innonimatu
the resident Cassandra
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2006
- Messages
- 15,338
As for the redistribution of wealth... I don't believe everyone has to have the same for everyone to have enough. While I can see some redistribution being useful to help those who can't help themselves, I see any further interference as completely unnecessary, and a violation of individual rights.
But what individual rights are these? The right to hold property? But that's a social right, it depends on the existence of a society that accepts and enforces private property. Just as communism depends on a society that accepts and enforces the sharing of "property".
I know opponents of collectivism are often painted as greedy capitalists, but the truth is, we are more than happy to share with our friends and loved ones, and frequently do. I don't drink, but if I'm out with friends I still buy a round. Its having the choice taken away that doesn't really sit well with a lot of us.
The choice of whether to share? But I can and will now argue that I dislike having the choice to freely use any piece of "property" taken away. Property can be seen as an enabler of choice, or as a limitation on choice. There you go: property can indeed be theft, depending on people's expectations. Either system takes away choices.
Having your own personal finances also gives you more control over your life. I'm trying not to bring up the efficiency argument, but I do believe individuals are better able to decide what they need. Its the freedom to make those choices that makes life interesting. They make the difference between living and existing.
I don't want rations, or an equal share of the food the government thinks I should have. I might not like certain things, and I might like certain things more. I might eat less than someone else, or more because I do more physical activity. Luckily I don't require a special diet like some people, though I do avoid meat if i can (I'm not a proper veggie though).
I also dislike government control over people's lives. But I cannot ignore hat in the absence of government control there are still many other forms of control constraining my actions. Absolute freedom is impossible. "Communism" as it became understood proposed to use government control as a "temporary" (and no one ever explained how that would be ended) measure to remove several other constraints over people's lives. Unfortunately for the people who lived under that particular incarnation of socialism government control turned out to be neither temporary nor, perhaps, "lighter" than what it claimed to replace.
Money is only a means of exchange. By having your own money, and deciding how to spend it, you can make great changes to your lifestyle very quickly, in order to put funds where you want them. I don't care if I can have an equal share in a cabbage factory. I don't like cabbages. Or factories.
Unfortunately money tends to be hard to come by for the average individual. And once the principle of private ownership is enshrined (as economists supportive of the "Coase theorem" defend it should) and the trade economy established everyone must obey the rules of money (actually, those of property). Those tend to be dictated by the people who hold most of it - they will be another form of constraint on people.
One thing I wonder about is how a collectivist society would cope with people travelling abroad? What will they do when they get there if they don't have money to take? How will society fund the trips, and what rules would govern where people could go, and for how long? I can't see the government giving everyone a free cruise every year.
That is an old problem. Money, of course, is just an exchange medium, and collectivist societies do not necessarily expect it (or trade!) to be abolished. Most just defend that concentration of wealth should be strictly limited, and that some of the current forms of property should not be allowed. Would the modern world be conceivable without the modern corporation, or without publicly traded companies? What could possibly replace these institutions with others, without reducing "social welfare" (or, in a more modest but not any more measurable version, without losing "efficiency")?
These are some of the important questions. And there are plenty of answers. Many were never tried on a scale that would allow them to be judged. The power of the state usually defeats all other forces in a modern society, sometimes lending its weight to oligarchies disguised as democracies, sometimes to tyrannies disguised as socialism. The oligarchies, because they're usually more fluid, tend to be preferable - democracy and competition within elites, and between these and rising outsiders, can still impose some moderation. Tyrannies depend on the character of the people in power, and even if they start with "good principles", they can more easily betray them.
The big question, however, is: can the power of the state be reduced in a modern society, without causing that society to break down into violent anarchy? Find some way to make a positive answer possible and we can try many different social models.
Anyway, if you want communism to work, you need support. Right now in the west you don't have it, and its not just because of anti-communist propaganda. No matter how warped the systems were in the soviet union or wherever, they're the only examples that people have to go on.
If you want to convince people to throw out a system they are used to and feel secure in, you need to show them that your alternative can work. People aren't going to be happy when you tell them "its never been tried".
No, actually you were right in the previous paragraph: you only need superior propaganda in order to win.
The only way I think you could do it is to build a community yourself, with some buddies. Not only do you have to make it successful, you have to show you can operate it while respecting people's rights (I appreciate that you mentioned this yourself).
No, it won't work, because you cannot escape the state (and its propaganda). Any such attempt will fail.
Only very motivated people would insist on trying to "break away" from mainstream society in such a way, and in some pasts attempts that motivation led to insanity and spectacular failures.
One thing the communists apparently did get right was their conclusion that breaking away from the "bourgois" system could only be done by taking over the state and imposing a new system, by violent means whenever necessary.
Can democracy lead to a similar shift? Perhaps, some experiences that were cut short by coups and other violent reactions might have led to it. But the existence of those coups in fact seems to prove the communist's conclusion that violence would be necessary...
Perhaps this is something you can look into. Try running an online MMORPG with a collectivist system. See if you get people interested in it, and see if you can keep the system working without too much interference and "cheating" by programming solutions around its problems.
An interesting proposal, especially coming as it does during the fight over whether "intellectual property" should or should not be allowed.
But online collectivist systems have been shown to work quite well already, not in MMORPGs (that might be a bad choice, as RPGs traditionally included the accumulation of loot as one of the possible goals) but in the "real world" of software development.
Of course, the "online world" has had the advantage of being mostly free from the state's weight... so far! The laws over "intellectual property" are seeing to it that this realm too is brought firmly under state supervision.
Which only shows, once again, that property is anything but natural: it is a product of laws, ultimately enforced by the state.