Cheezy the Wiz
Socialist In A Hurry
The kibbutzim are dying out. People don't choose to live in them any longer. The other, you say they have to have individual rewards instead of community rewards. I don't see a refutation of my point here.
Well community rewards are individual rewards. What matters is making them feel like individual rewards. It doesn't even have to be a lot, merely enough to make someone feel as if they've gotten back what they put into it. I don't see why something like communal farming is inherently lacking in that department. For something like a kolkhoz, where the "collective" nature of it is not really evident (a place where the above "return" I described very seldomly happened), yeah, you might be able to choke their comparative lack of productivity up to not receiving enough of a reward for their efforts to feel worth it - most of their product went very far away and didn't sell for much, despite the shortage of things. But for your example of Plymouth colony, I can't help but feel that there is something external or unsaid that influenced that moved them to change their habits, or that influenced their harvest. The benefits of their work would have been readily at-hand, not sent off a thousand miles to be part of some giant food basket that the whole country took from. I mean, communal work is nothing new, the Amish have been doing it for centuries, as did most frontier towns.
As for the kibbutzim, people are leaving them for a variety of reasons, none of which constitute a failure on their part as communities. Not only were they driven by socialist motives, but also religious and social ones (the kibbutzim were historically the first line of defense against fedayeen attacks after independence, as well as their incredibly prominent role in 1947-8), and by the early '80s neither of those was particularly necessary for Israel. Also, kibbutzim were driven by the frontier mentality characteristic of early Zionism; they were founded by settlers in a world far away from their own, you didn't find these Lithuanian and Spanish Jews forming these kibbutzim in their home countries.
Because they can. They get the work they pay for. And if their workers are desperate enough, maybe a little more.
So they knowingly reduce the productivity of their workforce?
Many employees do make enough. But it depends on the skills and the demand for the skills.
Above you just said that they don't.
And no, some make enough. Most don't. Most don't make enough to afford health insurance or put their children through college. Most of those most probably even struggled to make rent this month.
Is there a large volume of well-paid, affluent people? Absolutely. Are they anything approaching a majority? Most certainly not.
I'm not debating the morality or justice of your cause. Only whether or not it will actually work. You have to show me it working. Because I just don't believe it.
Capitalism was once unproven as well. I don't know that socialism will work. But I do know that capitalism is evil enough to give socialism a fair shot, and that things cannot continue on like this. Not for people like me.