rotting bones wrote: ↑Tue Jan 12, 2021 4:35 pm
Regarding the Third World: Under capitalism, much of the purchasing power that is raised by globalization goes to opulent elites. (Eg. Chomsky's Profit over People, I believe:
https://www.pdfdrive.com/profit-over-pe ... 78429.html) Manufacturing jobs accumulated in China because of its vast quantities of cheap labor. Raising the wages of Third World workers increases the risk of those jobs being transferred elsewhere because there is no international scheme of taxation and redistribution. As indicated, I support globalized production under a system where raw materials and tools of production in essential industries would be government property.
Yep, the bulk of the growth indeed went to the richest, but I should add that the global poorest
did benefit. For that matter,
all levels of income benefitted, see this:
http://piketty.pse.ens.fr/files/ideologie/pdf/G0.5.pdf
Legend: The 50% lowest income worldwide have experienced an important growth of their purchasing power between 1980 and 2018 (between +60% and +120%), the 1% highest income worldwide an even stronger growth (between +80% and +240%), on the other hand intermediate revenues have experienced a more limited growth. To summarize: inequalities decreased between the bottom and the middle of the worldwide income distribution, and increased between the middle and the top.
Again, I am
not saying that this went swimmingly. The thing is, you don't argue with conservatives / neoliberals by saying that globalization was a net loss. They'll just bring up the figures and point out that yes, there was a net global benefits.
What needs to be said is this:
- The benefit went disproportionatley to the 1%.
- That disproportionate share was entirely counter-productive, since higher growth was achieved before with much more moderate levels of inequality.
If you still don't see a problem with global capitalism, then let me be as practical as possible. In the short term, First World workers have no reason to care whether globalization benefits the Third World. If you keep arguing that putting them out of work is the just course of action, then they will keep reliably voting for injustice. Over time, "justice" and "injustice" may even partly switch meanings in popular discourse. I don't understand why today's "left" keeps forgetting that there has never been a value.
Let me first reassure your that I do see many problems with global capitalism. (I listed several of these in this thread).
I need to point that since the 80's, First World voters have reliably and increasingly chosen neoliberalism and global capitalism. Socialism, communism and variation thereof have went from a very solid option, with a consequent voting base to almost nothing in Western Europe.
US voters weren't really into socialism for other reasons, but they went from capitalism with many compensating factors to capitalism without regulation at all, a view that until recently was equally accepted by Democrats and Republicans. (There are encouraging signs that the Democrats are now willing to try other approaches.)
How about first world
workers? In Europe these vote right-wing or don't vote at all. I understand very well those who don't vote at all; I understand once upon a time people could actually get excited about candidates or parties, now it's really a tedious chore of figuring out which of the assholes on offer is going to do the least damage.
I agree with you that the left has become entirely uninspiring.
But what it needs, I'd argue, is to come up with
new ideas, not coming up with new iterations of Marxism.
Regarding the wealth cap: Let's assume that billionaires don't just move their wealth abroad and bring it in to keep their wealth near some preferred mark at all times. What worries me is that the desperation brought on by the wealth cap will cause a capitalist society to behave like a country that is effectively ruled by rich peasants. If that happens, I may have to enter a contract of indentured servitude under a kulak who belongs to the atheist minority just to survive.
That's indeed an issue, not only for the wealth cap, but really for a lot of left-wing policies (and quite a few non-left-wing ones!)
Essentially, yes, the issue of moving wealth around, and general fiscal concurrence is a very pressing issue.
What happens, though, isn't that a return to feudalism, but that it's used as the right-winger's ultimate excuse when he's exhausted all possible arguments.
To be honest, yes, it's a problem, but we're not trying hard enough. We have nothing but speculation on what'll actually happen if we put a bit of extra pressure on the 1% -- no such attempt has been made in ages.
Generally, no state, no matter how libertarian can ever hope to compte with the Cayman Islands on fiscal policy. I suspect all assets that could be moved overseas have been moved. We could make an honest attempt at what remains in the country.
Regarding tax evasion, besides, it should be humiliating that the United States are doing a better effort at handling this -- for instance, I have had to make a statement, ultimately intended to the IRS, to the effect that I don't have any assets in the US, nor income originating there.
It's also a problem within the UE, though it's hardly surprising that nothing can be done there: European countries generally elect bland conservatives, so it's hardly surprising bland conservatives won't make an attempt at improving things. Though if a fiscally conservative European commission can tell France, Italy or Greece to watch that deficit,
or else, a more left-wing commission could tell Ireland, Luxemburg or the Netherlands to watch their corporate taxes.
The problem is again, to get voters interested enough to elect left-wingers.
This would take, I think, two things:
a) For left-wing parties to get their shit together, come up with actual ideas and do a serious attempt at adressing social problems.
b) For left-wing activists to accept that no, they're not going to get their actual, highly specific ideology of interest to 2% of the voters implemented, and to accept that politicians aren't miracle workers, and that the global capitalist system as it stands now isn't going to get dismantled in a year.
Moreover, this still wouldn't make money equivalent to work credits. Eg. In essential industries, work credits equalize the value of all kinds of work by the average time it takes to complete it.
That demonstrably doesn't work. It offers all kind of wrong incentives.
I work in IT. Suppose, for argument's sake, that I can do routine production supervision work at twice the average speed, and set up complex cloud hosting solutions at average speed. Frankly, I should go for the supervision job: I'll get the same pay with half the hassle.
Or, suppose I can do my job at twice the average speed. Should I bother doing twice the work, or just do as much as the average worker, and just goof off half the time?
For that matter, shouldn't I set up an arrangement with my coworkers so that each other deliberately pretend to be slow, so that we can goof off
most of the time?
That's really an incentive for reducing productivity.
Or suppose I do my job at average speed, but shoddily and everyone has to go over my work later on?
For that matter, there's really a case to be made, that as productivity is rising, we should really all be working less. Where's the incentive for that under your system?
These arguments, though, are a bit too utilitarian for my taste. Frankly, the problem with the idea of work credits is that it's just unfair.
Above-average work has above average value, and it deserves somewhat better pay.
And that's really kind of the problem these days: some really mediocre business leaders, such as Steve Jobs or Elon Musk got income that is completely out of proportion with what they bring or brought to their company, let alone society at large.
Regarding social justice:
I agree with you there, except for this:
All these arguments may sound theoretical until one has skin in the game. I think it is a bad idea for mèþru to call for canceling Nazis because he has argued in favor of incest and IIRC even ephebophilia in the past. If canceling is generally accepted and the Nazis find out about this, I doubt the activists he relies on to cancel the Nazis will hesitate to cancel him too. This is what I mean by restrictions of freedom being used to game the system.
First: hey, not cool. I'm sorry but that's kind of an
ad hominem, and besides: what? where's that stuff about mèþru coming from in the first place?
I'm strongly opposed to what is called cancel culture, especially since it's generally activists that get punished. (Honestly, most people never get cancelled and wouldn't care if they did, and the less savory kind of individual positively revels in being cancelled)
On censoring Nazis, I've argued in favor elsewhere, and I'll still argue about it.
The chief strategy of the far right now is to keep everyone riled up against them. There's nothing they like more than people debating them -- and arguing with them is, as they say, like wrestling with a pig: you get covered in mud and besides the pig likes it.
All public debate is currently spent arguing with Nazis. Sure, everyone has a right to free speech, but likewise everyone has a right not to be constantly confronted with violence, trolling and besides, minorities have rights too, including the right not to be constantly told to fuck off and die.
PS: Yes, Steve Jobs was way overrated as a CEO. Debate me. I suspect - but I can't prove it - that the free market doesn't handle IT and computer science-related fields very well.