Travis, scandinavia isn't market socialism. It's social democracy, which is nice and all but is not clear can exist without our highly exploitative system of international division of labour.
On the question of value, I'm totally against using that word as a synonym for price: price is influenced by value, but also by many other things. Even if one is to be a capitalist and sincerely believe in economics as a science, it is too naive to believe those two things are the same.
zompist wrote: ↑Tue Dec 29, 2020 5:18 pm
At the same time, not every socialist idea is a great one. There really are big, gaping problems with centralism, and when you throw in authoritarianism you really do get a worse dystopia. Socialists need to address these concerns, not just assume that everyone will be nicer this time around.
Yes, it's kinda unfair that everyone always says "Last time you killed millions of people!" Or it would be, if the same people don't bring up (say) slavery or the British Empire to condemn capitalism. Sorry, but killing millions of people
should put your ideology on the defensive.
I agree! but socialism, way I and your interviewee use it at least, does not mean, precisely, "whatever socialists believe". and also it doesn't mean the soviet union. I personally tend to be defensive of it cause its heart was, I feel, in the right place, but socialism as an idea is no more married to it than is democracy to the french revolutionary terror or the modern world to napoleon. The soviet union was pretty dystopian, no questions there: then again, so is the us for anyone who's not well off, and at that time particularly so was germany and japan, but also china, romania, indonesia, the philippines, india, etc. around the time it was started we had here the massacre of santa maría, a literal army formation mowing down two thousand, well, proletarians. at least the soviets were trying something better. Capitalism is pretty comfortable for well off americans, or for the french, but look at it from the point of view of a russian peasant, or a woman from burkina faso.
Of course, the atrocities of the soviet union are something that's fair enough to mention in a discussion of socialism: the people partial to the ancien regime also mentioned the terror to bonapartists, democrats and secularizers. I'd love socialism to be implemented peacefully, ideally through broad democratic consensus. the problem is, the people with the money and the power won't let you. Like, I don't
enjoy being all like CIA this and US troops that and american-backed fascists and the rest of it but... It's kinda true.
I'm not a convinced Leninist, though, I don't love one party states: the problem the leninists are trying to solve is that if you have just whatever party pops up participate, the gringos and euros are going to fund the crap out whoever they can to oust you: the only way I see you getting democratic socialism in a world where money and global imperalism exist is if some of the center countries like france or the us or something were to get a big enough chunk of its economy under worker control, enough to exert counter-influence in the electoral front. Unless you're like the US itself, even if enough people came to believe in socialism enough to ignore a gorillion dollars being spent in propaganda they can always just invade you. You know they'll invade you're Irak, but even if you're france, I'm not so very sure. So the only solution they find is what they call dictatorship of the proletariat. (btw this isn't my interpretation, Lenin wrote a bunch about imperalism.)
But I'm not so sure, myself. I'm not against the argument that revolutions and post-revolutionary authoritarian governments can end up being on balance a good thing even if bad things happen during them (I'm kind of a bonapartist, I think? and anyway I'd say that the vietnamese, chinese and bolivians live better now than they would in a world where their revolutions hadn't happened), but I hope there's a better way. The allende experiment, for example, would probably not get such a vigorous antiimperialist response right now as it got in the seventies, and the US empire is, thank god, on the wane. the EU is also a lot nicer than colonial france was to vietnam. or belgium to the congo. It got easier to start liberal revolutions after the first try, too.