Do Socialists hate making money?

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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Doc » Sun Dec 14, 2014 12:50 am

TheNewGuy wrote:DOC, on a serious note, I do wonder how you reconciled your military service (in my mind, military service is de facto a nationalist, aggressive lifestyle) with your socialism (in my mind, socialist belief is an anti-nationalist, pacifist lifestyle). Can you elaborate on that situation, a bit?


The military is an example of communism in action- All have a job, and all people at the same rank are paid salary for their service.

Military service itself is almost apolitical- the politics come in because the military is used fr various things. I will say that a lot of the people I served with were pretty right wing, but then again, some of the staunchest socialists I know are vets. Its because we saw first hand that socialism and communism can work- we experienced it ourselves. We all were guaranteed a job for our terms of service. We all had guaranteed housing, food, medicine, and education benefits. And our efforts were all dedicated to the effort of the entire society, or in our case, our Battery, and the mission of the Marine Corps as a whole.

Yes, the military lifestyle is defacto aggressive. The job almost demands it of us- After all, all of our professional training is to kill someone. But I suppose that if there was a national service program, whose mission is building roads or maintaining IT support for a health care web site, or whatever, there would be a different attitude toward aggression. You could still have discipline, military-like bearing and professionalism, and rigorous physical training without all the "Kill Kill Kill" stuff, if your job was not killing, but repairing. You could even keep friendly competition- Who can repair the most miles of roads in a month, and compete for trophies or whatever. Moral incentives are often very powerful in a military, when there actually aren't ways to derive monetary incentive. I can say I wouldn't trade the Naval Achievement Medal I earned in the Marine Corps for ten thousand dollars. I am proud of that medal which nobody can take away from me, no matter what, while ten thousand dollars would be gone in a week.

And finally, not all socialism is internationalist. As a matter of fact, one of the leading non-Marxist American socialists (the fellow who is my avatar) named Edward Bellamy, called himself a Nationalist. His idea was that each nation could establish socialism, and it would work for the benefit of that country almost exclusively. The nationalism which no socialist will adopt is the jingoism which characterizes the sort of nationalism that calls for torturing terrorists and invading foreign countries. The kind of nationalism which has been common in the US since 2001- No socialist will advocate for that sort of nationalism. And we didn't necessarily advocate for that while in the Marine Corps, either.

I hope that answers your question.
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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Doc » Sun Dec 14, 2014 12:54 am

Amazeroth wrote: Not really. What I want to know is specfics, not vague talk about non-socialist alternatives. I don't want to know that there are alternatives, I want to know what these alternatives are, and how they work.


Let me ask- if I were to offer you a solution which explicitly rejected capitalism, even if it were reasonable, would you ever be willing to even consider it? Or must there always be capitalism, a market, and free accumulation of wealth for you to ever accept the solution?
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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Doc » Sun Dec 14, 2014 1:03 am

Afrocentric wrote:
Doc wrote:And to beat you to the punch, I will just say here that yes, had I my druthers, I would run our economy into the ground and the US would become the 150th largest economy in the world before I would ever endorse an extension of capitalism. So as I say, you are lucky I don't have control of anything.


This just gives people more of a reason to be skeptical of Socialists and their agenda. I don't know how any sane person could join a Socialist Party.

Doc wrote:Our system of capitalism and the ideology that it apparently inspires among a significant number of my countrymen is morally corrupt and wicked, equivalent to the explicit or implicit endorsement of slavery among the vast majority of the population of the US before the Civil War, and like chattel slavery, needs to be ended,


Stop. You don't get to compare Capitalism to slavery; you don't have that right or luxury to do that.


Oh please- If you can compare socialism to totalitarianism, I can compare capitalism to slavery. Each comparison is equally valid. Except I am talking about the immorality of capitalism, and immoral is immoral, whether it be slavery or capital murder or capitalist exploitation.


Doc wrote:After all, just because the majority of the population support something, that doesn't make it any more moral or just.


You don't get to decide what's moral and just in the world, anymore than I do.


And yet, you have already decided that capitalism works and that I should just deal with it.


Doc wrote:Meanwhile, yes I do shop at WalMart, because I am not fortunate enough to be able to afford to shop at other stores for my basic necessities. So yes, even I benefit from the exploitation of others. And that is what is so galling to me- I can't escape it if I tried.


You have alot of guilt going on in your life. Why is that? Also, how does a college professor with a doctorate not make enough money to shop at high end stores. You probably make about $75,000/year.


Comrade, clearly you have no idea about the state of the job market in academia these days. 75,000 is what I would make if I were an associate professor at some really prestigious private school. 75,000! My God! I am lucky if I gross half that amount working about twice as many hours... Oh, the difference between what Rightists tell themselves about academics, in their little Glenn Beck-run echo chamber and what really happens in academics is truly stunning.
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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Doc » Sun Dec 14, 2014 1:39 am

Amazeroth- I argue that there are alternatives because I believe there HAS to be- There is not just capitalism or socialism. That sort of dichotomous thinking is not even close to realistic- my point is that "There is No Alternative" is a complete fabrication of liberal dogma. There are alternatives, because there HAVE to be alternatives, and some of them may work better than capitalism or socialism. I don't happen to be prepared right now to explicate them in full, because I endorse socialism.

I have had these debates with anti-socialists for years. I never hear from the other side any more than you all have claimed. Nothing any of you have said is particularly novel, nor does it convince me that capitalism actually IS moral or produces equality in society. Its all just the same thing, repeated over and over as if repeating it will make it so. "Capitalism is the best because it works," and "if you think socialism is so great show me where it has worked better than capitalism." But hell! I know interstellar travel is possible, though I have never seen it actually accomplished. But if we all just rejected all ideas which we have never seen before, we'd still be living in huts... Ultimately that line of argument is akin to me as "superstition" which is an opinion held despite any (or no) evidence to the contrary.

Lets actually give socialism a try and see if it works. I don't mean Stalinism. Let's put the platform of the Socialist Party into effect and see if it works better than capitalism at producing social equality. I challenge us to measure socialism's success not on capitalism's metric- That would be like me grading a Spanish test with a Mathematics key. No, lets take socialism on its own terms and see if it produces the outcomes it says it does. We don't know yet, because socialism, as socialism, has never actually been tried anywhere. Stalinism has been tried. Welfareism has been tried. Social Democracy has been tried. But- Socialism has never been tried. So there is zero way we can possibly know whether it works or not, unless we automatically fail it because we are grading it using an entirely invalid measure, which is that of capitalism. If so, and if our goal in society is actually to produce social equality, then we have to accept socialism over capitalism. If we are only looking for a system which guarantees that a few will get fabulously wealthy, while the rest of us will not ever get our own share of the national product, then capitalism works great and socialism would be completely inappropriate.

I don't happen to want to live in the society that capitalism produces. I think it is immoral to arrange society so that only a few will ever really benefit, and at the expense of the many. So I want to try something else. The capitalists clearly could care less about the things socialists are concerned with. So at the end of the day, this debate is completely pointless- or as they say, entirely academic. We will continue to live in a morally corrupt society, and those who actively support it must square themselves with their support for wickedness. I have a feeling that they don't lose a minute of sleep on the matter. And nothing I could possibly say on this forum is going to change that.
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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Amazeroth » Sun Dec 14, 2014 2:22 am

Doc wrote:
Amazeroth wrote: Not really. What I want to know is specfics, not vague talk about non-socialist alternatives. I don't want to know that there are alternatives, I want to know what these alternatives are, and how they work.


Let me ask- if I were to offer you a solution which explicitly rejected capitalism, even if it were reasonable, would you ever be willing to even consider it? Or must there always be capitalism, a market, and free accumulation of wealth for you to ever accept the solution?


Yes, I would. I'd be surprised, sure, but if it would be reasonable, I'd consider it.


Doc wrote:Amazeroth- I argue that there are alternatives because I believe there HAS to be- There is not just capitalism or socialism. That sort of dichotomous thinking is not even close to realistic- my point is that "There is No Alternative" is a complete fabrication of liberal dogma. There are alternatives, because there HAVE to be alternatives, and some of them may work better than capitalism or socialism. I don't happen to be prepared right now to explicate them in full, because I endorse socialism.


That's fine as a theoretic point, but so far "There is no alternative" hasn't been my defense. In the contrary - I wanted to know an alternative. But just saying "There has to be an alternative" alone doesn't make it so, and it doesn't make an alternative happen. For that, you'd need to find the alternative, and convince people that it's good.

I have had these debates with anti-socialists for years. I never hear from the other side any more than you all have claimed. Nothing any of you have said is particularly novel, nor does it convince me that capitalism actually IS moral or produces equality in society. Its all just the same thing, repeated over and over as if repeating it will make it so. "Capitalism is the best because it works," and "if you think socialism is so great show me where it has worked better than capitalism." But hell! I know interstellar travel is possible, though I have never seen it actually accomplished. But if we all just rejected all ideas which we have never seen before, we'd still be living in huts... Ultimately that line of argument is akin to me as "superstition" which is an opinion held despite any (or no) evidence to the contrary.


So far you were exactly like the man saying, "Hey, let's start interstellar travel!" without any idea how to get there. It's one thing to describe a untopia, it's another to find the way to get there. If you want to think of systems that work better than capitalism - by all means, do that. But don't come with a vision of the future, and no way to get there.

Lets actually give socialism a try and see if it works. I don't mean Stalinism. Let's put the platform of the Socialist Party into effect and see if it works better than capitalism at producing social equality. I challenge us to measure socialism's success not on capitalism's metric- That would be like me grading a Spanish test with a Mathematics key. No, lets take socialism on its own terms and see if it produces the outcomes it says it does. We don't know yet, because socialism, as socialism, has never actually been tried anywhere. Stalinism has been tried. Welfareism has been tried. Social Democracy has been tried. But- Socialism has never been tried. So there is zero way we can possibly know whether it works or not, unless we automatically fail it because we are grading it using an entirely invalid measure, which is that of capitalism. If so, and if our goal in society is actually to produce social equality, then we have to accept socialism over capitalism. If we are only looking for a system which guarantees that a few will get fabulously wealthy, while the rest of us will not ever get our own share of the national product, then capitalism works great and socialism would be completely inappropriate.


Socialism as socialism doesn't exist. All the things you count up are facets of Socialism. You yourself have admitted, though, that capitalism does make things better for the poor, even if it doesn't lead to full social equality. So you can't really call capitalism the system that guarantees fabulous wealth for a few while denying the rest their share.

By the way, nobody is measuring the outcome of socialism on capitalism's metric. Or at least I didn't, in this discussion. I also notice that whenever I adress specific points of your socialist vision, you only retort with vague arguments and try to explain it away by me not being able to empathise with a socialist viewpoint. Which is both untrue, and an unfair move, because it automatically disqualifies everything I say, not because of my arguments being faulty, but because I can't say anything correct by definition. If that's the way you want to play it, fine, but then a discussion is pointless.
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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Doc » Sun Dec 14, 2014 3:31 am

Amazeroth wrote:That's fine as a theoretic point, but so far "There is no alternative" hasn't been my defense. In the contrary - I wanted to know an alternative. But just saying "There has to be an alternative" alone doesn't make it so, and it doesn't make an alternative happen. For that, you'd need to find the alternative, and convince people that it's good.


This is just it. I don't think that I do need to convince anyone of anything. First of all, I really don't think that it is possible- I know it is not possible to convince me that capitalism is preferable to socialism, and I suppose I assume that all people on this list are similar to me, that is, ossified in our ideological orientation. I am not pretending that I am openminded on this question. I don't think any of the people who have been participating in this discussion so far are open minded on the topic. But at any rate, the burden of proof, in my case is far higher than anyone on this list is capable of meeting. I don't think it is any different for anyone else here. But then again, I really don't have to convince anyone. None of us are in a position to do anything about it. If we were, we would be doing it instead of debating the matter on an internet forum for an online RPG. As for me, I write volumes on the topic because I like to keep in practice.

Amazeroth wrote:So far you were exactly like the man saying, "Hey, let's start interstellar travel!" without any idea how to get there. It's one thing to describe a untopia, it's another to find the way to get there. If you want to think of systems that work better than capitalism - by all means, do that. But don't come with a vision of the future, and no way to get there.


That's correct. I am saying let's start interstellar travel, as a matter of policy, without actually knowing how to do it. I think we should. It is a good idea. But I will leave it to the technicians to figure out how to enact that policy. I have some ideas, but I am a political scientist. I don't suppose they will consult me when they ask, "How should we conduct interstellar travel?" I suppose they would go to someone who knows something about the question. I can talk about policy- that is something I have a pretty high level of skill at. I can critique capitalism and assert that socialism should be tried. I have described one possible way to get there, or at least get a start on the process, and the opponents respond, "Well, that's simply not possible." As a theorist, I know that anything is possible. I am sure of it. But the response has always been to simply dismiss it out of hand as "Well, the people would never go for that." So I guess that means we simply do nothing and just let the disease continue to fester.

Amazeroth wrote: All the things you count up are facets of Socialism.


That is simply not true. Socialism is democratic control of the economy and of all social institutions. And I don't mean simply "voting" as democracy. I mean "rule by the people." Stalinism, welfare statism, and social democracy is not democratic control of the economy. In the Stalinist Model, the state acts as the sole corporation. In Welfare Statism, capitalism is not touched. In social democracy, there is co-operation between people and owners, but in fact, the decisions are often left to technocrats in some sort of wierd corporatist arrangement. I'm not talking about any of that. I am talking about the consumers deciding what is produced and for how much it is sold. I am talking about a production model which produces only to meet need and demand, and not more or less, but certainly not to provide producers with profit. I am talking about the citizens in an area controlling the behavior of their cops and the curriculum in their schools. I am talking about the Government no longer dictating laws to the population, but the public informing the government about the policies it will undertake. And I am talking about nobody having any more control over any social or economic institution than anyone else. Everything else I described is to tide us over until we can get to socialism.

Amazeroth wrote:By the way, nobody is measuring the outcome of socialism on capitalism's metric. Or at least I didn't, in this discussion. I also notice that whenever I adress specific points of your socialist vision, you only retort with vague arguments and try to explain it away by me not being able to empathise with a socialist viewpoint. Which is both untrue, and an unfair move, because it automatically disqualifies everything I say, not because of my arguments being faulty, but because I can't say anything correct by definition. If that's the way you want to play it, fine, but then a discussion is pointless.


I haven't responded to everything you have written, so this is not a fair critique. Most of my sharpest comments have been about the fiat arguments of your fellow defender of capitalism, Afrocentric, which are quite typical of most people who wish to defend capitalism. But I will say- it is difficult to offer concrete examples which you demand when I assert that socialism has never actually been tried, and when it looks like it probably won't be tried at any point in my lifetime, especially due to the unremitting hostility the very word receives from most of my countrymen. When I did actually present a program, you declared it totalitarian. That sort of says it all about your position on the matter- it sort of makes anything I said before that point automatically supportive of totalitarianism. I happen to think that national service gives people a stake in their society. It is only for 4 years and works to pay society back for the investment society made in them. I don't see how that is totalitarian at all- the fact that this difference of opinion exists demonstrates the fundamental pointlessness of this discussion. But dropping a bomb like that ends the discussion as quickly as if you were to refer to the system as Nazism.

Let me go back through the discussion and see which direct questions you raise. If there are any of them which aren't loaded, I'll answer them. if there are any that you haven't raised with the intention of setting a trap for me, you could also ask them again, in case I missed any of them.
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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Doc » Sun Dec 14, 2014 4:17 am

Amazeroth wrote:Please explain more about how you, or Aristotle, come to the conclusion that fairness means everyone has what they need. I'd really be interested in that.


Aristotle believed that justice was located in moderation, which is not having an excess or a deficiency in moral virtue. In the Politics, Aristotle described the Just society as the society which ensured that all people could live the good life, which is the life where people had all that they needed, and friendship (defined as good will between equals) along with time to contemplate virtue. I draw my sense of fairness then from the notion of the Golden Mean. I argue that a person that has very little is miserable, and people that have too much are also miserable. Those who have little are miserable because they suffer from a deficiency of those things that they need to live a good life. Those who have too much are also miserable because they are constantly worried about losing what they have. Consequently, both apply to the government for protection, but in our society, the rich just happen to be more adept at getting public policy to protect them from those who have very little than the poor are at protecting themselves from the systemic demands of capitalism.

Amazeroth wrote:And where would the money come from to pay for the fullfillment of all the citizens' needs, or for taxation in general, if nobody needs to work anymore in order to have his or her needs fullfilled? Who would perform all the manual labour jobs needed to produce food, or houses, or even medication? Who will go and seek higher education, in order to fullfill management roles in governmental positions, or become doctors, or scientists working for the government, if they get the same as the manual labourers, or the people doing boring but easy bureaucratic work?


Who said nobody would work? I explicitly argued that the private sector should be maintained to provide luxury for people once basic needs were met. And who said all people working for the public service get the same regardless of what their job is? I think you didn't read what I wrote. The National Service would be paid on a scale similar to the Military. In the military, no E-2 is a supervisor of anything, and they are paid as such. The Supervisors, the NCOs are paid higher, and their bosses are paid higher. Even Corporals make different rates, based on their time in service... And Military members dump boatloads of money into the economy. So much so that when a base closes, it ruins the town or towns attached to it, which is why it is so hard to close bases.

Amazeroth wrote:Next question - why wouldn't it end like the Soviet Union did, if there is no incentive for government workers to work hard, since they don't get paid more if they do? That's actually one of the few things the Soviet Union has shown pretty impressively - that people need motivation to do more than the least. Granted, there will always be a few idealists who go the extra mile even if they don't get paid, but the majority won't, at least in a bureaucratic system like you're proposing, where you don't actually see any consequence of your shoddy labour.


There were disincentives to work in the Soviet Union. Bureaucracy and just the tendency to lop off the heads that stuck out too far was a real disincentive to hard work. But I can see a different situation as well, where hard workers are promoted, and lousy workers are cashiered. I am not proposing a bureaucratic system. I know that in the military, people strive for medals and distinctions, and there is zero money attached to that. Why would that be so difficult to imagine?

Amazeroth wrote:Who would pay taxes in that setting? I mean, you'd have to enact it globally to prevent all the wealthier people fleeing your country, and then who would work extra if that only means getting taxed all of a sudden? I'm all against subsidizing too, but it wouldn't matter, the government as competitor would either be so efficient that it remained the sole competitor in the end - since it has, compared to private companies, unlimited resources; or so inefficient that you'd have a large black market going in no time.


That's fair, but I would bet on the prior over the latter. The Private sector does too, for that matter. This is why the public option in the ACA was killed by the insurance industry. In the beginning, all who earned money would pay taxes. And since I am exempting the private sector from government control when they produce luxuries, anyone who works for them will pay taxes. And anyone who works (beyond their initial conscription) for the Public sector will pay taxes on their income just like the Military does today.

Amazeroth wrote:I actually live in a country where that pretty much is the case already, and so long as you have enough tax payers, it works. It's costing a lot, and it doesn't have the best image, but it does its job. But with your similar idea of forcing out taxpayers, how would you finance that?


Let me then ask you- What keeps YOUR taxpayers from fleeing? Could it possibly be that there is something which keeps them there despite the tax rate? I don't imagine that I will force out tax payers. Only those who don't think they owe anything to the society, and who don't seem to think that they gain anyone from being a domestic corporation will flee. But then again, they do that now, so what's the difference?

Amazeroth wrote:I'd also like to know how humanity is a virtue that entitles me to have all my needs fullfilled (except the one you don't deem basic) without having to work for it. Or will people be forced to work by law in your utopia?


That would sort of defeat the purpose of freeing people from the need to work, wouldn't it? People should have the choice whether or not they want to work. In the current system, especially in places with hugely deficient social safety nets like the US, we don't have the choice. We must work or we starve. My question is, how is our system any less totalitarian then? Just because I have the choice of who I have to work for? Hunger is the master which whips me into a job. That and a desire to be clothes, housed, educated, healthy, and the need of me to provide those same things for my children. I don't actually have a choice whether or not to work. I must work. But I think if people are freed from need, want of more comfort will drive people to work. I have said that people will have their needs met. But that doesn't equal a flat screen TV and a second car. If you want that, you work for it. If you want McDonalds cheeseburgers, you work for it. If you don't want that stuff, you should nonetheless still have the choice whether or not you want to work, just like those who choose to work.

As for the humanity entitling people to have their needs fulfilled, I think the existence of society, which allows us to so so much more in life than we would if we were in Hobbes State of Nature (or even Locke's State of Nature) obligates us to help to preserve that society. Each member of that society has an equal claim on the resources and benefits of society as I do. Therefore, humanity entitles each and every member of the society to the same privileges as I claim for myself. There is no difference between the poorest person and the richest person. All are equally entitled, by virtue of their humanity.

Yes- this is theory. It certainly doesn't exist in the real world. Nor is this even the most popular idea. Nor is it mine. I would encourage you to ask the person I got the notion from, Edward Bellamy. He is able to defend this notion far more persuasively than I can- after all, he convinced me, though my preservation of a part of the private sector is a significant modification of his system. For Bellamy, all production is nationalized. I don't necessarily think this is such a good idea. I understand why Bellamy did that, but I also think that people like things that the Public sector shouldn't be producing, like SUVs. Just because the public sector doesn't produce something doesn't mean that people don't want that thing. So I maintain the private sector to produce non-public goods.

Amazeroth wrote:Also, why exactly is it in societies interest that all are fed, housed, healthy, educated and employed?


I don't put it on Christian Duty. I say that a society with homeless people puts all those who have homes at risk. So it is in our interests to ensure that homeless people are housed. Hungry people will often resort to actions those of us with food may view as crime. Sick people will get us sick too, because disease is contagious. Ignorant people who still have the right to vote fall easily under the sway of demagogues. It is therefore, in the interest of society, not to derive some material benefit, but to protect some semblance of the good life for all, to see to it that nobody does without who will threaten the rest of us and the things we have.

I can give you a good, concrete example. I teach college classes- that is well known. I have a policy in my courses. Students are able to bring a full 8X11 sheet of paper with whatever they want written on it into my tests. I argue that by eliminating the need to cheat eliminates cheating. Yes, it works. I have zero cheating on any of my tests. And yet, even with all the answers potentially in front of my students as they are taking their test, I still get a normal distribution of my scores. Those who prepared for the test and took good notes on their paper earn higher grades, while those who did not prepare for the test and wrote a bunch of worthless nonsense on their papers do poorly on the test. But over all, the scores are not different than they would be if the students took the test cold. There is just no incentive to violate academic honesty policies now.

There- You have your answers. Please do not fiat them away. But whatever, I have answered you, and in my opinion, those answers are more than satisfactory. And I answered in good faith. Though they may not be satisfactory for you, I hope the good faith is at least worth something.
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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Afrocentric » Sun Dec 14, 2014 6:21 am

Doc wrote:Oh please- If you can compare socialism to totalitarianism, I can compare capitalism to slavery. Each comparison is equally valid. Except I am talking about the immorality of capitalism, and immoral is immoral, whether it be slavery or capital murder or capitalist exploitation.


That's such and ignorant thing to say and the fact you stand by your comment is telling. Do you know how many people died during slavery? Do you know how many people have died from Capitalism?

Doc wrote:And yet, you have already decided that capitalism works and that I should just deal with it.


It works in the USA. You are free to move up north to Canada or to Europe if you want to escape the Corporatist $tates of America.

Doc wrote:Comrade, clearly you have no idea about the state of the job market in academia these days. 75,000 is what I would make if I were an associate professor at some really prestigious private school. 75,000! My God! I am lucky if I gross half that amount working about twice as many hours...


I don't. I assumed that was the base salary for professors. Pardon my ignorance.

Doc wrote:Oh, the difference between what Rightists tell themselves about academics, in their little Glenn Beck-run echo chamber and what really happens in academics is truly stunning.


You don't know where I stand on academia, so don't sit there in your ivory tower and judge me or link me to a far-right lunatic.
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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Doc » Sun Dec 14, 2014 6:48 am

Afrocentric wrote:That's such and ignorant thing to say and the fact you stand by your comment is telling. Do you know how many people died during slavery? Do you know how many people have died from Capitalism?


I'm sure I don't know either number. But you must. But in both cases, the number must have been significant enough for social reformers to notice deaths under both systems. But then again- I didn't say that capitalism and slavery were the equivalent. What I said, had you bothered to actually read what I wrote is that a defense of a morally corrupt system of capitalism was like the defense of the morally corrupt system of slavery, because defense of wicked systems is unconscionable whether its capitalism or slavery. I could have just as easily said defense of capitalism is equivalent to defense of torture, or defense of the Prison System, or any other completely rotten system in the US. Defense of wickedness is defense of wickedness- if you defend capitalism, you may as well defend all wickedness.

So let me withdraw my comparison to slavery and let me substitute it with defense of state-sponsored torture. Morally speaking, defense of a system which exploits the mass of the population for the gain of a few, which you yourself admit creates winners and therefore, losers instead of existing for the benefit of all of society, is exactly the same as defense of any other system where people are abused, exploited and eventually crushed, as a systemic rule. Slavery happened to be an expedient- we can talk about wicked system that you like. Because to me, wickedness is wickedness- there are not degrees. And full-throated defense of wickedness is a reprehensible activity.

Afrocentric wrote:It works in the USA.


I disagree that it does work in the USA, which is why I want something else. You can't just say "It works", especially since you yourself admit that it doesn't work for everyone, nor do you suggest that it is supposed to. It works for the class of people that YOU prioritize, but I would even argue that it doesn't work for them, because it forces them to separate themselves from the rest of humanity out of fear. So I will not give you the point that "it works." I can just as legitimately claim that it doesn't work, which is why it needs to be replaced. We can go on and on like this all day, if you want.

Afrocentric wrote:You don't know where I stand on academia, so don't sit there in your ivory tower and judge me or link me to a far-right lunatic.


Forgive me- I wouldn't willingly associate anyone with that lunatic, unless I actually thought they were adherents of his. I stand corrected.

But then again- your reference to "my" ivory tower really does give me some hints as to where you stand on academia. I don't sit in an ivory tower or anything like it- I am buried under a mountain of debt that I wracked up earning my degree, and make about twice as much as a person who works full time at minimum wage, before taxes and withholding. I don't sit anywhere NEAR the Ivory Tower you so smugly and self-righteously look down upon, as if education were some sort of crime.

And by the way, you may not deliberately associate yourself with various positions on the far right, but your words and your positions put you squarely there. You can call yourself a libertarian if you like, but there are lots of those "far-right lunatic(s)" who take many, if not most of the same positions you take, including the followers of Rand and Beck. You may not willingly keep company with them, but the opinions you have stated on this thread have been happily and easily adopted by them. I am sorry then about that for your sake- I wouldn't want to be known by that crowd either.
Last edited by Doc on Sun Dec 14, 2014 7:09 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Do Socialists hate making money?

Postby Siggon Kristov » Sun Dec 14, 2014 6:55 am

Afrocentric wrote:I care about me and only me.

Then why are you asking about Socialists and whether they hate to make money?

Afrocentric wrote:IDRGAF about people who are suffering or ended up as failures in life; it is what it is. As far as I'm concerned, its not my problem and I'm not obligated to extend my help towards them.

That is pretty evident.

Amazeroth wrote:Please explain more about how you, or Aristotle, come to the conclusion that fairness means everyone has what they need. I'd really be interested in that.

Amazeroth has a point here. Even "fairness" can be subjective. We can talk about what everyone needs, but I think fairness really revolves around what everyone deserves. Persons with different views will have different opinions on what qualifies someone to deserve something. Some persons would say that every human deserves have his needs satisfied, while others would disagree.

Doc wrote:
Afrocentric wrote:don't sit there in your ivory tower and judge me or link me to a far-right lunatic.

And you may not deliberately associate yourself with various positions on the far right, but your words and your positions put you there. You can call yourself a libertarian if you like, but there are lots of those "far-right lunatic(s)" who take many, if not most of the same positions you take, including the followers of Rand and Beck. You may not willingly keep company with them, but the opinions you have stated on this list have been happily and easily adopted by them. I am sorry then about that for your sake.

Based on some things you have said, even on this thread, I have to agree with Doc.
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