When I see comments like this ("it's not any 'ism', the system isn't the problem, it's just bad people") I assume the poster knows next to nothing about actual #capitalism
Am I wrong?
Capital must be eliminated or we're all fucked for sure.
Capital has become an autonomous entity that rules over us with a ruthless logic built on toxic premises.
"Capital is a product of peopleβs labour which has escaped from their control and has come to dominate them in the form of coercive economic laws which they have no alternative but to obey and apply."
(from "State Capitalism" by Adam Buick and John Crump)
Capital is not a real thing in itself, it is a social relationship of dominance and exclusion that was created by violence, theft, genocide and environmental pillage.
As I already said:
"Capital is not a real thing in itself, it is a social relationship of dominance and exclusion that was created by violence, theft, genocide and environmental pillage."
So no, I don't mean someone should come and demolish your house.
Your house is not capital unless you're renting it out while you live somewhere else. Even if that were the case I would not advocate demolishing the house just because it is being used as capital, but I would advocate eliminating the social relationship of capital because it is just as unjust as slavery. Indeed our current system of wage slavery is an extension of chattel slavery, not a break from it.
Capital is best understood as a social relationship, not the "stuff", or numbers in a spreadsheet, that quantify it.
I invite you to explore my pinned toot if you're interested in understanding what I mean:
https://kolektiva.social/@RD4Anarchy/110357255122736031
Especially a couple links I just added to the EcOnOmIcS!!1!! appendix:
What are the myths of capitalist economics?
https://anarchistfaq.org/afaq/sectionC.html
"State Capitalism: The Wages System Under New Management" by Adam Buick and John Crump
https://files.libcom.org/files/State%20Capitalism.pdf
Attached: 1 image HOW DID WE GET HERE? (a thread of threads, quotes, and links) This is a collection of writings and research concerned with how we got where we are today, which is in fact the story of what has been done *to* us, and what has been *taken from us*. By "us" we're talking about "the 99%", "workers", "wage slaves", all non-owners of private property, "the poor", unhoused people, indigenous people, even plenty of people who swear by capitalism and identify as "capitalist" yet have no capital of their own and no serious hope of ever having any worth speaking of. In other words almost everyone except for the very few who have had the power to exploit us and shape our lives to serve their agenda. We're going to examine institutions and concepts that have deeply altered our world at all levels, both our external and internal realities. By "here" we are talking about climate crisis and myriad other environmental catastrophes resulting from hyper-excessive extraction, consumption and waste; a world of rampant inequality, exploitation and oppression, hunger and starvation, genocide and war; a world of fences, walls, gatekeepers, prisons, police, bullshit jobs and criminalized poverty; a world overrun with cars and preventable disease; a world of vanishing biodiversity and blooming fascism; a world where "democracy" results in being led by some of the worst of humanity; a world ruled by an imaginary but all-powerful and single-minded god: Capital. Our inspiration and structural framework for this survey is this quote from "The Prehistory of Private Property", an important work from political philosopher Karl Widerquist and anthropologist Grant S. McCall: "After hundreds of millennia in which all humans had direct access to the commons, it took only a few centuries for enclosure, colonialism, capitalism, and industrialization to cut off the vast majority of people on Earth from direct access to the means of economic production and therefore to rob them of the power to say no. It took only a few generations to convince most people that this situation was natural and inevitable. That false lesson needs to be unlearned." https://widerquist.com/books-3/#2b Also recommended: "Prehistoric Myths in Modern Political Philosophy" https://widerquist.com/books-3/#4b #capitalism #colonialism #enclosure #PrivateProperty #state #police #inequality #anthropology #environment #ClimateCrisis #economics 1/30
@RD4Anarchy @aral I'll check it out. I'll try to sort out where we have totally different understanding of various words, but I have to say capital has conflicting definitions, and I don't like that. Seems we agree that large owners are too big, at least. :-).
Suggesting different term: Major Enterprises, Major Owners. Me, Mo' ! for short.