• mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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    6 months ago

    Okay, my response to that would be circling back to my earlier question about, when has it worked out that way? In what country has this been tried and had a good impact?

    I’m not trying to just keep asking over and over even though it seems like you don’t want to answer that question – so you can treat it as a rhetorical question, I guess. It’s just that that’s the way I look at things. As you said, if the theory doesn’t match the practice, then one or the other is wrong. I do think you have to look at the practice. In socialism or communism or capitalism, there are generally big elements of the practice that don’t match the theory.

    I didn’t say socialism was more prone to corruption than capitalism. I said that the USSR and China showed themselves way more prone to takeover by non-benevolent forces than the US. It wasn’t a general statement about socialism in general… probably, if you look back in history, you’ll be able to find examples of when socialism and communism were set up well and worked well. I mean, a lot of FDR’s things were socialism (big government programs to employ people, so that the “ownership” of the entity doing the production was a democratic government instead of private industry, and then providing health care to people according to their needs instead of what they can afford). And look, it was fuckin fantastic. But I’m asking you what elements or models you would like to use. It’s not a gotcha. I mean, I am kind of trying to make a point, yes. But also, partly, I’m genuinely asking, and you seem like you’re treating it as some kind of hostile or irrelevant question.

    It seems like you’re holding up the theory of communism, according to communists, and comparing it to the practice of capitalism. Of course capitalism’s gonna look way worse, because capitalism has some big problems. I am saying, we should look at the practice (and, sure, the theory) of both and find things that work and then do those things, and also see if we can improve on them, instead of only the theory. And in particular, I think that history shows that setting up a centrally-controlled economy, because then the ultimate-authority central planners can make sure everything’s set up fairly for everybody, has oftentimes worked out way worse than even the pretty significant evils of unchecked capitalism. Would you agree with that, or you think it didn’t happen that way?

    • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      In general, it has worked like that when it has been done. You already agreed that the USSR and PRC were vast improvements on their previous systems, even if they were highly flawed.

      Can you tell me what specifically you mean when you say Communist practice has not met the theory?

      I would personally say that the US was always more of a Capitalist dictatorship and was founded on state-endorsed genocide, it’s a settler-colonial project. I would say the USSR and PRC, though obviously not free from tragedy nor atrocity, were not founded in the same manner.

      I disagree with your analysis that central planning has worked out way worse than Capitalism, and want to know why you say that.

      • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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        6 months ago

        You already agreed that the USSR and PRC were vast improvements on their previous systems

        What? When did I say that? I didn’t say that.

        I think that the standard of living increased dramatically in both, as scientific advances that provide standard of living became more widely distributed worldwide, and I think their previous systems were pretty abysmal. But I think they chose the wrong model for how to centralize a strong government and create an economy that works for all their people – the benefit of any central planning that accelerated their industrialization was dwarfed by the nightmare of having a single strong central government that can kill millions of its people at the drop of a hat or throw them in prison for literally just a single sentence when they spoke the wrong thing.

        I don’t think that the fact that they came from feudalism and so therefore there were aspects of coming into the modern world and some form of modern government, that were good things, means that the model they chose was at all the right one, and I don’t think that’s a good argument for moving the US from its current state to a similar model.

        I disagree with your analysis that central planning has worked out way worse than Capitalism, and want to know why you say that.

        I didn’t say central planning has always worked out worse than capitalism. Like I said, a lot of FDR’s reforms were centrally planned, and they were great.

        The specific examples I brought up were how it’s worked in the only two huge countries like the US that have tried a fully communist economic model (and the central control of the country that necessarily seems like it goes along with it). What they got was gulags, cultural revolution, Tienanmen, great firewall of China, mass starvation in both countries (because of mismanagement, which is very very different from the earlier mass starvations that were caused by crop failures or war), modern Russia after the total unsustainability of the USSR system led to a total collapse, Uyghur re-education camps.

        Yes, the US does lesser versions of all of the above that are still to a level that’s horrifying. I think we should fix those things when the US does them. But I think treating those even worse outcomes as non-events, because in theory the system that produced them has some good features, is a mistake.

        • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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          6 months ago

          What? When did I say that? I didn’t say that.

          I think that the standard of living increased dramatically in both, as scientific advances that provide standard of living became more widely distributed worldwide, and I think their previous systems were pretty abysmal.

          What.

          the benefit of any central planning that accelerated their industrialization was dwarfed by the nightmare of having a single strong central government that can kill millions of its people at the drop of a hat or throw them in prison for literally just a single sentence when they spoke the wrong thing.

          The US did the same thing when it was industrializing, they just weren’t counted as citizens. Even at the peak of the USSR’s incarcerations, they were lower in number both per capita and in total than the US Prison system.

          I don’t think that the fact that they came from feudalism and so therefore there were aspects of coming into the modern world and some form of modern government, that were good things, means that the model they chose was at all the right one, and I don’t think that’s a good argument for moving the US from its current state to a similar model.

          Explain why you believe Capitalism would have been better. Secondly, I did not say the USSR is what the US should copy, I explained the issues with Capitalism and how Socialism solves them.

          The specific examples I brought up were how it’s worked in the only two huge countries like the US that have tried a fully communist economic model (and the central control of the country that necessarily seems like it goes along with it). What they got was gulags, cultural revolution, Tienanmen, great firewall of China, mass starvation in both countries (because of mismanagement, which is very very different from the earlier mass starvations that were caused by crop failures or war), modern Russia after the total unsustainability of the USSR system led to a total collapse, Uyghur re-education camps.

          And yet the US is worse.

          Yes, the US does lesser versions of all of the above that are still to a level that’s horrifying. I think we should fix those things when the US does them. But I think treating those even worse outcomes as non-events, because in theory the system that produced them has some good features, is a mistake.

          Explain why you believe the US did lesser versions of the above when they have been higher in total quantity and per Capita.

          This is just vibes, lol.

          • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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            6 months ago

            0.7% of the US population is in jail or prison, which is a shockingly high percentage unworthy of a modern wealthy country, and a testament to the barbaric nature of our system.

            The Gulag in 1950 housed 2.5 million people, after it received a huge influx of returning veterans whose only crime was having been exposed to the reality of the western world which the USSR didn’t want the population to be allowed to know about. They got sentences like 10 or 20 years. The total population of the USSR at the time was about 178 million, meaning the Gulag housed 1.4% of the population.

            And this was a type of imprisonment which was sadistic beyond the wildest wet dreams of Joe Arpaio or Stephen Miller. Of the 18 million people who ever interacted with the Gulag during its full implementation lifetime, almost 10% died there, or shortly after their release.

            Idk what’s going on at lemmy.ml to give you the picture of the world you have received, but they have done you a disservice. Idk dude. I tried.

            • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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              6 months ago

              Yes, so at the absolute peak of the Gulag system, right after an influx of imprisonment from returning POWs being imprisoned (which I never claimed to support), the US currently does not imprison as much. Wow, what a shocker!

              The vast bulk of deaths in gulags came from starving POWs after the Nazis invaded Ukraine, the USSR’s breadbasket. The reality is that just like American prisons, the USSR had vastly different conditions depending on severity of crime and location.

              All this digging and still not a single point about why the atrocities that happened in the USSR are necessary for Socialism or supported by Socialism. It’s clearly all vibes-based analysis from a lifetime of Anticommunist propaganda and an unwillingness to look at systems within the context of trajectory and as built upon from previous conditions.

              • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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                6 months ago

                Even at the peak of the USSR’s incarcerations, they were lower in number both per capita and in total than the US Prison system.

                This you?

                I’m honestly not fishing for a gotcha. I’m fishing to talk some sense into you.

                I think you’re making statements without caring whether they’re true (just basing them on whether they feel right to you), and shifting your definitions around, and refusing to clarify what you mean or the details of what you’re advocating. IDK, man, if me trying to pin you down on what you mean or poke holes in what you’re saying comes across as hostile, then I apologize. That’s just kind of my way of speaking sometimes.

                But overall, I think you have succumbed to this sort of groupthink that makes you think that things make sense when they don’t or when there are significant flaws in them. Now you’re falling back on accusing me of saying it has to play out like the USSR, when I said multiple times that it doesn’t, and I guess implying that I don’t like socialism when I listed some great socialist things already. I think you don’t want to “lose” the conversation and are just kind of twisting things around to be able to accuse me of being wrong.

                IDK man. Like I say, I tried. Good talk.

                • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                  6 months ago

                  It’s pretty clear by my wording that I was referring to when they were contemporaries, not the peak right after WWII to modern US, lol. Again, silliness.

                  I think you’re making statements without caring whether they’re true (just basing them on whether they feel right to you), and shifting your definitions around, and refusing to clarify what you mean or the details of what you’re advocating.

                  Here’s a mirror, lol. You haven’t answered my questions and constantly duck and weave.

                  Here, I’ll extend an olive branch. I can list several things, and you can tell me where you disagree.

                  Capitalism has the following flaws:

                  1. Ownership of Capital by individuals results in a class conflict between Workers and Owners, resulting in a tumultuous society

                  2. Production of commodities for profit rather than use results in products designed to make profits rather than fulfill uses, ie enshittification

                  3. Capitalism cannot exist forever because of the Tendency for the Rate of Profit to Fall, which leads to Imperialism and eventually fascism and collapse

                  • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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                    6 months ago

                    You haven’t answered my questions and constantly duck and weave.

                    Have I not answered questions? What haven’t I answered? I’m happy to go back and address things if you feel like I evaded something.

                    Here, I’ll extend an olive branch. I can list several things, and you can tell me where you disagree.

                    Capitalism has the following flaws:

                    Sure.

                    1. Ownership of Capital by individuals results in a class conflict between Workers and Owners, resulting in a tumultuous society

                    Agree

                    1. Production of commodities for profit rather than use results in products designed to make profits rather than fulfill uses, ie enshittification

                    Agree

                    1. Capitalism cannot exist forever because of the Tendency for the Rate of Profit to Fall, which leads to Imperialism and eventually fascism and collapse

                    I mean, a building can’t last forever because of its tendency to decay and fall apart, but then if you maintain it properly, it’s fine, for long enough to be useful.

                    I think this is the core of our disagreement: I would agree about the tendency, but not the inevitability. Like I said, I think that particular elements (strong labor unions and a strong-in-practice democratic government) can constrain capitalism to where it functions well and gives a good world to the people connected to it, but doesn’t take over and become a destructive force (as it is today to a large extent).

                    It sounds like you’re saying that the flaws are unfixable and so capitalism has to be rejected in order to make a good system. Which, I mean maybe, but in my mind that’s unproven.

                    It also sounds like you’re saying that because of these flaws, we need to replace capitalism specifically with communism or socialism and asserting that it’ll be better. Which again, I mean maybe, but it seems like you’re being consistently evasive about the details of what that would mean (either through details or a historical example), which makes it conveniently easy to hold up the theory of how wonderful it could be, against the actual reality of how capitalism is in practice, and assert that of course it would work better than capitalism in practice, because capitalism has these problems.

                  • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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                    6 months ago

                    It’s pretty clear by my wording that I was referring to when they were contemporaries, not the peak right after WWII to modern US, lol. Again, silliness.

                    Oh – and I’m really trying not to get caught up in this extended back-and-forth over individual details because super fine details are not the point, but saying the USSR’s incarcerations at their peak were lower than contemporary US imprisonment is even sillier. In 1940, the US had 0.2% of its people in prison, which is an actually-reasonable level for a decent country, and lower than the USSR’s before-WW2-fucked-the-demographics level of 0.7% (1.5 million in prison out of 194 million people), which is equal to the US’s peak of 0.7% and lower than its current level (I was wrong - it’s dropped to 0.5% now, which is still of course way too much).

                    The skyrocketing of prison population from 0.2% to 0.7% happened pretty quickly, from 1980 to 2008, under the great neoliberal enfuckening of the country that was the end of the millennium. It’s been going back down, slightly, since then.

                    I would like the system in the US to be back again more like the one that had the 0.2% that had lasted for 204 years up until that point, and work from there to make more justice at home and abroad. You could say that Reagan and Clinton are inevitable final stages of the system that no amount of safeguard can prevent, and there’s no way to improve it within its parameters. I mean, maybe. But I still think it’s reasonable to ask, okay even in that case what is the system we will do instead, that will prevent Reagan or Clinton from being replaced with a new Stalin (or, because of lukewarm support for the liberals from “pure” leftists, a Trump – which is exactly how it happened in pre-Nazi Germany that led to Hitler) who will then make the days of “welfare to work” and 0.7% in prison look like wonderful happy days.