gb13
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- Nov 22, 2007
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A warning: this is quite long, but important and very entertaining. ANYWAY, the point of all this is to show you what we (especially those of us in blue states) are up against come the general. So it is my recommendation to start this type of discourse with your own friends early and often, so that hopefully if/when Ron Paul wins the Republican Nomination, we can have a head start on the Statist attacks that are sure to be coming our way from those near and dear to us.
This conversation came about in a thread under a question one of my friends posted on facebook regarding Elizabeth Warren. This friend is a great girl; I vehemently disagree with her political philosophy, but she is a selfless, cool chick whom I really like and go all the way back to middle school with. I don't think SHE is a communist, per se, and she's definitely not a party-line Democratic evangelist (I don't even know if she's registered D), she doesn't support Obama, but she definitely leans toward communism/socialism rather than towards our persuasion.
Anyway, she asked if Warren was "for real" I responded, and suddenly found myself fending off attacks from one communist-sympathizer after another. There were too many people responding for me to try to indicate here which individual each response was coming from, so I'll just use "them" and "me" to distinguish the posts from one another. I'll put "Me" in bold to avoid confusion.
After some pretty benign banter (mostly friendly fluffy stuff about how they only like Kucinich and I pretty much only like Paul)...
Them:
Me:
Them:
Me:
Them:
Me:
Them:
Them AGAIN:
THEM AGGGAAAAAIIIN:
Me (Finally):
They have yet to respond.
Then I went on to post a couple "progressives for Ron Paul" on her wall, because of some of the Paul-hating. I really hope I changed some minds.
This conversation came about in a thread under a question one of my friends posted on facebook regarding Elizabeth Warren. This friend is a great girl; I vehemently disagree with her political philosophy, but she is a selfless, cool chick whom I really like and go all the way back to middle school with. I don't think SHE is a communist, per se, and she's definitely not a party-line Democratic evangelist (I don't even know if she's registered D), she doesn't support Obama, but she definitely leans toward communism/socialism rather than towards our persuasion.
Anyway, she asked if Warren was "for real" I responded, and suddenly found myself fending off attacks from one communist-sympathizer after another. There were too many people responding for me to try to indicate here which individual each response was coming from, so I'll just use "them" and "me" to distinguish the posts from one another. I'll put "Me" in bold to avoid confusion.
After some pretty benign banter (mostly friendly fluffy stuff about how they only like Kucinich and I pretty much only like Paul)...
Them:
Hah... well... I'm not sure I agree with either of the viewpoints there... I want to smash the state, persay, but I'm definitely not a libertarian.... and I'm not totally sold of Warren's rhetoric there either... but I'm wondering if my left-ish progressive-ish or even left-ish radical friends think she's like, a "real" progressive or if she's just another politician... and I know these are all completely loaded and problematic words, ha! (And dear friends, I really don't want this to turn into a convo about Obama, please nobody mention him)
Me:
The thing I don't understand about Progressives is this... They're usually anti-war, and anti-violence in general, but they fail to see that the State is nothing but a monopoly on force/violence. They give the State a pass for the very same violent acts that, if committed by an individual, would rightly be seen as reprehensible... I don't get the logical disconnect there. As soon as you bring a gun into the argument, you've lost. That's all the State has: Guns.
Them:
well, i certainly don't disagree with you about the state having a monopoly on violence. i don't really consider myself a progressive though, i want radical change. i think the system is inherently flawed and part of it is because of what you said, that the state = violence. i like kucinich probably for similar reasons to why you like paul, because he is totally fringe.
just because a person critiques the foundations of a state, doesn't mean they a libertarian. at least not in the ron paul sense. in any case there are a lot of different ways to go with disdain for/distrust of the state, it's a complicated position to hold. i'm not sure i'm up for getting into it....
Me:
One point I'd like to run by you: Decentralization; bottom-up. Leave most social/fiscal/civil matters to the individual states as the 10th amendment prescribes. Would there be injustice at the state level? Yes, of course. But, I think history shows that this is vastly superior to the enormous injustices of which an omnipresent Federal State is capable. Consider...
Them:
yuck. libertarianism is such a mind-leech. sigh. so many good potential communists and anarchists gone to waste on capitalist ideology about states v. markets when what you have, and always have, under capitalism, is a market-state, no matter how small or 'big' it gets, or how many states you break it up into. the advantage with one is that its clear where you have to aim your action to cripple the ruling classes. the more the state conspires to shift guarantees of universal freedom downward to arbitration by 50 fiefdoms or privatizes its functions, the more bureaucratic authorities you have ruling over you, the more private money controls your chances of anything remotely resembling a decent life, and the more the state looks like a senile feudal lord, presiding over chaos, in the name of market freedom.
anyhow, on warren, believing in her as something beyond the perimeters of the Democratic Party's ideology is a recipe for disappointment. she's a solid believer in reforming credit markets in such a way that provides more guarantees of middle-class security in the *flows* of credit but not the accumulative spread of the monopoly of lending: so her main concern is big bank behaviour and how to rationalise and tame it, not the structure of ownership and control over decisions in relation to credit. she basically believes with all her heart in 'the middle class', which is a way to avoid talking about class struggle, not embracing it. especially when, y'know, wages have been repressed for thirty years due to the destruction of union power and there's no upward mobility from the working class to the middle class anymore (if there ever was in quite that starry-eyed way rather than a working class that just got richer). so it's an anti-struggle message butcher-papered in a struggle message. she seems to have an unusually solid sense of ethics - she took her job far more seriously than was polite in ruling class circles - and most of the stuff she says is leftward of what's on offer, of course, so she's a likeable Democrat, which is increasingly rare. but she is a Democrat, true and blue. i wouldnt expect too much at this point.
Me:
Wow, dude. Talk about a mind-leech. Anarchy and Communism as somehow equatable... Communism as a fair system... OK. Maybe if we all agree to revoke our individuality in favor of the collective State then yeah, it's fair. But so long as you have individual human beings capable of dissenting points of view, you'll never have fair communism. But more than that, you don't even have your terms right, You're not even talking about "capitalism"; you're talking about corporatism: the corporate/state complex, which is all we've ever really had in this country, save for a few isolated instances in short periods of time taking place at random geographical locations, before being absorbed by the corporate/state complex. I'm a minarchist, more in favor of voluntarism over mainstream libertarianism, but I would take libertarianism over communism, or radical socialism any day of the week, because I'm against violence (other than self-defense), and I'm against force as a means to an end. A market, in its pure form, is nothing more than voluntary exchange, i.e. the fairest possible system. Are you against people acting voluntarily? Have you forgotten that the Corporation is a creation of the State? It seems so, since you rail against the corporation, while completely giving the State a pass. How can you deride the "market", when it doesn't even exist, and what your really arguing against is just a State perversion of voluntary exchange. No matter which way you try to refine your rhetoric, whatever pseudo-intellectual artifices you try to drape over it, when you take away choice, when you put guns in the hands of State agents to force absorption of the individual into the collective, you champion injustice and violence. Take off the cheap disguise.
Them:
Good luck trying to get capitalism to give up its "corporate/state complex": if you give up your head for the liberty of your torso and limbs, you've put yourself to the guillotine. Here's the thing with the "it's not capitalism, it's corporatism" line. I suppose you wouldn't accept it if I turned around said that the communist movements of the twentieth century were in no way responsible for the socialist states that resulted. If I said, oh, it wasn't that *they* got it wrong but that the "bureaucratic/state complex" took over. And as it happens, I agree. Communism in the 20thC did get it wrong, especially about the state. Yet capitalism - oh no, capitalism never went wrong. It somehow isn't responsible for the state that capitalism occurs in. Because capitalism has never really occurred, as you have to argue, because if you were to acknowledge that capitalism actually existed, rather than "the corporate/state complex", you'd have to acknowledge that capital needs the state precisely because it requires classes. See, the only way to arbitrate classes is via a strategic field formed by the intersection of the lines of class power. That's the framework of the state.
Do you know why libertarianism talks about individual liberty on and on *only*? So it never ever has to talk about class, which it doesn't think is real. Libertarianism sees class as an 'identity category' and says once we understand we're just individuals, liberty and justice will prevail. Yet...seeing as class already coerces what you can and cannot exchange freely, and determines the power of your volunteered labour to make a difference to your life chances, to talk about liberty and justice without talking about class is like trying to tell the time on a clock with no hands.
The corporation, you say, is a creation of the state. So there's no relation between the accumulation of capital and the forms in which it accumulates in, which are all the product of this violent, violent state-thing that coerces and coerces. No relation between the economies the ruling classes preside over and the capitalism they've long said they represent. Capitalism never has produced a ruling class, for the very convenient reason it has never really existed. Pretty sweet self-confirmation bias you have there. But, outside that cognitive loop, the point of the state is to ensure that 'a fair and voluntary exchange' can take place between those who have accumulated capital on behalf of their interests as a class. It's not there for those who lack capital: it's there to *govern those who lack capital* on behalf of those who do, and arbitrate disputes and relations between those who have capital but different influence, amounts and interests. And capitalism is predicated on a labour force that lacks capital. Straight fact. If you are serious about a world without class, you're a communist, whether you know it or not. And, may I add, if it's the case that fair communism is impossible so long as you have individual human beings capable of 'dissenting view points', then how will you ever stop people exercising those dissenting view points in favour of a state structure? What on earth will libertarianism do with all the progressives? I'm sure it won't involve force. Or not force that counts anyway since you've defined them as being on the side of 'injustice and violence' in advance.
As for the rest, I can only ask you to actually sit down and read, first hand, books on communism by communist thinkers and not trust the scary monster version filtered through to you through Reason Magazine or whatever. I've read Hayek, Mises, Rothbard, Konkin, Novick, etc. I'm willing to bet you've never read Marx, Lenin or Trotsky and wouldn't have a clue who, say, Hilferding or Poulantzas or McNally is. Mind you, you don't have to spend all your waking life reading to have a political opinion - in fact, you don't even have to read at all - but if you're going to think you have the full measure of certain political philosophies, it's really only fair to base your opinion on some familiarity with what they actually say, rather than what you've been told they said by a culture this full of bullshit. Especially when what you've been told is so easy to believe: that the world can be broken down into a cartoonish antinomy between 'the individual' and 'the collective', and 'the State' and 'the market', without any account of class and political economy and ideology and the state's mediation and amplification of capitalist market violence through legalizing capital's exploitation as the order of everyday life and repressing collective organization on the part of the lower orders on capital's behalf. Every day of life under capitalism is a cheap disguise.
Them AGAIN:
I'll say this: Capitalism and its friend corporatism are inherently exploitative pyramid schemes. It is literally impossible for their to be equality within capitalism/corporatism because they require classes. In the most basic sense, you cannot be rich-- you cannot have MORE-- if there is not somebody who has less. This is built into the system. Also built into the system is a profit motive. An owner makes profit because he doesn't pay the worker what the work is worth. An owner gives the worker a wage that is not equal to the product-- it can't be, otherwise there would be no left-over, no profit. So the owner, while not doing any work himself beyond an initial investment, managing money, and bossing people around, takes time and value from the worker. From there he is able to accumulate capital which makes him go farther and farther up while the worker has to work more and more within that ever-widening gap just to stay afloat. There's no way to argue that capitalism/corporatism can exist without classes. If one argues that, then it is clear that they do not understand the systems at hand. This isn't anarchist or communist conspiracy; this is literally how capitalism works.
Furthermore capitalism requires constant expansion into resources (due to the fact that it requires constant competition which necessitates constant growth-- again, capitalism literally cannot exist without these things, this isn't environmentalist hooey) which means that it is inherently destructive to the natural environment, but that is a whole other critique.
In short, capitalism/corporatism require the following: profit motive; classes; expansion; competition. These things DEFINE capitalism. If we're not talking about these things, we are talking about something else. In the most literal sense.
I don't mean disrespect but I do find that most people who defend capitalism and/or degrade alternative systems, have not actually read capitalist thought or critique thoroughly enough to talk about the issues. I don't know what to do with this issue, because it does require time and other personal resources to really sit down and go through the texts and understand them, which, interestingly, can make the scholarship elitist in itself... but then, I guess that's also capitalism's fault, because education would, in an egalitarian society, be free and fair.
Now this is not to say that there can be no fair "markets". Market does not equal capitalism/corporatism. Markets and trade can exist without capitalism/corporatism/class. Again, that is another conversation.
THEM AGGGAAAAAIIIN:
Funny how all but one of the candidates in the Republican primary sound like they WANT another civil war. Paul doesn't seem to, but his "free market" bullshit will certainly encourage one. For a while there I felt like I was drowning in my own tiny corner of poverty and couldn't muster the energy to argue against Ron Paul's utopian capitalist vision. I feel my positions, literally and politically, have been given adequate support [by others on the thread].
Me (Finally):
First of all, it's important to note that "Capitalism" is actually a term coined by Marx (in a derogatory fashion) to describe a state/corporate perversion of the marketplace which existed in his day. For this reason alone, Marx's and Engel's argument fails at point one because it doesn't even really know its enemy. I don't even like to use the word "capitalism", because I don't like peddling a lie. I prefer talk about voluntary exchange; that vital manifestation of innovation, choice and variety -the essence of human output- which Communism tries to obliterate, but for the sake of speaking your lingo, I'll let it slide for now.
The reason I say that "capitalism" (here again meaning voluntary exchange), as a widespread system, does not exist today is because it actually does not… Not because it's more convenient an argument; it simply ceases to be. All the capitalism we've had in the past 100 years has existed solely under the power-structure of central banking, which as you know, is a vital component of Marx's and Engels' argument. Voluntary exchange and central banking are antithetical to one another. The market fails under such a system, because it is perverted at step one. Corporatism, on the other hand, thrives in this environment, because with the issuing of capital and the powers of economic planning being so centralized, the elite business *class* and the political *class* work, via elite-centric regulatory conditions and manipulation of the supply of capital, toward a mutually beneficial end, and to the detriment of the rest of humanity. Again, the modern communist argument fails at point one, by failing to even properly define its enemy, but we can go further, considering you touched on so many different topics.
I think Bastiat said it best when he wrote that statist communism is based on three fictional components, "the utter inertness of mankind, the omnipotence of the law, and the infallibility of the legislator". As hinted at by my use of the word "fictional", the trouble is that none of these things actually exists in real life.
The entire concept of communism is predicated on the great lie that someone (or a group of people) entirely benevolent can exist at the top of its structure in order to ensure equitable distribution. This is not a classless society; it is merely a society with fewer classes: the overseers in one class, the rest of humanity in another, and little opportunity to change stations. This aspect is entirely similar to the corporatist system, except that under communism, rather than the corporation being a legal fiction created by the state, the corporation IS the state. (So, corporatism is actually closer to communism than it is to my system of voluntary exchange). Considering the undeniable truth that, in human beings, pure benevolence is nonexistent, how anyone could believe that such a structure as Communism -one that is even more oligarchical than the corporatist system- could somehow wind up being fair, is beyond me. It assumes an impossible, idealistic scenario where somehow the instinct to act in self-interest can be removed from the human psyche. Every single point of history shows us the complete opposite is true. What's that saying about absolute power, again? This central reason why Corporatism and Communism -and Statism, in general- fail is precisely why an unfettered system of voluntary exchange works; it accounts for selfishness, checks it with consumer/worker choice, and leaves protection of life, liberty, and *legitimately* acquired property as one of the state's strictly limited functions.
The reason communism never talks about liberty, is because under communism, liberty does not exist. It is a wholly authoritarian system -an absolute state- which completely ignores the value of the individual in favor of "equitable distribution" of imaginary capital to the collective; capital containing no intrinsic value which can be arbitrarily expanded and contracted by the state in order to fulfill whatever allegedly altruistic goals it may have. Sure, one could take the Bolshevik argument and say that money should not exist either. But, considering that actual "money" (i.e., not fiat) is nothing more than a convenient way to create equitable exchange while bypassing the unworkability of a barter system in a modern world, one need only to look at Russian life in the early 20th century under the Bolsheviks to see that transitional or hybrid systems lead to disasters that those of us living today in the west (even under our unjust system) could hardly imagine, let alone empathize with.
It's also important mention that under the Bolsheviks, while private trade in the urban areas was made illegal, it actually took place at a higher rate than perhaps at any other time in Russian history! If this were a fictional literary attempt to create a perfect depiction of irony, it would be lauded by critics as a wild success; tragically, though, it actual happened. The starving, impoverished people were desperately (and illegally, under penalty of death) using "capitalism" in order save themselves from the unspeakable inequities brought about by the unjust, failed policies of their Communist rulers.
Communists rail on about how workers are exploited by the owners of the means of production, because in order for a company to be profitable, it has to pay workers less than the market value of what they produce (an entirely true point, though redeemed by virtue of the relationship being entirely voluntary) but, the communist fails to apply the same standard to the State, which under communism, has de facto ownership of a person's output, because wages are garnished by the state in an compulsory, unchecked, arbitrary fashion... The state owns 100% of the fruits of your output, and permits you to keep whatever portion it deems fit. And so we come to the graduated income tax -another pillar of Marx's system- which also very curiously exists under what you like to call "capitalism", even though, here again, the two concepts are antithetical.
So now we have two concepts central to Marxist communism perverting the market, and yet you fail to recognize this fact, preferring instead to blame voluntary exchange for perversions committed by the state in the marketplace.
That's like blaming the rape victim for not being impervious to penises.
Sadly, these are but a few examples of the inherent dishonesty that must be committed when defending ANY Statist system (communism being no exception). Such systems trade voluntary interaction for forced labor; individual freedoms, for collective imprisonment; the ability to change your station in life, for the miserably static existence of a serf.
A just system is one which does not rely on force and violence to accomplish its end. A fair system is one which allows people to act freely so long as they don't infringe on the rights of others. Statism is the opposite of this. But, to answer you question, if you would like to live under a system of communism, no, I would never use violence against you to force you to choose otherwise. I would bitterly defend your right to live voluntarily in a commune as a part of a collective. As long as you're not going to force me to join up with you, I say more power to you. Have at it. The trouble is that I highly doubt, given the history of Statist ideologues, that you would afford me the same courtesy if I chose not to partake. That's the rub.
They have yet to respond.
Then I went on to post a couple "progressives for Ron Paul" on her wall, because of some of the Paul-hating. I really hope I changed some minds.
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