- Joined
- Jul 7, 2017
Radical centrism.I can't wait for the militant centrist/alt-cent movement.
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Radical centrism.I can't wait for the militant centrist/alt-cent movement.
Apparently such a thing already existsI want to join this movement. I'm just not sure what we do. Do we just sort of yell at both sides saying, like, stop doing that, man, it isn't, yanno, reasonable and stuff.
I Googled on how that can happen and I found thisI actually thought that subreddit was pretty funny, most of the stuff is /pol/ level memes, just commie instead of alt right. But then here we are...
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I've never even posted in any of those subs.
https://www.reddit.com/r/TheoryOfReddit/comments/6cnspi/how_can_subreddits_autoban_users_for//r/LateStageCapitalism is terrible with their bans. I once got banned for saying I was a manager at a coffeeshop. When I appealed, a mod harassed me. I continued to request a real reason when another mod chimed in and said he was a middle manager too. Eventually the mod team decided if I wrote a 500 page essay on why libertarianism is bad and posted it to /r/politicalrevolution they would remove my ban. They can fuck off.
I Googled on how that can happen and I found this
https://www.reddit.com/r/TheoryOfReddit/comments/6cnspi/how_can_subreddits_autoban_users_for/
Marxism resonates with many people on a moral basis. "People working together instead of against each other; everybody sharing with everybody; equality; no beggars living in the street while millionaires dine of caviar" -- it's in fact an extension of New Testament morals which have been ingrained in Western culture for 2000 years. It appeals emotionally and feels right and just, so some people decide it is the way to go without any considerations of historical failures or practicality.Communism and or Marxism fascinates me because despite the numerous failures people still want to try it out. Cuba and North Korea are pure communist countries and are utter shitholes. Laos is a joke and Vietnam became impoverished after the Vietnam war. Funnily enough they became the western imperialists they hated so much when they decided to invade Cambodia and install a puppet government. China is arguable the only communist success story but even then they adopted capitalist ideas in the 70s and 80s to stop an economic crisis. Despite that they're (ironically) shitty to their workers. My theory is it's because Marx was an "intellectual" and thus obviously never wrong about anything. It fascinates me however rebel groups think communism is the way to go despite it most likely being worse for them in the long run.
Marxism resonates with many people on a moral basis. "People working together instead of against each other; everybody sharing with everybody; equality; no beggars living in the street while millionaires dine of caviar" -- it's in fact an extension of New Testament morals which have been ingrained in Western culture for 2000 years. It appeals emotionally and feels right and just, so some people decide it is the way to go without any considerations of historical failures or practicality.
The problem is that no society can possibly succeed with such a naive view of human motivation. This just isn't going to happen. When it doesn't, the government you set up is going to have to resort to a carrot and stick approach, and the problem with these socialist "utopias" is that they don't even have carrots, and sticks aren't enough, so they generally go for gun to the head coercion, or just getting rid of people, and using terror to motivate may deter resistance, but it doesn't exactly get enthusiastic support or success.
Part of why our constitutional system works in the U.S. is it was created by people who knew people (including themselves) were thieving, corrupt, greedy assholes and given enough power, would go insane from it and rob everyone blind if they didn't just go purely murderous, so it pit every branch of government against each other, so that their mutual infighting would prevent any one of them from getting too powerful.
Soviet-style systems never do this and thus inevitably get taken over by the most murderous strongman in the country (and it's almost invariably a man).
That gridlock and dysfunction isn't a bug, it's a feature.
eh, we should just automate as many shit jobs as possible, universal mincome and shit. Make robots the means of production. Fuck it.
Marxism resonates with many people on a moral basis. "People working together instead of against each other; everybody sharing with everybody; equality; no beggars living in the street while millionaires dine of caviar" -- it's in fact an extension of New Testament morals which have been ingrained in Western culture for 2000 years. It appeals emotionally and feels right and just, so some people decide it is the way to go without any considerations of historical failures or practicality.
To this day, GDR fans point out that while there were far less consumer products available in the GDR, nobody had to starve, nobody lived on the streets, there was no unemployment and a very low crime rate. This is true. Jugendwerkhof Torgau was also true. The GDR was massively unforgiving towards people who refused its blessings. A punk or hippie who actively chose to live as a vagrant subverted the state's fundamental dogma -- that every human being knew nothing greater than working shifts in an aluminum foundry, living in a highrise apartment block and practicing folk dances with the Worker's Folklore Group --, so he had to be re-educated. Methods were brutal.
Margaret Thatcher once remarked that socialists had the problem of running out of other people's money. Not very precise -- because the Eastern-Bloc Nations' state banks could print arbitrary amounts of money. What they did run out of were ways to make people work. As mentioned above, the central dogma was that people would actually love factory work once factories were nationalized. They didn't -- most types of industrial work probably aren't very self-rewarding. In order to make people work quickly and efficiently, you sort of need the carrot and the stick. Capitalism does just that: The carrots are raises for reliable workers, the stick is unemployment. This method of motivation seems to be very efficient, this is likely the main reason capitalism succeeds.
This fact -- that for many jobs, people need to be motivated with a reward/punishment scheme -- rings uncomfortable to many: Another reason why Marxism still has a number of adherents. Wouldn't it be nice if work could be made so pleasant and rewarding that employees are content with working just for the greater good? Well, it is kinda hard to make building roads, cleaning the streets, building cars on an assembly line or growing potatoes sufficiently pleasant and rewarding.
My parents once visited a family in the GDR. After dinner, the family's mother said: "And now for something very special and delicious!" My parents wondered what it could be. What she brought out was a small, dry, shrunken orange. "A very special treat! From Crimea Island."
Yeah it's not coming any time soon, we'll have to slog through decades of most people being unable to find jobs while we build up the robot army before we're close to realizing we've succeeded. There will be nothing but cows *waves arm over landscape* cows for miles.It's probably optimistic to think this is coming in the immediate future, but we should probably work toward something like it. One advantage is more lolcows.
It's probably optimistic to think this is coming in the immediate future, but we should probably work toward something like it. One advantage is more lolcows.
Hold on, he did something amazing largely because he really believes in his country: surely that's the kind of thing that gets you serious brownie points in a communist state, isn't it? Contrarian is a better label than communist for these people.This is Buzz Aldrin btw.
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https://www.reddit.com/r/CringeAnar...latestagecapitalism_shaming_buzz_for_showing/
I think USSR communism and GDR communism can't be compared in a straightforward manner. Society, mentality and socio-psychology were probably very different.In 1988 the USSR's homicide rate was 9.6 per 100,000, compared to 8.4 per 100,000 in the United States and 1.1 per 100,000 in West Germany. If East Germany was safer than West Germany, it wasn't because the communist system guaranteed it.
What is true is that the GDR's crime rate was markedly lower than West Germany's unless you count crimes committed by the state against the populace.
We could automate many jobs with existing technology -- pilots, truck drivers, locomotive drivers, mailmen (just use drones), farmers (hydroponic greenscrapers). In Paris, they tested automated Metro trains which worked flawlessly, but the trade unions luddited the robots away, because they'd have killed the jobs of human drivers. The Nuremberg subway service just said "fuck it" and automated anyway. We'll have to figure out how to deal with robots eating up jobs on a grand scale; Basic Income is often suggested, but at the moment it still seems to be out of reach for most economies; in Germany you'd need about 1000 billion € annually, which is more than the entire German tax revenue. With new technologies, such as Very High Temperature Molten Salt Reactors, plasma arc material processing or nanomachines giving a boost to economies, luxuries such as Basic Income may become viable.eh, we should just automate as many shit jobs as possible, universal mincome and shit. Make robots the means of production. Fuck it.