Moose-tache wrote: ↑Mon Dec 21, 2020 1:11 am
As for the capital class not "running the country," again this is naive.
A person who has a knife to your throat doesn't need you to give them power of attorney to be in charge. I already gave the example of the US in the 1980s.
Very well, cure me of that naivete. How exactly did the capital class force 50% of Americans to vote Reagan
twice?
If so, how come France at the time actually elected democratic socialists? (A socialist-communist coalition, even!)? Was it not a capitalist country?
At the time, West Germany elected Helmut Kohl, who granted was a conservative, but at no point a Reaganian. (In fact Schröder was probably more into deregulation, and he was elected in a economic boom...)
Basically the rich got to enact their agenda (*) in some countries, but not all of them. There's obviously something else than just capitalism at work here.
(*) Even then, not entirely so. Thatcher didn't get to do everything she'd have liked to...
Sure, the rich winged and moaned about Socialism the whole time, but that was part of the strategy to manipulate poor people.
Do you have any evidence that it was a strategy, as opposed to sincerely felt?
One of them even dressed up as a cowboy to trick poor people, and it worked. There are certainly countries that have weathered economic downturns without becoming neoliberal dystopias, but this is a danger that every country faces when they allow themselves to be literally owned by a small number of private individuals. Why even roll the dice?
The choice is between trying to regulate capitalism, an imperfect solution -- but one that got results, or trying to get rid of capitalism entirely.
Regulating capitalism indeed runs into a risk of having a neoliberal dystopia on your hands.
Getting rid of capitalism entirely has always ended into the kind of regime that
defines dystopia. (And it should be pointed out the neoliberal dystopia prevents people from getting in while socialist dystopia forbid people from leaving...)
Why even roll the dice?
rotting bones wrote: ↑Sun Dec 20, 2020 7:51 pm
1. Irresponsible options are made temporarily cheap by state policy collaborating with the interests of big oil..
I should add that capitalism wasn't the only system to make the mistake. Eastern block countries certainly took advantage of cheap oil!
They didn't quite get into cars the way we did, true, but it's hardly something to be proud about: they just weren't very good at building cars...
rotting bones wrote: ↑Sun Dec 20, 2020 2:35 pm
Ares Land: I agree that many people support capitalism. The point is, the incentive structure promoting capitalism against our self-interest is created top-down by capitalism. Instead of "that's what people think", our response, as Moose-tache said, should be to create an educated working class movement to defend our interests against capitalism.
What exactly is that incentive structure, and how is it created by capitalism?
Travis B. wrote: ↑Sun Dec 20, 2020 7:00 pm
One thing to remember is that a lot of modern "left-wing" governments still buy into neoliberalism, and so those disaffected with neoliberalism buy into the policies espoused by supposed populists, even when said populists are actually just as neoliberal as the supposed left-wingers. Additionally, modern "liberals" have in many cases become sufficiently tied up in identitarian causes that are liable to alienate those who do not belong to the most oppressed that said liberals claim to champion.
Very unpopular opinion: that myth need to be laid down to rest. People vote for racist populists because they find racism congenial. Period.
I know a fair amount of 'disaffected' people. Granted they are alienated by liberalism... but they're mostly single-issue voters, alienated by having to see foreigners and people of the wrong skin color.
They didn't start voting for populists because they were disappointed by the left; they vote for populists because racism has for quite some time now been an acceptable campaign proposal
rotting bones wrote: ↑Sun Dec 20, 2020 2:35 pm
Also, recent "left-wing" governments in France weren't particularly left-wing. Or effective, for that matter. It's hardly surprising that they lost.
.
Jospin's government from1998 to 2002 was fairly left-wing and effective. It lost due to a host of factors, but ultimately it came down to not being seen as tough enough on crime and immigration. (A right wing concern).
Hollande's presidency was neither left wing nor effective. This came down to an internal power struggle between centrists and left-wingers in the socialist party.
The left-wingers won the party nomination in the primary... and polled at an humiliating 6%.
The centrist followed Macron, who won the election. The second round was a contest between the far-right and the center-right.
It doesn't really look like people were clamoring for dictatorship of the proletariat in 2002.
rotting bones wrote: ↑Sun Dec 20, 2020 2:35 pm
My impression is that contemporary "leftism" has become so pseudo-ethical that it has lost touch with the facts of material reality. We should turn away from the humanities and return to scientific socialism.
The problem is, the contemporary left is divided into factions that are unwilling to compromise, and demands immediate miraculous solution to all the ills in the world anytime a left-winger manages somehow to be elected.
Right wingers are open to all kinds of unholy alliances, are willing to vote even for candidates they personally hate, and hail even the slightest hint of success, or even a particularly funny tweet as exceptional statesmanship unrivaled since Churchill. No wonder one side consistently wins!