They privatized survival and called it freedom."
~ from Michell C Clark
If you're referring to the USSR or any other country that has been called "communist", that was state capitalism, not communism.
@hackersquirrel @RD4Anarchy @AlisonCreekside yea of course. Typical critical leftist view. Sorry I disagree. Not saying it's necessarily wrong. The USSR called itself communist but in practice moreso state capitalism. State owned everything. Workers didn't control anything. Elite made all the decisions which goes against communism. People had no power or production shared. If anything I would call it bureaucratic socialism. People who lived it still call it communism or some Marxist Leninist socialist/communist state. Seems to me they wanted it to be communist but never made it.
That said scary enough America is State Capitalism which is why I think it's about to fail. Control is an illusion in this country.
My apologies for earlier comment. These discussions are like splitting hairs sometimes.
@sebgogola @hackersquirrel @RD4Anarchy @AlisonCreekside
One might call it authoritarian socialism. It definitely wasn't actual communism, no matter the aspirations behind the revolution or the naming of the party. It's also very different from the democratic liberal socialism being sought (and in some countries largely scrubbed) in much of the West.
@sebgogola @hackersquirrel @RD4Anarchy @AlisonCreekside
* largely achieved, not "scrubbed"
@sebgogola @hackersquirrel @AlisonCreekside
This conversation has continued fine without me, but I can't get some thoughts off my mind, so I'm going to dump them here:
I don't see clarification of critical, fundamental distinctions as "splitting hairs". I came to "throw comments" because there are so many common misconceptions, false narratives, and outright lies circulating about communism, capitalism, democracy, and state, and I'm just trying to do what I can to resist the perpetuation of these errors that hinder people from really understanding what's going on and acting accordingly.
I'm glad to see that you recognize the error in what you initially posted about communism being a "proven failure".
On a tangent I'll note that pointing out that no state has implemented actual communism (indeed this is an impossibility since a core aspect of communism is being a stateless, classless society) cannot be both-sided with the false claim that "what we have now isn't Real Capitalism (TM)."
The word capitalism was in fact coined in criticism and description of an *existing system* that emerged in continuity from preexisting conditions (especially state and colonialism). And a system's purpose is what it does, not what the dictionary or some ancap says about it.
Communism on the other hand is more of a theoretical concept (though it has been applied in retrospect to preexisting stateless, classless societies) that some have supposedly attempted (whether sincerely or not) to realize in a state context but have not. Even the states in question recognize this as none of them even claimed to have attained actual communism, regardless of being run by a so-called communist party, or being referred to by others (inside or outside) as "communist".
But all claims and intents aside, the defining reality is that none of these countries eliminated capital, or wage slavery, or enclosure, and none of them extricated themselves from the global capitalist system.
I wouldn't call the US state capitalism. The distinction with state capitalism is that it is state that owns and controls capital, not private individuals or private corporations. The idea that private ownership is an essential element of capitalism is a red herring. Capital does not give a shit if it is owned by a private individual or a state, as long as it's demands are met. In the US, state certainly serves as a tool and defender of capital, of course. Contrary to popular lies about it, you can't have capitalism without state. They are not opposites, they go hand in hand.
@sebgogola @hackersquirrel @AlisonCreekside
I would say it's a technical distinction that might not make that much difference in practice, but it's a clear distinction nonetheless between private ownership and state ownership and for that reason I reserve the term "state capitalism" for situations where most capital is literally owned by the state.
@AlisonCreekside not fedi. alive and well. why post here?
someone had mentioned something about side convo/sub tooting other's intellectual property, and i've been noodling the notion about connectivity and reasonable norms and such.
@AlisonCreekside If health care was a commodity, we would be a hell of a lot better off. Health care is a cartel.
Why do some drugs cost $10 in Canada and $100 or $1000 in the USA? Because if you try to drive a truckload, or even a suitcase full, back from Canada, you will get arrested. If health care was a commodity people would do that, and the $10 in Canada drug would be $15 here.
The individual doctor is as screwed as the uninsured patient. They have to join "medical groups" to get paid.
@PaniczGodek @AlisonCreekside "They" are the billionaires and their megacorporations that dictate how business and politics are done in this country.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gini_coefficient
https://www.statista.com/chart/27638/net-wealth-held-by-top-1-percent/