• sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    Everywhere. Just look for anything that goes against (even slightly) the leftist perspective, such as:

    • anything critical of trans people competing in sports - a lot of those policies are bigoted, but there are legitimate concerns
    • evidence that the economy is not as bad as people claim - e.g. cars aren’t more expensive today than they used to be, bottom of the market cars are about the same price as they were 20 years ago, after accounting for inflation (they’re actually a little cheaper in many cases, and have way more tech)
    • arguments criticizing Biden/Democrats
    • anything anti-socialist

    And so on. The quality of the argument doesn’t matter, what matters is that it doesn’t fit the leftist agenda, so it gets downvoted like crazy.

    Go ahead, try playing devil’s advocate sometime (and don’t say the equivalent of “I’m a leftist, but…”) and cite your sources and see how well your post does vs comments that ignore facts and spout common leftist rhetoric, the lower effort post will get more votes and yours will probably go negative.

    • Thief_of_Crows@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      Aside from criticism of Biden/Dems, in all of those cases you’re taking a position that is, in general, not true. Just because you have some facts that suggest the economy is better than we think, or that socialism doesn’t work better than capitalism, doesn’t make you correct. Just because a fact is correct doesn’t make it true. The truth is that capitalism is killing us all, and nitpicking that narrative really doesn’t help anybody. Facts that disagree with that truth are usually either misleading or literally just fabrications themselves.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        Just because a fact is correct doesn’t make it true. The truth is that capitalism is killing us all, and nitpicking that narrative really doesn’t help anybody. Facts that disagree with that truth

        Let me just explain what I’m hearing here: “I believe X to be true, and anything that goes against that must be false.” That’s culty thinking.

        Here’s how it should work: “I believe X to be true, but fact A goes against that, so I’ll look for more facts to prove or disprove X.” Science is all about making a hypothesis and finding evidence both for and against it, and then making a new hypothesis with that new information.

        So the reaction to a well thought out argument that goes against your belief shouldn’t be to downvote and move on, but to challenge your opinion and look for evidence both for and against it. Take your belief as one hypothesis, take the alternative as another, and find facts that support each. Then go with the opinion that has the better evidence, or form a new one based on your findings.

        • Thief_of_Crows@sh.itjust.works
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          11 months ago

          Right, but I have already challenged my opinion far more than is necessary, I’m not going to start over. I used to think of myself as a capitalist, and as a liberal. But then I challenged my beliefs, and I found that they didn’t hold water. By I believe the transitive property, that means I no longer need to seriously consider whether capitalism or liberalism are reasonable views to hold.

          As a result, unless I see a whole lot of new information on the subject, I am going to assume that any fact which seems to suggest capitalism or liberalism are valid systems is actually just misleading or false. And you should too. People have been having these debates with themselves for 150+ years, and all of the smartest people came up with the answer of socialism (Einstein, MLK, Lenin, etc). Meanwhile, all of the grifters and Nazi lovers came up with capitalism/liberalism

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            11 months ago

            Einstein was a fan of socialism, but he was also very critical of Lenin saying he and the Bolsheviks had established a “regime of terror.” So it’s unclear what system he’d actually be in favor of, since socialism tends toward authoritarianism.

            MLK was more of a democratic socialist (e.g. someone like Bernie Sanders), and he was staunchly anti-communist.

            So each of those three are very different from each other.

            Nazi lovers came up with capitalism/liberalism

            No, Nazis hate capitalism and liberalism, by definition.

            Fascism is wholly against international free market capitalism, and against any form of capitalism within the state that does not directly benefit the state. Fascist regimes consistently interfere in capitalist mechanisms.

            They hate liberalism because the needs of the state supercede that rights, wants, and needs of the individual. Fascism is actually defined as being anti-liberalism, so they’re pretty much diametrically opposed.

            So either you don’t understand fascism, or you’re applying the term to something completely different.

            • Thief_of_Crows@sh.itjust.works
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              11 months ago

              I don’t know for certain that fascists love capitalism, but capitalists sure love fascism. Most of the Uber wealthy in the mid 20th century were more than happy to work with the Nazis. And the Nazis certainly were not opposed to working with those capitalists. The two ideologies are very similar: both steadily constrict the power of the government into fewer and fewer hands, until you get situations like Nazi Germany or present day USA, where one group of a few thousand has near complete control over the country.

              I was using socialism as a blanket term for “the left” there (do you know a better one?). All 3 of them were further left than Bernie Sanders, which I’d argue makes them socialists (the blanket term)

              Not sure where you’re getting the idea socialism tends towards authoritarianism, it has more defenses to it than capitalism. Capitalism literally demands that a company do everything it can to co-opt the government, because if you don’t, your competitors will. By contrast, socialism is commonly referred to as “workplace democracy”. It has distributing power as widely as possible as its central tenet, IE workers owning the means of production.

              • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                11 months ago

                capitalists sure love fascism. Most of the Uber wealthy in the mid 20th century were more than happy to work with the Nazis

                I would hazard to say those wealthy people aren’t capitalists (ideologically at least). Yes, they have a lot of capital, but they would rather pull the ladder up behind them than support open economic policy. They’re crony capitalists at best because they preserve their wealth not by continuing to produce value, but by regulating competition out of the market.

                If you look at it from that perspective, it makes a lot more sense. They like the idea of government that’s very involved in the economy because that means they can cement their power, and perhaps get more by turning their economic position into a political one.

                And it’s not just people from the right, people on the left do it as well. Look at the big tech firms, they tend to support candidates on the left because they pass the kinds of policy that cement their position. It’s cronyism all the way down.

                And it’s not unique to capitalism, influential people have been trading favors since the dawn of time. The more opaque the system, the more corruption there is.

                I was using socialism as a blanket term for “the left”

                I would say “progressivism.”

                Socialism is collective ownership of the means of production, so something like the USSR, Vietnam, or China. And that government system absolutely lends itself to authoritarianism. Look at any socialist country, and you’ll either see authoritarianism or collapse.

                A lot of people mean “democratic socialism,” which isn’t socialism at all, but capitalism with a lot of social programs (universal healthcare, free college, etc). Another term for this is “welfare state,” which is just a term for a state that provides a lot of services. It’s still not socialism, just redistribution of wealth within a capitalist system.

                Lenin absolutely was a socialist, MLK Jr. certainly wasn’t, and Einstein seemed like he was just reacting to fascism in his home country and thought socialism was the solution. If Einstein were alive today, I think he’d reconsider that point. What Einstein seemed to want as less income gap and more equality, so more similar to democratic socialists than socialists.

                By contrast, socialism is commonly referred to as “workplace democracy”. It has distributing power as widely as possible as its central tenet, IE workers owning the means of production.

                How often do political tenets hold up in reality? The more power you give to politicians, the more corruption you get.

                Small scale socialism can certainly work (e.g. co-ops), but once it reaches a certain scale, it’s just the same cronyism you’ll get with any political structure where power is involved. Those with power will take for themselves at the expense of those without.

                The problems with socialism and fascism are the same, but coming from different directions: centralization of power. Einstein seemed to think “the right people” could make things better and that Lenin and Stalin were “the wrong people,” but that’s just it, “the wrong people” are attracted to power, so you’ll trend toward getting “the wrong people” in any governmental system you pick.

                My opinion is that we need more capitalism, not less, and add some wealth redistribution on top. Take a look at georgism, which proposes distilling taxes to a land value tax, which means you own the value you produce (buildings you build, products you make, etc), but you get taxed on the land you occupy and the public owns the resources on the land itself. It’s not a far stretch to require assets to be turned over to the public upon death as well (the pubic has a greater claim to your assets than your children). This preserves the best parts of capitalism (incentive to provide value to the public), while eliminating many of the worst parts (monopolization of public resources, squatting on unimproved land, generational wealth, etc). With socialism, you eliminate that incentive to produce value, which is why socialist regimes often resort to authoritarianism to get things moving (5 year plans, etc).

                I think workers having shared ownership of a private business is a good idea, but only if it’s within a capitalist context, otherwise the incentives just aren’t there.

                • Thief_of_Crows@sh.itjust.works
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                  11 months ago

                  Crony capitalism IS capitalism, in its purest form. The system incentives doing it, so it will ALWAYS happen. Tech firms aren’t left at all, theyr all capitalists solely out for their own gain.

                  Socialism is when the workers own the means of production. The collective workers in any given company own it. Not the government. That’s why it’s so insulated against authoritarianism, because without the unions behind it, an authoritarian govt has nothing.

                  The reason the results we’ve seen are authoritarianism and collapse is that the US military/CIA have gone out of their way to make sure the ones that aren’t authoritarian will collapse. Rigging elections, assassinating elected leaders, blocking trade, etc.

                  It’s better for your political system to have a central tenet that is good, and which it sometimes doesn’t live up to, than it is for it to have one which is bad and it always lives up to. Capitalisms central tenet is to take the power that should belong to the people, and give it to clueless rich guys who don’t work.

                  No ownership of large parts of multiple companies, no cronyism. Well, minimal cronyism. If a large shareholder of UPS cannot possibly also own large shares of an airline, then they can’t possibly act in their own interest but not the company’s.

                  Why would the incentives for workers not be there, if the system is requiring that those workers be paid 100% of profits? The only people without incentives are the rich leeches who don’t want to do real work.

                  • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                    11 months ago

                    Crony capitalism IS capitalism, in its purest form

                    No, cronyism happens when you mix the government and the economy. Pure capitalism is little Timmy with the lemonade stand on the corner, cronyism is the city ordinance banning unlicensed businesses.

                    People like to fix problems, and the government is a convenient tool to do so. But the more laws there are, the easier it is for a lobbyist to tweak them to get an advantage.

                    The collective workers in any given company own it. Not the government.

                    So you’re in favor of market socialism? Most people mean non-market socialism, like the USSR with planned economies and whatnot.

                    I’ve seen a few businesses make that work, but nothing widespread enough to really consider the country socialist. I’m interested in what role the government has in such a system.

                    But unions aren’t that. Unions are collective bargaining, not collective ownership. So unions act more like governments than business owners.

                    make sure the ones that aren’t authoritarian will collapse.

                    Care to provide some examples?

                    Capitalisms central tenet is to take the power that should belong to the people, and give it to clueless rich guys who don’t work.

                    No, capitalism’s central tenet is that a free market will eventually self-regulate. A clueless rich guy would eventually fall to more motivated people who outcompete them.

                    The problems occur when clueless rich guys can convince lawmakers to put obstacles in the way of their competitors. Such as ISPs creating bureaucracy to stall competitors until they run out of money, or a ban on municipalities making their own (happened to my city, we’re trying again now that the law changed). The government’s job is to prevent that from happening, not enable it.

                    The motivations to consolidate power exist in any economic system be it socialist, capitalist, or fuedal. That said, despite this, western capitalist societies have done a fantastic job improving the standard of living of the average person (rising tide lifts all boats).

                    Why would the incentives for workers not be there, if the system is requiring that those workers be paid 100% of profits?

                    Are they paid equally? If so, what incentive does the average worker have to take a more risky job or one requiring more education? Surely it would be rational to do the easier job, no? Likewise, why would people innovate if the reward is just another job?

                    If they’re not paid equally, what’s to stop the founder from giving themselves an outsized portion of the profits? What exactly has been gained? What’s to prevent exceptions in the law for more influential founders? What about embezzlement?

                    I’m not exactly sure what system you prefer, so I’m not sure how to show the potential flaws, but hopefully something there provokes thought. People with power will find a loophole to enrich themselves, and if that’s too difficult, they’ll bring their innovation to another country instead.

                    I think it’s better to play off people’s selfishness and pit them against each other than try to compel them to share. Otherwise selfish people will end up in control of whatever system we choose.