Cheezy the Wiz said:Assuming, of course, that your individual aspiration is not subjugation or exploitation of others.
And if it were?

Cheezy the Wiz said:Assuming, of course, that your individual aspiration is not subjugation or exploitation of others.
On the contrary; it would empower you to. Assuming, of course, that your individual aspiration is not subjugation or exploitation of others.
And if it were?![]()
So everyone is rewarded in proportion to their ability?
What if I wanted to go travelling? Do you think the government would keep foreign currency to hand out, or does everyone get access to a communal bank account and a credit card?
And if my chosen profession was creative, like writing or something, they wouldn't stop me pursuing that? Since it forces me to be dependant on them for materials like paper, would they still let me do that if my work was critical of the government and the system?
And if my dream was to emigrate and live in a different society, how much cash would I be given to set myself up there?
And if I wanted to vote for a individualist political party, I could do that to?
As Cheezy already stated, both a socialist and a communist society would allow more people to a larger degree to realize their potential and cultivate their talents.Would a communist government prevent me from following my own goals and individual aspirations in life?
Then you had to either channel your ambitions and talents towards something more constructive or move to a more primitive (read: capitalist) society.And if it were?![]()
Everyone would be rewarded according to the quality and quantity of their work.So everyone is rewarded in proportion to their ability?
If you wanted to travel, buy a ticket at a traveling agency. As for foreign currency, you get that the normal way also, by exchanging your own in an approriate place.What if I wanted to go travelling? Do you think the government would keep foreign currency to hand out, or does everyone get access to a communal bank account and a credit card?
And if my chosen profession was creative, like writing or something, they wouldn't stop me pursuing that?
Yes.Since it forces me to be dependant on them for materials like paper, would they still let me do that if my work was critical of the government and the system?
Nothing.And if my dream was to emigrate and live in a different society, how much cash would I be given to set myself up there?
Provided such a party existed, why not?And if I wanted to vote for a individualist political party, I could do that to?
Do you still believe in the LTV and the exploitation theory?
Of course I already know the answers but Im interested in reading your responses.
What does a communist in your style believe about censorship of media not for political but "moral" reasons?
Everything goes back to labour. Whether or not there are other components to a given price (a price for a certain thing, at a certain time) can be argued about - circumstances distort prices, granted. But for the aggregate production of society, labour is the one source of (trade) value.
Everything else which may have use value, notably what is available in nature but requires no labour to obtain (air!), has no trade value. It's not scarcity, it's the difficulty to obtain those things - in other words, the labour necessary - which gives value to things. Scarcity of some well known vales is enforced by making them hard to get at - that's why gold tends to be guarded by people with guns, inside vaults: to make it harder - more labour-intensive - to get.
Classical economics are not very popular right now in mainstream economics at least for the last 150 years, I would prefer to read neoclassical economists.That's what all property is about. And this isn't even a "red" point of view... go read your Adam Smith, or Ricardo, the great liberal of the 19th century.
You have any proof of that?There was one, and only one, reason why liberals annouced the death of their own LTV: because a german guy sitting on a library made it politically inconvenient. The "marginalist revolution", standardized with Marshall's works, tried to deny the link between labour and value, only to produce a towering heap of wrong assumptions and dysfunctional theories with no relation with reality whatsoever.
Even the apparent local logic of marginal utility (within a theory of the firm it might be of some use) has been made obsolete by the nature of the firm tin the 20th century (the public corporation has goals different from those of the simple private enterprise, as we're seeing from the apparently irrational behavior or many large corporations in recent years).
Look at the way productivity grew, at at the regular disconnect between productivity in quantity or quality, and in value. The first increases constantly as a result of technical improvements (some would call that capital investment, but it's not necessarily always so); the second tends to hold steady - in other words, as we increase production we lower prices. Why? Because the labour involved is the same! Because to close the economic cycle whatever is produced must be bought and costumed, by the very same people doing the production. Capital gets recycled, it's an important local variable, not a global one. Labour is the steady input (the single input, as technology is also a product of labour, but the way it's introduced does causes some jumps) into the economic system.
It's funny that people like Milton Friedman, for example, would establish a link between wages and prices (through inflation) but deliberately ignore the other half of the cycle (the necessity of wages accompanying prices). And that second half is so obvious that economists have even created other ways to measure their fancy "GDP" - the PPP - to account for the fact that wages (which is to say labour) and prices are indissociable.
Oh, really? A mind reader, are you? I'd like to see you prove your foreknowledge in a scientific manner!
I don't have the time or the inclination to spend pages here demonstrating
Thats pretty much what I expected![]()
As for other art movements, it depends of the quality.What do you think of socialist realism?
You might want to work on your attitude.Do you still believe in the LTV and the exploitation theory? Yes.
Do you support or denounce the CCCP? Support.
Can you prove to me in a scientific manner how to calculate the surplus value? No.
What is your answer to the calculation problem in socialism? It is irrelevant.
How does a socialist state "wither" to communism? I don't know.
Are you for the state or against the state? It depends on the situation.
Of course I already know the answers but Im interested in reading your responses.Why?
I don't believe in censorship at all, I just see it as a necessary means in certain situations.What does a communist in your style believe about censorship of media not for political but "moral" reasons?
So if I decide to become a programmer and write a revolutionary new word processing program and sell it for $20 apiece, I get to keep all that money?On the contrary; it would empower you to. Assuming, of course, that your individual aspiration is not subjugation or exploitation of others.
If it only was that simple...I hope it doesn't come to closure; for a more 'fair' 'discussion, one can always start a thread of their own.
If it only was that simple...
Sorry, but my activity on this thread is finished.
If Cheezy and others want to continue it, they are free to do so, otherwise I will request it closed.
Curiouser and curioser.
Now we even have a silk thug who are unable to distinguish between a board and a thread.If he had bothered to read the OP he would have seen that it is exactly my bloody, exclusive right to decide who answers in this particular thread.
I just guess some countries have worse educational systems than others...
It is a real pleasure to report this one.![]()