Protestation
Protestation
Protestation
Excerpt is from Why Socialism?
Maybe this is a good place to ask this, as I always think about it. I am all in favor of abolishing this nightmare of late stage capitalism and coporate ownership of government. However, how do you explain that any other form wont take away from those of us who are (admittedly lucky) home/land owners, that actually are sitting fine ? Those people don't want to give up what they have so someone in an apartment can have more. Think of it this way: you have an acre of land you worked for, it wasn't given. Someone else has a 2 bedroom apartment they also worked for. For reason (either laziness, or unfortunately events) the apartment owner can't save enough for a house/land. Maybe their mental capability is maxed out (be honest, we know people like this) and they can't get more schooling etc. Under a socialist system, it seems like anyone with their house/land would be forced to give it up and live in blocs of apartments, which no one I know actually wants. This is just one example. But it's something that I feel like will always hold the US back from socialism, because those that currently have "the dream" don't want it to be taken. Now, people living in shacks that vote for Musk because the immigrants will take their jerbs, those people are idiots. But I'm talking about people who work full time and are decently well off, probably have a decent amount in stocks etc. Those people don't want corporations destroying us, but they also don't want full socialism.
There are a few important things, here.
If you want an intro Marxist-Leninist reading list, I have one here.
This is part of the myth of scarcity. There is currently already enough housing for everyone. It's capitalism that's keeping people out of it.
Many of these places have been left to rot by landlords that would rather let them sit empty than charge an affordable rent, or perform necessary maintenance. A big part of housing everyone would be using reallocated resources to refurbish dilapidated properties. That's why we want to tax the rich
I agree. I still think regular peiple would view that as "the government stealing their property" though. For example i know a few people who buy places and fix them up to rent out. Are you saying they should get their properties taken away?
If you're only referring to billionaires and corporations buying housing, i agree. But if any laws were put into place, we know how it always goes, it would only affect those regular Joe's renting properties, and theyd further hate the government for too much regulation. I see no way to possibly stop the rich from buying all housing.
I am personally weary of centralized planning, I think small scale cooperatives are the way to go instead of big corporations. With more centralized authority for things that require it, like law enforcement.
If we are to take Marx's word for it, the advancement of industry necessitates its increasing scale, which necessitates increasing complexity and planning. Markets in every economy gradually centralize themselves over time, and since we cannot "freeze" an economy in time, we can't expect the cooperatives to remain small forever.
Rather than fight centralization, we should study how it works and how we can best make it work in the favor of all.
Also, enormous monopolistic companies are centrally planned themselves. Companies like Walmart and Amazon have internal economies the size of some national economies, and their employees, teams, and departments aren't buying and selling resources amongst themselves -- the allocation of these resources is planned.
Attempting to run the internal operations of a large company like the free market was actually what killed Sears:
Lampert intended to use Sears as a grand free market experiment to show that the invisible hand would outperform the central planning typical of any firm.
He radically restructured operations, splitting the company into thirty, and later forty, different units that were to compete against each other. Instead of cooperating, as in a normal firm, divisions such as apparel, tools, appliances, human resources, IT and branding were now in essence to operate as autonomous businesses, each with their own president, board of directors, chief marketing officer and statement of profit or loss. An eye-popping 2013 series of interviews by Bloomberg Businessweek investigative journalist Mina Kimes with some forty former executives described Lampert’s Randian calculus: “If the company’s leaders were told to act selfishly, he argued, they would run their divisions in a rational manner, boosting overall performance.”
Anyone who's worked at a large company could tell you that the plans they make aren't flawless, but central planning at scale is not some scary untested idea, or a disproven relic of the past. It's happening right now in large swaths of major industries.
The “small scale” part of my comment is a bit of an overstatement. Perhaps I should have said “smallest practical scale”.
I believe mostly in letting people make choices for themselves, which I think is best served by having organisations at a size where an individual voice has the opportunity to make a difference.
This can be achieved in many different ways, including having partially independent subdivisions within large scale organizations.
One of the (many) failings of the USSR was, at least for a long time at the start, insufficient flexibility and reactivity to local issues. But thinking about it, maybe this isn’t a good reason to think ill of centralized planning. The USSR had incompetent centralized planning (especially in the agricultural sector in the earlier days), the failures and famines could be argued to me more due to the incompetence than to core attributes of centralized planning.
Marx never had a computer.
His world view was based on the world he saw, a world that has vanished.