• @SupraMario
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    -206 months ago

    And in a communist society, the candy belongs to everyone in the neighborhood, so they have to go around passing it out until it’s equally distributed…

    • Cowbee [he/him]
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      136 months ago

      Communism isn’t about equal distribution. Communism is about addressing everyone’s needs from everyone’s collective abilities.

      • @SupraMario
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        -106 months ago

        And who gets to decide that?

          • @SupraMario
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            -26 months ago

            Lol so people who you elected, just like the system we have now.

              • @SupraMario
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                -26 months ago

                So you’re back to a committee telling people what they need to do and how much they get, just without the freedom to change jobs…got it.

                  • @SupraMario
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                    -26 months ago

                    You’re committee did, or if they didn’t then they’re just gov bosses over everyone since they dictate what people are worth. So you’re back at capitalism…just with a voted in committee telling people their worth, or we’re talking about a committee that dictates what people are going to do. Which is it?

      • @SupraMario
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        -46 months ago

        Yes because your comment has totally provided a ton of rebuttal.

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      No, the buckets would be communally owned, and those who were luckier - perhaps they got to the good houses earlier - would be made to give some of their surplus to Jimmy, who fell ill just that morning and couldn’t go trick-or-treating to not infect others. They’d still have enough, but Jimmy wouldn’t be left out just because he was unlucky.

      • @SupraMario
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        06 months ago

        So how does that work for real life? You going to cut off a bedroom and give it to jimmy? Or give him one of your cars?

        • @[email protected]
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          36 months ago

          I don’t even have a car, because I can’t afford one, nor do I have a spare bedroom because I live in a small apartment, paying a chunk of my monthly earnings to a person whose only contribution is having a piece of paper that says they’re allowed to charge for the fundament necessity of having a place to live.

          My neighbour has a big house, three cars in their driveway and most of the time, at least two of them are standing around unused. He probably could afford to share. That’s the meaning of “everyone, according to their needs” - that guy most likely doesn’t need as much as he has, so it won’t hurt him to give some away to people that do need it.

          But the issue isn’t him having something nice. He can have his house for all I care. I want him to have a nice house. I want Jimmy to have a nice house, and you too! I want all of us to have nice things, because a bit of luxury isn’t the problem, and covering a symptom won’t cure the disease. And the disease is the belief that property rights matter more than human welfare.

          You wouldn’t achieve anything by taking a little from those that have a little more than the rest. You’d have to take away the systems that constrain us.

          There’s an empty flat? Great, let’s give it to Jimmy! What do you mean, if he can afford the rent? Man needs a place to live, for fuck’s sake. Jimmy needs medical care? Get him to a doctor. The community carries the cost, because we all would want the same if we needed care.

          How do we reach that? That’s a tough one. Eventually, a concerted effort to uproot that system will have to take place. I’m not positive that’ll succeed on ballots alone and as has become increasingly evident, peaceful protests tend to meet violence all the same.

          But whether through coordinated civil action like protests and disobedience or through outright revolution, awareness is the first step. Informing people of the injustice done to us all, that it doesn’t have to be this way, and that together, we’re strong enough to change it.

          The only people that don’t profit from it are the ruthlessly selfish ones that think “I’d rather have a second car than let someone else have one” is a reasonable sentiment.

          Because yes, if I had a car I didn’t need, and Jimmy needed it, I’d let him use it. What good would it do standing around?