Rossiya
Fridge Magnet Porn
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2006
- Messages
- 6,981
Could someone just explain this to me, please?
It's unAmerican.
Could someone just explain this to me, please?
But I like your verbose.Wall of Text hits you for 235 points of damage. You die.
I'll never be accused of being the most verbose again.
Socialism may be more efficient than capitalism. Capitalism is sociologically fragile and it's sociologically fragile because it is so economically successful. Change is the only constant in the evolution of capitalist economies which doesn't always make it pretty or admirable. Fact is, capitalism might take your job. Someone, somewhere, is always trying to think of a way to do the job better. It's true, capitalism is a Darwinian process because of its constant change and innovation.BakingTheArt said:Can someone tell me why Socialism is so bad?
The answer was right in front of you the whole time. The system you described in the OP already exists. It exists in most of the Free World--and it goes by the name "capitalism".Why would a government that we directly control be worse than entrusting the important services we depend on, such as water, national security, health care electricity, even education in some cases, to private sector companies that we have no control over
Well, at least you're half rightSurely we've learned by now that extremes are ********, and that the best solution is usually a compromise between two extreme views (such as extreme capitalism and extreme socialism)
Surely we've learned by now that extremes are ********, and that the best solution is usually a compromise between two extreme views (such as extreme capitalism and extreme socialism)
The answer was right in front of you the whole time. The system you described in the OP already exists. It exists in most of the Free World--and it goes by the name "capitalism".
What are the things avowed socialists are looking for? First and foremost, to put money and production power in the hands of the common people. Well, if you give them that power, then anybody who can gather the needed resources can start a new company any time they like. Guess what, that's exactly how most companies in the Free World got started. Socialists want companies to be answerable to the People--guess what (there's those words again)--companies are already answerable to the People. In order to make a profit, they have to produce stuff the People actually want. So, if you're wondering why companies are they way they are today, go look in a mirror. And, finally, some socialists want the People to have direct top-level control over corporate decisions. That's never going to happen. Most people are idiots and have no idea how to run a company. Put the executive decisions in the hands of the voters and most companies will go under a lot faster than the Big Three auto manufacturers did.
Fact is, modern capitalism is about as close to socialism as the world is ever going to get. Feel free to cry now.
The answer was right in front of you the whole time. The system you described in the OP already exists. It exists in most of the Free World--and it goes by the name "capitalism".
What are the things avowed socialists are looking for? First and foremost, to put money and production power in the hands of the common people. Well, if you give them that power, then anybody who can gather the needed resources can start a new company any time they like. Guess what, that's exactly how most companies in the Free World got started.
Socialists want companies to be answerable to the People--guess what (there's those words again)--companies are already answerable to the People. In order to make a profit, they have to produce stuff the People actually want.
So, if you're wondering why companies are they way they are today, go look in a mirror. And, finally, some socialists want the People to have direct top-level control over corporate decisions.
That's never going to happen. Most people are idiots and have no idea how to run a company.Put the executive decisions in the hands of the voters and most companies will go under a lot faster than the Big Three auto manufacturers did.
Fact is, modern capitalism is about as close to socialism as the world is ever going to get. Feel free to cry now.
@Hsinchu Have you ever been in a position where you needed financial aid while looking for a job, or else:
- you wouldn't be able to feed your family
- you wouldn't be able to pay arent
Yeah.. I didn't think so..
This, and the fact that capitalism requires the customers to have perfect knowledge of the whole market (which is simply impossible), is something that is quite obvious, but seems to escape the grasp of just so many people - hence why we constantly have the same repetition of the same false arguments over and over and over...Pure socialism (commonly known as Communism) while a great idea in theory, is about as good in practice as pure capitalism (another great in theory idea), because of the one factor that the majority of economists seem unable to grasp, i.e. people are people not automatons who automatically make the most logical choice available to them .
At any rate, no, we want workers' control of the means of production. We want companies to be accountable to their own workers in a meaningful way.
Wrong. We want top-level corporate jobs to dissapear.
Surely we've learned by now that extremes are ********, and that the best solution is usually a compromise between two extreme views (such as extreme capitalism and extreme socialism)
But I like your verbose.
Anyhow, here's my view of this...
Socialism may be more efficient than capitalism. Capitalism is sociologically fragile and it's sociologically fragile because it is so economically successful. Change is the only constant in the evolution of capitalist economies which doesn't always make it pretty or admirable. Fact is, capitalism might take your job. Someone, somewhere, is always trying to think of a way to do the job better. It's true, capitalism is a Darwinian process because of its constant change and innovation.
So if you're inspired by the Marxian theory of value, where all surplus value (profit) is said to come from labor and where labor is the factor of production that should have the most say in management decisions then it's for you. Bear in mind, this idea is removed from the idea that the innovator is important in the economy. The entrepreneur who takes responsibility for and making judgment decisions that affect the process, cost-benefit, risk, location, services, institutions they deal with along with form and use of goods and resources.
On the other hand, if you believe that the economy is in a constant flux of change and innovation, profit, in contrast to Marx and his theory, is not surplus value stolen from the workers. Quite the contrary, it is the only source of jobs for workers and of income. Remember, the entrepreneur must ask how much profit he must maintain to keep your job when someone else is knocking down the door trying to get in.
So as soon as we shift from the thinking of an unchanging, self-contained, closed economy (in a Marxist and classical sense) to a dynamic, growing, moving, changing economy, what is called profit becomes a moral imperative of the entrepreneur because it has now become the cost to survive. Micro is more important than the macro.
Then again maybe that's not for you.
History has not been kind to socialism whether it was the Eastern European version or Swedish social democracy version leading up to the late 70's and 80s that very nearly became full blown socialism (What's really interesting during that timeframe is to see how the Wallenberg family took advantage of those policies) but I would never discount it.
99.9999999 per cent of profit is going to be generated by those who have capital as the have the means of production.
Certainly ordinary people have success in modern society, to varying degrees, whether it be home owning or some industrial success but this may be built upon sound education, health, social stability all of which are vectors of social ownership.