Comments by "King Orange" (@kingorange7739) on "Hitler's Socialism | Destroying the Denialist Counter Arguments" video.
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@stormyprawn Thank you for your counter argument and unlike some people, know how to keep it respectful.
"I'll explain my analogy to show where you're wrong." - U may proceed.
"Some cars truly aren't designed to drive on the road, there's some that can go off-road and on road but most are designed primarily to go on road." - Ok does not mean the car is required for the road to still be a car. So if Hitler's socialism "can go off the road," then it could still be considered socialism.
"So too does socialism mean different things to different people." - That we can agree on, unfortunately socialism's definition has been distorted so badly that often people can't even come to a proper consensus on what it even means. However since I pulled most of my definitions from Oxford, I figured it was only appropriate to do the same for socialism definition which is the only definition that can apply for all its variants, or at least most.
Socialism: "a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole."
"Generally speaking however, the socialism described by Marx actually was about the worker and shifting power to them." - True which is why neither I nor Tik argue its Marxism. Just because National Socialists were socialists does not mean they were or even allied with Marxists.
"The different sects of socialism describe the worker's control over the means of productions in different ways." - There are some that do, however you have to remember, socialism predates Marxism. Pre Marx socialism had variants that were not about the workers at all but rather ensuring communal control as a whole, worker or not. In fact, socialism's overarching origin can be dated even all the way back to politicians in the Roman Empire. And none of them so much as mentioned concepts as worker or class.
"Some point to the state to control the economy as a representative of the workers (though I would scarcely call the Soviet Union, China and other examples as socialist)." - I mean they are failed socialists. And highlights one of socialism's fundamental flaws, but ur points still stand.
"Most modern day socialists and some socialists in history believe in workplace democracy where the workers directly control their workplace." - Which no one is denying, however even as you yourself have admitted, not all of them did. If u want to come out and say that Hitler wasn't truly about the worker, I would agree with u. But frankly neither were many variants of socialism including many Marxist states. I doubt the Soviet Union under Stalin was really doing things in the worker's best interests, considering how many he murdered or starved.
"Saying that socialism is just "state control of the means of productions" has so many layers of misunderstanding baked into it." - Which is why I don't define it as that. Its defined as Communal control. The state is just the extension of said community and technically represents them.
"It's like a black-and-white understanding of politics and history with no nuance whatsoever." - I will agree to that to an extent, however socialism again, has been distorted in definitions throughout history so many times, that you kinda almost have no choice but to oversimplify it. Otherwise there would be no definition anyone could agree on.
"Hell, look at the leftist anarchist movement: they hate state control! Their entire ideology revolves around dismantling the state! Yet they still describe themselves as socialist." - True, however looking at it from an objective standpoint, anarcho socialism is oxymoronic. How are they suppose to ensure socialism if the state does not exist? Its not like the power would come down to individuals since socialism is inherently about collectives and communities. So, to that extent, they propose decentralized structures, but the end result would only be many mini states, with states you cannot have anarchy but without it u cannot have socialism.
"Or what about people organising in trade unions? (though unions don't need to specifically be made up by leftists, labour organising as a concept is a predominantly leftist idea and it's applications often lead to leftist activism)." - True but not all unionists are socialists. Unionists while at times allied with socialists, are not automatically socialists themselves considering that not all of them want to get rid of capitalism. They just work together as workers to get better work conditions and of course an owner is more likely to listen when almost your entire workforce is speaking rather than just one.
"They don't need or want the state to control them, there's several cases of the state attempting (successfully of unsuccessfully) of crushing unions." - True, but not all states are socialist nations.
"The Soviet Union basically neutered its trade unions because they often opposed the centralisation, central planning policies, collectivisation, etc." - True, which furthers my point. Why is it when Hitler does it, people are like "see this is proof he wasn't a socialist," but they are so quick to retract when Lenin or Stalin does it. Of course you do have some people that are delusional enough to say "that was not "real socialism" either." This is where the "State Capitalism" fallacy quickly takes surface which has often devolved into shifting blame to the other side of the economic spectrum for socialism's own failings. I do appreciate your attempted counter arguments, you did present them well, and I appreciate that you kept things respectful. That becomes more rare by the second, but I do feel your arguments are suffering problems on two fronts.
A. I did not define socialism as exclusively state control. Yes state control is one form, but its not the only.
B. Your emphases on workers shows me that you are subscribing too much to Marxist definition, yes, while some variants of socialism are very much about the workers. Not all of them are, and especially in Pre Marx Socialism, it was not emphasized anywhere near to the same degree it is now. In fact variants full on rejected worker's concept. I would argue Hitler was one of those people. He did lie about being part of the workers, and trying to help them. When in reality, Hitler's communal control was never going to be through the workers, but instead through the state and race. However, that does not debunk Hitler as a socialist. It only means he wasn't a Marxist or Social Democrat.
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"But he hated socialists and communists and had them murdered in large numbers," - Communists were Marxists who he already explained. Being a socialist does not mean ur going to like every variant. Monarchs killed other monarchs, capitalists killed other capitalists. Does that invalidate them too? As for socialism, look at the 04:08:00 section.
"before he even came to power." - He hated marxists who he viewed as part of the Jewish conspiracy.
"He believed in the state above all else, not any sense of collectivism. How can you ignore that?" - Because your failing to understand that the state is a collective. There is no such thing as a one man state. States are the public sector, the ruling community of the nation.
"That is why he is a Fascist." - Except he isn't. Strongly suggest looking up the real definition of fascism as described by Gentile and Mussolini.
"He abandoned Socialism in prison while he wrote Mein Kampf." - According to what? Mein Kampf itself advocates him as a socialist. So clearly that statement holds no truth.
"Is it possible to try to understand history without coming at it from either an anti-socialism or anti-capitalism viewpoint?" - Both yes and no. History is always going to have biases, the main thing is to look into definitions and be able to see how much the evidence favors?
"Can we not do that anymore?" - Depends who u ask. At the end of the day TIK maybe bias, and there are many parts of his views I disagree with, however none of this is going to stop until people at the very least understand that the Nazis were not this far right thing. They were at the very least in the center with stronger leanings to the left when we look at it on how much political and economic control they had.
"I have no need for him to be or not be a socialist." - Ok, then if he is a socialist, why would u have a problem with that?
"I would just like the historical facts to be put forward without ideological bias." - Every person has ideological biases. The best way to get closer to the truth is to make those clear when describing and interpreting the evidence and come to your own conclusion.
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@zekeybeats2927 "do you have any idea of how beneficial UKs socialism, or any of commonwealth countries socialist agenda is for the citizens? If you are in the states you live with private jails, private health care, in a system that resembles slavery. In social democracies when COVID comes the government takes it upon themselves to make sure the displaced underpaid labour force is paid MORE to stay home than minimum wage, which for me in some places in my country is barely enough to afford basic living costs?" - Dude this is not even an argument. Ur doing what abouts. this has nothing to do with the discussion here. I stated it before and I will say it again, I do not care if u think socialism is beneficial or not. Its not relevant to this argument.
"The only people who like capitalism are gung ho middle class idiots who just like to shit on people poorer than them while creating a class of elite that will dictate policy (and from a capitalistic point of view don’t blame them) with Cold War jitters handed down from their slave family who help keep the majority of people from ever experiencing any political system based on its textbook ideology ." - Dude, ur once again doing the zealotry type connotations I warned u about. Again ur projecting a personal stake which will not get u anywhere in a debate.
"Socialism is the workers owning the means of production." - That is not the definition. Ur defining Marxism, not socialism as a whole.
"Co ops. Nothing that takes out the private nature of ownership or owning a business. I just finished listening to this guy try and imply socialism is a right wing(totalitarian), left wing, private, public, facist system." - Dude totalitarianism has nothing to do with right wing. Stalin was also a totalitarian.
"Socialism is overseen by government to avoid free markets(where one ceo gets paid more than. 300 minimum wage labourers)
It’s meant for you to own more of your surplus. That’s it. Is anyone convinced any system is not “state?” Inherently? Do we think that North American capitalist democracy does anything more than allow public officials, democratically voted in then use private capitalist funds to drive whatever narrative your lobby wants to push? - Again this is not relevant to ur argument. Dude I can only say the same stuff so many times. I don't care what ur opinion of socialism and capitalism are. that has nothing to do with the video. TIK literally has debunked people like u near the end of his video. Again I would suggest watching the full video and then coming to a conclusion ur self. But maybe try using a bit more of an open mind.
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@DeathRayGraphics "Hold on... the "owner's" money? That is a very tenuous concept any way you look at it. In the first place, the owner's so-called money is often a line of credit or a bank loan-- not really "his" in the most real sense." - In the context of investment, it is his money. The point of that is he or she is taking the risk within opening of the business. If the business goes out, the employees simply find a new job, however the owner is stuck having to pay that debt off either way. That is part of the risk.
"However, to the extent that the owner has a large pool of cash of his own, did he not make much of it exactly how I described: by not compensating his workers for the full measure of their productivity?" - The full measure of their payment is pre determined. They agree to a wage of payment. Which as mentioned is a secured payment. No matter how much or how little the company profits, the employee will get paid that amount either way.
"On that analysis, much of his money is rightfully the workers', morally if not under the law (laws written by and for capitalists, I should remind you)." - According to who? Once again, the workers agree to a compensation that is negotiated between themselves and the owner in question.
"Our system of wage labor is by no means organic or proper." - It is literally the definition of organic, as again it is a consensual agreement done by both parties.
"It is an established system of laws with winners and losers--" - Except those losers are not the employees, the problem which is shared among all socialists is that they try to view economics as a zero sum gain. When in reality both parties, mutually benefit.
"it did not arise from a collective decision of the nation. It was created top-down by the elite that benefits from it." - Not really, it was created on an individual level.
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@DeathRayGraphics "Which is, of course, the most exploitative situation and the one that requires unionization more than all the others." - Except it isn't. It is basic value of the work in question. Once again, why would you pay someone $20 for a job someone else offers to do for 10. Competition upon low skilled workers is much higher which is why they typically get paid less. High Supply, Low Demand. By contrast a job like say, a pilot has much more value within an employment market because he or she has skills that not many others do in a high supply. As such, he or she has much more negotiating power. And yes, Unions can help employees protest this as a larger group. If they want to boycott a company for their belief of unfair wages, that is within their rights to do.
"Exactly. That is called "exploitation". - It isn't. Anymore than it would be considered exploitive for a customer to choose the cheaper product.
"The worker does not willingly give more for less." - Except he does, no one forces him to do anything. He either agrees to the payment or doesn't.
"He does so because he has no options, unless he can enter into collective bargaining." - Or when there is another job that will offer a higher payment, in which case they will often switch jobs. As mentioned, some places will offer higher wages, to incentivize employment at their locations over others. That is especially more prevalent now, given the employee shortages across many regions.
Now yes, collective bargaining can be used to help increase the voice of certain employees, and in the context of a market. I have nothing against it.
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@slaterslater5944 “you probably think the origin of species is to overthrow dinosaurs in favor of mammals.” - Those were ur own words and is a form of gaslighting, as ur purposely saying something that has nothing to do with the topic and using it in an attempt to get me to doubt my own sanity. It’s manipulative, slander or libel considering we are writing, and depending on what country ur in is considered a form of abuse. So why r u lying about that? Again Marx’s connotation against the bourgeoisie is writing on the wall. Or do u think Marx condemns capitalism because of the proletariat?
“Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communistic revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win.
Workingmen of all countries unite!”
“And here it becomes evident that the bourgeoisie is unfit any longer to be the ruling class in society and to impose its conditions of existence upon society as an over-riding law. It is unfit to rule because it is incompetent to assure an existence to its slave within his slavery, because it cannot help letting him sink into such a state that it has to feed him instead of being fed by him. Society can no longer live under this bourgeoisie; in other words, its existence is no longer compatible with society.
The essential condition for the existence, and for the sway of the bourgeois class, is the formation and augmentation of capital; the condition for capital is wage-labor. Wage-labor rests exclusively on competition between the laborers. The advance of industry, whose involuntary promoter is the bourgeoisie, replaces the isolation of the laborers, due to competition, by their revolutionary combination, due to association. The development of modern industry, therefore, cuts from under its feet the very foundation on which the bourgeoisie produces and appropriates products. What the bourgeoisie therefore produces, above all, are its own grave diggers. Its fall and the victory of the proletariat are equally inevitable.”
“The bourgeois sees in his wife a mere instrument of production. He hears that the instruments of production are to be exploited in common, and, naturally, can come to no other conclusion than that the lot of being common to all will likewise fall to the women. He has not even a suspicion that the real point is to do away with the status of women as mere instruments of production. For the rest, nothing is more ridiculous than the virtuous indignation of our bourgeois at the community of women which, they pretend, is to be openly and officially established by the Communists. The Communists have no need to introduce the community of women; it has existed almost from time immemorial. Our bourgeois, not content with having the wives and daughters of their proletarians at their disposal, not to speak of common prostitutes, take the greatest pleasure in seducing each other's wives. Bourgeois marriage is in reality a system of wives in common and thus, at the most, what the Communists might possibly be reproached with, is that they desire to introduce, in substitution for a hypocritically concealed, an openly legalised community of women. For the rest, it is self-evident that the abolition of the present system of production must bring with it the abolition of the community of women springing from that system, i.e., of prostitution both public and private.” - This one especially I find rather funny considering he’s making quite a bit of assumptions on someone who are merely business owners. Almost like he’s trying to paint them in a bad light.
Gaslighting def: manipulate (someone) by psychological means into questioning their own sanity.
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@slaterslater5944 "I see you don't understand what genocide means either." - "the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group" -
Genocide: the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group
Ethnic Group: a community or population made up of people who share a common cultural background or descent.
Nice try.
"Surprise surprise." - Really now. According to what?
"So, what we're the equivalent of the extermination camps like Sobibor, Treblinka etc in the USSR?" - Really now, Holodomor which was responsible for up to 10 million Ukrainian deaths, Red terror, responsible for 200,000 deaths, Kazakh
Polish Operation of the NKVD, Great Purge in 1936-38 responsible for up to a million and 200,000 deaths in just 2 years. These are just a few, sure were any of these on the exact same scale as Nazi cleansing? No. Nor will I intend to say it is. But considering things like the Holodomor killed almost as many as the extermination camps did, its worth noting. And thats just in the Soviet Union, not even including the actions Mao's China did. Mao who is noted to be the number 1 mass murderer in history with the only debate being between him and Genghis Khan.
"Capitalism has also killed more people than Hitler, by the way." - Which regime and any within the same span of time as Hitler?
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@mikemcmike6427 And now you have proven my point even further. Again for someone who claims to have a degree in political science, you are spouting caveman level of vocabulary. You are pathetic, in spite of every chance I give for you to actually present a convincing argument to change my mind you would rather resort to the same harassment and insults you always do. At this point, you are basically trolling and have no relevance. It just shows you are desperate for attention instead of actually confronting the root of the debate.
Oh wow, someone on Youtube with no face, no proof of his credibility, and no language beyond insults calls me a useless sack. Wow, really did a number there. LOL
I honestly pity on how low your intellect is. It never ceases to amaze me how you are aiding my arguments just on the merit that you keep undermining your own credibility as a debater. Again try to get any third party to take what you say seriously after seeing the way you are acting. They wouldn't and honestly probably couldn't.
Get a damn life buddy. Do something that matters. For someone who claims I am so insignificant you seem to make it your life mission to see how much you can try to degrade me. I don't think I need to get into how hypocritical it is or how pathetic it is to get your highs off of that. Yeah I lost my ex, that's life. You win some, you lose some. But I am unlikely to take the word of someone who likely never had a girlfriend to begin with.
Mike, seriously man. Get some help, take some therapy, see a councilor, join the military. I don't give a shit. Just you really need to find something better to do with your life. Because won't lie, it is funny to see how many other people have recognized how much of a desperate bully you are. 😂
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 Except they are controls. Wage control, price control, resource control, price commissars, workers battalions, state land reforms, quotas, autarchy. If the state is effectively saying the price I can sell something for, Who I can trade with, and what I make under the threat of expropriation, how is that in any way capitalist?
"a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole." -OWNED OR REGULATED.
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@stephanedaguet915 "UK, but all around the world. Physical violence is not permitted in our modern world, unless in case of people's riot when the ruling class feel itself endangered, not physically but in their power." - Ignoring that many people who also work to demolish said systems do the same thing.
"Is to limit the power of the state and put it down more to the individual citizen."
"But in democracy theoretically the state is the people!" - the state is the people collectively, not individually. Just because someone votes to control u, does not change the fact ur being controlled.
"Yes it is not really the case due to the fact power is actually always in the hands of the ruling class. "individual citizen" ... or rich citizen ?" - Ironically empowering the state empower them. Or did u forget the state is composed of the elite as well?
"What is more efficient ? Individualism or cooperation ? In the wildlife, sure cooperation is always more efficient ..." - Not necessarily. Collectivism cannot survive without individualism because individualism is what proposes the key to thought, its what propels someone to want to become more than where they currently are. Individual incentives are far more impactful than collective incentives.
"individualism is a waste of time, perpetually reinventing the wheel, lot of resources used separately at the same time by individuals." - How is individual invention a waste? Or an individual having control of their own life? Do u not think they would live a better life through being able to control it rather than surrendering it to the collective?
"Lot of major technical discoveries of the last decades were made by public research center in USA or in Europe simply because the states have more resources than private corporation and are more motivated by non profit research." - Ignoring how many other inventions were created by individuals or businesses to improve their own standard of living.
"For example startups are just myths, actually they simply used public patents." - Elaborate.
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@stephanedaguet915 "I know what they claimed.
Do you really trust in these murderers ?" - Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Castro were also murderers, should we not trust their beliefs either? Also murderers and liars are 2 separate things. And if every response one makes is assuming lies, then it would impossible to ideologically identify anyone. The only time it is key to declare them lying is when there is a contradiction within the logic. But even then it requires context as to why. As even Lenin a hard believer in Marxist Socialism, still had to backtrack in order to prevent Soviet collapse.
"Do not trust the description on the packaging, it just a marketing technique. For example Tony Blair claimed he was socialist (labour) and he had the same policies as Magaret Thatcher.
See : Blatcherism is a term formed as a portmanteau of the names of two British politicians, Tony Blair (Labour Party) and Margaret Thatcher (Conservative Party)." - Which is why u look beyond the marketing. However, u cannot just dismiss ideology out of hand. Like anything else, its info needed to be observed. Otherwise as I mentioned before, u could throw that at just about anyone.
And : The view that Tony Blair was Margaret Thatcher's heir was largely adopted by both academics and political journalists.
"Morality : you cannot trust politicians, be suspicious." - I never said trust them. However there is a difference between believing in what they say vs interpreting what they believed in.
"The Italian fascist militia worked for the capitalist against the unions and workers on strike," - The Fascists also incorporated the industries under Nationally controlled corporations and established worker roles in said Corporations.
"exactly as the freikorps did during the Weimar Republic. Members of the Freikorps could be described as conservative, nationalistic, anti-Socialism/Communism. They also murdered leading communists Karl Liebknicht and Rosa Luxemburg. They also attacked meetings of the Spartacists." - I never said Mussolini was a Marxist. But again there is a difference between rejecting a variant of socialism vs rejecting the entirety of it.
"Mussolini was a former socialist but he turn far right, and he isn't the only in the socialist history." - Again what exactly turned him far right by ur logic? Do u even know why Mussolini got kicked out of the Marxist party?
"Fascism despite its claim is not a variant of socialism, is really a variant of capitalism." - Except it isn't. Both Mussolini and Hitler rejected capitalist concepts. For Mussolini it was because of how it divided the National Community and for Hitler it was because of his belief it was Jewish.
"Italian fascists waged war on the unions between 1920 and 1922 when Mussolini took power, burning trade union offices, and beating and torturing trade unionists. In Turin, the key industrial centre, fascist squads celebrated Mussolini coming to power by attacking trade union offices and killing 22 trade unionists." - Ignoring what the political situation was at the time. Mussolini did not want to completely tear the system down like Marxism did, because he believed propelling Italy into a civil war would devastate the nation like it did in the Soviet Union. Mussolini still held his socialist roots. In fact despite no longer being a Marxist, Italy was one of the first nations to recognize the Soviet Union.
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@stephanedaguet915 "They need capitalism for the benefits of the rich ruling class." - They needed it to ensure economic survival, or do u think someone like Lenin cared about the rich?
"Roman empire also was a developed civilization and its economic system was based on slavery. Capitalism is based on employment, it's quite the same, the only difference is capitalism salary its slaves in order to allow them self feeding and lodging and keep them with invisible chains : the fear of unemployment and poverty, and low wages." - Not really, voluntary work for a financial gain is not even comparable to slavery. Especially when as the market expands, so does job opportunity. The only time this does not happen is Monopolies taking control, however such occurrences are rare to happen in a pure free market.
"USSR based on socialism was also a developped country, the wealth of its people raised since the tzar era." - But was still lower than the capitalist nations or even Nazi Germany for a long period of time.
"The fall of USSR was due to the wars its endured : civil war 117-192 with the invasion of its territory by the allied expeditionnary force (USA, UK, France, Japan, ...) + WW2 (more than 27 million casualties and huge destructions + the cold war." - Right so wars that occured almost 70 years ago from its fall is suppose to damage it to that point? I will concede WW2 but u have to remember that the western allies were also suffering from that, mainly Britain who lost its entire colonial empire and France that literally collapsed. As for the Cold War. Both the USA and Soviets were engaging in major spending to win that war. One could do it, the other could not. And its not any other nation's fault that the military spending went that high. The Soviets could of u know, left Eastern Europe years ago.
"The wealth of humanity raised gradually since the neolitic time without the need of capitalism. Capitalism is quite recent in history." - Not effectively.
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"The definitions TIK applies are bonkers. No other way of saying it." - U mean the most basic dictionary definitions?
"Capitalism is against corporations? Really? I'm gotta tell you, I've never hear that one before. In fact, I'm pretty sure corporations are a common feature of all economies purporting to be capitalist, and that the only economies where they don't exist are socialist economies." - False, corporations are not privately owned entities, they are collectively owned by a special interest group. Corporatism is not Capitalism.
"Groups are non-private (?), they public entities and public entities are "The State". Uh-huh. Does that include my local herpetology club? Are we few amateur herpetologists "The State"?" - You are not a political community making up a nation or territory. R u?
"Look, if this is how you load the question then anything can become anything. If Capitalism is a economic system governed by individuals, and excludes corporations, associations (free or otherwise), partnerships, or any group, then capitalism does not exist, has never existed, and never could exist." - It does not exclude partnerships nor private associations.
"With these definitions, we are left defining every political system that has ever existed as Socialism. necessarily
"But one only arrived at that point by contorting definitions to the point we are incapable of differentiating radical egalitarianism from virulent racism." - How is this relevant?
"Why in the world, WHY would anyone want to employ such useless language?" - It isn't useless.
This is the very essence of Newspeak.
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"No, Hitler was not a total socialist since he acknowledged elements of private economy." - You mean like Lenin did as well? Not being able to go 100% on a system does not mean you aren't a socialist.
"I think almost each country or each society includes socialistic elements and capitalistic elements. There are only few purepred socialistic or capitalistic societies. Hence, it is a question of the ratio. USA may have a soialist percentage of 5%," - You clearly don't know much of government control of the economy in the USA nowadays.
"Germany today 20%, Third Reich 40%," - Nope.
"DDR 80%, UdSSR in 1940 98%, UdSSR in 1990 90%, North Korea today 98% etc." - Thats not how you define an ideology as socialist or not. As TIK highlights in his video. Even if we were to agree that the Third Reich wasn't socialist, which it was, that doesn't mean National Socialism is not socialism from an ideological standpoint.
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@DeathRayGraphics "If the risks become smaller over time, common sense says that the productivity of the workers (whose output generated the profits that lessened that risk) should earn them more of the windfall." - Except it isn't. Because if he or she was the one to take the risk, he or she would entitled to the full reward. That is literally how high risk, high reward works. Why would the employees be entitled to higher rewards when they were not the ones taking the risks. Now of course the irony of this, is that more experienced workers who remain in the company longer will often get paid more than those that didn't.
"Instead, under unregulated capitalism, the United States has seen nearly three generations of wage stagnation and the hollowing out of the middle class, which is what is leading to fascism, not "socialism". - The United States as far from an unregulated economy. Also while stagnation of wages, can happen. That would only occur in a natural market when the supply and demand reaches an equilibrium. And everyone is subject to that basic market rule until someone tries to get an outsider to interfere with it. Hence where state involvement typically happens.
"Capitalism is not patriotic. It uses up people the same way it uses up natural resources." - No, it really doesn't. It bases a payment based on the value they have in the market. Because once again, the value of a product or employee is not objective, it is subjective. It does no good to put a lot of work into something no one wants. By the same token, it should not surprise a low skilled worker that he or she is not getting paid as much as a high skilled job or the owner taking the risks in the first place.
"It does not care how much ruin it brings because the wealthy always have ways to insulate themselves." - And once again, what is it "ruining?" I have been a worker myself bud, and there was nothing exploitive about agreeing to a wage, working for it, and as soon as I felt that wage was becoming unfair or an opportunity for a better paying job presented itself, I took it.
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@DeathRayGraphics "Except it isn't. Because if he or she was the one to take the risk, he or she would entitled to the full reward."
“Hardly. In the first place, no one person in a business exclusively takes the full risk of all contingencies upon themselves,” - How so?
“nor does the capitalist even take the greatest risk. (Who risks more in coal mining: the miners or the owner?)” - In the context of finances, the owner. And what’s funny was I even predicted you making this exact analogy. And typically higher risk jobs would on average generate a higher pay for the workers.
“Nor is profit a "reward". Profits cannot be generated without the output of the laborer. If such were possible, there would be no need for labor at all.” - True, but in most cases, profit cannot be generated exclusively through labor either. And as mentioned, the labor is paid regardless of profit generation. Even if a company is losing money, they would still have to pay the employees the same amount for their services.
"That is literally how high risk, high reward works. Why would the employees be entitled to higher rewards when they were not the ones taking the risks."
“Because compensation for one's productivity is not a "reward". It is simply what they are owed for their labor.” - Which is what they already get in the payment that was agreed upon beforehand.
"The United States as far from an unregulated economy. Also while stagnation of wages, can happen. That would only occur in a natural market when the supply and demand reaches an equilibrium."
“Or, where capitalists have rigged the system to accumulate ever more of the profits while the laborer's get the crumbs, which for almost three generations now is exactly what has happened in the US, hence the slow -rolling economic collapse we are experiencing right now.” - And guess what causes it, not the free market but state meddling. That is the irony. Corporate Oligarchs do not care about capitalism’s principles and would throw it away as soon as convenient. That is why ideological capitalists call for limitations on the state, since you can’t rig the system if the thing rigging it has little to no power to do so.
"And everyone is subject to that basic market rule until someone tries to get an outsider to interfere with it. Hence where state involvement typically happens."
“Capitalists seek the interference of outsiders all the time, when they outsource their labor.” - Clearly you are not understanding what I mean by outsiders. I am referring to non participants in the economy, such as the state. And yes, some capitalist members will stray away from the ideals and those are as much an enemy to capitalism as they are to your socialist ideals.
"No, it really doesn't. It bases a payment based on the value they have in the market.
"A market they manipulate on 100 levels, but go on.” - Once again, done through the state. And I don’t agree with their influences there either.
"Because once again, the value of a product or employee is not objective, it is subjective. It does no good to put a lot of work into something no one wants. By the same token, it should not surprise a low skilled worker that he or she is not getting paid as much as a high skilled job or the owner taking the risks in the first place."
“Again you suppose that all "risk" belongs to the capitalist, but by this you simply mean the risk of bankruptcy. But a person working in a precarious position for an employer in a company town risks a great deal more.” - Bankruptcy, being in severe debt that would take them years to pay off, and their credit rates going way far down.
“They risk losing their health insurance if they are fired,” - Something an owner also risks if their company goes under.
“they risk being fired if they attempt to unionize, and they and all their neighbors risk utter ruin by working for a company that controls the fate of their entire town if the company decides to pull up stakes and move to Vietnam or Mexico.” - And if that happens, they have the option to work for a different company. Yes they can risk being fired, but that is the end of it once when that occurs. They can seek a new job or better yet, open a new business themselves. Afterall if all it requires is labor by your logic, then a group of 10 opening a brand new company should be easy by that metric.
"...and there was nothing exploitative about agreeing to a wage, working for it, and as soon as I felt that wage was becoming unfair or an opportunity for a better paying job presented itself, I took it."
“Wage labor is itself exploitation. In a system where the individual has no bargaining power and where the capitalists work ceaselessly to make sure they never gain it (see Amazon), of course you cannot recognize your own exploitation.” - Because it isn’t. Even as a regular worker, I had some negotiating power, I had the ability to ask for more if I felt it was something that was deserved. Working for the company was my choice. And of course if I felt that it wasn’t being fair to me, all I had to do was find another job with more favorable conditions to my needs.
“You've been conditioned to believe that being paid nothing more than a wage which does not reflect your actual productive output is as natural and proper as, I dunno, letting your employer control your health insurance.” - No, it is because I can recognize the difference between something being operated at my expense vs when it produces mutual gain. None of it is conditioning, it is participating in a basic market. Something that is easy to understand even as a 5 year old. You have been conditioned to believe that people are entitled to more than what their services are actually valued at. And of course the irony is, because of that continued pursuit you would rather put tyrants into power that dictate everyone’s lives than accept that capitalism is the natural market. There is nothing inherently exploitative about it. Yes there are some bad apples in the tree, but considering socialim’s track record, I do not believe that trying to group the whole ideal as bad over the actions of a few is something you socialists would want to have held to the same standard. Or do we need to get into the actual exploitation and crimes that were committed by the Soviet Union, Mao’s China, North Korea, Vietnam, Venezuela, and others just to name a few.
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@slaterslater5944 "No, "the whole point" of Marx's writing is to describe Capitalism and analyse history through a materialist lense." - U mean how Engels puts it which still advocates a change in the current system?
"The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in the philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch."
"From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought," - Meaning Engels at the very least did advocate a revolution.
"You don't have a clue what you're talking about." - No u.
"You probably think the point of "The Origin of Species " is to overthrow dinosaurs in favour of mammals." - I see u r resorting to gaslighting now.
"Or you would, if you weren't so d you'd never heard of it." - More gaslighting.
"By the way, why are you so dishonest?" - I haven't been. I've been wrong before and the few times that I am, I am willing to admit it, but I have no been dishonest. Or do u fail to recognize that u have to use ur brain on some terms to break down their meaning?
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"Flaws with the premise:
Socialism is not, I repeat not*, state control of the means of production, and it has *never been. Socialism is worker control of the means of production," - Except it isn't. You have once again fallen under the camp Tik warned about. Socialism by definition: "a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole." - The community. Has nothing to do with the workers. Now workers can be a community, hence you get Marxism. But Marxism is not socialism but only a variant of socialism.
"now this can be manifested through the ownership of the means of production by the state," - Which is where state control was born.
"but even most marxists trended towards workers running their workplaces, and through their workplace unions the state." - which would still enable the state to hold control or state like groups.
"Misunderstanding this during the premise is, I believe, your fundamental flaw with the entire 5-hour video. If you want to claim that all communist states have had state control of industry, well, I'll point you to Das Capital, where Marx directly says that only an industrial state can have a communist revolution, and only through a democracy run by the workers, not the party, can Communism be realized." - Which is why he is talking about socialism, not communism. Communism within reality is nothing more but a pipe dream based on the delusion of a potential paradise.
"And I want you to stop and think, were any nations run by communists, run as a democracy by the workers as opposed to the *party*." - The establishment of the one party state came because of the extreme during the "worker revolutions"
"I believe that Stalinist Russia and Maoist China had more in common with fascist ideology than they did marxist ideology," - Which is something TIK highlights in the video when discussing Animal Farm by George Orwell. Socialism is the precursor to Fascism. Also hence why Fascism had its root in socialism.
"by their tight party grip, and their parallels to Umberto Eco's 14 points." - To a degree yes.
"Socialism has always been marked as an ideology steeped in class-based conflict," - except it hasn't. Ur once again ignoring pre marx socialist ideologies, many of which had nothing to do with class or workers.
"the workers (proletariat) vs. the capitalists (bougiouse), and to remove that is to remove the heart of socialism," - No, it is to remove the heart of Marxism and socialist ideologies that came around the same time or after Marxism. Class conflict was not inherent to pre marx socialism. In fact almost none of them mention it.
"and to lean into the more capitalist idea of class collaboration. Capitalism's halmark is the absolutist private ownership of the means of production, and its use to generate profit for the owner with no regard to the will of the workers save where it impacts the bottom line." - Once again capitalism holds no bias for or against the worker. Its a purely open market.
"Hitler's Nazi ideology falls on the capitalist side of things, albeit with a heavy-handed state to beat them back into line when they stray too far from the government's wishes." - Which is not capitalism by definition. You cannot control your own means or production as a private owner if the state is completely manhandling the economy and placing restrictions on nearly every aspect of your production and trade.
"Fascism can side-step the race-based hatred," - Fascism has nothing to do with race bud.
"but it requires an other in order to justify it's violence, and a mythical or semi-mythical past to call back to as an impossible goal to justify its continued existance." - Its past to call back to is because its more traditional and even then relies on distant pasts, not current. Not only that but Marxism also justifies its violence in a us vs them mentality.
"For Italy it exalted the Italian and his glorious past above all others, and engaged in the attempted cultural genocide of the Slovene population, and is why Italy doesn't own Fiume in the modern day." - The same way Marxists did cultural genocide against religion and capitalists in general?
"For Spain, this was Franco's vision of the 'Spaniard', and he spent decades trying to eliminate socialism and regionalism of all stripes to 'regenerate the Spanish nation'." - Firstly you have to look at the socialists that were prominent back then to understand why they were fighting them, secondly France wasn't really a fascist but rather just an ultra nationalist.
"Nazism exalted the Aryan, a smaller definition than the 'german' that a more traditional German Fascism would've likely focused on, but it was an exaltation in the name of 'restoring and reclaiming germanic identity and pride'." - That was part of it, but not the only thing. Hitler's racism stemmed on the history of German pride, but also stemmed from geopolitical and economic climates that existed at the time.
"I would recommend you investigate Umberto Eco's 14 points, or just read his essay on Ur-fascism to understand why people will call Hitler a fascist, even if he hated his contemporaries, even though I have little doubt he would've hated them simply for not being 'aryan' enough regardless." - Having similar points does not automatically associate him with Fascism. Hitler never subscribed to Fascist ideology, in fact he often looked down on it.
"Flaws in Part 1:
Capitalism is indeed, the individual or group ownership of the means of production, but it is by no means anti-state, capitalism in fact requires a state to function in any capacity." - Debatable. This is something he covers in one of his response videos.
"Capitalism requires a strong government capable of ensuring the property rights of the capitalist in order to actually function, it's why anyone supporting Libertarianism, the small-government pro-capitalist stance, gets laughed at by the left." - without any understanding of what the advocation is. There are alternatives to the state, now they won't work well in practice hence why most are not anarcho capitalists. However, while TIK did over simplifying capitalism is anti state control. Even by definition.
"It also does not preclude a non-democratic state from being capitalist, if a dictator owns a factory, and wields the might of the state to favor that factory, is that not capitalist?" - No, because if the dictator controls the state, he is not a private owner. At that point he isn't owning it as an individual but a collective.
"It's simply a private owner acting in his own best interest after all." - Which is where the flaws in your logic come in, he or she would no longer be a private owner. You are a public controller. Controlling the state which is a public or communal domain.
"I would also not lean on the Austrian school of economics, one created by fascist collaborators in the wake of WWII and headed by one Ludwig von Mises, in order to define socialism and capitalism, if you are going to do that, you kinda need a voice from the other side of the aisle to actually get a more balanced view of both, might I suggest using some Marx to balance out Mises?" - Like Marx has much credibility?
"Your insistence that public = state also makes your argument incoherent, as a State is a specific organization within and emergent from the public," - The state represents the public sector and controls the public sector. While yes a state is emergent from public, its because it has to be. Public control or societal control is the same as state control.
"and not all groups form into their own 'mini-states' in the way you seem to describe." - He never said all groups, he referred to corporations and coops.
"A State is an organization established to ensure mediation between groups and the protection of all groups under its aegis, not merely a 'collection of people'," - Except that is not the definition: "
“otherwise capitalism has never existed because the existence of investors and shareholders turns a traditionally capitalist enterprise into a socialist one.” - Not a socialist one, but more socialistic, hence mixed economies. Capitalism and socialism exist on spectrums. TIK is right when he said that there has never be a pure capitalist economy, the same way socialists say there hasn’t been communism either.
“Assuming that the 'economy' is capitalism, now that's a dishonest framing if I've ever seen one! The economy is the name that is given to the distribution of goods and services according to the framework established by the economic system.” - How does that make it dishonest framing?
“A socialist economy is not going to look the same as a capitalist one, neither of them will look communist, and all of them are distinct from a fascist economy, but they are all economies just the same.” - Fascism is a political ideology, not an economic theory. Fascism adopts Syndicalism and Corporatism. So while its not completely socialism, it does lean towards it.
“And it is at this point that I don't think I actually need to go further, because if you are making such fundamental mistakes in the bedrock of your argument, I feel that at best you are fundamentally misinformed, and at worst being deliberately dishonest.” - In this case its neither. You cannot call him misinformed if your trying to misdefine the words, whether accidental or intentional.
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@slaterslater5944 "The dictionary says, unequivocably, that Nazism was right wing." - Labelling is not a definition. And nowhere does the Oxford definition call them right wing. See ur lying here now.
"Why do you ignore clear definitions that disagree with you," - Because its not in the definition. And as I mentioned before calling something "Right Wing" or "Left Wing" means nothing is you don't even have a consistent metric on what measures left and right on the spectrum.
ambiguous
"And will you ever muster the honesty and courage to explain what "the sought of all political revolution" was supposed to mean," - Already did.
"and why you invented that gibberish quote?" - Because I didn't invent it.
Here is another quote if u can't believe Engels wanted a revolution.
"A revolution is certainly the most authoritarian thing there is; it is the act whereby one part of the population imposes its will upon the other part by means of rifles, bayonets and cannon — authoritarian means, if such there be at all; and if the victorious party does not want to have fought in vain, it must maintain this rule by means of the terror which its arms inspire in the reactionists. Would the Paris Commune have lasted a single day if it had not made use of this authority of the armed people against the bourgeois? Should we not, on the contrary, reproach it for not having used it freely enough?"
Engels, On Authority, (1872)
Or this one, "The Communists disdain to conceal their views and aims. They openly declare that their ends can be attained only by the forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions.
Let the ruling classes tremble at a communist revolution.
The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win.
Working Men of All Countries, Unite!"
Marx & Engels, Communist Manifesto (1848)
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@mikemcmike6427 I never claimed it was anything that made me an ultra hard working person buddy. But clearly you haven’t considered that during the early pandemic, most jobs were not that well available anyways. Not to mention the unemployment rates.
Again, you can claim whatever u want on ur life. You have nothing to show for it. And no, mowing lawns, babysitting, doing a Santa costume job, being an aid in a business’ special events. Those are freelancing. And when you judge based on someone freelancing, I find it rather funny as it highlights a rather pathetic elitist mentality.
Also the fact you couldn’t tell I was mocking your lack of patience and treat it like i think you care about me has left me flabbergasted at how delusional you can be. 😂
Buddy. You make no sense. At this point we’re not even talking about the history topic. If you have such a better life, good for you buddy. But surely that would mean you don’t need to waste time in mine. So since it’s clear that nothing productive is coming from this thread anymore, this is where I’m gonna end thing. When you’re ready to talk like an actual 25 year old with a degree and not a caveman who only knows the language of insults, let me know. Until then, fair well.
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@mikemcmike6427 I already told you before that I would kindly accept whatever evidence you wish to send. Hell I even offered you a method to do it. Yet you still refuse at every turn. It is not my fault you don't bother to pay attention to what you read. So let me get this straight, because I did not want to make working a wage job a factor in my life during my high school years, that makes me lazy. Sure buddy, sure. Of course It is funny considering that considering you spend nearly all day just launching personal attacks on me, your job must leave you a shit ton of time to just sit and write comments on Youtube. LOL.
I still don't seem to grasp how it is apparently being lazy for working freelance and not committing to a singular job. Also no, the burden of proof has always been on you since you made the beginning assertion of TIK's video being wrong, but the only argument you have consistently made is how it goes against a consensus, despite the fact TIK dedicated a very part of his video to address that counter. Gee, it is almost like you don't pay attention. You are a pathetic waste of time Mike. Even most who agree with your views on TIK's video don't respect you. You spend your days trying to see how much you can degrade me as if it makes any difference. I am sure your political science class taught you that you don't win debates by trying to bully your opponent into submission. Maybe you weren't paying attention in class either, assuming you even took it.
Now for the 7th time, since you clearly are very poor at paying attention, I will ask again. What disqualifies Hitler from being a socialist to you?
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "No, the UK is not more socialist now than it was in, say 1948." - I did not compare it to 1948.
"You have immense difficulty in actually identifying, let alone understanding, Socialism, don't you?" - Once again, if the state is controlling the means of production. If it is dictating the actions of what a private individual can do with his own means of production, that isn't capitalism.
"In an anarcho socialist society the government wouldn't be seizing anything. Because it wouldn't exist.
And who on earth would buy from someone who was profiteering?" - People that would rather get it straight away than having to waste time making it themselves. Thats part of trading. Or are you naive enough to really believe that everyone would just be ok with sharing without even one individual becoming materialistic or wanting to get a financial gain out of what he or she makes?
"You wouldn't need a state to stop people from doing something it would make no sense to do." - Except for many it would make sense to do. Again, you are just naive in thinking that everyone is just going to willfully share everything they make. They won't. And because your making this kind of argument, I now know why you are arguing against the Nazis being socialist, likely because you are a socialist yourself or at the very least a socialist sympathizer. Again I can throw that logic right back, why would I make something that gains me and my family nothing, why would I just give it away rather than attempt to get a want or need on my end out of the product someone else wants.
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"Hitler himself, when asked by a British journalist in an interview if he was a socialist in the traditional sort of way, he expressly answered that he despised socialists and socialism, and wanted to steal the term to give it a new meaning, completely detached from its original one." - Source please?
"Hitler could not be a socialist because he not only despised left wing politics in general, that he thought was secretly manoeuvred internationally by Jews, but also because left wing parties in Germany got all the blamefor loosing WW1, even though it was clear that it was lost as Germany could not replace anymore any man or weapon lost on the battlefield." - Yes, we are aware of the stab in the back myth. That is not the point. Socialism within the 1900s was primarily loaded with Marxists, which Hitler rejected Marx believing his version of socialism to be part of a Jewish conspiracy. He thought the same of capitalism btw.
"It was sufficient an offensive by the Allied to make the whole castle go down, but he believed the "leftist plot to stab Germany in the back" anyway, as he was a former corporal in the German army and staunchly conservative.
Only this little fact is sufficient to classify him as an hardcore anti-socialist," - Except it isn't, because as noted before. He rejected Marxism. Most left wing parties at the time were primarily Marxists or parties sympathetic to Marxism, or Social democrats.
"but let's look at the facts: the philosophy of fascism and nazism is the exactly opposite of the one of socialism and communism. The society they were trying to make had the opposite kind of structure, as a fascist society is hierarchical therefore has a vertical structure, while a socialist society is not, and has an horizontal, egalitarian structure." - Have u not seen the Soviet Union or Mao's China? I doubt u could call those egalitarian.
"Some other facts:
1) Hitler suppressed the rights of minority and workers in favour of the business owners." - Which he did to expand collective or state control over the economy, not to mention many of these industrialists were needed to get Germany back as a military power. Something Hitler makes clear needed to happen.
"2) No government to this day in Germany, not even the most pro-capitalism one, did the same amount of privatisation as Hitler did." - Tik already debunks this. 02:10:18
"If he was a socialist, he would have made the opposite. That made the business owners richer and the workers poorer." - Except it didn't as noted within the section the rich were the ones carrying the majority of Taxation burdens to fund the Nazi State. Also as stated, Hitler's so called privatization was redistributing previously Jewish or opponent owned businesses and giving them to loyal party members. In totalitarianism, the party is the state and the state is the party, they are the same thing.
"3) He NEVER advocated for abolishing private property or seize the means of production and give them to the workers, he instead did the opposite." - Except he did abolish private property rights. And he never seized much because he did not have to. He isn't going to make an enemy of his own party members or industrialists already loyal and obedient to the state. They were working for him. He did however seize many businesses not only from Jews and political opponents but many smaller businesses were crushed under Nazi policy.
"He invested into the private sector with no promises of any profit in return for the only advantage of the rich and defined the German enterpreneurs as "responsible" and a vital part of the German economy." - Hmmm, maybe that was because they were preparing for a war. One that Hitler stated needs to be won in order to complete his socialism. Lebensraum was essential to fully implement socialism for Germany. As it was the only way for the economy to become self sufficient.
"Not socialism in this statement there. Instead we have capitalism." - Except we don't. Hitler using state supremacy to increase his own powerbase and understanding that maintaining the loyalty of 13 corporations is easier than 100s if not thousands of smaller companies, is not capitalism. Its applying policy to achieve Germany's self sufficiency. You only have to look as far as Junkers on what happened to his airplane factory for refusing to obey the state mandates.
"And the private owned company had massive amount of freedom, they could do almost whatever they wanted, they were not under the strict rule of thumb of Hitler like were normal people instead." - Hahahahha, no. They did not have many freedom, the only ones that did were major party members. Or r u forgetting that the Soviets also benefited party elites under Stalin?
"4) As soon as he seized power, he sent all the opposition, socialist leftist first, in concentration camps, as Dachau was built in 1933." - ALL OPPOSITION!!! Capitalists were often also sent there as well, especially when they did not cooperate with the states grip on the economy. The collective, the state, was absolutely in control of the economy.
"5) He reversed the progress of society, by making policies expressly designed to re establish and reinforce the traditional genders roles in society as hard core conservatives intended them, so women at home making and caring for children and them men at work. Something that socialist parties were trying to dismantle." - U mean Marxists or Liberals? People that Hitler already rejected? Also u forget that traditional roles were not just meant for the sake of it. His entire ideology is a race theory. Part of maintaining the race is producing children.
"Now, I could go on for hours, but I do not have this much time." - Sure u do.
"Why he called himself a socialist? To fool the masses, to gain power, to win the elections and then seize it all for himself." - And why did he make himself look appealing to industrialists? To fool them, gain power, and use them to prevent Germany's economy from imploding. Mutual gain is not the same as ideological alignment. It was a "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" mentality.
"An extremely anti socialist thing to do as socialism is democratic by nature." - Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Kim un Sung, Ho Chi Minh, Castro, etc. U really think those were democratic either? So tell me, were they not "Real Socialists" either?
"But his backers, the industrials, the nobility and the military, staunchly anti left and anti democracy too, knew he wasn't and backed him." - Again, they knew he wasn't Marxist. But what they needed was protection against the Marxists, something Hitler offered them pretty quickly to gain a further advantage in the elections and to gain an early boost in Germany's economic buildup. However, u seem to forget how quickly many of these industrialists and nobles turned on Hitler within 1944 and 45 as soon as they realized that his policies were not to their benefit.
"People that believe Hitler was a socialist by anti measure, believes in 80 years old long debunked re interpretation if history, made to make the far right look good by blaming the left for the crimes Nazis were responsible for." - Proof to said claim?
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@mikemcmike6427 Ok for the 10th time I addressed this. Hitler tried to take power in a traditional revolutionary manner during the 20s. It didn't work. After that, he reworked his strategy and realized that taking power by force would only backfire on the Nazis. To hit this point at home even further, the Nazis did not want Germany to suffer the same civil war which caused massive economic damage like had happened in Russia. So as mentioned, they took power the democratic root and needed the major industrialists to help back him in order to take power.
"Amazing how Hitler wasn’t afraid to get rid of, jail, kill or scare away millions of Jewish" - You mean the main target of his ideology?
"and left wing scientists," - You mean social democrats and Marxists? Already explained that before. Social Democrats became an obstacle to his rise to power and the Marxists were viewed to Hitler as a Jewish controlled movement.
"academics," - Like?
"business owners and vital other contributors to German society." - Yes, thanks for agreeing that they were willing to target plenty of business owners. However, there were only so many the Nazis could target before the economic consequences were coming into play. Hell many have argued they were already suffering those consequences. Considering how fragile the Nazi economy already was, Hitler knew that further pointlessly targeting key economic individuals such as the lead industrialists would only leave Germany far more likely to fall into political and economic instability. Something that he could not afford to do at the time when preparing for the conquest of the east. And as we went over, Hitler already scared the right wing parties to back down. This is also to mention that, because the Nazis had a lot of the larger ones backing them either through mutually gain or fear of the Nazis. Hitler targeting say some of the smaller businesses or academics with a democratic or marxist bias, were safer people to target than the people Hitler built his entire rearminant to be dependent on.
All political parties were banned, not just the ones on the left. The only difference was, after the left wing parties were dealt with for open resistance. The right wing parties (for the most part) were not willing to take the same risk.
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@slaterslater5944 I mean an employee can buy a product to sell or even freelance. Just about anyone can be a private owner with just a little time and investment. And do I need to put the definition of bourgeoisie again. It’s funny how u pretty much reject any definition that doesn’t come out of Marx’s mouth. Almost like ur a Marxist ur self.
And of course u will bring up things that are not only false to my original point but irrelevant to the topic point we are discussing now. Almost like u don’t have any productive arguments left to say and have instead just been trying to wait for a mistake on my end to pull a gotcha.
It’s not my fault nor my problem if ur an Anti Cap. It’s amazing how this has now become about Marxism when the initial argument was just suppose to be about Hitler and his Socialism. At this point, it’s become a waste of time. Because ur line of thinking has pretty much been set to label every major socialist system or prominent leaders of socialism in history as “Not Real Socialists.” So despite the definition clearly saying otherwise capitalism must mean state totalitarianism right? Never mind when the state aka the class collective, racial collective, or national collective control nearly every aspect of the economy. Never mind when your property can be taken from you for simply not making what the all knowing and all powerful state wants you to make, never mind that private ownership and control effectively doesn’t exist. No it must be capitalism, because a few elites benefit off of the corruption. Because really, if National Socialism isn’t socialism, and the Soviet Union wasn’t socialism and people like Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Kim, Castro, and Ho Chi must not be “Real Socialists.” Then you’ve lost any tangible ground to even define socialism at all. And it’s funny when I call out socialism’s bullshit, people like u will try to pull the “Not Real Socialism” argument yet any time a capitalist does wrong or violates capitalism’s principles. It must be because capitalism is evil instead of the argument I could use, because if we are being fair we can just say it’s not “Real Capitalism.” 😂
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@slaterslater5944 "to sell" eh? Is this like your "private market" nonsense from earlier?" - How is it nonsense exactly?
"Yes, if you buy and sell a COMMODITY, you own it for a short period of time, well done. Now, what does that have to do with your claim that an employee owns and controls a means of production. What means of production are they, then? You have confused a commodity with means of production,because you are a dimwit." - No, because a means of production is one method of trade and as I showed you before.
Capitalism DEF: an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
Controlling a trade is just as impactful to capitalism as controlling a production. And once again, it does not change that an employee can become a private owner. Nothing stops them from say opening their own business if there is a good or service that people want.
"And a dishonest one at that." - Coming from the one who cannot even read capitalism's definition.
" you’re entire book has pretty much been libel against it."
"You are functionally illiterate, aren't you?" - Oh wow, how dare I make a spell error.
"What book are you talking about?
Where are the Bourgeoisie libeled? Is this going to be like your hilarious claim that Engels was advocating for revolution when he said the causes of revolution are to be found in changes in material conditions?" - No. And I am not repeating the same quotes a third time. At this point, it is on you to search it. Because I am not going to dig up the research a 5th time with you. At this point, you are wasting my time. Because its clear no matter what I say, you won't see the comparisons or the writings on the wall. You would rather remain plugged into the Matrix rather than seeing the world for what it is with what socialism is. And once again, this was not even supposed to be about Marxism. You are the one that made it about Marxism. Its not my fault that the economic arguments used against National Socialism so happens to also be able to apply against Marxism.
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@slaterslater5944 "No, I'm repeating YOUR statement that "an employee is not a private owner"." - Not inherently, does not mean that they do not have the opportunity to become one, nor does it mean they have to stop being an employee to do so. You can be employed in one establishment and be the owner of another.
"Why are you so dishonest?" - Why are you? You are the one trying to put words in my mouth. Also care to stop being a bot?
"Nowhere did I say they cannot become an owner"
"And there you are admitting, again, that an owner and an employee are different things!" - Being two seperate things does not automatically make them mutually exclusive. So once again, an employee can be an owner and if an employee can be an owner, they can control their own means of production or trade.
"One they open themselves or inherit".
"Huh. Earlier you claimed their means of production was the ability to buy and then sell something with their wages 🤣😆🤣😆🤣. What happened to that?" - That is not a means of production. It is a trade. And as the definition already shows, one you love to ignore. Capitalism is when trade or industry is controlled by private owners for profit rather than by the state.
"So, if an employee is gifted a factory then they become an owner (and as you yourself said "an employee is not a private owner") and now own a means of production.
But it was employees that you claimed 'absolutely control their own means of production", not owners, remember?" - No I said an employee can control their own means of production, which is true.
"Why are you so dishonest?" - Why r u a bot?
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950
"As I said, you simply don't know what you're talking about" - Wow, what an argument. Could say the same to u.
"and are trying to define what owning the means of production actually means." - Socialism: "a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole." - OWNED OR REGULATED. If the state is dictating and controlling the means of production then it does not matter whether or not the "owner" makes a profit.
Ownership: "the act, state, or right of possessing something." - So yes they possess it. But they do not control it and as highlighted here. "Ownership means that having legal title. Control means having the ability to determine use. Ownership and control generally come as part of the same package in a market-oriented capitalist economy. ... Combined ownership and control is important to the efficient allocation of resources." - In order to truly own something u need to control and to truly control it u need to own it. They go hand and hand in economic terms. The Nazi business men did not truly own the business because at any point when the government saw fit could take the property away and private property rights outlined in the Weimar constitution were suspended until further notice.
What firms were shut down for "not complying with a Nazi mandate or quota"? - Um, "Other historians dispute the Buccheim and Scherner thesis that the general absence of state coercion means there was no real threat of it. They believe that many industrialists actually did fear direct state intervention in private industries if the Nazi government's goals were not fulfilled, and that their choices were affected by this concern. Peter Hayes argues that although the Nazi regime "wished to harness business's energy and expertise" and "generally displayed flexibility in order to obtain them, usually by offering financing options that reduced the risk of producing what the regime desired", the government was nevertheless also willing to resort to direct state intervention as a "Plan B" in some cases, and these cases "left an impression on the corporate world, all the more so as government spokesmen repeatedly referred to them as replicable precedents."[70] Thus, the Nazi state did not resort to "blunt-instrument forms of coercion" because it did not need to, not because it was unwilling to do so. After 1938, "examples had been made, fear inspired, and the lessons internalized, on both sides of the business-state divide."[71] Hayes describes Nazi economic policies as a "'carrot-and-stick' or 'Skinner Box' economy" in which corporate decisions "were increasingly channeled in directions the regime desired" through a combination of "government funding and state-guaranteed profit margins" on the one hand, and a series of regulations, penalties, "the possibility of government compulsion, and the danger that refusal to cooperate could open opportunities to competitors," on the other hand. As such, he argues that "the Third Reich both bridled and spurred the profit motive."[72] Hayes concludes that "Nazi economic policies structured opportunities and thus corporate executives' choices. Did businessmen retain free will? Of course, they did. Was their autonomy intact? I think not."[73]"
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "So, in a dictatorship the state is the community? Nonsense." - Yes it is, because it is the community that enabled and appointed the state. Now yes, an abuse of power comes into play. But that is inevitable. If people vote on the dictator then the dictator is representative of them. Otherwise going by ur logic, we have never had a socialist nation because all of them end the same way. The Soviet Union was a dictatorship, Communist China was a dictatorship and in most ways still is, Vietnam was, North Korea was, Cuba was. Were they not socialist nations either then going by ur logic?
"Once again, you are blindly buying TIK's nonsense that any sort of state intervention is socialism." - I never said any, I stated any, I stated state control over the economy. Again separation of the Public and Private sector. Again, separation from a state that ensures private property rights vs one that strips it, one that has little interference in trade and distribution, vs one that completely tries to dominate it. There why the term Mixed economies were invented.
"Which is silly." - Except it isn't.
"The economy of Nazi Germany was capitalist, what with the means of production being owned by private individuals, which is pretty much the basic definition of capitalism." - Except it isn't. Its about control not ownership. Because u don't truly own something if u don't have control over it.
Capitalism Definition: "an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state." - The Nazis interfered and near completely dictated all 3 of these fronts. So no, it was not capitalist. Even people that disagree with Nazis being socialist have come to realize that it is not capitalism either. Because Capitalism was viewed just as much of an enemy to the Nazis as Marxism. Capitalism was International Jewish Finance and it was the primary reason Hitler had a hatred of nations like the USA who he planned to fight after the Soviets as highlighted in his second book.
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@LautaroJaguar "stop inventing and changing definitions to try to fit your own opinion, nobody is taking you seriously." - What defintion am I changing here?
Socialism definition: a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.
State Definition: a nation or territory considered as an organized political community under one government.
Second State Definition for good measure: A state is a political division of a body of people that occupies a territory defined by frontiers. The state is sovereign in its territory (also referred to as jurisdiction) and has the authority to enforce a system of rules over the people living inside it.
"Read historians. Youtubers are no source of knowledge or analysis." - So by that logic, if a youtube video is made about how to do a math problem I shouldn't believe it because it is not a source of knowledge or analysis? Do u hear ur self? Youtube or the Internet in general is like any hub of information containing multiple info and multiple sources, some are right, some are wrong, and some have more credibility than others. But like I mentioned time and time again, the words of historians alone without sources, properly understanding definitions, and a lack a proper logical conclusion is half hazard at best and foolish at worst. Again if every historian said Hitler and Stalin fell in love with each other, r we suppose to believe it just because its the word of a historian? If ur answer which I hope is no, then you'll understand why trying to use historians alone is not an argument.
comparison
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "Distribution and exchange. Which were also in private hands in Nazi Germany." - Except they weren't. As mentioned before, not only was the degree of state regulation higher than almost everything else, but things such as high wage and price control affected distribution. I cannot control my means of distribution and trade if the state is telling me that what price I can sell an item for. It is also controlling it when it is cutting off trade from other markets thanks to their autarchy policies. So again, it wasn't.
"Really? Well, he has redefined right wing to mean free from state interference," - Depending on the spectrum, that is true. For example a political compass is representative of how much state interference the economy has.
"equated socialism with totalitarianism," - Socialism nearly always leads to totalitarianism and you cannot have totalitarianism without socialism. Not all socialists are totalitarians but all totalitarians are socialists.
"and tried to claim that when a company has a public share offering it isn't owned by private individuals. For a start." - I will give you this one, however what he is trying to explain through that is how a group or community is controlling that company's mean of production, distribution, and trade. Not an individual. Thats why corporation domination is technically neither capitalism nor socialism. It's corporatism.
"Corporatism is a collectivist political ideology which advocates the organization of society by corporate groups, such as agricultural, labour, military, business, scientific, or guild associations, on the basis of their common interests. The term is derived from the Latin corpus, or "human body". - Technically, Fascist Italy would be compared to that mainly.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "The political "spectrum" would define increasing government control as authoritarian," - Political control, yes, economic control, no.
"not left wing." - Again, economic control is further left, or more collective control to be precise.
"As I showed you in the thread you had the sense to run away from," - Which one?
"there are many libertarian/anarchist versions of socialism too." - Which I already explain anarchosocialism is an oxymoron. If there is nothing to stop someone from going and creating their own means of production to profit, that just creates anarcho capitalism.
"And as you have admitted in this thread, dictatorships cannot be said to be representative of the community." - I did not say they can't. I said they don't always. But how they rise to power is a factor in that. Also again, by that logic, Lenin and Stalin weren't socialists either.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "A regulated capitalist economy is still capitalist." - Except it is not when regulations completely undermine a private control. Not when the threat of expropriation exists.
"Who was getting the profits from e.g Krupps?" - Profits are not relevant to either system. You are aware a socialist economy can also have people profit.
"All totalitarians are socialist"
Provably wrong." - Except its not. Totalitarianism is complete and utter control of every aspect of someone's life. "Everything in the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state." If not everything is aligned and or part of the state, then its not truly totalitarianism. By trying to say the Nazis were capitalists, even though Hitler hated capitalism as highlighted in his second book, comparing it to international Jewish finance, you are technically saying the Nazis were not totalitarian.
"And you don't understand corporation either. If only you'd copy and pasted the next line from Wikipedia: "Corporatism does not refer to a political system dominated by large business interests, " - I am aware it doesn't.
Corporatism is a collectivist political ideology which advocates the organization of society by corporate groups, such as agricultural, labour, military, business, scientific, or guild associations, on the basis of their common interests. The term is derived from the Latin corpus, or "human body"
"the control of a state or organization by large interest groups" - There is more than one definition. Granted I am aware this section can be taken with a grain of salt slightly.
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@slaterslater5944 But since I counted on you being idiotic on this notion again. I saved the definitions.
"Oxford Definition: an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state." -
a country's trade and industry are CONTROLLED by private owners for profit RATHER THAN BY THE STATE.
"Merriam Webster Definition: an economic system characterized by private or corporate ownership of capital goods, by investments that are determined by private decision, and by prices, production, and the distribution of goods that are determined mainly by competition in a free market." - by investments that are DETERMINED BY PRIVATE DECISION, and by PRICES, PRODUCTION, AND THE DISTRIBUTION of goods that are DETERMINED mainly by competition in a FREE market.
"Investopedia comparison between Capitalism and Socialism: Capitalism is based on individual initiative and favors market mechanisms over government intervention, while socialism is based on government planning and limitations on private control of resources." - INDIVIDUAL INITIATIVE and favors MARKET MECHANISMS OVER GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION.
"Vocabulary Website Definition: Capitalism is an economic system featuring the private ownership of business wealth and the free and unfettered operation of trade markets" - AND THE FREE AND UNFETTERED OPERATION of trade markets.
"Yourdictionary website Definition: An economic system in which the means of production and distribution are owned and controlled mostly by private individuals and businesses for profit, thus what is produced and the quantities thereof are determined by consumer demand and competition." - ARE OWNED AND CONTROLLED MOSTLY BY PRIVATE INDIVIDUALS.
"Oxford Learning Dictionary Definition: an economic system in which a country’s businesses and industry are controlled and run for profit by private owners rather than by the government. " - business and industry are CONTROLLED and RUN for profit by private owners RATHER THAN BY THE GOVERNMENT.
"Thought Co Article Definition: Capitalism is an economic system that emerged in Europe during the 16th and 17th centuries in which private companies, rather than the state, control trade and industry. Capitalism is organized around the concept of capital (the ownership and control of the means of production by those who employ workers to produce goods and services). In practical terms, this creates an economy built on the competition between private businesses that seek to make a profit and grow." - PRIVATE COMPANIES, RATHER than the STATE, CONTROL trade and industry.
Need I go on? Or is your cognitive ability strong enough to read what is clearly in front of you?
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@slaterslater5944 "Every single one of those definitions refutes your claim. Not ONE of them "specifically highlights it is about control, NOT ownership" - OMG, you must be blind. Either that or you are a bigger fool than I took you for. Again, they highlight specifically the importance of private owners CONTROLLING their own trade and industry and to be able to carry it out within a mostly untampered market. What you are doing is literally the equivalence of taking a flat earther, launching them into a rocket, having them revolve around the entire Earth and then after landing still claiming the Earth is fucking flat!!
"You can tell by the way they ALL mention private ownership.(But thet don't all mention control)" - All of them highlights the importance of said control. Which is why even when it does not explicitly says control, it uses words synonymous to them. Or again, highlights the importance of an untampered market which would by common sense give the control to the private owner. All of them mention private owners, because as I mentioned within basic English, it is not like there is nothing to control the industry or trade, otherwise it wouldn't exist. It highlights the importance of it however being CONTROLLED BY PRIVATE OWNERS. This is why as I mentioned hundreds of times by this point, private ownership by itself does not make capitalism. Even disregarding the definitions I provided that clearly proves my point, literally through basic logic it can't be just private ownership. Because if that alone made capitalism, then capitalism would be indistinguishable from Feudalism.
"For example:
"An economic system featuring the private ownership of businesses" - Which again would make it indsiguishable from Feudalism. This is why, as highlighted even by the definitions I used within this arguement, that capitalism is not JUST private ownership.
Do your lies and evasions even fool you?
🤣🤣😆😆🤣" - That fact you can't or refuse even read what is in right front of you means that is a question you should ask yourself.
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@slaterslater5944 And because you don't believe me, here is the full quote from anti duhring. "...the production and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or estates is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men’s brains, not in man’s better insight into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in the philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch. The growing perception that existing social institutions are unreasonable and unjust, that reason has become unreason, and right wrong, is only proof that in the modes of production and exchange changes have silently taken place with which the social order, adapted to earlier economic conditions, is no longer in keeping. From this it also follows that the means of getting rid of the incongruities that have been brought to light must also be present, in a more or less developed condition, within the changed modes of production themselves. These means are not to be invented, spun out of the head, but discovered with the aid of the head in the existing material facts of production.[1]" - I believe you now owe me an apology effective immediately.
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@slaterslater5944 "Capitalism isn't inherently anti state control." - Yes it is, by definition.
"You can't do capitalism without a state." - Firstly not true, secondly even if it was. A state existing is not the same as it being in control of the economy.
"How does "the sought of all political revolution" mean a revolution is desirable?" - No the actual quote goes like this, clearly u misread my original comment that mentions Engels desire for revolution. -
"The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in the philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch." - Political Revolution are to be sought. Dumbass. Damn I didn't know u couldn't read, thank God I did some digging on my previous threads otherwise I wouldn't had realized u purposely lied on what I even originally said.
"Its just gibberish. Sought is a verb, not a noun." - Are to be sought. Yes and its still a verb within the context of the quote I originally used.
"And it certainly is invented, so you're lying again." - Clear;y otherwise.
"Why did you make up a gibberish phrase and attribute it to Engels?" - Clearly u did not read the quote properly. Don't worry I laid it out again so that u could read.
"Did you even read the passage you cited?" - Anti Duhring.
"Because you certainly didn't understand it. Nowhere in that text did Engles say a revolution was desirable." - Are to be sought.
Sought DEFs:
A. attempt to find (something).
B. attempt or desire to obtain or achieve (something).
C. ask for (something) from someone.
"And he certainly didn't say "sought of all political revolution" because that is just a random jumble of words." - No once again u misread.
"social changes and political revolutions are to be sought" - That ain't random.
"Why are you so dishonest?" - Why r u considering u lied about the quote I even used. The quote even in its original inception 6 days ago had what was written above.
"The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in the philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch." - So answer me, why r u being dishonest?
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@slaterslater5944 "I didn't say Engles didn't think a revolution was desirable." - "Neither does Engles say a revolution is desirable there." - Stop being dishonest.
"But nowhere in any of what you posted does he express such a wish." - "The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in the philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch." - How many times must the same quote be repeated to you?
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@LeandroVelez7 "Since historically we have never seen capitalism work without a strong state backing it there is no argument to be had that it could work without the state." - True, but the only reason that has been the case is because the concept of the state has existed before the concept of capitalism.
"There have been moments in American history, say the Gilded age, when the country maintained the most laissez faire attitude you'll find. The question is, if it worked so well before then why did the government set regulatory guidelines in the first place?Especially
"The state's role should be to protect public interests from private interests through the enactment of laws and protect the playing field from unscrupulous characters." - Which I would agree with. I wish to be clear I am not an An Cap or even a traditional capitalist. But I am not ignorant to the reality of alternate systems. However, the problem with your statement is when does the line get drawn? A state in many ways is like a gun. When it falls in the wrong hand, a AK is going to be more destructive than a handgun. As such, when the state is smaller and weaker, it is much more difficult for it to be weaponized by any interest group.
"It should simply call balls and strikes. But when we look at the role it's played, it's done more to protect private interests than not." - Both yes and no. Like I said, the state represents two extremes, on one hand, yes it can and has protected the private interest in many ways, on the other hand it has completely all but eliminated the private sector in favor of socialism or appealing to a 1% of corporate oligarchs who have rejected capitalism on the base of competition being present.
"In America, the repealing of the environmental protection act and the voting rights act are just a few examples how this is currently been done. Attacks on labor rights through state supported right to work initiatives, the weakening of labor contracts; NAFTA brought down the costs of labor and destroyed the once illustrious middle class being other examples. Etc etc.
All state endorsed and permitted." - Which is another example of the state being weaponized. This was why most ideological capitalists were against state power, as they knew it would become easy to weaponize and be used against the interests of entering firms and supply/ demand.
"The state should be a neutral character but it has repeatedly used it's power, through it's monopoly on violence and law, to protect corporate interests and private property." - And this is where you are falling under confusion, corporate interests in the context of bribery is not in favor of capitalism. It is actually anti capitalism since they are trying to use the state to suppress the entry of new capitalists and restrict free enterprise.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "Not the same thing as controlling the means of production, kid." - Probably older than u r, I would suggest not going there. Also how is that not the same? And u forget that both distribution and trade are factors
"You admit they were in private ownership, for the profit of private entities.
What's your definition of capitalism again?" - "an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state."
Controlled, not owned. As I mentioned before, if you do not control something, you do not truly own it, and vise versa. If they cannot control their own means of production, distribution, and trade. That is not capitalism. The Nazis controlling prices is not capitalism, the Nazis expropriating the Jews and any who oppose them is not capitalism. The Nazis redistributing expropriated businesses to party members is not capitalism, the Nazis setting up autarchy and cutting off most trade is not capitalism. None of that is private control.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "Nope, the Nazi state did not represent the community. What did the Nazis do to a large chunk of the community? That's right, they put them in concentration camps and gas Chambers." - You mean the Jews? Hmmm what did Lenin and Stalin do to a large chunk of their community, oh yes, kill them for accusations of treason, send them to gulags, starve them out? Hmm, I guess by your logic, they were not socialists either, hmmm? What about Mao who was the second largest mass murderer in human history?
"Also, who profited at e.g. Krupps?" - Are you quite done repeating a question that I have already answered and explained why it is not relevant? Again, I can throw the same thing back at you. Lenin and Stalin did much of the things Hitler did as well, so by your logic, were they not socialists either then? "They weren't real socialists." That is what your argument is devolving into.
"Oh, and Hitler wasn't voted in by the people, he was appointed." - By government members who were elected by the people, 1932 election, the Nazi party already gained up to 37.27% of the total votes in the Reichstag. The government specifically appointed Hitler because of the amount of support he had gained in Germany, being far higher than both the Social Democrats and over double the amount of votes for the Communist Party. In fact it gained more votes than any other single party in Germany during that election. So the Nazis represented the community as a whole a lot more than any other party did in Germany.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "The state decides what the individual can do in e.g. Singapore,too .
Are they not capitalist now?" - If we are referring to economically, then not 100%. It likely would lean more toward capitalism but is technically a mixed economy.
"When would it make sense to pay more for a good than you have to, kid?" - Who would say you would automatically pay more? Do u not understand basic economics, have you been smoking socialism weed these days? Also define have to, if someone else is making the product for you and is only asking for a small price for it, many would take that over going through making it themselves.
"I don't think everyone is willfully going to share what they make, but that is irrelevant." - Except it is relevant. Because if they aren't going to willfully do it, then who is going to make them? If no one makes them, then they all would control their own means of production, distribution, and trade which would effectively make anarcho capitalism.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "So you agree the Nazis did not represent the community, good.
Can you stop asserting it now, do you think?" - Where did I say that? I said that your claims of them not representing them would be in the same vain of the Marxists not representing them either. So at that point your just admitting that socialists are hypocrites.
"No, you haven't said who profited at Krupps, but I'll give you another chance - who profited at Krupps?" - I answered this above, this is not even relevant as I explained before. Profit does not = control of means of production, distribution, and trade. You can still profit without owning something.
"And yes, as I was, Hitler was not voted in. Were you being dishonest or ignorant when you claimed he was?" - Did you not read the above comment? I did not know I was dealing with a blind man. Over 37.27% of total German votes went to the National Socialists. Making it the most voted for party in isolation. Hitler was appointed by the elected administration precisely because of the support Hitler gained. Which once again is far more to Hitler's credit than someone like Lenin who had to do a violent revolution or Stalin who gained power through a Cue. So again, by your logic Lenin and Stalin were not socialists either. Right? What about Mao then? North Korea? Vietnam? Cuba, were they not socialists either? If your argument devolves into everytime socialism fails its not real socialism, you lost all ground to your argument.
So I will ask one more fucking time, what makes the actions of Hitler any different than that of Lenin, Stalin, and Mao? What makes them socialists, but not Hitler when they did nearly the same things? Answer that now, or we are done. It amazes how you socialists take so much righteousness in your own ignorance, how you are quick to ignore things that undermine your arguments.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "If we are referring to economically"
"Of course we are. We're discussing the economy. Wherein the means of production are owned by private individuals,for profit. I.e. capitalism." - Controlled not owned, but go on.
"Not 100%"
"I'm sure there's one or two state owned entities, but the economy is still overwhelmingly capitalist and it makes little sense to characterise it as anything other. You are confusing free market with capitalism." -
"capitalism requires a free market to be 100%. Capitalism is private control over the means of production and trade. The state controlling that is contradictory of capitalism, hence mixed economies. A free market and capitalism are more a less one and the same.
"who would say you would automatically pay more"
"Uhhh... Socialists?" - Right and I am just going to take their word for it?
"do you not understand basic economics?"
"Do you not understand how basic Socialism addresses that point of basic economics? Or just unaware?
In which case, what credibility do to have in identifying whether anyone was a socialist or not?" - It is made quite obvious with your connotation. Now more than ever since your pretty quick to defend it, or act like Anarcho socialism is some utopian like thing even though its a walking contradiction.
"If the workers' co-op and the private owner produce a non-fungible product I need or want for 5 dollars, and the private owner for 6, what does basic economics predict I will do?" - Ok, if the private owner sells it for 4 dollars or even 4.99, then what? They buy from the capitalist, and not every product is non fungible. If I make my own farm and sell my food cheaper than the worker coop, who do you think most are going to buy from? If I offer a higher wage to people that work for me, then what happens? That is the contradiction. Allowing that would inevitably lead to competition between private markets, ultimately making it capitalism. Only thing that would stop that would be artificial barriers which would require a state.
"Finally, you need to learn the difference between advocating something and describing it. You clearly don't have much of a clue what Socialism actually is. Or capitalism, given that you can't identify the even stronger role the state has there. On reflection, anarcho-capitalism is FAR more a contradiction in terms than even anarcho-socialism, late alone anarcho-communism .." - Um no it is not. Because capitalism being individual control does not require a state for such individual control. I do not require a state to trade my piece of bread with someone who has a bag of coal that I want.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "Nope, that's not MY answer. And it's not for "random reason". - It doesn't matter. It might as well be with what ur saying. and u act as if no one would reject the system outright. People absolutely would, especially when it wouldn't seem to benefit them anymore, at least not as much as owning their own means of production would.
"You'd know why of you actually bothered to educate yourself on any of these subjects you keep sounding off about.
I mean, you didn't not even understand what a capitalist is." - Wow, so I don't understand the definition I clearly outlined to u? How do u not get this, if I make my own means of production, control my own means of production, and own my means of production for the sake of my interests. That makes me by definition a capitalist.
"Just like you didn't understand what bourgeoisie or corporatism meant." - U mean Marx's definition. The actual definition of Bourgeoisie was correct when I laid it out to u. Also how long r u going to be on about that? Jesus christ man, that was over 100 comments ago.
"the middle class, typically with reference to its perceived materialistic values or conventional attitudes.
"the rise of the bourgeoisie at the end of the eighteenth century"
(in Marxist contexts) the capitalist class who own most of society's wealth and means of production.
"the conflict of interest between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat"
"Corporatism is a collectivist[1] political ideology which advocates the organization of society by corporate groups, such as agricultural, labour, military, business, scientific, or guild associations, on the basis of their common interests." - Definitions are right here bud.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "Nope, a worker's coop is a worker's coop.
What's the difference if it only has one worker instead of two?" - Because that is not a coop. You can't have a coop with yourself. You are an individual a private owner. If I freelance, I control my own means of production.
"You are either missing the point or being deliberately obtuse. The full value just means all the money/goods gained from exchanging the product.
The raw amount may be subjective, but the proportion of the raw amount that goes to the worker most certainly isn't." - Ok and as mentioned before, if someone makes all their own money through their own products they produce themselves, they would not need a worker's coop? The reason why employee systems in capitalism exist is because of good and services being provided in exchange for the payment. But often the business owner is using his own equipment and is financially risking far more.
"Bingo! Of course, you WONT get all the money working for a company under capitalism." - Because a company is hiring you for a task or service. If I work at a restaurant, I am not risking my equipment nor my investments, nor even a complete standard of living. An owner has far more to risk, and more to pay for, so of course they are going to want more out of it. Not to mention none of the products within those are mine, I am only providing a service for them. If I say make a sandwich with ingredients that belong to someone else, that doesn't make it my sandwich, instead I am payed for the effort of making it.
"So, you need there to be enough workers' coops around first so that you have the option of working for a place that will give you the full value of your labour." - Or someone can just start their own business. The value of their labor is subjective because that is based on a supply and demand factor similar to consumers. A good airplane pilot is going to have far greater demand and lower supply, meaning they will be paid more than the average person that works at a Mcdonalds. If they feel unsatisfied with their current payment or conditions, they can attempt to alter the conditions with their owner, however the result is very much going to depend on how much value the owner sees in u in keeping u around.
If someone wishes to dictate their means of production or "gain the full fruits of their labor" then they can open their own business and become an owner/capitalist. At that point, they can risk their own items, their own investments, etc.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "If someone wishes to ... "gain the full fruits of their labour then they can open their own business"
"Ah, so the airline pilot should just go and start their own airline, should they?" - If they can afford to do so, yes. Or they can go to a different airline company that is willing to pay them more or provide more favorable hours. However much of the condition of that is depended on just how much they are needed.
"Because a business, by definition, has to exploit its workers to profit (according to the labour theory of value)." - Ok according to a labor theory of value, but have you considered just how wrong that concept is? By its logic whatever u provide, good or service is only worth as much as the effort it took to make it. However this is objectively false within a market. If I for instance spend an entire day working on an art piece made of mud, by the labor theory of value's logic, I should make a lot of money off of it. But I don't, why? Because I cannot find someone who would rather spend their money on my mud work than someone who took 2 hours to fix their phone. It does me no good to put a lot of effort and labor into something that nobody else wants. Just like for the consumer, producers have their own supply and demand in accordance with how much the work or good is worth to them. Am I worth giving a raise by $2? Is the Lawn Mower guy worth paying $40 for his service rather than doing it myself? There is no objective answer, the value comes down to what the opposite party in the transaction can afford and what both they and I the producer have value in my work for.
"Socialism is workers controlling the means of production." - Except it isn't. Socialism is not inherent to the worker. It is about Communal or Collective control. Marxism is about the worker. Now variants of socialism can make it about the worker, but others do not even mention it.
"If you have two workers, and two means of production, each of which is controlled by one of the workers, how is that not the workers controlling the means of production?" - Because Socialism is not about the workers. Capitalism calls for the private owner or individual to control their own means of production. By ur logic, literally any production would automatically be socialism since the owner works at his own business. What kind of logic is that?
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "How is a worker owning the means of production NOT a worker owning the means of production?" - Because as I mentioned before, Marx did not include owners of means of production.
"Karl Marx defined the working class or proletariat as individuals who sell their labour power for wages and who do not own the means of production. He argued that they were responsible for creating the wealth of a society." - Who do not own the means of production. Because guess what, if he did include those that owned the means of production, it would completely undermine the point of his ideology since it would create a loophole.
"This is hilarious" - Except it isn't. Think, if I own and control my own means of production and trade, that makes me a capitalist. Now Marx is advocating against capitalism because of its exploitation of the working class, right? If the capitalists were included in the working class, then there is no separate classes, the owners/capitalists would technically still count as workers, which means there would be no reason to throw a revolution to give the working class the ownership of the means of production.
"Pre Marx socialism had nothing to do with the workers"
Then why does the definition mention the means of production? (Another Marxist term!) - U can ask the people that wrote it. Unfortunately that is an aspect of the definition they do often get wrong when in reality it would just be referring to the economy in general. However when u combine the means or production, distribution, and trade. That does pretty much make up an entire economy within industry.
"How would it make every current business a worker's coop, when in a worker's coop the reward is shared between those who work there?!" - Again because if u are arguing that a free lancer/ capitalist who is in control of their own means of production would be a coop then by that logic, everything would be a coop.
"Capitalists..make the majority of their income from the ownership of assets and capital"
"A worker who operates their own means of production is making their income from the work they do, not the assets they own." - Really so u think it does not require assets to make their product? Also it specifically states, assets and capital.
Capital Definition: "the sum of financial assets required to produce the goods or services it offers to its customers."
Assets Def: a useful or valuable thing, person, or quality.
A person can very much be considered an asset.
"So by your own definition they're CLEARLY not capitalist." - Um no, because as I mentioned before, a person can be considered an asset. So is the equipment they make use of. If I am a Lawn Mowing guy for instance. Do u really think I am going to make money without owning or making use of a lawn mower?
"I'll admit you didn't redefine it, you just picked a definition that means the opposite of what you hoped it would.
You've lost it completely. now." - Except I didn't. As I mentioned before, a person can be considered an asset. That is part of the reason an employee is complimented as an asset for the company. A big help. Now while assets mainly refer to items, it can include people as well. Same goes for capital. I would assume u know the concept of human capital.
"The socioeconomic group consisting of people who are employed in manual or industrial work"
...And there you go not having a clue about what Marx meant by class or workers again.
Oh dear. Why don't you try actually reading Marx instead of making idiotic and plainly false assertions about his theories?" - Such as? The definitions are right there man.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "Tried to say state Capitalism was an actual thing when it isn't"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_capitalism
You were saying? - And did you bother to look into the origin? State capitalism was literally created in an attempt to disassociate failed versions of socialism or state control from their socialism theory and to try to blame capitalism for its existence.
“Perhaps the earliest critique of the Soviet Union as state capitalist was formulated by the Russian anarchists as documented in Paul Avrich's work on Russian anarchism.[45]
The Russian anarchists' claim would become standard in anarchist works. Of the Soviet Union, the prominent anarchist Emma Goldman wrote an article from 1935 titled "There Is No Communism in Russia" in which she argued:
Such a condition of affairs may be called state capitalism, but it would be fantastic to consider it in any sense Communistic [...] Soviet Russia, it must now be obvious, is an absolute despotism politically and the crassest form of state capitalism economically.”
Another example - “When speaking about Marxism, Murray Bookchin said the following:
Marxism, in fact, becomes ideology. It is assimilated by the most advanced forms of state capitalist movement — notably Russia. By an incredible irony of history, Marxian 'socialism' turns out to be in large part the very state capitalism that Marx failed to anticipate in the dialectic of capitalism. The proletariat, instead of developing into a revolutionary class within the womb of capitalism, turns out to be an organ within the body of bourgeois society [...] Lenin sensed this and described 'socialism' as 'nothing but state capitalist monopoly made to benefit the whole people'. This is an extraordinary statement if one thinks out its implications, and a mouthful of contradictions”
And another - “Another early analysis of the Soviet Union as state capitalist came from various groups advocating left communism. One major tendency of the 1918 Russian communist left criticised the re-employment of authoritarian capitalist relations and methods of production. As Valerian Osinsky in particular argued, "one-man management" (rather than the democratic factory committees workers had established and Lenin abolished)[54] and the other impositions of capitalist discipline would stifle the active participation of workers in the organisation of production. Taylorism converted workers into the appendages of machines and piece work imposed individualist rather than collective rewards in production so instilling petty bourgeois values into workers. In sum, these measures were seen as the re-transformation of proletarians within production from collective subject back into the atomised objects of capital. The working class, it was argued, had to participate consciously in economic as well as political administration. In 1918, this tendency within the left communists emphasized that the problem with capitalist production was that it treated workers as objects. Its transcendence lay in the workers' conscious creativity and participation, which is reminiscent of Marx's critique of alienation.”
Neo Trotskyists - “In neo-Trotskyist theory, such an alliance was rejected as being based either on a false strategy of popular fronts, or on political opportunism, said to be incompatible either with a permanent revolution or with the principle of independent working class political action.
The state in Soviet-type societies was redefined by the neo-Trotskyists as being also state-monopoly capitalist.”
Mainland China was viewed as this as well. However, even a simple glance at the definitions would make clear that the term “State Capitalism” is oxymoronic in its nature.
Capitalism DEF: “an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.”
State Capitalism DEF: “a political system in which the state has control of production and the use of capital.”
Ok, did the last definition not literally just say that the control cannot be by the state? It would have to be controlled by private owners or individuals. So that obviously does not work.
State Socialism DEF: “a political system in which the state has control of industries and services.” - Control of industry and production are synonyms to one another. State Socialism and State Capitalism literally mean the same thing. However as noted before capitalism in terms of economic control is anti state control.
Socialism DEF: “a political and economic theory of social organization which advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.”
State DEF: “a nation or territory considered as an organized political community under one government.”
Community Definition: “a group of people living in the same place or having a particular characteristic in common.”
A nation is a community, a state is a community. Community control over the economy literally is the same thing as state control over the economy. State capitalism literally is just another word of state socialism or just socialism in general.
"The workers would already be in control"
“Are most people a) Freelancers who control their own means of production or b) workers who sell their labour to an employer who controls the means of production?” - Most are b, but you're missing the point. Even an owner who hires workers can still be seen as a worker himself. Again, they still have to get reports, check numbers, hire and fire people, and make decisions. That is still work. So as I mentioned before. If private owners were included in the working class, it would completely undermine Marxism as an ideology.
“How can I provide counter sources that for example show Marx DIDNT say "the last capitalist we hang will be the one who sold us the rope"?!” - No I am asking for counter sources of what he did say then. U keep trying to deny Marx hating capitalism but show no evidence to support that.
“You make a claim about what you imagine Marx write or thought, the you support it, pal. That's how debate works.” -
“And where have I defended Socialism, exactly?” - really? Dude u literally tried to deny Anarcho socialism being oxymoronic, tried to say capitalism exploits workers, and have been pretty keen on implying market socialism would be a good thing.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "Such as? Roads and other infrastructure." - So how does a road in Los Vegas benefit me in the east coast?
"Healthcare." - I Don't use it.
"Unemployment insurance." - Again, what if one does not need to use it?
"Defence." - True
"The fire service." - I will partially give that.
"The postal service" - Ignoring internet and online mailing, ntm Amazon.
"You pay other people's welfare becuae YOU might need it one day." - Key being MIGHT. However as mentioned before, that still takes away ur money for something that likely won't even benefit you personally.
"And would you prefer to see the unfortunate starve to death? How inhuman are you?" - I never said I preferred that. I explained how taxes technically isn't allowing u to get the full value of labor either. Whether or not it is justified is irrelevant to the argument. This is the point ur missing. Just as the government takes part money for its purposes, so to does a business owner to help the business. Whether that be for getting new equipment, having emergency budget, upgrading to better tools, hire more employees, expand new products. All of that holds purpose. And do u know what the key difference is, working for a business is voluntary, taxes is not. If a worker is dissatisfied with his or her payment for his or her work. They can ask for a raise, find a higher paying job, or start their own business. They have an escape. However, there is not escaping taxes. The worst a business can do is fire you, or maybe sue you for a contract violation. The worst the state can do is send men in black suits to take you away.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "You'll need the roads in Las Vegas when you go to Las Vegas." - If I go to Los Vegas. But what if I never do? Then what?
"In the meantime, you'll need the roads that are around you and all the infrastructure that goes with them." - Ok in my area, however my area is not the other side of the country.
"But what you still don't get is that taxes are no more you "not getting the full value of your labour" than having to pay for water is." - Um yes it is, because purchasing of anything such as that is a willful transaction, not something forced upon you. Taxes is the principle of benefit after the threat. Because even if I made a convincing argument that I would not need anything that taxes paid for, say I owned my own roads, had private security, etc. It would not matter, it would come down to pay it OR ELSE.
"It's a transaction." - Not a willful one. And I would argue something u have no choice in is far more exploitive than anything a private owner can impose going by ur logic.
"If you can't see the difference between that and being exploited by an employer for their profit, it can't be explained to you." - So ur telling me u do believe people are being exploited? LOL. Yet denied any sympathies towards socialism.
"Working for a business is voluntary,"
Not really. And being exploited definitely isn't." - Really, who is pointing a gun at your head saying you have to work there? Who is punishing you for quitting and seeking a different job?
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "So obviously you do benefit from taxation." - Depends on what thing it is used for.
"Yet, it is a transaction. So it's not you not getting the full value of your labour." - Hardly, its a transaction in the same way paying an extortionist is a transaction. Paying not to be arrested is hardly worthy of being considered one, especially when once again, u have no choice but to pay it. If u don't pay taxes, u r made a criminal.
"And is in no way comparable to profit that an owner pockets." - Like the government does not pocket some of our own tax money? Its plenty comparable. The only part of it not comparable is a business I can walk away from, taxes I can't.
"You keep saying "by your logic" when it's clear you have no idea what logic means, yet alone what I have stated implies." - Really now, because again, if the owners are "exploiting my labor" so too would be the state when they tax. U can try to argue all u want about how it "benefits" me. But as I mentioned before, some of these things hell a decent amount of these things aren't even being used by me. Do I use a road in New Jersey? No, Do I rely on National Healthcare? No, etc. These things are not for my benefit but the benefit of the state itself and those that are actually affected by those investments. The same way an owner is going to use his money to invest in his business, to grow it, to get better equipment, to hire more employees, etc.
"By my (and everyone else's) logic a person is exploited when they create excess value that the boss takes as profit." - Clearly not, otherwise capitalism wouldn't still be existed, would it? Providing labor service is just that, a service. You get paid to do a job.
"That's what exploitation means." - the action or fact of treating someone unfairly in order to benefit from their work." - How exactly is it unfair when both parties consented to the arrangement? When both benefit off of the deal, and when you know in advance what kind of work and payment u get?
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "Have you ever had a job?" - Multiple.
"Being exploited is unavoidable,given that the owner will always be getting profit that comes from the excess value of your labour." - The owner gets profit because he owns the company and product. I am providing a service to his means of production in exchange for payment. Technically speaking, if the owner is exploiting me, I would also be exploiting them through making money off their equipment, their company, their transactions with customers. And like I said before, if I at any point feel that the arrangement is unfair to me, I can walk out. No one is pointing a gun saying I can't.
However since we are already on this topic,
DEF: "the action or fact of treating someone unfairly in order to benefit from their work." - So when the state takes money off of me for my work in order to provide or make something I do not even want, and they get to benefit for it, how is that not by definition exploitation? Especially when unlike working for a private business I literally cannot walk away. I have no choice, you going to say when you literally have no choice in is being fair? If I quit a business then the arrangement is done, and I can walk away and find a new job. If I refuse to pay taxes, guess what, property gets taken from me, and then if I still don't pay, I get arrested, stripped of my rights, and thrown in prison. That by definition is exploitation, its also extortion.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 “The state is not exploiting you because they do not make a profit from your labour.” - Except they do make money off of your work. Your confusing exploitation for profiting. Profits are not exploitation and exploitation are not profits.
“Getting arrested and thrown in prison meets no definition of exploitation ever accepted.” - Your missing the point, I never said getting arrested was exploitation. I stated that the state exploitation of the people’s wealth cannot be escaped because of the threat of imprisonment. You have no escape from it.
“Persecution, sure (if you think criminals are persecuted when they get arrested for criminal acts) but exploitation? Get a grip, kid.” - Again, look at the full picture. If I am getting exploited by the state, and I want out of it, I can’t. Its quite literally being effectively a financial slave to the state. Because unlike working for a private enterprise, walking away is not an option. The worst a business will do is fire you and maybe sue you if you violate a contract. The state on the other hand, quite literally can exploit your property and arrest you, throw you in jail, and then exploit your labor, since some jails do have labor jobs.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 “No, the state does not make money off your work, so it's not exploitation.” - Really, then how does the state pay its government officials, how do teachers get paid, how do police men get paid, or firefighters, how does the state afford all the infrastructure? Does it just magically have it? No it comes from the tax payer.
“What do they do with the money raised by taxation? It is spent on YOUR infrastructure,” - Except it isn’t mine. I do not own a road, or a light system, or a public bus. The state does.
“YOUR health,” - healthcare is meaningless to someone who does not use it. Not mine.
“YOUR unemployment,” - Don’t use it. So again, not mine.
“YOUR defence, YOUR safety etc etc.” - Ok and so when those same police men and military within a totalitarian state start executing people for speaking against them, is that still for my safety? Or the state’s safety?
“Again, you have tremendous trouble understanding the most basic political, social and economic concepts.” - Except I don’t. You are the one trying to call capitalism exploitive, you are the one trying to deny basic supply and demand concepts, or the place of private ownership.
“All because you're having a teenage libertarian tantrum about the nasty state (which you want to replace with truly terrible, for profit agencies).” - Strawman argument, no where did I say I wanted to replace the state with anything, no where did I say the state was nasty. This is why I mentioned before, whether or not you consider the actions justified does not change what the action is. Taxes are used for the benefit of others within the society when done right, when done wrong it only further empowers the state at the expense of its own people. Taxes are exploitive on the private individual whether you like it or not. Now we can justify that exploitation. Does not change what it is. The point being made was not being a neo anarchist, it was explaining that the private owner is not going to be any more exploitive than what a state is also capable of. But of course I don’t expect you to understand that.
This is likely where I am going to end things within this discussion, given that at this point you have strayed from the actual core of the argument, thrown blind insults, shown you have a clear agenda behind this argument, and now most recently attempted to use your personal assumptions as actual facts and arguments. For what it's worth, I can appreciate the discussion as it helped me further conduct my arguments and even gain new evidence to back it. But on a respectful note since despite how misguided I consider you to be, I will simply leave things on an agree to disagree note.
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@paidgovernmentshill_6950 "..and does the state have money left over once it's paid for all those services? Nope. Because it is not operated for profit." - So let me get this straight, the only way in ur mind that a state is not exploiting the taxpayer is by doing deficit spending. Its no wonder socialists end up in severe debt.
"It is a transaction." - Except it really isn't. Not a willful one at least. Its the same as a guy pointing a gun at your head unless you buy his pizza.
"You will need healthcare and unemployment benefit at some point." - Says who? If I constantly have a job and I have a private health insurance, where would I need either the healthcare or unemployment? Oh, u mean unless the state shuts down the business I'm in for not obeying its economic mandates? Is that what u meant?
"Plus, you're only alive due to the midwife that delivered you, in the hospital the state-owned ambulance drove you to," - My dad drove my mom, thank you very much.
"on the roads that the government built." - which is paid by the taxpayer.
"And then you got free education," - Free? Taxpayer is paying for that too, also what if someone uses private school?
"you can get to your job on those same roads etc etc." - U mean the road paid by exploited labor in other jobs?
"You don't get something for nothing, kid." - Unless ur the state. So let me get this straight, by ur logic. If u owe ur entire existence to the state, and must pay money to the state because u owe them, and the state can make u do whatever it wants because of that. That must mean the state effectively owns u. So much for slavery being abolished in 1865.
"As for exploitation - how does a business owner make a profit if the price they sell their product for isn't greater than all the inputs that went into it?" - Again, ur confusing profit with exploitation. So if I charge more money than the materials needed to make my product then I must be exploiting the customer. So co-ops must be exploitive too then. Or what about when the state charges additional money on road tolls? Tolls paid by your tax money.
"You might not like the term exploitation, but you can't escape the fact." - What fact? Ur confusing profit with exploitation. So tell me, do u have no money then?
"Yes, seeing as you have "developed" your argument to the point that you compare government spending on hospitals to your boss spending your excess value on a holiday," - Ur missing the point, it does not matter what they r spending it on. What matters is whose money are they using to pay for it? And unlike a business where if you feel like you r being exploited, you have the option to walk away, or quit, or start a new business, the state will literally arrest you, take away your rights, and throw u in a prison that often makes u do free labor for the state. All for not paying taxes.
"it's definitely best you give it a rest!" - Nah u bud.
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@hendrik8953 "i beg to disagree. the "minimum state" is a big flag from capitalism, "less state" on ppls lifes and so on. it dont advocate totalitarianism, true, but so does communism, no?" - Not necessary. And to correct, you mean socialism. The problem is socialism is calling for communal or collective ownership. Now, most people already know capitalists are not going to just willfully give up their property. So the question is, what forces them to?
"Capitalism from its very inception has been anti state control"
"as has being communism, with its "workers paradise"..." - Which has never existed in practice in any form. I am not talking communism considering that it only exists as a pipe dream no different than unicorn land. I am talking about socialism. Because there is no point in talking about Communism working if even socialism, the required transition to reach communism does not work either.
:what the reality shows is that both communism AND capitalism depends heavily on "state control"." - Except it doesn't. If you wish for examples of this, think of Hong Kong or 18th century Britain. Both of which exercised little state interference in the economy. While neither can be considered 100% capitalist, they were extremely close into that goal and showed that typically the less a state interferes the more free a market is.
"i thought absolutism was the system that replaced feudalism." - Not from an economic standpoint.
"feudalism itself isnt a monolitic system, being so named after a very specific, in time and place, system in use in the now "low countries"." - It does however factor as an economic system.
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@slaterslater5944 omg how many times must this be stated to you? "The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch." - That’s the full quote! I already gave my interpretation of it and I’m not going through that argument again.
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@zekeybeats2927 "there is no context needed. He literally within the first 30 seconds depicts hitlers system as socialist because he said so and that it wasn’t capitalism and left wing.(which he never claimed it to be and hated it) wrong, wrong, wrong. Dishonest. Why would I listen to 5 hours of someone trying to justify those 3 completely flawed statements to taint the definitions and examples of socialism and keep the Cold War vibes up:" - Because that is not context, that is like I mentioned before dismissing the claim out of hand without looking into the logic or evidence behind it. At that point ur attacking the video and the claim under an emotional standpoint because if u had no emotional stake in not wanting it to be true, u would have no problem watching the video as a whole or at least half way and see the type of logic being presented.
"Just so you can claim that all socialist systems are inherently left leaning, completely misrepresent hitlers disgusting facist system which represents capitalism in function and end result way more than any socialist system(by the creators own admission)" - Except it wasn't. Hitler never claimed to be a capitalist, in fact he saw capitalism as a Jewish concept, often referring to it as International Jewish Finance. And it was not Fascism either. At least not its original definition. The only reason Hitler has been depicted as a Fascist is because Fascism got redefined post war in order to directly correlate all the Axis with each other ideologically speaking.
"Man. How can you try and say I’m dismissing the nonsensical claim meant to create a narrative that’s sole purpose is to try and “shit on” the left wing and further divide our political systems where we say hitler was socialist I know what I’m talking about cause I was socialist." - Because u r dismissing it out of hand rather than taking the context in. Again, IDC what ur opinion of the topic is. IDC how absurd u think it is. U owe it to ur self as an intellectual and to ur movement (I am assuming ur a socialist), to watch and understand the argument he is presenting and then after the video when the entire context is displayed, present ur counter arguments. Blind labelling ain't going to get anyone anywhere.
"Stop. As a human being it’s just straight up so wrong to be able to write words yet Intentionally draw our growing brain dead society closer to drowning while claiming you’ll debate and own anyone who thinks hitler ain’t socialist(you know cause you used to be one)" - And again, that is allowing ur projected beliefs to override taking in facts, evidence, debates, and different viewpoints, and coming to a conclusion accordingly. What ur doing rn by definition is equated to zealotry. If u wish to see the truth or at the very least be able to be better convincing with ur beliefs, u need to stop doing that.
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@slaterslater5944 "Yes, it does. Until the invading force has set up a state there are no property rights." - Um no, so you think people aren't going to try to defend their own property against the invaders even when the state is gone? If ur answer is no, that they would defend it. Then clearly the protection of property can and would be done without the state if needed. In fact resistance movements only further this point.
"Yes, a state absolutely does establish property rights in a way competing private companies can't, because it acts as a final arbiter." - The only reason it can "act as a final arbiter" is because it is the one carrying the largest stick, which would be no different than a security company doing the same thing. And as mentioned, what happens when the state is doing the very same thing that you claim the companies in an An Cap society would do? It is the exact same problem.
"And I'll prove it: how do you establish and maintain property rights without a state? You simply can't answer that" - I already did. Just because you refuse to accept the answer does not mean I didn't answer it. And that isn't proof, that is only stating the same question that this debate started in the first place to address. Once again "property rights" without enforcement or protection is completely arbitrary and as such holds no value on its own. If the state is unable to take my farm away from me, because I have an army greater than the state, then guess what, the state does not get the final say?
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@slaterslater5944 "And once the recount was done, the Democrats conceded. Unlike Trump, they didn't start all kinds of insane conspiracy theories and mount endless court cases." - You and I must remember the whole "Russia tampered with the election" conspiracy very differently.
"You are just totally incapable of honesty, aren't you?" - Says the one who literally cannot even be consistent with your own definitions.
"Given the circumstances"
The circumstances of idiots listening to liars." - Nope. Of course I can call you the whole "Russia tampered with election" conspiracy theory. But that would be taking the easy way out.
"Trump absolutely did not go willingly, you complete cretin." - So someone arrested and forced him out of office? No? Then he did willfully stepped down. He still did his farewell speech and still passed the torch. He may not had been happy about it.
"Did your mother drink heavily when she was pregnant with you?" - Fuck off. You were a damn failed abortion. Fuck you! No I am done with your bullshit. You know why? Because you try redefining terms that don't suit your definition, try subscribing to Marxist concept of capitalism, argue workers being enslaved despite being able to leave anytime they want, attempted gaslighting multiple times, tried to argue that something is private just because there are restricted things for use, and literally contradict the very definition you tried to use against me. Yet you are going to try to put this kind of insult on me? You got a lot of nerve. It's clear you are not passed the age of 12 because if you were, it would be easy for you to understand basic concepts.
"Because you really are the most dimwitted person on the entire internet." - Ha, ever looked into the mirror?
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@slaterslater5944 "State bureaucrats ARE private people taking the profit." - State bureaucrats are not private though. A state by definition falls under the public domain, not private. They are using the public enterprise to personally benefit.
"No, you failed hilariously in trying to show that Capitalism can exist without a state. The idea of competing judges in a free market simply leads to either whoever pays most getting the result they want, or competing judgements that cannot be resolved." - Again I never said I believed in the system but a most basic question that u need to honestly ask yourself is do you really think a state does proper enforcement through actual legal righteousness or is it because more often than not they carry the biggest gun? The irony is if you looked by to ancient kingdoms where state police and military couldn't be everywhere, often people would be forced to either defend their own property on their own or hire someone to do so for them.
"Now then, when you claimed MCM CMC "did not apply" under state Capitalism, despite your subsequent claim that it applies everywhere, did you do it from stupidity, ignorance, dishonesty, or all three?" - I admit to being wrong about this subsequent claim, what would of been more accurate is it doesn't apply exclusively under it or a capitalist model. Or are you going to delude yourself into thinking state bureaucrats in socialist regimes didn't benefit?
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@slaterslater5944 "No under a collective, there is no exploitation by way of extracting surplus value as there is no employer extracting said value." - Really, because I already asked a question about this before, if the collective votes to take the wealth of one of its members, how is that not the collective exploiting that individual?
"Profit is shared amongst the collective." - And as mentioned before, collective exploitation is still a thing.
"Once again you have NO IDEA what you're talking about." - Not really.
"And I only identified Russia as state capitalist, so once again, you are lying." - Where did I lie? I asked you before and you dodged my question. If your logic applies to the Soviet Union being "State Capitalist," What about Mao's China, North Korea, etc? And if they aren't what separates them? Of course if you purposely start dodging questions I am going to begin assumptions after that point.
"As for your final paragraph - what on earth makes you think that pointing out state Capitalism exists means a person thinks Lenin was far right?" - Because apparently if Hitler was far right, for his supposevively "State capitalism" Why would the same not be true of Lenin?
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@slaterslater5944 I already showed you the original quote. You dumbass. You keep asserting something that not only wasn’t my original quote. But something that isn’t even relevant. You have been harboring on this for 3 months. Move on. It’s been addressed several times. It’s not productive to the debate and you are only repeating it as a desperate attempt to pull a gotcha. Ignoring that again. It never was the original quote.
This is the last time I’m posting the original quote to you.
“"The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch."
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@slaterslater5944 "1) It may have escaped your notice, but Germany wasn't in great condition after WW1. Some historians say that was a contributing factor to WW2.."
1. Some could say that. But others don't. Because ironically despite the handicaps Germany had within the interwar period, it actually amounted to have a military advantage over the allies during the first 3 years from 1939-1941. Ironically later in the war is when they suffered where I doubt the interwar years played a factor by that point. Especially when Germany's if only disadvantages did not exist during the time the war was shifting against them.
"2) There would be no economic interest in resisting. Simply take the most money to guarantee your customer the best outcome. What's yours is mine, if I can afford it.
That's free market capitalism, baby! A few mega corporations monetising everything and the rest of us fighting for the scraps." - This does not really hold much truth when put under scrutiny. Again there have been many cases of resisting over economic interest. The American Revolutionary war started over economic interests, mainly that the British were using heavy taxation and cutting off the colonists ability to expand west, something that they fought the last war (French and Indian War) to be able to do. French Revolution started based on economic factors as well. Civil War occurred for a similar reason. When slavery was in threat of being taken away, something that the south's economy heavily relied on, it resulted in them attempting to succeed. Hell even Lenin's revolution can be considered a form of economic resistance as it was done to overthrow the Monarch who in an economic sense was taking advantage of his own people.
"That's free market capitalism, baby! A few mega corporations monetising everything and the rest of us fighting for the scraps." - Except that is not the case, ironically corporate power actually becomes more common the more a state is involved. Why do you think corporations often weaponize state policy to get what they want? Its because they know it is extremely unlikely for them to obtain it through natural economic means.
And this highlights your entire argument only speaks from the position of an anti capitalist. And given previous connotation you have, it's not difficult to believe that you are a Marxist Socialist or at the very least sympathetic to it. And I correct?
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@slaterslater5944 "Yes, it is.
The Vietnamese and their allies proved themselves stronger than the US in that theatre," - Except they didn't. US outnumbered and outgunned the Vietnamese. The reason the Vietnamese won was done because of their tactics, home-field advantage, and the US home front turning against the war. Only an idiot would think that the Vietnamese were stronger. Or that the American rebels were stronger than the British. They weren't, but they had enough logistical advantages going for them and utilized good enough of what they had that it all eventually stacked up and made victory possible. You don't always win a war by being more powerful, often it is won by being smarter and having an easier war objective than your opponent.
"which is why the latter had to run away with their tail between their legs while the rest of the world laughed.
You clueless dimwit." - Again, the US did leave the war. And by all accounts lost. But again, only an idiot would think that literal farmers with rifles makes a more powerful military than highly trained soldiers. They don't. Again, they were able to capitalize their strengths and had enough going for them to make victory possible.
"The French and Russian militaries were a key part of those revolutions.
All of which resulted in STATES." - States were made post revolution. That isn't the point, the point is your misguided belief that the state has some divine right or purpose when in reality like an individual or security force is just an instrument of power that can be defeated.
"You are so clueless it's painful. See your assertion that employees "absolutely control their means of production" because one day they might win the lottery and buy a factory." - U still on about that?
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@mikemcmike6427 "and why would average conservatives be needed? 8 years into totalitarianism???" - Are you meaning why he didn't get rid of them later on? Because by the time he took total control, most were not operating as a threat to him. The few that were (The German National People's Party as an example), Hitler was rather quick to extort in dissolving under the threat of being targeted.
"Why did they vote for him: think long and hard. so in other words more lies from ginger lard." - Primarily, because they believed he was the best chance they had to prevent a Marxist takeover. As mentioned too, they mistakenly believed they could control or at least contain Hitler's influence, thus weaponizing him for their own purposes without any drawbacks. Of course this was not the case once Hitler took complete control.
"Yea you’ve repeated 5 times now they thought they could control him. You’ve clearly watched 3 Nazis documentaries on YouTube and are an expert." - So do you deny that they did believe that?
"So again no explanation for the mass persecution of the left from the high to low., but not of the right." - Again, most leftists were composed of Marxists who Hitler saw as the lead ideological enemy as explained in the video. As for the Social Democrats, they were one of the lead parties actively opposing Hitler's takeover, especially when it came down to their opposition to the enabling act of 1933. As such, Hitler correctly guessed that the Social Democrats would likely become a barrier for him. How do you not understand this? The only difference between the right and left by the time Hitler assumed total control was that the right was smart enough or scared enough (depending on which way you look at it) to back down and effectively surrendered to Nazi rule. The left by comparison didn't and once when they were made an example of, do you really think the right wing parties were going to try the same thing? Again, the German National People's Party (GNPP) is living proof of this very example.
"The ginger lard lies again: no wonder you are alone" - What part of this has been a lie? You are yet to find a single thing I have stated that you can factually disprove.
"Yes hitler operated once he had his totalitarian dictatorship on the idea of “don’t bite the hand that feeds you” - So you are agreeing that he isn't going to go after the people that are actively ensuring his regime's economy. Great to hear.
"When you have nothing! Just invent history!" - What is there to invent? All of it has been made pretty evident either within the video, or within simple research on the topic points being discussed. No matter which way you slice it, the Nazis were an authoritarian socialist ideology and regime.
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@Die-Sophie "Say goodbye to the idea of an economic yardstick measured by today's definition." - Sadly for you I won't.
"Under Hitler, there was no equality of the people as in the ideal of socialism," - So by that logic, Stalin must not had been a real socialist either right? What about Mao? Or Kim? Or Castro? Are you for real? Neo Marxists can preach equality all they want but when it comes down to their regimes in practice, they were never equal.
"but he chose his people, who were allowed to be equal." - You mean something the Marxists also did? So tell me were they not "real socialists" either?
"This has nothing to do with socialism, but was a national socialism," - Which is socialism. National Socialism which is really just racial socialism is applying socialism for a specific race. In Hitler's case the Aryans. However in order to create such a regime he needed to clear the ground with what he saw as either lesser races or systems part of the Jewish conspiracy.
"which was enforced with extreme right-wing means." - Like?
"No nationalization of enterprises," - So I suppose Junkers lost his factory by the forces of Magic.
"but only the expropriation of Jewish property in favor of Aryans." - Like the expropriation of Kulak's Property in the Soviet Union?
"Super example: The father of the musician Billy Joel. Helmut Joel was a factory owner for clothing in Nuremberg and was expropriated. The beneficiary was his competitor Josef Neckermann, who was offered this company for sale very cheaply." - Yes the Nazis would re privitize production lines to party members. However within a totalitarian state. Loyalty to the party is the same thing as loyalty to the state.
"The "modern" neo-Nazis are just as idiots as the old ones. They are too stupid to be able to set up anything economic." - Ignoring Mein Kampf did just that. You may rightfully find the economic theory stupid. But it is not because the old Nazis had no economic plan. It was that they never succeeded in establishing the groundwork to implement such a plan.
"Independently, they see themselves in the spirit of their role models from the past." - R u referring to Modern Neo Nazis?
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@Die-Sophie "Your problem, not mine. But you won't never understand Hitler's National Socialism." - Even though I do.
"As I said before, you should study more about NATIONAL socialism and the differences with normal socialism. That's your mistake." - Again if your logic is saying that if it's not equality it isn't socialism will then, how do you explain the many socialist dictatorships?
"And the capitalists, communists, fascists, ... Any. Even the Republic Party" - Deflection I see. It is also irrelevant. We are not talking about Capitalists or Fascists. We are talking about specifically socialists.
"So do all those who do not fit the collective. These are classic right-wing extremist methods." - Right so Lenin, Stalin, and Mao must be right wing right? LOL.
"The basis of the National Socialist worldview is the inequality of people, which ultimately led to the racial mania of the Nazi regime. This is the exact opposite of the leftist ideal of equality." - Ignoring that lefitist equality exists in a fallacy when applied into practice. And not every leftist aims for equality and different than every person on the right not aiming for it. This is also where the debate comes in between equal opportunity vs equal outcome.
"Violence, torture, terror, murder. These are also classic right-wing radical methods and are not unique to socialists." - I never said they were unique to socialists. However if you are trying to use those to disqualify Hitler from being a socialist, then by your logic, no "real socialist" would do that. Yet you listed socialists just earlier. So which is it?
"As a democrat and pacifist, he did not come to terms with the NSDAP. Furthermore he fell out with some senior staff and NSDAP members. So he was classified as an enemy of the state. In 1933 - in fact - he was expropriated and banned from the city of Dessau. Incidentally, the expropriation took place exactly 2 days after Hitler took power. What a coincidence of timing!" - And do you really think Junkers was the only one who lost their property to Hitler over not wanting to abide Hitler's economic policies?
"But I'm sure you can give me other cases of industrial expropriation. Can you?" - https://www.jstor.org/stable/2350401
"The Nazis also seized the property of other minorities, stigmatised groups and "enemies" of the regime for a number of ideological, political and economic reasons. Traditional stereotypes as well as stereotypes intensified by the Nazi regime and "modern" perceptions of racism provided the basis for the persecution of Sinti and Roma, who had to endure repression and persecution as well as expropriation.
Slovenes and Czechs also caught the eye of the Nazi authorities as they embarked on their "aryanization policies". Due to foreign-policy considerations, however, the Croat and Hungarian minorities did not have to endure most of these measures of repression.
Expropriation was also a means of suppressing politically persecuted persons. In most cases this was achieved directly or indirectly by not admitting these persons to their profession. Homosexuals were increasingly persecuted by the Nazi regime. Stigmatizing homosexuality justified political acts of cleansing within the regime's own ranks. The mass killings of physically and mentally disabled persons referred to as "euthanasia" had ideological roots as well as economic aspects." (https://www.wien.gv.at/english/administration/restitution/assets/population.html)
"Or rather on the connection of Henry Ford and other US companies to the German economy and Hitler. Probably Ford, General Motors, Standard Oil, IBM are all arch-conservative socialists. Are they? Certainly a funny idea that the big capitalists of the USA would suddenly have been socialists." - Financial gain is not the same as ideological alignment. Otherwise by your logic, the German Empire in 1917 must be Marxist because they supported Lenin's revolution.
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@slaterslater5944 ok and as I mentioned before that was not the original quote displayed behind my point. Which is why I went back to find it because I realized in memory that wouldn’t make sense,
This was the full quote: “"The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch."
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@slaterslater5944 again before I later realized that wasn’t even the original quote I used. It’s amazing how ur only trying to use my defense statements which were relying on memory rather than the actual original quote. Which wasn’t that. Again the original quote went as followed,
"The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch."
U have nothing to show to back ur claim and even if u did it’s not relevant anymore. Given the actual quote that I had to once again show to u. At this point this has nothing to do with even the debate anymore and instead has been used as a personal attack on me
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@slaterslater5944 Once again sought by definition means to desire, obtain, or attempt to achieve.
"The materialist conception of history starts from the proposition that the production of the means to support human life and, next to production, the exchange of things produced, is the basis of all social structure; that in every society that has appeared in history, the manner in which wealth is distributed and society divided into classes or orders is dependent upon what is produced, how it is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch."
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@slaterslater5944 no they did not define it as private ownership. Nice try attempting to cherry pick the definition again. No, it is control of trade and industry by private owners. Private ownership, by itself isn’t capitalism. And I already explained even beyond the definitions I used that contradict your notion, there are too many reasons why that wouldn’t be the case even from a pragmatic perspective. What’s the difference between ordering someone dead vs doing the deed yourself? Either way their blood is on your hands by your will. Same token. What difference does it make when the state nationalizes an industry vs controls the industry through o surf levels of taxation, regulation, mandates, quotas, and threats of expropriation. Either way the state controls the industry. It’s literally a difference between direct control vs control by proxy. That is literally the only thing that separates the two if the private owner is not in control of his or her own trade and industry. Or means of production, or economy. Which ever way u want to frame it. And it’s funny since your so quick to defend the legitimacy of the term State Capitalism under the argument that “the state takes the place of the bourgeoisie,” (Another pro Marxist red flag), yet you arguing against the notion that the state is effectively controlling the industries and trading in all but name. Meaning the private owner can’t properly make decisions over his or her property and his or her property only stays theirs entirely conditional on how much the state likes you and how much of a puppet you are willing to be. Again don’t believe me? Ask Junkers and the Jews. What happened to their businesses exactly?
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@slaterslater5944 “From this point of view, the final causes of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought, not in men's brains, not in men's better insights into eternal truth and justice, but in changes in the modes of production and exchange. They are to be sought, not in philosophy, but in the economics of each particular epoch."
Already highlighted the original quote. And as mentioned sought has a definition of to be desired, obtained, or achieved.
Sought DEF: attempt or desire to obtain or achieve
Even disregarding that, there are more than enough writing within the manifesto to back my claim.
"“The immediate aim of the Communist is the same as that of all the other proletarian parties: formation of the proletariat into a class, overthrow of the bourgeois supremacy, conquest of political power by the proletariat.” - This is Engels stating quote clearly that the aim of any communist would be to overthrow the bourgeosis and take political power for the proletariat class. Are you still going to deny that Engels advocated revolution?
“Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communistic revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. Working Men of All Countries, Unite!”
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@slaterslater5944 Also it is enjoyable you keep cherry picking again.
“Let the ruling classes tremble at a Communistic revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. Working Men of All Countries, Unite!”
It is literally written as a literal call to action and you still want to ignore that. I don't care if Engels wasn't Marx. He still co wrote the manifesto and has just as much authority in determining Marxism as Marx did. And as mentioned considering nearly every Marxist state implimented itself doing just that, it is clear I am not the only one who came to that conclusion. Sense a general consensus is so fun for people to rely on here when talking about the Nazis, let's do the same with Marx and Marxism, shall we?
“Marx believed that capitalism, with its emphasis on profit and private ownership, led to inequality among citizens. Thus, his goal was to encourage a system that promoted a classless society in which everyone shared the benefits of labor and the state government controlled all property and wealth.” - https://www.nationalgeographic.org/encyclopedia/communism/#:~:text=Marx%20believed%20that%20capitalism%2C%20with,controlled%20all%20property%20and%20wealth.
“Of all the figures discussed in these articles thus far, Karl Marx is without a doubt the most Revolutionary. Marx believed that Revolution was both fundamentally essential and inevitable to the progress of human society. He anticipated that eventually the workers of the world would realise they ‘have nothing to lose but their chains’ and revolt against the industrialists and capitalists who covertly controlled their lives.” - https://blogs.kent.ac.uk/ageofrevolution/revolutionary-figures/karl-marx/
“The idea that a proletarian revolution is needed is a cornerstone of Marxism; Marxists believe that the workers of the world must unite and free themselves from capitalist oppression to create a world run by and for the working class.” - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communist_revolution
“Marx said that capitalists had alienated the worker from the results of his labor, forcing him to become "enslaved by the machine." This exploitation, argued Marx, would soon bring about a new class struggle that would end with the "violent overthrow" of the bourgeoisie by the proletariat.” - https://www.crf-usa.org/bill-of-rights-in-action/bria-19-2-a-karl-marx-a-failed-vision-of-history.html
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@Charles-pf7zy "utopian socialist theory is based on the belief of peaceful means of surrender of capital. In which case the majority of predominant socialist/marxist thinkers would vehemently disagree, they generally believe a degree of violence is necessary to make the final transition. I now see where you’re coming from in terms of Marxism. However contemporarily people try to lump fascism in with Marxist socialism as a way to discredit marxist theory (I don’t really think you need to make incredulous statements to discredit Marxism, I think you can make a reasonable assertion that it does not work with arguments based on reality)." - I will be the first to state I am not trying to use National Socialism to discredit Marxism. I am still against Marxism, but it is not for the same reasons I am against National Socialism.
"Basically the framing is Nazi germany = Marxist, and since modern socialists pretty much all come from marxist theory the logic would be, socialist = nazi . as I’ve said before the two ideologies are diametrically opposed, Marxism and fascism that is." - Well I would agree with that too. Except here is the thing. Throughout history, there were socialist ideologies that predate Marxism and socialist ideologies that aren't Marxism. Good examples include Market Socialism, Social Democracy, Democratic Socialism, Liberal Socialism, Etc.
Now a minor correction. Fascism and National Socialism are separate ideologies. But ignoring that, the reasoning of opposition is believing that Marxism was the wrong way to obtain a good socialist society. Ironically even Marxism itself have variants that are opposed with each other. Main example being Stalinism vs Trotskyism.
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@Charles-pf7zy "I know he said that. But a 4 hour video is bound to get comments from people that haven’t watched it. I was more pushing against a common narrative in the comments for people to read because many of them are likely to already have made up their mind and are skimming through this video to try to justify their own conclusions, despite the fact TIK acknowledged Marxism =\= hitler." - Which is understandable.
"To your average Fox News political layman, the idea likely pushed by think tanks that modern day socialists actually derive their ideas from Hitler himself is too commonly held. Which is where the really dumb horseshoe political meme comes from." - Which I don't agree with those that try to weaponize that.
“Historians tend to differentiate between German National Socialism and Italian Fascism — they have a few points of difference. The main one is that the National Socialists did not really take the state as the ultimate "unit" of history/politics — they saw race (or "blood" as the Germans often put it) as the ultimate unit”
"So yes there are parallels between fascism, nazism, and socialism, however to conflate the three as the same thing done by uninformed political laymen is something I was trying to combat. You can have a correct position, that Marxists-Leninists are bad, but if your reasoning is based on falsehoods then the argument itself is based on shoddy ground." - True. But that is why it is always best to get opposing logic before jumping to any conclusions. At least that is how I see it.
"Overall tho unlike your view, I’m in the camp that those ideologies are more cultural than simple economics, since economic goals are derived from social values, the goals themselves are not objective. (the means to achieve those goals must be objectively based however)" - While I do somewhat I agree with this. The problem is Socialism was always rooted more in economic theory especially when u include all of it instead of just Marxism, that it is difficult to form a culture around it. Capitalism has a similar problem but even that does call against regulation and a more open market.
"And because of that, I don’t see socialism as “big state”. Often big states are used in the name of socialism, but an anarchist nation or even anything in between can also be fascist or socialist so I don’t really like the idea that fascism and socialism are centered around totalitarian governments. It leads to the false conclusion that since the two regimes operate the same way at least superficially , they must be the same thing. A large state can be used to enforce fascist values and discourage socialist values without being contradictory." - I would agree with this except given the generalized and historical definition of socialism. Fascism still exists as a variant of the concept. Yes I will agree Fascism is not the same as "modern socialism" since socialist concepts are more streamlined now than they were pre WW2.
"And yes, some Marxist theories existed before him. He probably wasn’t the first person ever to come up with his conclusions. However we call his ideology Marxism because it is him who consolidated these ideas into a canonized ideology so that’s why he is considered the face of socialism." - Which is the problem people like TIK struggle with. Because unfortunately Marxism has dominated socialist theory for the past 100 years that it has gotten to the point where people just view socialism as Marxism. In fact most of TIK's detractors tend to do just that, with some even being Marxists themselves.
"I believe my way of viewing socialism and fascism is more relevant because modern day dialogue about those ideologies carry a huge amount of social context beyond that of the structure of government and transient economic policies. So while your definition of socialism isn’t inaccurate, modern day discourse of them carry immense cultural baggage that make the nazi = socialist paradigm troublesome beyond semantic reasons." - Which is understandable. However this is where your conclusion differs from mine. I don't believe historical definition and theories should be discarded just because they are not "relevant" to modern times. As from my point of view, it creates 3 problems. 1. It leaves Pre Marx Socialist history relatively in the dark. 2. It creates a falsified spectrum that doesn't reflect the root of any of these theories. Fascism cannot be considered far right when it has more in common with Marxism than Free Markets. 3. It restricts the exercise of socialist theory and essentially portrays Marx as the owner of socialism. While I do find socialism bad as a whole. There are some theories that can prove to hold merit within certain circumstances and in certain times. As a Centrist I can acknowledge when social programs for instance or say a more centralized economy during times of war is completely understandable. However such applications have been limited because everything has now been compared or contrasted to Marx. You have the right calling anything done the same as Marxism, while actual Marxists will use their consensus to say that theory A is not "real socialism."
From the historical context and my conclusion. Fascism and National Socialism are variants of socialism. They are not branched from Marxism, but they are rooted in the same overall principle. They just have different outlooks, methods to obtain it, and who they are doing it for.
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@slaterslater5944 ". And all Socialists" - Except those that aligned with him.
"and any on the left." - Which were mainly composed of Marxists.
"But, curriosly, no one on the right." - People who openly opposed Hitler and Jewish conservatives shared the fate of death camps. Marxists were targeted first, but anyone in opposition regardless if on the left or right would be purged off. Funny considering that Lenin and Stalin also purged socialists deemed a threat to their regimes.
"And he remains revered by the far right to this day." - Such as? I do not recall classic liberals or modern conservatives praising him.
"He nationalised the unions"
No he didn't. He outlawed them and replaced them with a system which removed all power from the workers." - The Unions were outlawed because he created a National version of it, the German Labor Front. To be fair it was corrupt as hell, but does not change the intent. Also again, banning unions by itself does not disprove anything.
"How does M-C-M C-M-C "not apply" under State Capitalism, as you claimed, by the way?" - Again, Marxist concepts don't define what capitalism is. A socialist regime can be just as exploitive as a capitalist one, hell its often more so since nothing can compete with the State control.
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@mikemcmike6427 "yes to have a full grasp of a topic at least 4 years of schooling would be nessecary, or similar self education. Every time I do talk you get everything wrong. You don’t even have a foundational understanding of things so everything is starting at square one. But again, all the experts are wrong, Tik is right. What a sad follower you are." - LOL. So you are saying it takes four years for you to present an argument of this kind. That is funny.
"that is why we have bachelor diplomas you clown...... wow you are really this stupid... Omg we could have condensed it to a five hour video on YouTube!!! Bachelor degrees are a waste!" - You act as if education talking points don't change over time. I am sure Cold War myth and Lost causers would say the same thing when people were spouting maybe the Soviets weren't incompetent and maybe the south did fight for slaves. It does no good to rely on a consensus as an argument of its own because that is an argument built on the foundation of sand.
"wow you are so dumb. Market socialism is still communal control of the means of production" - So is state control of the economy.
"The soviets implemented it by a command economy. With bureaucrats dictating production from every shoe to every shoelace.setting economic goals." - So let me get this straight with your logic. If it is ran by 13 corporation owners that are dictated in all but name by the state, that isn't socialism. But when it is ran by 13 government elite bureaucrats that are dictated by the state in all including name. Then it is socialism. If the state is in control, the differences are down to semantics.
"Market socialism the workers own directly all corporations and means of production. Every company is basically worker owned. Supply and demand still works just every company is a worker commune." - Wrong.
"Market socialism is a type of economic system involving the public, cooperative, or social ownership of the means of production in the framework of a market economy, or one that contains a mix of worker-owned, nationalized, and privately owned enterprises." - Privately owned enterprises could still exist within a market socialist regime. And as mentioned, the social democrats also weren't trying to completely get rid of private property. Were they not socialist either?
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@slaterslater5944 "I see you have admitted your mistake about your McDonalds assertion. That's progress, so well done and credit where credit is due.
What on earth does the fact that McDonalds has shareholders have to do with anything?!" - Think, if a company is collectively controlled by shareholders that operate as their own community, that would not be an individual ownership nor of even a smaller group.
"That's just more TIK nonsense, like when he claimed something wasn't private if more than about 17 people are involved." - I don't agree with a 17 number, its not a hard set thing. However there is a line when something is individually owned vs communally owned. TIK for example would make sense if say a society was only composed of 20 members and 17 out of those 20 owned the company. Because by that point overall, the society itself is what owns the facility or business. Of course the problem is and this is where I disagree with TIK's assertment is it isn't completely quantifiable. That is where a gray area exists within the private vs collective ownership.
"It's totally ludicrous and patrt of TIK's silly tactic of taking one definition of private and applying it in a totally different area." - True, despite agreeing with TIK's conclusion, there are flaws with some of his methods and outlooks. I mean despite agreeing with him about the Nazis, his claims are still carried out in the POV of an An cap.
"TIK's entire argument about the Nazis being socialist hangs on his definition of the word "public"." - I don't think that is entirely true. TIK's argument is built upon the notion of the state control. The Nazis did not completely nationalized the industries, but still managed to take control over them. And the thing is TIK equates State and Community. However I don't assert that all communities are states. I do conclude all states are communities given the practicality in how they operate as well as definition. But this is where TIK's and my conclusions differ, he would believe the notion that socialism would only ever exist through the state. I don't. Because socialism can and in a small scale has existed without major state meddling. Yugoslavia was a prime example of that and the one form of socialism I actually have a bit of respect for, despite still disagreeing with it.
"Hence the aforementioned 3 hour video in Roman building codes." - I will confess he does reference the Romans a decent amount, however even removing his biases I think the reason he does that is because socialism theory did take root during that time. Socialism existed long before Marxism.
"Now, would you say a private, fee paying school (which is what a public school is in England) an example of socialism? Yes or no?" - If it is not owned or controlled by a state or public body then no. If it is however yes. The thing is I don't know how involved the state is with the schools in UK as I am from the United States, so most of my reference points of personal experiences come from there.
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@slaterslater5944 "Private does not mean individual." - Um, (of a person) having no official or public role or position.
Person is sigular not plural. Now, for the3 context of economy private goes as follows.
Private Owner Definition: Private industries and services are owned or controlled by an individual person or a commercial company, rather than by the state or an official organization.
"That's another piece of TIK definition-twisting insanity you have bought into." - Not really.
"Of course McDonalds is privately owned, shareholders are private individuals." - The shares are privately owned yes, and nowhere did I argue they weren't. But it is not privately controlled but rather collectively controlled through a beucratic like system.
"For it to be collectively owned, it would have to be owned by and the profits shared among THE PEOPLE WHO WORK THERE." - No it doesn't.
Collective Ownership Definition: ownership by a group for the benefit of members of that group.
"This simple concept has been explained to you many times, but apparently it's still too complex for you to grasp." - There is not a complexity behind any of it. It is a simple falsehood. From a technical standpoint, something is a collective if owned by a group. So when I mention that a Corporation is collectively ran, that still holds truth. Now where you confuse it, is with the private sector. Which goes as follows: the economic segment controlled by private individuals and businesses rather than the government.
From a purely technical standpoint, even Worker's coops are still technically part of the private sector despite being collectively or communally controlled. A corporation and Coop can still be part of the private sector even if they are not private controlled by individuals.
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@slaterslater5944 "Fairly" is a subjective term. - Ok and if fairly is subjective, than how can you objectively try to decide it isn't fair? The workers can walk away if they feel that it isn't a fair arrangement. The fact that concepts like fair is subjective only furthers capitalism's stance. If one person feels the arrangements of working at that business isn't fair, nothing is physically stopping them from quiting and searching for a different job. Of course if you choose to end the deal or exchange between yourself and the owner, you cannot be angry when the owner hires someone to replace you who is willing to work for the wage and time you were unwilling to, nor can you claim it to be unfair that you are now suffering the consequences of your choices by not making any money until getting a new job.
"Now you're changing your argument, while still admittimg the employee has to be paid less than the value they generate 😆🤣😆." -
It's also funny you all but completely ignored my examples of why your claim of worker exploitation is ridiculous based on your ridiculous concept of the labor theory of value. Again, mowing someone's lawn doesn't give you ownership over it. If someone agrees to build a chair for $20. It doesn't matter if after you sell it for $25 or $50. How r u not getting this? The reason you don't understand this is because you are acting like the value a product generates comes exclusively from labor. Here I will even break it down for you so you finally understand this on why owners tend to get more and who contributes to what.
A product is made through all these factors:
Capital (Owner), Expenses (Owner), Risk (Owner), Liability Insurances (Owner), Business Tax (Owner), Sue payments if something goes wrong (Owner), Labor (Worker).
Are you starting to get it? An owner has a lot more to cover and a lot more to risk. Again its a high risk, high reward. That is what contrasts them to employees. Being a worker or a standard employee is typically a much safer job. Because the worse that can happen to you financially because of the job is losing it.
The Owner on the other hand is investing hundreds, thousands, or some rare cases millions of dollars based on gambling an idea or product they think the market will want, as well as gambling their own ability to sell it. If they lose out, they will have a lot more to lose since not only does it make all their investments before be for nothing, but any debt the business makes has to be paid off by the owner. This is the kind of risk nearly every business runs into when first opening. Yes through skill and sometimes caution you can reduce the risk, but it is still a risk all the same. Again, High Risk, High Reward. Contrary to what you think, I am not against Coops out of hand so as long as it operates with the mutual and consensual agreements in mind. If they share the risk, they share the reward.
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jeff jr except I haven’t. Because ur trying to detach Hitler from a socialist and claim him to be a fascist instead. Ignoring that Fascism is founded in socialist roots as highlighted by both Gentile and Mussolini. But again u cannot define Fascism by a couple of arbitrary traits. That’s like saying socialism just wants democracy. Without actually defining what socialism actually is and what it calls for. Then it’s going to be quick logic, where if only a few arbitrary concepts define an ideology than more outside that ideology could be labeled as it. Stalin for example was ultra nationalist (socialism in one country), was a known racist and anti semite, called for complete totalitarianism, wanted a gigantic military (USSR began highly militarizing since its creation, not to mention Stalin’s five year plan, plus by the end of the Second World War amounted to one of the 2 most powerful militaries on earth), ultra national security (NKVD), was constantly hunting potential enemies both outside and inside his border, and was very mistreatful of his wife, arguably making him sexist. So by ur logic of trying to define Fascism by a few arbitrary concepts which are all met by Stalin. Stalin must be a Fascist. Right?
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@slaterslater5944 "Then you don't understand what "communal" is.
Here, let me show you the definition 🤣
"shared by all members of a community; for common use."
"Now, is a dictatorship shared by all members of community for a common use? Of course not!" - Ironically it actually is when accounting for state members. State officials such as economists and military officials are not going to just work for nothing. Again that's how cues happen. So even the King, or Emperor, or Dictator still has to distribute the wealth to state members. And as I mentioned before a state is a community in it of itself. So it ironically does still hold a communal control. It's just the everyday citizen is not part of said community.
"There is no such thing as a one man state"
There is, actually. Absolute monarchy, Imperial Japan where the emperor was also a deity, and many other examples (the fuhrerprinzip is a strong candidate) are all "organised political systems that inherits a nation or territory." - Politically organized community. And no, not even those are "one man states." Why? Because they cannot enforce anything on their own. They still require economists, and military officials, tax collectors, and foreign diplomats. All of these put together make the state. Just because you lead the state, does not make you the entire state. Because without support from these keys to power, you having the throne is worthless. Since you were the first to mention Imperial Japan. Think of WW2. The Emperor was still seen as a diety, but he held little power by this point and the military administration with Prime Minister Tojo were the ones that actually held the power.
"This is all beyond you, obviously, because all you're capable of is reading ambiguous and incomplete dictionary definitions, misapplying them, and then ignoring definitions when it suits you. Because you are very, very dim." - I have not ignored definitions bud. And nothing is ambiguous about them. You are the one flat out trying to ignore definitions that don't suit you.
"Which is how you ended up claiming McDonalds was either a charity or government owned, and that "sought of all political revolution" mean was a coherent phrase." - Nope.
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@realitymatters8720 "If the state is under communal/democratic control, how can it be said to be Totalitarian, and by this definition, every state that have ever had a national budget, would be a Totalitarian State, rendering the word "totalitarian" meaningless." - Totalitarian has nothing to do with dictatorships or democracies. It has everything to do with whether or not there is a separation from the state. "Everything in the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state."
"But there is, as you say the possibility of a Socialist state, where power is exclusively yielded through the state.
Most Socialist systems that have been theorised, tries to avoid a strong state structure,,," - Well yes and no. Problem is most did want to use the state as a platform for implementation, they just thought the state would gradually sacrifice said power when no longer needed. This though is the fundamental flaw when applying socialism in practice, as once when that much power and control is surrendered to the state. Its almost never going to give it up. This is why the Soviets, Chinese, North Korean, etc needs to be considered socialism, because its attempts of implementing socialism into practice. Now if you would like to call them failed socialists, thats fine. But just because they tried and failed at a system, does not mean they aren't what they tried to put in.
"this perversly includes "Communism", where the basic idear are selfgoverning communes !" - Which pretty much only exists in a pipedream, but go on.
Y"ou still seem not to grasp the basic idear of Socialim. Power MUST be under Democratic control." - According to what? Pre Marx definitions of socialism did not specifically mention control being democratic. Also you do realize most of these systems were officially democratic, but again problem lies when you surrender too much power to one or a small group of people within the state.
"Totalitarian Socialism, Authoritarian Socialism, these ideas, are contradictions in terms." - Except they aren't. A state by definition is a politically organized community inhereting a nation or territory. There is no such thing as a one man state.
"They are systems that don't even have a theoretical basis for existence. And seem to be entirely used to discredit Socialism." - Except again that does not hold truth. Lenin did try to implement his interpretation of what Marx wanted, granted probably altered it to suit his needs, but my point still stands. Same goes for Mao, and Kim. The problem is you are not making a proper distinction from socialism in theory vs socialism in practice.
"This is why im not a Socialist, I like the idear, it is clearly the only moral system ever proposed." - I disagree with that strongly but I will respect your view.
"But it is also so idealistic that I cant realy imagine how it would work in practice." - It doesn't. From my POV it is a bad theory as a whole, and is nearly impossible to work in practice the way the theorists want it to work. Socialism doesn't work.
"Most people including myself just dont want to deal with politics all the time, im simply not social enough :) !" - That is fine, but it does fall to be able to analyze systems when put into practice. Because if we are going to say the slightest deviation prevents it from being that thing, then by that same logic, there has never truly been a capitalist system either. The problem you ignore is that often democracies are asserted to create the dictatorship. People often democratically want it. For instance in the German election of 1932, the Nazi party got more votes than any other individual party, despite the fact it was enabling a dictator. This is why democratic control in reality just leads to either blind mobs, or dictatorships. The thing that has stopped dictatorships in many areas is constitutional power, given that those are designed to be upheld regardless of people sways.
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@realitymatters8720 "Social control over the means of production, is democratic control, you will find no movement before the Soviet Union created their doublespeak, that would have said anything else." - Not necessarily. Because that control was not always meant to be done through the entire nation democratically, but rather through concerned parties. Also as mentioned before, it falls under a community to enable the dictatorship. This is why the "Public Sector" is the state. Because the state is the representative body of a community and requires a community to be a state. Again no such thing as a one man state.
"Its realy easy, if it aint a Democracy it ain't Socialist." - Again that does not work for multiple reasons. A. You are implying that democratic only exists within an entire population. Most socialist nations did have democratic control but only within the party elite. This is where the corruption took swing. And a party elite is still a community and a state.
"Let me quote Hannibal lecter "what is it in its nature".
Why is this hard to understand, most 5 year olds know very well, that much they are told is complete bullshit,,, but somehow you cant grasp the simple fact that the Soviet Union lied about the nature of their system. And that the Capitalists used this lie to discredit Socialism, in the eyes of mentally lazy morons." - Except again, it isn't a lie. The Soviet Union tried and failed to implement socialism. But the same way you have a soccer player who loses the championship, trying and failing at something does not mean they were not seeking to do it. It only highlights what I mentioned before, socialism in theory is very different from socialism in practice. But both have to be factored in especially when it becomes a consistent pattern. Trying to disassociate failed socialists is the very reason why socialism keeps being advocated for. Because its easy to continue support of an ideology when you disassociate its attempts in practice rather than gaining an understanding that their failings were because of fundamental flaws with socialism as a concept.
"Btw. You are correct, if you are a Socialist, don't ever take power by force.. It has a really low success rate, to the tune of f...... zero !" - Which is what almost every socialist has to do. Because higher and middle classes aren't just going to peacefully surrender their property. Which leaves a socialist state with 2 options. Either take it by force which is what the Marxists did, or attempt to control them through state mandates, which is what Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, Franco's Spain, Modern day China, and Lockdown Europe and USA have been doing.
And this is where the concept of Totalitarianism has to be understood. Whether it is through a cue or the people willfully putting the dictatorship in power or giving the state ultimate control, it does not change that the ultimate control still happened. Giving the people more "Democratic Power," only further enables the dictatorship because of a very simple reason. Most people don't think for themselves in politics. They go by identity. The "Have faith in my side" or the "Opponent is the embodiment of evil". They essentially have been treating politics like religions and have associated their entire sense of self based on it. What people actually need is personal liberty within a strong constitution but limited state. Because the only way people are going to think for themselves is when they develop their ideas through achieving their goals themselves. This is why politics in modern day has based itself more on empty promises rather than long term plans and developments. Tyranny of the Majority is just as much Totalitarian as Tyranny of the Minority. Trying to say it's not socialism because its not "democratic" is ignorant that democracy is what creates the dictatorship. Lenin rose to power with an army that democratically supported him, Hitler rose to power through more Germans supporting him than any other party, Mussolini rose to power and stayed in power for over 20 years because of the mobs that supported him. And we are seeing right now in the United States people cheering for the very people stripping the constitutional rights away from us, all for the socialist paradise that the politicians know themselves will never come but will keep feeding the lie to keep themselves in the thrones.
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@slaterslater5944 1. A state is the body of the entire society. Key difference is a private entity u can leave and have others compete with, the state u can’t. One is decentralized, the other is completely centralized under an authoritarian monopoly. Once again profit is not the only aspect of capitalism. A state or community can very much make a profit just as much as an individual can, in fact most of the time it is expected to for long term investments and getting things back for what they risked.
2. A state by definition is an organized political community. It is by definition communal. Even a monarchy and dictatorship still require the community to maintain its rule. Any dumb ass can bark orders, but unless ur superman, ur going to need personal in economics, military, tax collecting, resource distribution, and foreign relations. No matter which way u try to slice it, there is no such thing as a one man state. Even a dictator technically isn’t a private owner.
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@slaterslater5944 "So, the best thing you can say about anarcho capitalism is it will fall into armed Feudalism, where wherever has the most guns becomes the state" - Eventually yes, which is why I already explained I am not an An Cap. Because that would be an inevitable problem. In fact that is the main problem with Anarchism in general is that it would effectively become a faction war.
"Who says you had the right to "make a farm" on that land, which I claim belongs to me?" - Do u seriously think it requires a right if the land was not claimed?
"Back to your magical transaction records. You have a transaction record saying property A belongs to you, I have one saying it belongs to me. What now? You keep ignoring his rather important point" - Except I didn't I already answered that either the situation would be sorted involving the 2 opposing people and any other concerned third parties or armed conflict would occur.
"No, the USA is a country. Now, why wasn't e.g. FDR and ethno-nationalist, given that he fought for the supremacy of the US?" - You answered your own question. US is not an ethnicity however Russian is.
"Once again, how many ethnicities were there in the Soviet Union? (You used the terms interchangeably, saying it was the same countries as Russia, remember?)" - The Russians were the most ethnically dominating of it, the culture was mostly pulled from Russia, and Russian was the primary language. Again its not as on the nose as Germany. But any nationality that also shares the same ethnicity is going to want uphold said ethnicity.
"How many ethnicities do you the think there are in Russia?" - Considering that it was an Empire, a few.
"I'm not slandering by saying you're stupid, as it is obviously true." - Except it isn't. Even if what I said there was wrong, ok that is one thing I got wrong. I do not recall getting one thing wrong the same as being stupid, otherwise by that logic, you are dumb for missing one question on a test. So whether u admit it or not, it was directed as a personal attack on me over debating a term. I could call you stupid for thinking that State Capitalism isn't oxymoronic despite the fact that Capitalism definition explicitly says not state control. But that would be taking the easy way out, and I have enough respect for opponents not to resort to slander if they do the same.
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@slaterslater5944 "US is a country, you fucking idiot." - Damn, did I pull a string?
"A country with multiple ethnicities in it." - Almost every country has multiple ethnicities, especially first world one. Does not mean there is not a dominating ethnicity.
"So, like the US, Russia is a multi-ethnic state.In fact, the US is far more of an ethnostate given that English is the official language, while there were many in Russia. During FDR's time, certain ethnicities were treated differently by law." - I mean FDR could be considered partially one.
"How come he wasn't an ethno-nationalist, if Stalin was?
There's that stupidity of yours again." - Again, being wrong about one aspect does not make me stupid anymore than you being wrong about one aspect would make u. I can tell you are at this point getting emotional about this. There is a chance I could be wrong about Ethno Nationalism, in fact for the sake of argument, I'll admit I'm probably wrong about it and probably confused it with racism or xenophobia. But even if I am, my simple question would be, why would that only be associated with the right wing?
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@slaterslater5944 first of all source, don’t just leave a quote without saying where the quote came from. Secondary, trying to pull gymnastics isn’t helping u. Most dictionaries use the definitions I laid out. And we can’t have a debate if we can’t even agree on the definitions of words. If I use the dictionary definitions and u come in saying “na uh, that ain’t true.” Then we have nothing to go off of. And the irony of your “it doesn’t reflect the real world” argument is I could use that to describe socialism in general. I usually don’t to avoid bias, but let’s think what most socialist nations were like in practice aka the real world. That’s right, Soviet Union, Mao’s China, North Korea, Vietnam, Cuba, Venezuela. U know what most of these had in common? Complete totalitarian control, dictator in power, suppression of speech and expression, camps/gulags, state monopoly over everything, highly militaristic, imperialistic, and often had some of the lowest standards of living out there. Funny how socialism was such a paradise, that Eastern Europe got away from it as soon as the Soviets let them go. Funny how socialism is such a good system that China had to gradually get away from it. Funny how socialism handled its economy so well that Venezuela has starving millionaires.
That’s socialism in the real world, arguably the only successful implementation came from Yugoslavia and even then Yugo still adopted a market value within its economy. Of course none of those were “Real Socialism” right? Sorry but if you are going to throw the “it doesn’t reflect the real world” bullshit argument then be prepared for that logic to be used against u as well. Now this is where i’m going to end things because it does no good to continue to debate with someone who can’t even agree on basic definitions. So cheers, and peace.
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@slaterslater5944 "No, capitalism is not anti state control." -
Capitalism Definition: an economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit, rather than by the state.
RATHER THAN BY THE STATE!!! I do not know how many times the definition has to be handed out before you get it.
"What it is is pro profit." - Private Owner control for profit. Again profit is one aspect but it already requires the private owner to be in control first.
"Now, if a worker's employer is profiting from their labour, it makes no difference whether the employer is a state-owned private company or an individual one." - And congrats, you summed why State Socialism more often than not fails. But this is where once again, socialism is not about the worker, I don't understand how many times this has to be explained to you.
"The quote is from Wikipedia. It matters not whether socialism is a good, what matters is that State Capitalism clearly exists, despite your ignorance-based objections." - Really, lets look at Wiki's definition of capitalism. " Capitalism is an economic system based on the private ownership of the means of production and their operation for profit." - Even Wikipedia a source generally considered pretty unreliable admits that capitalism requires private ownership.
"It is literally the state taking over the means of production on behalf of state appointed individuals, and continuing to operate a capitalist system." - It isn't capitalist. A state monopoly is not private owners controlling their own means of production. And as mentioned before, the state is public not private.
"One where the goal is accumulation of capital through buying the labour of the proletariat and selling what they produce at a profit." - U realize by ur logic every state in history is capitalist, because every single one generates a bit of profit to support itself.
"M-C-M/C-M-C still applies, so it operates on the same principles of Capitalism, but run by state appointed individuals, who individually benefit." - Weaponizing the state isn't capitalism. So no it isn't, the reason u think it is, is because you are thinking anything that makes profit is capitalism when it isn't.
"The profits aren't passed to the community." - Who builds the roads, the commodities, militaries?
"Hence, state capitalism." - Nope thats just a failed state. And all you would have to do is look into most socialist societies and understand that they fell into that corruption. Thats State Socialism.
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@slaterslater5944 "You keep ignoring the "for profit" part." - Except I didn't every single time I laid out a definition to you, I included it. What you do is keep ignoring private owners, and RATHER BY THE STATE!!!! Like good God, can you not read?
"The state is running a private corporation for profit." - What corporation is that? The state isn't a corporation. And a State by definition is Public.
"Workers are employed and their surplus value is extracted as profit." - And? Again, its not about the workers. Its about who is in control.
"M-C-M/C-M-C still applies." - No it really doesn't.
"It is a capitalist mode of production, controlled by individuals within the state." - How ignorant you are. Just because there are individuals in an organization does not make it individually controlled. And it is as noted before private owners that are suppose to be in control. A state is A. a community, not an individual, and B. is not private. So by definition, it is not capitalist.
"Hence state Capitalism." - Again, Capitalism by definition is anti state control. State monopoly is not private ownership. You are failing to understand this basic logic because you are subscribing to Marx's concepts.
"Explain how it is different from any other sort of Capitalism as far as the worker and employer is concerned." - Ignoring that the employer isn't a private owner and there isn't a free market?
"You can't." - I very much can, once again capitalism and socialism are not inherent to employees and or workers. It accounts for who is in control.
"You don't understand what communal means, because you are incredibly stupid." - Once again throwing blind insult I see. And also hypocrite. You cannot say I do not understand definitions when you literally try to ignore the definitions laid out to you.
"Communal means everyone." - Everyone within that community. A state represents everyone. By definition.
"If a small group within a larger one controls everything, that's not communal or community control." - It is when they have the technical authority to represent said community. The German government represents the German people. The only time these things are put into question is a time of civil war or if the state came to power illegitimately.
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@slaterslater5944 "And there you go ignoring the "for profit " aspect again." - BY PRIVATE OWNERS!!!! Again actually look up the fucking definition!
"No, a state running a corporation is not public. It is being run by and for private functionaries within the state who are taking the profit." - Again a state is by definition a public entity. That's why the concepts of Nationalization and socialization existed. Once when the state takes control of the means of production. It is no longer private control.
"A state does not represent everyone, by definition." - Represent DEF: be entitled or appointed to act or speak for (someone), especially in an official capacity.
"Does the Chinese state represent the Tibetan people?" - Foreign occupation so false equivalence. Because that puts it legitimacy in question.
"You are desperately trying to confuse state, community, communal etc." - No I'm not. And ur trying to confuse state with private owner. A state is not private, is a community by definition and by all accounts represents the people in it.
"Because you ar both dishonest and stupid" - Really, where did I lie? Also again, u keep misdefining capitalism which specifically by definition excludes the state. But of course you'll ignore that because it does not suit your argument. And as mentioned before, I can do the blind insult game too. Act like an adult and keep the debate professional, if you can't do that then you need to GTFO. I consider you incredibly misguided but I am not going to throw blind insult over disagreement and debate. But keep up your attitude and I won't be so hosbilital.
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