You hadn't posted this when I wrote the things you quoted.
Just to be clear, I don't know who you are referring to here.
I've said it before too. However, I still have reservations.
The government industries are not For Profit.
I've discussed this in more detail before, but here's a recent brief comment:zompist wrote: ↑Sat Nov 20, 2021 11:11 am You think workers should control their workplaces... until a vote comes along which overrides and replaces worker control. Then the central organization forces people to do what it wants. That's what "tomatoes ought to be grown" means: the central government gets to force its way on people. If there is no forcing, then your statement about tomatoes means nothing.
---rotting bones wrote: ↑Fri Nov 19, 2021 5:49 pm For a government industry, the crucial factor is that its employees are paid a government salary, whoever makes internal decisions is not allowed to lower the number of jobs in defiance of the popular vote, and the raw materials and the tools to work them are government property. (Compare how worker co-ops create fewer jobs than private companies.) However, everything else could be decided by worker vote.
Look, no society is 100% coercive or 100% free. I'm suggesting a specific plan that mixes coercion and non-coercion in a way that I've tried to justify.
How can people both be starving and not want a job as a tomato farmer?
I'm not saying the demand is guaranteed to be met. I'm saying if the people want food, the government should try to meet the demand instead of spinning propaganda about every other type of government in existence.
My argument is that the government is more likely to meet demands for food than For Profit corporations because it's literally going to take the resources and organize the production.
I'm pretty sure Mao was trying to boost steel production, not feed people by making steel. His backyard furnaces are precisely an example of decentralized production by central command, etc.zompist wrote: ↑Sat Nov 20, 2021 11:11 am Look, the problem we've both identified is tough. I don't expect you to solve it in a few board posts. But I do think you're waving the problem away, supporting contradictory positions because they both sound good, and not working out the contradictions.
Have you tried Googling the effectiveness of central planning on food production? The USSR was notorious for not producing enough food, and it sure wasn't because it was "unprofitable". China under Mao didn't do much better; Mao's solution was to hold forced meetings and make people melt down their pots and pans to make backyard iron foundries. And let 20 to 40 million people die, the biggest famine in the 20th century.
But none of that matters. Why should I have to argue about what China's population pressures were at the time, the relations of the rest of the world with the early Soviet Union, and so on, when what I'm proposing is not a rigid five year plan. Those aren't systems I even support. As people vote for certain goods, jobs to produce them become available.
I've argued in great detail why my system is good news for consumers, what the potential pitfalls are (they have nothing to do with "centralization" and everything to do with incentive structures), and why I have reason to think it will work regardless. I don't feel like it would be productive to rehash all of it, but it's unfair to accuse me of ignoring problems.
The problem with this thread is that every argument against the profit motive is answered with charges of genocide. I hope you realize that if the left shoots down every proposal to build socialism, then poor people will turn, as they repeatedly have, to the nationalists.
This progress was because of science, not politics. No matter how far science advances, everyone can't be fed as long as the motive behind food production remains profit. The people who are still starving are extremely poor.zompist wrote: ↑Sat Nov 20, 2021 11:11 am I agree with you that food production is basic, and highly skewed. It's also closer to being solved than at any time in history. First World nations have gotten themselves into all sorts of trouble, but if you look at the entire planet, the last century is the story of an amazing success in feeding people. China and India alone— more than 2 billion people, far more than live in the First World—were once miserable basket cases where famines routinely killed millions of people. They are not at First World levels (and that's a good thing, because preserving the ecosphere is also important), but they're not starving poor any more.
This is a problem with definitions. Malnutrition deaths are common from Latin America to Indonesia. Mainstream definitions only count a disaster as a real famine if it cuts into profit margins.zompist wrote: ↑Sat Nov 20, 2021 11:11 am Global famine deaths have been cut in half since the 1990s. In the last 40 years, famines have been restricted to Africa—
Housing and medicine are even more problematic all over the world. But people are only real if their lives make money.
Well, if you must answer an appeal for democracy by comparing my system to North Korea...
North Korea may be a fascist dictatorship, but there's a reason why their food production suffered. Their dictator saw America invading other dictatorships around the world, heard that America's diplomatic language towards North Korea was extremely negative, and feared that they must be America's next target. To save himself, the dictator diverted resources for food production into producing things like mustard gas.
It's structurally impossible for a democratic state to have followed the same path.
Of course, agriculture was terrible over there even before that. North Korea has very limited agricultural resources to begin with, some of which, apparently, were disrupted during the war by defoliant sprays.
???zompist wrote: ↑Sat Nov 20, 2021 11:11 amI don't recall that, but I'm not the one claiming to have solved all the problems of a socialist society.I asked you to clarify your idea of decentralized socialism where production is arranged by worker co-ops. You got mad at me and refused.
Yep. The discussion about what's "true socialism" hasn't ever been interesting, and has usually been a cover-up for authoritarianism.Right, because the person trying to move beyond true and false socialism is the one who's gatekeeping.