prinz wrote: » Flawed in practice? It is flawed in practice because it is inherently flawed and will never work like Marx hoped. The -ism that has brought more death and suffering to the world than any other.
Ye say Russia isnt truly communist.
asdasd wrote: » No welfare cheques, then? I think you and DF will agree on that one.
turgon wrote: » I am resigning from this debate.
turgon wrote: I dont know too much
turgon wrote: the best ye can do is "capitalism is bad, thus we need communism."
They are not just downplayers of past holocausts but champions of the next.
Joycey wrote: » And what, exactly, is it that you are saying? Capitalism is just perfect, Liebniz was wrong in his day, but I can say with certainty that this is "the best of all possible worlds".
Joycey wrote: » At least we are trying to propose a hypothetical scenario where things would be better then they now are.
Joycey wrote: » I am more then happy, in fact I would be delighted to get into serious discussions about how to put our vision of a better society then the one we currently live in into practise
turgon wrote: » And the boer war? And the zulu war? Funded by the big government back home. Big government you want.
turgon wrote: » No thats not what Im saying. What Im saying is that the majority of arguments on this thread have been against capitalism rather than for communism. So yeer criticizing without offering a solution. Its like Simmons giving a list of whats wrong with the other candidates without offering any new solution.
brianthebard wrote: » Ironic then that this is what you and your cohorts have done for the last 14 pages.
turgon wrote: » The question proposed was: "How are things made in communism; bearing in mind that three of the principle criticisms of capitalism are excess produce, that people are "alienated" from their work and that different people profit disproportionately from the chain of production."
turgon wrote: » So you blame Africas problems solely on capitalism? But arent you just lumping those kind of capitalists into the same league as all capitalists? I have given you the benefit of the doubt by not lumping you in with Lenin. If we were to depend fully on past history in this regard as a guiding point for future economic development, how do you think communism measures up?
donegalfella wrote: » This post has been deleted.
turgon wrote: » Gees, how is Africa a "capitalist failure" when the whole continent is under totalitarianism (which your system need to work, like it or not)? Think about the biggest dump in Africa - Zimbabwe. I suppose the socialist red star on their national flag missed you a bit? Actually the star in the flag 'represents the countries international outlook'. Now i think it is fair to say that Angolas flag has a socialist bent,
asdasd wrote: » ... all Marxists thought it clearly was Marxist at the time, and plenty do now.
owners of capital, or "privilege", which means - effectively - all of us in the West.
turgon wrote: » Because it seems to me that communism ties people down in their innovation. If Im working in a car factory and I suddenly think up of a new type of engine, what do I do?
dreamlogic wrote: » Well what do you do under a capitalist owner?
dreamlogic wrote: » Under an alternative system there is no such profit-motive. So it is easy to see how people would be freer to innovate under an alternative system.
turgon wrote: » You dont do anything. You put in work perfecting the idea, patenting it and then licensing it on to manufacturers. Thus being rewarded for your ingenuity.
So what motive is there.
Joycey wrote: » The reason is that, while not always the case, for a good proportion of the cars and houses that are sold, the individuals who buy them, are going into bigger or smaller levels of personal debt. A distinction needs to be made between two types of debt: 1. self liquidating debt. 2. non-self liquidating debt. Things like college loans, loans for new farm machinery, a new, larger car if you are a taxi driver, and the like, are self liquidating, because what is being purchased is an investment. From the bankers point of view, these loans will pay for themselves over time. "Wasteful" purchases, such as second homes, or even bigger homes, or new cars or excessive clothing, or anything else which requires going into debt in order to pay for (very easy to go unnoticed what with credit cards etc), are non-self liquidating, because the value of the loan is unredeemable from what it has been spent on purchasing. What an ever-increasing number of non-self liquidating loans being taken out leads to, are events like the current financial crisis, or even just ruined lives for individuals on a smaller scale.
Joycey wrote: » creating/consuming massive excesses of essentially non-productive paraphenalia as cars and second homes.
Joycey wrote: » Now, the obvious response is to say that its these peoples own fault, they wasted money which wasnt theres, and which they had no realistic hope of repaying. But I would argue that in the era of credit cards, and free and easy loans, the psychological weight of getting into debt has been vastly reduced.