• @Snowclone
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    863 months ago

    But see, now she doesn’t have time to organize or even attend a Revolutionary action of any kind!

    • Track_ShovelOP
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      673 months ago

      The first rule of a successful abuse of power is to make people too busy trying to survive to worry about what your policies are

      • @jaybone
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        93 months ago

        The Jan 6ers made the time. Not sure how many jobs they have.

        • Cowbee [he/him]
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          153 months ago

          Trump die-hards are largely petty bourgeois, ie small business owners. They can make their own time.

          • @jaybone
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            63 months ago

            Had not heard this term before, so I learned something new today. Thank you. And yes, this explains a lot.

            • Cowbee [he/him]
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              53 months ago

              No problem!

              The “fun” thing with the petty bourgeois as they relate to Trump is how classes relate to fascism. Fascism materially arises from a frustrated petty bourgeoisie aligning with the Bourgeoisie against the Proletariat along nationalis and xenophobic lines.

          • @AngryCommieKender
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            23 months ago

            Petit* bourgeois, it’s French so you spelled it like it sounds.

          • @Snowclone
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            12 months ago

            Cops make a surprisingly high amount of money.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          The Jan 6ers made the time. Not sure how many jobs they have.

          Then? Unemployment. Now? Unemployment.

        • @Snowclone
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          11 month ago

          A lot were retired, some police and other minor tyrants, and some were just full time white nationalist organizers.

    • @Alteon
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      43 months ago

      No, but thank you though.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          Long, boring, hard to pay attention to. I read philosophy and theory sometimes but it’s few and far between for those reasons. I really have to be in a special mood to sit down and read something that dense.

          Edit: I’m not the original commenter

          • Cowbee [he/him]
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            183 months ago

            Long, boring, hard to pay attention to.

            There are simpler, shorter, and easier works by Marx, Like Critique of the Gotha Programme, Wage Labor and Capital, as well as Value, Price, and Profit.

        • @[email protected]
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          23 months ago

          Reading Marx is like reading Adam Smith. Both wrote about economic systems before economics was even a thing. All ideas start somewhere but our ideas, and our society, have advanced dramatically in the 140+ years they’ve been dead. They’re more interesting for historical purposes than economic ones.

          • @[email protected]
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            173 months ago

            But it’s also hard to know what contemporary economists are arguing without reading those foundational writers

          • Dessalines
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            123 months ago

            All of Marx’s main concepts, surplus value, classes and class struggle, alienation, are just as relevant today as when they were written. Much like Newton, Marx built the solid foundation that scientific socialists stand on today.

            • @[email protected]
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              53 months ago

              Right, but nobody tells anyone interested in physics to read Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica. If you’re interested in history, sure. If you’re interested in physics, read a modern physics textbook.

          • @rockSlayer
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            113 months ago

            Das Kapital described crypto before digital computers were even an idea. His work is still relevant.

            • @[email protected]
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              I thought to look this up cause I think it’s neat and it’s often the case that some technology is described long before you’d think. The first description of using electrical switches to do logic operations came in 1886 in a letter from Charles Sanders Peirce. That’s between Capital volume 2 and 3, and most importantly, AFTER he described the law of value.

          • Cowbee [he/him]
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            3 months ago

            Both wrote about economic systems before economics was even a thing.

            Lol. Lmao, even.

            and our society, have advanced dramatically in the 140+ years they’ve been dead.

            In what manner has this proven Marx wrong?

            • @[email protected]
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              3 months ago

              You’re very good at saying you’re right and very bad at providing evidence. The best thing about lemmy’s size is I can recognize which usernames to disregard immediately after enough encounters.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      Do you have a good starting point? I have a rudimentary understanding of Marxism, but not much in the way of details.

    • @[email protected]
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      -43 months ago

      Good idea. Read about a hypothetical economic theory that is impossible to implement unless everyone become obedient to a small group of elitist while pretending the people are in control. I’m sure you’ll get it right this time

  • @[email protected]
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    123 months ago

    Girl is doing her best and changing what she can reasonably change within her locus of control.

    • @[email protected]
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      33 months ago

      That’s the cool part about the struggle against capitalism: Workers’ labor and consciousness of how it is used and and withheld is the single most powerful tool within this locus of control, as said labor is the very foundation of the economic system. And the most cost-and-time-effective and reliable acts within this locus to reasonably change circumstances such as better pay and conditions are also the most effective ways of challenging capital itself, like unionizing and organizing direct action with a wider group to support you and together shoulder the burden and the associated risks of daring to raise your head against your masters.

      It works double as a prime tool for furthering class-consciousness and class-solidarity (which capitalists already have with each other when push comes to shove). Which then makes continuance of this, and the spreading of this knowledge, capability, inspiration to other shops even easier. From experience, this costs much less time, effort, and spirit, and is much better at solidifying and maintaining better conditions (and not just for yourself but for everyone), than hurling yourself individually into the carousel-blender of endless additional gig work while everyone else is also made to do that individually, forever, in isolation from each other and utter hope-death, which helps this all perpetuate itself.

      I’ve seen it happen where just the mere fact of a union vote being filed and date set results in an instant pay raise among discussion from bosses of “We’re a family though! This will put others between us and things won’t stay friendly! MUH OPEN-DOOR POLICY!! BUT WHAT ABOUT UNION DUES!?!” Granted, I’ve also seen it where bosses just close down that shop-branch and reopen elsewhere (sometimes under a new name to avoid legal ramifications for blatant union-busting) because they’re so disgustingly rich and so scared of other branches catching wind and joining in, that it is deemed less costly than simply recognizing the will of their workers. So there is risk to be considered, hence the need to build awareness and solidarity among a wider organized group and in your community (and definitely also other branches/departments of your company, but with the care that it’s harder to know who to trust in the early stages than among direct coworkers. Punishment for union-advocacy may be illegal, that doesn’t mean the bosses won’t try to find ways to do it if they don’t think you’ve the support to make them pay for it).

      But the defeatist and false, purely bourgeois-implanted notion that the only thing within one’s locus of control as a worker is to sell yourself HARDER and make capitalists RICHER in the race-to-the-bottom death-spiral of moribund capitalism is exactly how things get this bad and continue to for working people and oneself. Workers are in reality much more powerful (and more numerous) than the capitalists who require us. That is why they need us to think we have no other or better option, and poison the well to have us perpetuate our own and each others’ defeatism and compliance.

      in short: Solidarity Forever

  • NutWrench
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    123 months ago

    If you work 40 hours a week and you STILL can’t afford to pay basic living expenses, then your economy sucks.

  • @[email protected]
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    83 months ago

    I feel that this post is a clear evidence of why do people believe in the dead internet theory.

    • Track_ShovelOP
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      113 months ago

      Yeah, but would a bot creatively insult you, you slack-jawed, basement-dwelling rat fondler?

      • @[email protected]
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        23 months ago

        I bet it would not be hard to have a simple script stringing together some words you paper-boned carpet-smelling mud eater

        • Track_ShovelOP
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          23 months ago

          Listen here, you thin-skinned shitgoblin. you might like to think you’re clever and can program, but I have it for veritable fact that you’re and underpaid grundle hair braider who is barely making ends meet.

  • @tee900
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    -13 months ago

    Lemmy-level comedy