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Topic ClosedWhy do you reject communism?

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Poll Question: Why do you reject communism?
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
1 [4.00%]
4 [16.00%]
1 [4.00%]
1 [4.00%]
0 [0.00%]
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15 [60.00%]
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2016 at 16:30
Originally posted by A Person A Person wrote:

Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

I'd be alright with socialism. I don't see any advantage to communism over socialism. I still like to own things.

You still own things in a communist ideology. It's personal property. What wouldn't exist is private property, which would also be nonexistent in socialism.


Its incredible how we still have to point this out. Its so simple...
- From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 19 2016 at 21:26
http://i.imgur.com/xI4X1Na.jpg
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 20 2016 at 19:29
Originally posted by A Person A Person wrote:

Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

I'd be alright with socialism. I don't see any advantage to communism over socialism. I still like to own things.

You still own things in a communist ideology. It's personal property. What wouldn't exist is private property, which would also be nonexistent in socialism.


You see, Matt, the personal belongings which are "tolerated" in communism are only what's of the utmost importance for the individual, which means you can kiss goodbye most utilities we have. Commies here used the Neolithic indians to demonstrate this point: you should have clothes and other things you need to live (personal hygiene items  and such), but EVERYTHING ELSE would be socialized. Your house? socialized. Your land? socialized. Your books? socialized (after all, the bourgeoisie domination was/is also intellectual). Computers and phones? socialized. Your records? socialized. Do you have a ceiling fan or heater in the house? well, too bad, there's a family of 15 that needs it more than you, socialized.

There's a reason why Lenin had to modulate marxism with State Capitalism: the mass socialization and the abolishment of "capitalist" ideals, such as currency and private property was done with the utmost zealotry in the earliest days of the October revolution, but the disaster was so utterly universal (farmers, and here I mean SERFS, not nobleman) refused or couldn't to plant because they had no means to, since the central committee took everything they produced last year, same happened with mines, factories . . . Russia also had one of the most massive brain drains ever experienced, probably  only surpassed by when the whole thing fell because scientists and otherwise intellectuals had their means to created stripped from them and so for. Hell, even the musicians who played "counter-revolutionary" music, whatever that means, were persecuted because either their instruments or their styles didn't appeased to the chaos forced collectivization brought. Then Lenin had the greatest idea any socialist had, economy-wise: let's conjecture a pre-revolutionary/collectivizing state, in which the will of the people was substituted by the will of the state. There you have it. What you mean by personal property is the pre-collectivization state of being, when in the communist "utopia" that concept disappears completely, like the bolsheviks tried to implement, but failed miserably.

Originally posted by GKR GKR wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

well there is the (obviously thorny and emotional) matter of National Socialism. Looking at it purely economically and not for its tragic and odious social and racial agenda which was a vehicle for political power, making the Jewish a scapegoat for national humiliation that followed ww1, not a part of the economic viability of the system in itself.

One can argue that it was a economic system that opposed both Communism and Capitalism. An attempt, economically to take the best of both Capitalism and Communism. Agree? Disagree?

Disagree absolutely, Micky.

Hitler was an anti-marxist per nature, and nothing he said/wrote has absolutley nothing to do with marx. He defended the national sistem of germany capitalism. Thats it. He was anti-liberalism (in the economic sense), but thats it.


What he probably means is that both totalitarian regimes had more in common than they had different. Which is absolutely true: they disagreed ideologically, but their modus procedendi was either the exact same or very similar, even economically: mass statization, strict control of production and what could be produced (in the nazi state, that meant "un-German" products were forbidden), absolute control of "morals" (arian moral and communist morality), oppression, disintegration of self, destruction of communities and so forth.

Originally posted by A Person A Person wrote:

http://i.imgur.com/xI4X1Na.jpg


Don't animals actually do that on local levels? I mean, at least two mass-extinctions happened either by the depletion of resources or the creation of an universal poisonous resource (oxygen). And if animals have the means (or evolutionary traits) they not only organized themselves in small groups, but also fight for hegemony, which may cause the depletion of resources from any given area. Human social organization is just extremely advanced, but the basics are in every gregarious animal group/society, specially the great apes.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 20 2016 at 19:58
Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Haven't you forgot Túpac Amaru?


Tupac Amaru is a fraud.

He was a landlord of Tungasuca who fought the Spanish, because they took taxes (Prebendas).

He didn't seek for freedom of America as Chavez, Fidel, etc say, he wanted to be richer and stop paying taxes.

If Perú would had been independent, he would had fought against the central government
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 21 2016 at 18:27
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Haven't you forgot Túpac Amaru?


Tupac Amaru is a fraud.

He was a landlord of Tungasuca who fought the Spanish, because they took taxes (Prebendas).

He didn't seek for freedom of America as Chavez, Fidel, etc say, he wanted to be richer and stop paying taxes.

If Perú would had been independent, he would had fought against the central government


I mean the marxist-leninist terrorist organization. But, yeah, most of the "libertadores" are actually caudillos/caudilhos who only fight for their personal gain.

https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movimiento_Revolucionario_T%C3%BApac_Amaru
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 21 2016 at 23:51
Caio, I'm too addleminded on cold meds to do the cutty pasty thing with quotes, but my response basically is that I am not sure about all that. I would think that "socialzing" things like computers or such would only happen when it crosses the line where it stops being for personal use and becomes a means of production. I'm very poorly read on specifics of the implementation of such lines, so I have to admit I can't really argue that point.

I also know that many leftists view Leninist/Stalinist/Maoist style communism negatively, and as being too authoritarian. I have to again admit I am not well read on those either, I've mostly only read about more libertarian forms of leftism, anarcho-communism and such. I guess my point was that there are more dimensions that left and right, and various ideas on the organization/implementation of a communist society.
Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Don't animals actually do that on local levels? I mean, at least two mass-extinctions happened either by the depletion of resources or the creation of an universal poisonous resource (oxygen). And if animals have the means (or evolutionary traits) they not only organized themselves in small groups, but also fight for hegemony, which may cause the depletion of resources from any given area. Human social organization is just extremely advanced, but the basics are in every gregarious animal group/society, specially the great apes.

I'm too tired to find a good link but as far as hierarchy in great apes goes there was an interesting experiment on what was called the Keekorok troop. It had to do with a group of baboons in which the alpha males died, and the hierarchy of the group changed to become less dominating and more cooperative. This new behavior persisted through several generations, and when a new male would join the group the typical displays of dominance were punished, and the new male would ultimately change its behavior to that of the troop. It is not so interesting to me in that they are primates and that they are more like us than other animals, but rather that the cooperative nature of the group was sustained in the presence of a more dominant outsider. Also it was just a silly pic that made fun of capitalism.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 22 2016 at 13:38
Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Haven't you forgot Túpac Amaru?


Tupac Amaru is a fraud.

He was a landlord of Tungasuca who fought the Spanish, because they took taxes (Prebendas).

He didn't seek for freedom of America as Chavez, Fidel, etc say, he wanted to be richer and stop paying taxes.

If Perú would had been independent, he would had fought against the central government


I mean the marxist-leninist terrorist organization. But, yeah, most of the "libertadores" are actually caudillos/caudilhos who only fight for their personal gain.

https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movimiento_Revolucionario_T%C3%BApac_Amaru

Ahhhh...Those are the TUPAMAROS.

Yes, they were really crazy.

I have a friend from Uruguay who told me that a little girl became friend of a Minister's daughter, one night the kid placed a bomb under the parents bed.

We had the MRTA "Movimiento Revolucionario Tupac Amaru" who appeared along with Shinning Path, they were Marxist while SP were Maoist Pol Potians, they looked civilized compared with Shinning path who admired Pol Pot, but no terrorist is harmless

They took the Japanese Ambassador's house in a party and were exterminated in a perfect operation, only one hostage (He hide himself in a closet and a lost bullet hit him) and one soldier died, all the terrorist were exterminated and 71 hostages freed. 

Now the Human Rights Associations are blaming the soldiers for killing the terrorists.




Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - January 22 2016 at 13:49
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 22 2016 at 15:58
Originally posted by A Person A Person wrote:

Caio, I'm too addleminded on cold meds to do the cutty pasty thing with quotes, but my response basically is that I am not sure about all that. I would think that "socialzing" things like computers or such would only happen when it crosses the line where it stops being for personal use and becomes a means of production. I'm very poorly read on specifics of the implementation of such lines, so I have to admit I can't really argue that point.

I also know that many leftists view Leninist/Stalinist/Maoist style communism negatively, and as being too authoritarian. I have to again admit I am not well read on those either, I've mostly only read about more libertarian forms of leftism, anarcho-communism and such. I guess my point was that there are more dimensions that left and right, and various ideas on the organization/implementation of a communist society.


Regarding anarchy, it also depends a lot on which line you follow. I'll admit upfront that I don't know as much about anarchy as I do marxism, but what I know, Bakunin, is extremely similar with marxist modus procedendi. You know, armed conflict, violet retribution, militarized "communal/neighbour" groups (militias) that would put forth the collectivization and such. The difference is that the people itself would be responsible for the transition to communism, not being necessary a strong state to do so.

My great-grandfather was was avid anarcho-christian, (which IDK how it would function because he was also a fervours roman-catholic) and it was supposed to be based on Leon Tolstoy and the teachings and lives of the first christians and desert sages/hermits (so, simple life, rejection of "capitalist" ideals, more importance to the community and family unit, etc). I don't really know how that would work because that line of thought has died in many levels (the killing of God in contemporary western world being the biggest reason, but that sh*t in 1950's and 60's Brazil was already so detached from reality neither my grandfather or father bothered following it up).

So, yeah, there's a plethora of anarchist lines of thought that are, in all seriousness, very interesting, but IMO they are such an utopia that I find it hard to have any connection. Even anarcho-capitalism, which is the one that's the most probable of actually existing (I've red people arguing it already exists in the stock market, but whatever) and even that is completely bananas.

Originally posted by A Person A Person wrote:

Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Don't animals actually do that on local levels? I mean, at least two mass-extinctions happened either by the depletion of resources or the creation of an universal poisonous resource (oxygen). And if animals have the means (or evolutionary traits) they not only organized themselves in small groups, but also fight for hegemony, which may cause the depletion of resources from any given area. Human social organization is just extremely advanced, but the basics are in every gregarious animal group/society, specially the great apes.


I'm too tired to find a good link but as far as hierarchy in great apes goes there was an interesting experiment on what was called the Keekorok troop. It had to do with a group of baboons in which the alpha males died, and the hierarchy of the group changed to become less dominating and more cooperative. This new behavior persisted through several generations, and when a new male would join the group the typical displays of dominance were punished, and the new male would ultimately change its behavior to that of the troop. It is not so interesting to me in that they are primates and that they are more like us than other animals, but rather that the cooperative nature of the group was sustained in the presence of a more dominant outsider. Also it was just a silly pic that made fun of capitalism.


Wow, really? I'd be VERY interested in reading that, it sounds amazing. if you have the source plz send me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 22 2016 at 16:14
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Haven't you forgot Túpac Amaru?


Tupac Amaru is a fraud.

He was a landlord of Tungasuca who fought the Spanish, because they took taxes (Prebendas).

He didn't seek for freedom of America as Chavez, Fidel, etc say, he wanted to be richer and stop paying taxes.

If Perú would had been independent, he would had fought against the central government


I mean the marxist-leninist terrorist organization. But, yeah, most of the "libertadores" are actually caudillos/caudilhos who only fight for their personal gain.

https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Movimiento_Revolucionario_T%C3%BApac_Amaru

Ahhhh...Those are the TUPAMAROS.

Yes, they were really crazy.

I have a friend from Uruguay who told me that a little girl became friend of a Minister's daughter, one night the kid placed a bomb under the parents bed.

We had the MRTA "Movimiento Revolucionario Tupac Amaru" who appeared along with Shinning Path, they were Marxist while SP were Maoist Pol Potians, they looked civilized compared with Shinning path who admired Pol Pot, but no terrorist is harmless

They took the Japanese Ambassador's house in a party and were exterminated in a perfect operation, only one hostage (He hide himself in a closet and a lost bullet hit him) and one soldier died, all the terrorist were exterminated and 71 hostages freed. 

Now the Human Rights Associations are blaming the soldiers for killing the terrorists.


With all the due respect and reverence that I have for the UN and other human rights watchdogs, sometimes they can be pretty retarded. And I mean ice cream on the forehead, foot in mouth, so stupid it makes a low-functioning autistic person seems brilliant kind of retardation.

Hell, recently, they had a meeting/hearing with professional victims Anita Sarkeesian and Chelsea Van Valkenburg/Zoe Quin (this last one if so f**king rich she has to use a boat to visit her parents, LOL) to talk about "online harassment" (you know, mean comments on the internet) and the final document went short of equating it to actual rape and suggesting measures that would result in censorship laws. Whatever happened to "sticks and stones" I'll never know. . . Wile at the same time UN troops in conflict zones (Kosovo, South Sudan, Somalia, etc) are accused of using the food rations they were supposed to give to the people in the first place to get sex with pre-pubescent girls and boys and trafficking drugs; and they can't be touched because they have a blue passport.

That's the kind of thing that makes so many disregard what the UN has to say and question its very existence.


Edited by CCVP - January 22 2016 at 16:14
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 22 2016 at 16:21
The trouble with Communism (and Capitalism for that matter) is that it doesn't take into account human nature. People always want an edge where they can find one and governments can't help interfering or creating rules and systems that ensure that the ideology fails.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 22 2016 at 16:42
an interesting book I'd recommend to people that really is anathma to some but an enlightening read.

The Chief Culprit by Viktor Suvorov.

the synopsis.  Stalin and Soviet Union LOST ww2.

Surprising and a bit controversial in historical circles until you read just why the author makes that bold statement.

Stalin knew the death of Communism was exposure to other systems.

So his goal. He encouraged and in fact may have been the guiding force behind ww2, a fight between France/Britain and Germany.. and the Soviets decend upon the weakened west.  Stalin lost the war when Hitler realized Stalin's 'game' and preempted Stalin's invasion of the west with his own.

Thus Stalin lost ww2 by only gaining control of eastern Europe.. not the whole of Europe as he had been. planning.. YEARS.. to do. Thus Communism itself was doomed..
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 22 2016 at 19:23
Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Regarding anarchy, it also depends a lot on which line you follow. I'll admit upfront that I don't know as much about anarchy as I do marxism, but what I know, Bakunin, is extremely similar with marxist modus procedendi. You know, armed conflict, violet retribution, militarized "communal/neighbour" groups (militias) that would put forth the collectivization and such. The difference is that the people itself would be responsible for the transition to communism, not being necessary a strong state to do so.

My great-grandfather was was avid anarcho-christian, (which IDK how it would function because he was also a fervours roman-catholic) and it was supposed to be based on Leon Tolstoy and the teachings and lives of the first christians and desert sages/hermits (so, simple life, rejection of "capitalist" ideals, more importance to the community and family unit, etc). I don't really know how that would work because that line of thought has died in many levels (the killing of God in contemporary western world being the biggest reason, but that sh*t in 1950's and 60's Brazil was already so detached from reality neither my grandfather or father bothered following it up).

Yeah, some do advocate a violent revolution. Not all strains of anarchism are the same, and some are very anarchists are very much pacifists and the like. I have seen online some who think that revolution is only possible through self liberation, and in general I don't think most think an anarchist society is achievable in their lifetime, so I would say it's not particularly utopic in that regard.
Quote Even anarcho-capitalism, which is the one that's the most probable of actually existing (I've red people arguing it already exists in the stock market, but whatever) and even that is completely bananas.

As far as "anarcho"-capitalism goes, it's not true capitalism since anarchy is against all oppressive hierarchies including capitalism. It's close to right-wing libertarianism. Both are pretty disliked by not only anarchists but leftists in general.[/QUOTE]
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 22 2016 at 22:52
Originally posted by GKR GKR wrote:

Originally posted by A Person A Person wrote:

Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

I'd be alright with socialism. I don't see any advantage to communism over socialism. I still like to own things.

You still own things in a communist ideology. It's personal property. What wouldn't exist is private property, which would also be nonexistent in socialism.


Its incredible how we still have to point this out. Its so simple...
I've only seen very underworked definitions of private and personal property. So how is bling not capital? It seems like we were once on the gold standard. How is livestock or pets not capital? They've been used as such through history. How does one procure music without capital? For free? What rights does an artist or musician retain after their personal property becomes private property by being exchanged for capital. Lots of "personal" property produces capital gain. How does my awesome comic book collection get defined, personal property or private property?





Edited by HackettFan - January 22 2016 at 23:20
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 23 2016 at 07:31
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

an interesting book I'd recommend to people that really is anathma to some but an enlightening read.

The Chief Culprit by Viktor Suvorov.

the synopsis.  Stalin and Soviet Union LOST ww2.

Surprising and a bit controversial in historical circles until you read just why the author makes that bold statement.

Stalin knew the death of Communism was exposure to other systems.

So his goal. He encouraged and in fact may have been the guiding force behind ww2, a fight between France/Britain and Germany.. and the Soviets decend upon the weakened west.  Stalin lost the war when Hitler realized Stalin's 'game' and preempted Stalin's invasion of the west with his own.

Thus Stalin lost ww2 by only gaining control of eastern Europe.. not the whole of Europe as he had been. planning.. YEARS.. to do. Thus Communism itself was doomed..


That's a very interesting perspective. I've already seen people argue this and some even go further: communism, as we know it happened in Russia and China, was doomed from the start because those revolutions were more akin to eastern equivalents of the French Revolution (overthrowing of a "parasitic" noble class and the arise to prominence of the "oppressed"), instead of legitimate marxist revolutions, since these were supposed to arise in countries where capitalism was the most advanced and "equipped" (so the proletariat could use the underlying social disparities and the riches of capitalistic gains to perform the socialization of everything).

So the best places for that would be the UK, Germany, France and USA, the biggest industrial powers of the late 19th and early 20th century, but instead happened in Russia (who was an important industrial country, but about 80-75% of the population was made by serfs) and China (which wasn't even an industrial country by the time Mao came to power, in the mid 20th century).

Originally posted by A Person A Person wrote:


Quote Even anarcho-capitalism, which is the one that's the most probable of actually existing (I've red people arguing it already exists in the stock market, but whatever) and even that is completely bananas.

As far as "anarcho"-capitalism goes, it's not true capitalism since anarchy is against all oppressive hierarchies including capitalism. It's close to right-wing libertarianism. Both are pretty disliked by not only anarchists but leftists in general.


I not a specialist of anarcho-capitalism either, but I don't see how it wouldn't be true capitalism. it's definitely not catered to transnational globalist large-scale companies and organizations or the traditional marxist criticism about superstructure, but capitalism as very elastic mean of economic production and reproduction of capital hasn't fit exactly in the marixt critic for at least 120 years (since the advent of the second industrial revolution) and such critic has become inadequate for discussing today's capitalism, as it only fit one of the many, many means of production and reproduction of capital. Specially because the state itself became a player in the marked with state-owned companies and regulating bureaus instead of an ominous force that catered to the "elites", something Marx and Engels didn't even dream of.

Anarcho-capitalism also has the retarded presumption people would simply be smart enough or would have enough power to deny those monstrous companies their money and time if their services weren't adequate, which is completely ludicrous.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 23 2016 at 08:03
Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

an interesting book I'd recommend to people that really is anathma to some but an enlightening read.

The Chief Culprit by Viktor Suvorov.

the synopsis.  Stalin and Soviet Union LOST ww2.

Surprising and a bit controversial in historical circles until you read just why the author makes that bold statement.

Stalin knew the death of Communism was exposure to other systems.

So his goal. He encouraged and in fact may have been the guiding force behind ww2, a fight between France/Britain and Germany.. and the Soviets decend upon the weakened west.  Stalin lost the war when Hitler realized Stalin's 'game' and preempted Stalin's invasion of the west with his own.

Thus Stalin lost ww2 by only gaining control of eastern Europe.. not the whole of Europe as he had been. planning.. YEARS.. to do. Thus Communism itself was doomed..


That's a very interesting perspective. I've already seen people argue this and some even go further: communism, as we know it happened in Russia and China, was doomed from the start because those revolutions were more akin to eastern equivalents of the French Revolution (overthrowing of a "parasitic" noble class and the arise to prominence of the "oppressed"), instead of legitimate marxist revolutions, since these were supposed to arise in countries where capitalism was the most advanced and "equipped" (so the proletariat could use the underlying social disparities and the riches of capitalistic gains to perform the socialization of everything).

So the best places for that would be the UK, Germany, France and USA, the biggest industrial powers of the late 19th and early 20th century, but instead happened in Russia (who was an important industrial country, but about 80-75% of the population was made by serfs) and China (which wasn't even an industrial country by the time Mao came to power, in the mid 20th century).




yeah. It is quite the interesting perspective from a number of different angles.  It is quite something to realize just how vastly different the world today might have been if Stalin hadn't made but ONE fatal mistake in his plans to bring his brutal and violent brand of Communism to the west. Telegraphing to Hitler in 1940, with his annexation of Bessarabia and northern Bukovina in 1940, his intent to invade the west with France out of the war and Britain off of the continent.  Thus forcing Hitler and Germany  to attack first in preemptive self preservation. A lot of historians scoff at the notion but it fits a lot of unanswered questions..  espeically the first question to arise out of ashes of ww2. Why did Germany commit suicide by doing the one thing they knew they couldn't do.. open a second front against a nation they had no hope of defeating.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 23 2016 at 08:37
Originally posted by CCVP CCVP wrote:

I not a specialist of anarcho-capitalism either, but I don't see how it wouldn't be true capitalism. it's definitely not catered to transnational globalist large-scale companies and organizations or the traditional marxist criticism about superstructure, but capitalism as very elastic mean of economic production and reproduction of capital hasn't fit exactly in the marixt critic for at least 120 years (since the advent of the second industrial revolution) and such critic has become inadequate for discussing today's capitalism, as it only fit one of the many, many means of production and reproduction of capital. Specially because the state itself became a player in the marked with state-owned companies and regulating bureaus instead of an ominous force that catered to the "elites", something Marx and Engels didn't even dream of.

Anarcho-capitalism also has the retarded presumption people would simply be smart enough or would have enough power to deny those monstrous companies their money and time if their services weren't adequate, which is completely ludicrous.

Sorry I meant not true anarchism. And I agree, the idea that a person can control the market through "voluntary" decisions is pretty silly. Regardless of whether you are anti-capitalist or not it is easy to see that some sort of force like the government is necessary to keep it from devouring itself, not to mention the environment and everything else.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 23 2016 at 11:18
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

...

Why did Germany commit suicide by doing the one thing they knew they couldn't do.. open a second front against a nation they had no hope of defeating.


Simple: Germany's leader was Censored nuts.
He looks at this world and wants it all... so he strikes, like Thunderball!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 23 2016 at 17:59
Originally posted by KingCrInuYasha KingCrInuYasha wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

...

Why did Germany commit suicide by doing the one thing they knew they couldn't do.. open a second front against a nation they had no hope of defeating.


Simple: Germany's leader was Censored nuts.


Not quite. He expected England to either surrender or capitulate by 1940 or 41, something it would be very much possible if he simply machine-gunned the Dunkirk evacuates and immediately bombed England, but he decided to show some mercy in the hopes the English wouldn't want another prolonged war + German war technology was mostly superior to anything the allies had at almost every point in the war, but he didn't factored in radar and computers, what literally saved England before US intervention. Had not have been for those two inventions, which allowed the RAF to defend the UK from a vastly bigger and overall better equipped German navy and air-force even in unfavourable weather conditions, it's very probable that the UK would have fell as well.

Besides that, by the time he invaded the USSR, the soviets had a really pitiful army. It was barely equipped, and the equipment  was of terrible quality, which, allied to the fact that Stalin had purged all or almost all capable military thinkers and strategists and put in their places captains and lieutenants, made a perfect storm for complete disaster. The inability of the soviet army to invade Poland in the 1920's and then Finland in 1939 made clear that the soviet army was a shade of the once powerful Russian imperial army.

There were four problems, however. First, Russia is absolutely massive. Even today russian territory accounts for about 40% of Europe's territory and, adding the Baltic states, Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine it accounted for more than 45% of Europe's territory.

Second, the US showered the soviets heavily with supplied (goods in general and war material), allowing them to rebuild their industry and use it exclusively towards the war effort (plus, russian equipment wasn't very sophisticated or advanced, so it was cheaper and faster to build than German war material; If I recall correctly, a T-34 costed roughly half of what a panzer IV costed, if you account man-hours and other raw materials needed for its construction and it was so rough that Nazi propaganda used its poor design as one of many "proofs" of communist inferiority).

Third, Stalin didn't give a single f**k about his own subjects. Casualties were so high among the soviet army that it was one of the very first armies to allow women in their ranks because there were not enough men to do the fighting and even so it only had a marginal net increase in the army, causing the male population of the USSR to be lower than the female in the millions for decades after the end of the war and its consequences can be seen even today. That, added to the scorched earth policy and poor army equipment, resulted in the biggest loss of human life that ever existed in the history of humanity, with more than 20-22 million people biting the dust in the USSR.

Fourth, the early 1940's had some of the coldest winters of the 20th century and, by then, they were the coldest winters in decades. That's something you absolutely can't predict, but it played a role of the utmost importance, because it hindered considerably the Nazi advance. Just to give you an idea, in the winter of 1941 (or 1942, I don't quite remember which year) the German troops had to star fires under their tanks in order to MELT THE GASOLINE, AS IT HAD FROZEN INSIDE THE FUEL TANK (keep in mind gasoline's melting point is MINUS 57ºC/MINUS 70ºF).

If any of these conditions were not in place, the USSR would have probably surrendered or capitulated to Nazi demands. Of course, these are only the direct/biggest parts in the Eastern Theatre, there was small stuff as well, like the inability of the Axis to secure oil fields, Italy's inability to be a reliable player in the war and the crippling economical isolation, the last of which caused the collapse of the Nazi war machine by early 1944/late 1943 and by the time D-Day happened, the resources were stretched so thin it was impossible to defend France, Italy, Germany and keep with the east.


Edited by CCVP - January 23 2016 at 18:02
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 23 2016 at 19:20
Damn, Caio with the entire WWII history class condensed! Feels like reading all my textbooks at one timeSmile
Also, all 100% spot on.



Quick note, I think communism, as we had it, was doomed from the very start. Literally, from the get go. 
Lenin's vanguard party never dissolved to give power to the people, some blame Stalin and that if only Trotsky took his rightful place things would've been different. Maybe, all pure speculation. 
The reason the USSR was doomed was because it was basically state capitalism and thus was a woeful failure, I'll call it the worst of both worlds. Trotsky did get this and said central planning would fail so maybe he would've indeed try to transfer power to the people eventually. 

But as we know, Russia was not even ready for communism, so I just can't see it as succeeding and the longer the communist party was in power, waiting for Russia to be ready, the lesser they'd give it up. 

Really the whole thing was just doomed. Russia was already developing Soviets, which were very true to what Marx probably would've envisioned, but they pretty much got replaced by the central authority. 
So I think the Bolshevik's in their lust for revolution and intolerance of others doomed it all from the start. 


So, I'd say communism per se didn't fail, but all that shows the difficulty with the idea and frankly I see it as worse in all ways to socialism. Which I am agnostic on, just I think social democracy proved to be extremely great and easiest to implement, IF we were ever to get there again I just think more nationalization/state competition needs to happen with banking and etc  because it's been the slow clawing of banking/finance that eroded social democracy 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 24 2016 at 11:28
Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

Damn, Caio with the entire WWII history class condensed! Feels like reading all my textbooks at one timeSmile
Also, all 100% spot on.


LOL, thanks. Thumbs Up

Quote
Quick note, I think communism, as we had it, was doomed from the very start. Literally, from the get go. 
Lenin's vanguard party never dissolved to give power to the people, some blame Stalin and that if only Trotsky took his rightful place things would've been different. Maybe, all pure speculation. 
The reason the USSR was doomed was because it was basically state capitalism and thus was a woeful failure, I'll call it the worst of both worlds. Trotsky did get this and said central planning would fail so maybe he would've indeed try to transfer power to the people eventually. 

But as we know, Russia was not even ready for communism, so I just can't see it as succeeding and the longer the communist party was in power, waiting for Russia to be ready, the lesser they'd give it up. 

Really the whole thing was just doomed. Russia was already developing Soviets, which were very true to what Marx probably would've envisioned, but they pretty much got replaced by the central authority. 
So I think the Bolshevik's in their lust for revolution and intolerance of others doomed it all from the start. 


So, I'd say communism per se didn't fail, but all that shows the difficulty with the idea and frankly I see it as worse in all ways to socialism. Which I am agnostic on, just I think social democracy proved to be extremely great and easiest to implement, IF we were ever to get there again I just think more nationalization/state competition needs to happen with banking and etc  because it's been the slow clawing of banking/finance that eroded social democracy 


Yeah, micky and me kinda started talking about this, but from the perspective of the unfavourable socio-political environment in the Russian empire and how the communist revolution had more to do with the French revolution (overthrowing the Ancien Régime) than a genuine revolution in the model Marx proposed, because the models Marx had (Germany, England and France) had already overthrown their absolute monarchs or never had one (Germany). Not only that, but Russia was still a feudal country by the time the revolution occurred, even though serfdom was officially outlawed in 1860 it never went away, persisting one way or the other, up until the 1950's (except now the master was the State instead of nobles).

Moreover, the attempt to implement what Marx preached literally (abolition of currency, fox example) was a complete disaster and one of the many reasons for the social and economic collapse Russia (and later the USSR) suffered before the implementation of the New Economic Plan/Policy (which basically reinstituted the imperial economic policies, even allowing foreign investment and financial speculation, like WTF Lenin, hahaha).

So, for example, currency was abolished and every need was met with consumption and production quotas; this caused the collapse of agricultural and industrial production, resulting in widespread famine and shortage of everything, from shoes to medicine, clothes to furniture, fuel to screws, you name it. Not to mention the riots (caused by the shortages and famine), brain drain (everybody that could fled the place) and purges (that killed millions more).

Another example of the disastrous attempt to implement literally what Marx proposed was the use of the military to extract goods from producers. So, if you were a farmer or an artisan or owned a manufacturing plant or an industry (no matter big or small), everything you produced was taken from you by force, using the army and if you refused or simply couldn't produce anything more (because of the shortages in the case of the artisans, manufacturing and industries or the lack of seeds to plant and lack of materials for planting, in the case of the farmers), you were either purged or killed on the spot.

There were countless other problems as well, but those were the ones I could recall on the spot. So, this widespread collapse could be one of the reasons for the underdevelopment of the soviets; or maybe the soviets couldn't develop in the first place because there weren't enough workers to start with (since about 80-85% of the population was rural).

The rabbit hole is much deeper than simply ideological differences between the heads of the party about central planning or how to regulate people's free-will.
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