• @[email protected]
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    133 months ago

    We totally did try pure capitalism. It mostly led to naked children in coal mines (because their clothes would get stuck on the sides of the super narrow mining shafts, you see) and pepper with iron fillings (because scrap iron was cheaper than actual pepper). Also a lot of other horrifying stuff, but those two have always stuck out to me.

    • SatansMaggotyCumFart
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      63 months ago

      Blood iron levels plummeted after that pepper stopped being fortified and if the children don’t like their jobs or how they are treated they can find new ones.

    • @[email protected]
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      -13 months ago

      Funny because it you talk to libertarians, we’ve never had a pure capitalist society. You probably just don’t realize how similar they all are to the people who claim we’ve never tried our Communism.

      • carl_marks[use name]
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        33 months ago

        they all are to the people who claim we’ve never tried our Communism.

        When you dont know the difference between socialism and communism

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          You’ll have to explain what you think I don’t understand and how you came to that conclusion.

          • carl_marks[use name]
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            33 months ago

            Because for the idea of communism to exists it would have to be globally, otherwise youd need a state and a definition of communism is a stateless and classless society.

            A common misconception is to think that what the Soviets, Chinese, Cubans, etc. were/are doing is communism, when in fact it’s communists exercising state power to organize the economy in a state socialist, market socialist (or SWCC) etc. way. You can’t just claim power and say it’s communism now, in a context where globally capitalism and imperial forces exist. (See if you find and notable examples of anarchist/stateless societies that survived)

            • Aatube
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              23 months ago

              The cold war lasted a long time. Sure, pure communism is probably going to take a lot more time, but what these countries did (well ig I don’t know about Cuba) is move away from it. Every political system needs some idea of implementation and transition, and of course defense. To say that it’s impossible for a system to do that is conceding its outright utopicness.

              I really don’t know what you mean by “it would have to be globally”. In anarchism, you solve communication with others by temporarily agreeing to have someone speak with other communities and rotating that person.

              • carl_marks[use name]
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                13 months ago

                what these countries did (well ig I don’t know about Cuba) is move away from it.

                Move away how and were? The Soviets, Chinese, Cubans, definitely were/are socialist.

                Every political system needs some idea of implementation and transition, and of course defense.

                Yes and AES states managed to do so.

                To say that it’s impossible for a system to do that is conceding its outright utopicness.

                Frederick Engels - Socialism: Utopian and Scientific https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1880/soc-utop/index.htm

                I really don’t know what you mean by “it would have to be globally”

                A new system will always exist within an old one. You cant proclaim communism/anarchism and think that other countries will just stand by idle. (See Rojava, etc.) In a world where most other countries are capitalist and go on imperialist emdevours, you’re basically inviting them to colonize you, because you don’t have a state apparatus to organize defense. Communism/anarchism can only be proclaimed at once and globally where adveserial forces to the working class had been overcome.

                Communists in China, Cuba, Vietnam, etc. are aware of it and are exercising state power to navigate these conditions. What they are doing is socialism, which ofc still has classes and it’s own contradictions which are being resolved.

                • Aatube
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                  13 months ago

                  Yes, they’re socialist. No, they did not work towards communism. Brezhnev and Deng did not simplify government and declared the end of the era of working towards communism as well as a new era of practicing socialism. Sure, implementing communism would take a long time, but I don’t see how they’re working towards it instead of just improving on socialism.

                  I don’t know what AES is.

                  Before I read a full nonfiction book, I check its summary on Wikipedia or Goodreads to see if it’s worth reading. I don’t see how this book on socialism relates to the topic, which is how any system you can’t implement is utopic.

                  because you don’t have a state apparatus to organize defense

                  Volunteer militias. Stateless doesn’t mean people can’t organize. This applies to many kinds of work as well: roles on the railway have to constantly communicate with each other.

                  • carl_marks[use name]
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                    03 months ago

                    Sure, implementing communism would take a long time, but I don’t see how they’re working towards it instead of just improving on socialism.

                    What do you mean by this? Specifically “improving on socialism”? Reading this I get the impression that you don’t know what you’re talking about, but would like to give you a chance to clarify.

                    I don’t know what AES is

                    Actually existing socialism. One party proletarian states lead by Marxists-Leninists.

                    Yes, they’re socialist I don’t see how this book on socialism relates to the topic, which is how any system you can’t implement is utopic.

                    Good that we agree that China, Soviet Russia, Cuba etc. Are Socialist. Since they obv were able to implement socialism they’re not utopian. I recommend the book because I wasn’t sure you were aware of that

                    Volunteer militias. Stateless doesn’t mean people can’t organize. This applies to many kinds of work as well: roles on the railway have to constantly communicate with each other.

                    Sounds utopian and not very effective to me when you have countries that have conscription and Military industrie. Can you give examples that exist today and how it can defense itself against such adversaries?