No, that's demand. Going out to buy stuff is demand.The point is that buying goods and services that provide power, prestige and security is demand generation.
No, that's demand. Going out to buy stuff is demand.The point is that buying goods and services that provide power, prestige and security is demand generation.
No, that's demand. Going out to buy stuff is demand.
That is a semantic issue. If you're so insistent on getting hung up on words why don't I instead say "the capitalist's actions have the effect of philanthropy". My argument stands all the same.
How can philanthropy be an effect, anyway? Literally, at least, it denotes a "love of other people", an orientation on the part of the philanthropist rather than a state of affairs that he brings about.
Literally speaking yes. Factually speaking, not always no. Someone who donates a lot of money - and kills people - would often be called a philanthropist anyway simple because that person is an important benefactor to "charities".
Literally speaking yes. Factually speaking, not always no. Someone who donates a lot of money - and kills people - would often be called a philanthropist anyway simple because that person is an important benefactor to "charities".
Meh, utopianism is for suckers.Though I regard him as more of a comedian than a serious thinker I'm quite familiar with Zizek's views on the issue and used his "chocolate laxative philanthropy" phrase jocularly in one recent thread. But the truth is, for all the creative thinking going on on the left, has a superior alternative to it even been devised?
hey Monsterzuma, I've just realised: your post is exactly why capitalism isn't philantropic. Nothing is done in the spirit of helping others according to your scheme, only in the spirit of profits. You even help someone only if they will be able to repay you.
Meh, utopianism is for suckers.