class. Workers who are a part of unions are making commitments to each other to fight for their rights as a group. They have nothing to do with what capitalist ceos or shareholders do. Not unless a union has been corrupted and is being manipulated by ruling class forces.

        I am not a syndicalist, but I do think that the widespread unionization of workers is objectively a good thing. Tenants unionizing against their landlords, workers unionizing against their bosses, the working class as a whole unionizing against the ruling class.

        I also push back against this notion of capitalism not being a hard and fast specific ideology that takes specific actions at the expense of workers. It is the truth. In countries that are more socialized but still maintain capitalist systems, less capitalism is still an improvement for the material conditions of workers. Private ownership of the means of production is still problematic even if there are more regulations from local government. Those things could still be collectivized and made worker owned so that everyone can have the fruits of production. And so that everyone has the same political power as everyone else.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 hours ago

          Companies making more money does not translate to increased wages for workers.

          In a unionized company with periodic collective bargaining, it definitely gives workers the potential to earn more money, if the union is doing its job right.

          But, overall I agree with you. The potential drawbacks to unions are small potatoes compared to their real benefits. I think they’re one of the most powerful ways for the working class to take power back from the parasitic owning class.

    • ZeroOne
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      416 hours ago

      Also capitalism has it’s roots in Colonialism

    • @[email protected]
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      15 hours ago

      Capital means money. Capitalism is an economy that is centered on money. Socialism OTOH centers the economy on the people.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 hours ago

        You may want to read up a bit, and stop using socialism as an umbrella term. Socialism as in European social democrats, traditional socialists, Communists? Any of the other variations? Because both Social Democrats and Communists use the Socialist term.

  • @[email protected]
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    315 hours ago

    So where do Co-ops fall, one where all the workers own everything equally and vote on hiring and firing etc?

    • @[email protected]
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      154 minutes ago

      Isn’t a co-op just an individual organization where the workers have already seized the means of production and share it fairly among themselves? With every worker having a say right? Sounds like socialism on a small scale to me.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 hours ago

      That would be socialism because the power and profit of the company are eventually distributed throughout the workforce regardless of their capital investment.

    • @[email protected]
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      712 hours ago

      Socialism. Plenty of models that use or aspire to that system, especially when it’s part of a larger capitalist society and one can’t expect the workers to change it all.

      Few large coops are truly equal partnerships or that democratic though.

      Generally speaking, what prevents it from falling under capitalism is non-transferable ownership stakes. Otherwise the workers can sell their stake and the system inevitably declines into capital interests hiring employees instead of a partnership.

  • @[email protected]
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    1221 hours ago

    I think it’s important to clarify that markets and the use of money are not exclusive to capitalism. Under capitalism, the point of markets is to accumulate money absent of any actual project or goal, and money is the way the capital holding class keeps score. In other systems, the point of markets is to connect people who have some item with people who need or want that item and money is the means of exchange. Markets are fine for distributing excess materials and labor, once people’s basic needs are met.

    • Natanox
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      11 hour ago

      Definitely something people forget when talking about money in general. Capitalism warps the meaning of “value”, money is just the closest we have to display a certain value in a tangible form. In itself, money is merely a tool for universal exchange of goods. A tool that’s unfathomably useful no matter the system it exists in.

      Imagine we treat money like US citizens treat measurements. “Yeah, I’d like to buy these produce for about the value of 1 middle-sized football field”. What.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 day ago

    Stop. Get help. Defining things to make sure your position is the right one and the only correct position is the one that does no harm to anyone and is in no way evil or exploitive. STOP.

    It is not useful, it is not constructive. While you’re lecturing about who has the correct beliefs to have a place at your little left wing table, a billionaire has gotten more wealth and power. Find common ground with people who work, and who believe in working to make the world better for society. It is more important to do something beneficial than to make sure you can’t be logically judged poorly.

    Go help someone. Go work to improve your community. Go find common ground with the people who are doing the same.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 hours ago

      Hey, liberal:

      The fascists deliberately redefine what words mean to their idiot wage slaves as a method of stiffling dissent and controlling narratives.

      The end goal is the ability to slap labels like “communist” on simpering liberals like Biden and Harris, so the brainless base knows they’re free to inflict violence on them and their supporters.

      Fuck off with your insistence that actual leftists play along with it instead of educating people.

      It’s for your good too.

      • @[email protected]
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        817 hours ago

        Lol, this would hit better if A. It didn’t start with some kind of weird name calling rather than any attempt to communicate respectfully. B. It weren’t defending an objectively bad take around defining the completely relative and subjective term of “left” and “right” rather than a word like capitalism and communism and C if the liberal label were even accurate, I am a democratic socialist, it doesn’t matter though, it doesn’t change the validity of any part of this argument, not is it a more important fact about me than my class, the fruits of my labor, and most importantly my ernest desire to do good in my community.

    • @[email protected]
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      721 hours ago

      I do love when idiots insist the world must conform to their own internal definition.

      The problem is the idiots never realize you’re talking about them when you say this.

  • @[email protected]
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    141 day ago

    Left and right are completely arbitrary semantic categories so you can define them however you like, as long as it has a clear and internally consistent definition.

    I’ve even seen ancaps who have almost the same definition as I do but completely reversed which is pretty funny but also gives me a headache.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 hours ago

      left = not capitalism

      right = capitalism

      this definition has formed since more or less (…) since the french revolution and has consolidated along with capitalism itself.

      • @[email protected]
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        155 minutes ago

        I wouldn’t go that far, in a lot of ways capitalism was the left wing at the time. That was a liberal, ie capitalist, Revolution. Basically all the revolutions between the American Revolution up to 1848 were liberal and capitalist revolutions.

      • @[email protected]
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        316 hours ago

        Woll, not that far back, after all the terms came later, but it was fairly set by the turn of the century.

  • socsa
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    1 day ago

    “Pro capitalism” and harm reduction are not the same thing. Some form of capitalist-like economics will exist until we achieve post scarcity economics. The best we can do until then is work towards that end, while also working to minimize the harms imposed by material and labor scarcity.

    This is just another stupid purity test by people who care more about their own righteousness than actual action. You can call my praxis whatever you want. I don’t care.

    • @[email protected]
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      523 hours ago

      Capitalism is not a market. Markets have exactly nothing to do with capitalism.

      Capitalism is not only not needed before total post scarcity, it prevents it as capitalism requires artificial scarcity to function.

    • @[email protected]
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      We’ve been post-scarcity on a global scale for decades if you count the essentials. We’ve been producing all the food that’s needed to feed the world, and that’s with only 2% of people working on agriculture in the developed world.

      The reason for housing shortages is also due to policy, not because we somehow don’t have the resources and labour to build enough.

      • Natanox
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        160 minutes ago

        Statistically yes, however any of those calculations I saw were always flawed and intentionally excluded losses that will always build up even in the most fair system (losses in transport, accidents, individual wrongdoing i.e. overbuying and bad cooking, miscalculations, bad harvests etc). And then there’s the rapidly shrinking space for optimal harvests, the climate catastrophe as well as capitalism keep destroying the ecosystem.

        Technically we could produce enough to offset that as well, however that would include a global empowerment of… veganism. Or at least a 95% reduction of red meat, it’s the most outrageous resource hog. I don’t need to explain why this won’t happen though.

  • BarqsHasBite
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    51 day ago

    To people using this as a reason to not vote: It’s going to be capitalism. You have a choice between free for all capitalism with fuck the environment and fuck the workers (GOP), or regulated capitalism with environmental protections and workers rights (Dems). If you don’t vote or vote third party, you just voted for the free for all one.