My defense of capitalism is more limited than stating that it is or ought be an end-of-history scenario. I'm stating that it has proven itself to be more productive than planned systems, and that it ought not be abandoned unless we can demonstrate a superior system.
That's fair. But, as I said, it's naive to think that this sort of deep social change occurs because people have decided that it should, that one system supplants another because it is a Good Idea, and that a majority have been won to that opinion. That's never how it's worked in the past; mostly, change happens, and then people convinced themselves it's a Good Idea after all, and even then a lot of them will still keep insisting that it's a Bad Idea, perhaps a majority, but the change remains, because history doesn't work in reverse.
Necessity, they say, is the mother of invention, and I tend to think that the same applies to human societies as much as steam engines or microprocessors. The question is not whether Atlantis can stand another few golden spires, but whether we notice the waves on the horizon.
Furthermore, I also believe that capitalism can be made amenable to leftist goals, so it is an asset more than an impediment.
And they call
me the utopian.
"Why don't you people have any have constructive ideas?"
"We have lots."
"So you start implementing your idea in your own life and prove it's feasible."
"Well I can't be bothered with that, it's too inconvenient/unrealistic."
"I see... well I agree, me neither."
Consider, alternatively,
"Why don't you people have any have constructive ideas?"
"We have lots."
"So you start implementing your idea
in your own life and prove it's feasible."
"We do not have access to the means or resources to implement these ideas, except through large-scale collective action."
And that, in my experience, is more usually how this sort of discussion flows.
That's not what I said at all though. But hey, whatever makes you feel better about yourself...
It's an interpretation. You should give yourself enough credit to believe that you posts have enough substance to allow that.
It's not good enough to have great ideas. Ton of great ideas are floating around, vote on beliefs, but implement betting markets for methods. How do you put the policy into place, realistically? For example, majority would prefer single-payer in the US, but when you add the qualifier that taxes would have to be raised, support drops like a rock.
I actually agree with that: as I said up-thread, change tends to happen despite human planning, not because of it. My point was only that the qualifier "realistic" is essentially a way of the speaker granting himself an absolute veto on other people's opinions, hardly conductive to the sort of free and open debate we all pretend to be very much in favour of.
Given the progress that has been made in the last, say, century, this strikes me as at least a superficially dubious statement. Does it find any empirical support?
Most of that progress was made between 1945 and 1960, and 1935 and 1970 at the most generous, in the space of a generation or two, and much of it is now being undone in the name of economic rationality. That's not to deny that the progress occurred, or that progress may occur in future, but it is to say that progress is not an inherent feature of the system, simply a thing that may occur in some circumstances.
Citations would be helpful. I'm doubtful communism was more successful, considering massive technology theft was priority of the KGB throughout its history and MSS today in China.
The Soviets were hardly the first people to practice industrial espionage. Savvy operators always take the path of least resistance, it's simply that in a system of effective patent laws- and if the West is ineffective, it is in being overzealous- the path of least resistance is often finding another way to the same problem. The Soviets and the Chinese did not find themselves so burdened and, dutiful students of Western capitalism, took every shortcut available.
Marxist-Leninists may have propounded the virtues of hard work for hard works' sake, but that doesn't that it's true, or that the leadership was dumb enough to believe it.