I think you kind of missed the point. What we're talking about is reality right now where in fact there are two dominant parties and two dominant voter bases in the US. In fact, most politicians at the national level situate themselves in one of those two groups.
All of the nuance that you described exists. It's absolutely real. And so is the above paragraph, so go back and read the original post and maybe you can uncover some meaning.
I mean if you're talking about this version of capitalism, sure. But capitalism is more than one thing. These monolithic ideas that you are either capitalist or socialist or something else really downgrades the debate.
I have no love for what we have today. But there's a version of capitalism I could live with - it's just a far cry from what we have.
These overly simplistic memes don't do any favors, in my opinion. Saying if you believe in capitalism you are right wing is more alienating than galvanizing, and it reduces so many concepts down to such basic ones that there's no real meaning left.
Middle-ages at the latest at least in writing, but the idea of an employer we know of today probably goes way further back. People have owned and bought people longer than cities have had walls.
The ability for an individual to be able to fire someone is not really compatible with leftism. Employers don't really desire unions, ya know?
I think concern is placed on the wrong end, at least in terms of criticality.
I am less concerned about "maximums" right now. I know that's going to set off all kinds of alarm bells right now, but bear with me.
The two are intertwined for sure, but I'm mostly concerned with "minimums". If we had a society with Universal Basic Income, housing and Healthcare for everyone, and people had a safety net to pursue their passions, then I'm far less concerned about if someone has a billion dollars.
Again, they are both part of the same problem, but it's the focus. If billionaires were no longer allowed, and the money was re distributed amount people with 9 figure net worth already, it doesn't solve anything.
So yeah if people have the mobility to move from jobs, housing and Healthcare taken care of, and their basic needs met, I think it solves a lot of labor exploitation right away.
From there we can continue the debate, but I'm more concerned about taking care of everyone who is closer to the floor then worrying about the ceiling. I think there are capitalist ways that continue to reward actual breakthroughs and risks rather than the exploitation we have now.
I think that capitalism as we have it, but with a solid welfare state as you describe, is pretty close to my ideal society. But when I think about how such a system evolves over time in the presence of privately owned businesses, it seems to me that it is an unstable equilibrium. That is, it has an inherent tendency to break down the welfare state. I'll sketch the argument.
The first ingredient is that the owning class has an outsized influence on politics. This happens through a number of means, including:
threat of capital flight ("if you pass this bill I don't like, I will take my gizmo factory abroad")
direct bribes / lobbying ("if you pass this bill I like, I'll give you a nice cushy job at my gizmo factory", and also campaign donations)
ownership of the media that completely shape the opinions of the electorate
Through these means they can influence politicians to pass laws that benefit the owning class. Note that it is not beneficial to politicians to do something about this. This is their bread and butter.
The next ingredient is that the welfare state as you and I would like to see it (UHC, UBI, and so on) is detrimental to the owning class. A solid welfare state means that workers have a much stronger position to negotiate from. Without UHC, refusing a crappy offer is much riskier since your health is at stake, for example. That is to say, the welfare state drives up operating costs for the owning class. As such, it is in their best interest to fight tooth and nail against the welfare state.
Combine these two ingredients, and you see that in the presence of privately owned businesses, you eventually lose whatever kind of welfare state you had. A similar argument shows that moving towards such a welfare state from our current system is very unlikely.
I would add that this isn't just speculation, it has historical precedent. The US created a powerful welfare state under FDR and it was slowly destroyed in exactly the way that you described. It's also important to note that it was racism that provided the owning class with the narrative they needed to convince the working class to support the erosion of their own welfare. The creation of the welfare state began with the compromise that the benefits would not extend to non-white Americans. When the civil rights movement successfully forced the issue and demanded that the benefits be universalized the owning class was able to ride the wave of the racist backlash all the way to a near-total rollback of the welfare state.
Ensuring that welfare for the people lasts requires that we directly and conclusively address the underlying causes of the inequality it is meant to alleviate. We must recognize that private ownership of the means of production is the direct cause of this inequality and will always reproduce it if it is not eliminated. And finally we must also address the social causes of inequality - racism, bigotry, xenophobia, sexism, etc. - so that they cannot be used as justification for the reconstruction of a system of inequality. Alongside an economic and political revolution we also need a cultural revolution.
If billionaires were no longer allowed, and the money was re distributed amount people with 9 figure net worth already, it doesn’t solve anything.
How exactly does wealth redistribution not solve anything? The disparity is the problem.
if people have the mobility to move from jobs, housing and Healthcare taken care of, and their basic needs met, I think it solves a lot of labor exploitation right away
And how are you going to pay for that without wealth redistribution?
Yes, the disparity is the problem. But it needs to actually be spread out. Things like universal health care do that inherently if they properly raise taxes on the rich.
Redistributing wealth from the top 0.1% to the top 1% doesn't accomplish anything meaningful.
And yes, paying for it will come from taxing the rich. None of that has to do with capitalism exclusively.
I feel like we're after the same thing but you're more interested in attacking my idea than building something together or proposing something different. I'm sorry if that's harsh, but your questions are quite loaded and you didn't offer anything of substance yourself. The only thing you didn't deflect back to me was saying "the disparity is the problem", and that is precisely the point I was making. I'm specifically pointing out that it's about the full disparity.
I think I actually misinterpreted your original comment because of the typo in this sentence:
If billionaires were no longer allowed, and the money was re distributed amount people with 9 figure net worth already, it doesn’t solve anything.
(I now realize you probably meant to write "among".)
I didn't realize you were saying, "it doesn't help if you redistribute wealth to the wrong people". And that sort of set the tone incorrectly for the rest of your comment. That materially changes how I read your comment, and I do mostly agree with your points.
I'm not sure I agree that this isn't exclusive to capitalism though. If you impose a tax that effectively caps wealth, then you are inherently compromising one of the core tenets of capitalism: private ownership of means of production. And I'm also not sure that this type of tax even goes far enough to prevent worker exploitation, but I guess we'll see if it ever actually happens.
Got it, apologies on the typo and subsequent misunderstanding.
I think we're both after the same thing - I guess I'm just trying to get the safety net before attacking the "top" of what is reasonable.
And I'm kind of OK with a nearly infinite top... As long as the tax rate makes sense. If you're at a 95% tax rate (and loopholes aren't rampant... Lot of ifs here) then go nuts. You'll be supplying a good life for many people, by force, as a result of good taxes and public policy.
Yeah. You can have a left based on a version of 'value' where the productive apparatus is made for the benefit not of all, or the benefits of those who do the work, but for those who 'own', who reign, who hold dominion over.
I really don't see how this is so hard for these people to understand.
What are your skull measurements, BTW, fellow leftie?
How about he Sherman Antitrust Act. It is obviously left wing to oppose monopolies, and yet it fit into and supports a capitalist system. Even communist China has significant capitalist elements. Most notably, in "post capitalist" Star Trek, Jean-Luc Picard owned a fucking vineyard in France. You telling me everyone who wanted a French Vineyard got a French Vineyard?
Communism is per definition a stateless classless society. Capitalism is when the means of production is in private ownership which is the norm everywhere
Smith in coming up with it viewed it as a system that would pay people based on hours worked so that the rich who sat around getting money off the backs of workers would be punished and the workers would be rewarded.
Marx saw it as a system that dispersed power from the nobles to the merchant class. (With socialism as the next step of expansion)
As a contrast to mercantilism we can say it's a non-protectionist system based on globalization/mass imports and exports.
Really the system never changed, the idea of capitalism was just a rebranding for the wealthy.
What are these things that matter that we are fighting for?
Preserving capitalism, just you know, we'll fix it this time, we just have to do (thing that is guaranteed to be undone by capitalism)!...
Or... not that, instead, identifying the instinct to do that as the entire main problem that causes or exacerbates all the other problems?
Its only semantics if you're in full-on capitalist realism mode, where the apocalypse is easier to imagine than the absence of capitalism.
That's how you get the Fallout timeline.
I hope we understand that the Fallout timeline is bad.
Smearing around the meaning of words is actually exactly how propoganda works. If you literally can't even know what someone is talking about or means, well, then you basically just make stuff up willy nilly, confusion increases, meaningful discussion becomes more and more impossible, and the status quo wins.
Man people can't seem to get their terms together. Some people define left as communist/anti capitalist. Some define it as just anyone who wants equity for minorities. Some people define it as anyone they don't like and them damn hippies.
People use "The Left" contextually. See the Overton window for reference.
You are just stating what classical liberalism. If this isnt classical liberalism then what is the definition of classical liberalism? You should look up neo liberalism.
Also liberals are hardly leftist since they want free markets and zero regulations. Your picture says so
Liberalism is inherently left wing. In this sense im referring to autocracy vs democracy and nothing to do with capital. Big L Liberals still sit to the left in many regards. You might find some classical liberals in the conservative party but that is usually found to be faux virtue signaling, like the libraterians.
I give zero fucks about people who identify leftist as if opposing the right side of a spectrum is some sort of virtue.
I disagree. You cannot be a leftist and a capitalist. You can be a centrist, but I will never let you call yourself a leftist while defending private property and the military necessary to defend it. You don't have the ability to argue with me and win because you lack all of the necessary evidence to prove me wrong, because it doesn't exist because it's a falsehood. Liberals are not leftists. They're capitalists and therefore not leftist. Leftism is necessarily an anti-capitalist position.
The terms left and right are only useful until they are not.
These days you need to dig down into peoples ideology until you ask the question, should all people be cared for by society? I dont know how many levels up from that we skate around on but its almost insane how we are scaffolded over real human principles.
Its as if we have a bunch of people yapping, jumping into every conversation, with no idea about the pillars we are build on.
Maybe it's just me but it really bothers me that the far right is on the left of the diagram, and yet, I think it would also bother me somewhat if it were rotated 90 degrees so the the far right was on the right but then liberals would be on top.
Also, it doesn't make sense that the part where all three overlap says "hate leftists" which would mean that leftists hate leftists and ah ok I see that checks out.
There are plenty of Corporations that lean hard left. Capitalism is far better then socialism. It encourages choice and opportunity in better products. Economic diversity and stronger individual wealth. Problem is the consumer mentality, everyone wants convenience. Taxes are astronomical in many places, and every government agency provides nothing in promoting independence in individuals they "help". Every single tool of the rich is available to all. No body is taught a thing how to be responsible or harness the vast array of tools.
Also both the right and left seem to have forgotten polictians are our common enemy. None of them are trust worthy and they wealth they gain in office, the fraud they commit is swept under the rug.
Why are we grouped up and colored red or blue? Because war is peace for them.
1984 is already here.
The left are the fascists with their politically correct and willful segregation practices. While many of the right are no better and fascists in their own right.
Independent thought doesn't exist anymore. Not in any meaningful capacity.
There are plenty of Corporations that lean hard left.
What do you mean by this? I've never seen a corporation run democratically by the workers from the bottom up; it's always the opposite. Or is your idea of a "left" corporation one that puts a rainbow on their logo in June and engages in identity politics?
polictians are our common enemy
Agreed. We need to abolish the state.
The left are the fascists with their politically correct and willful segregation practices.
You seem to be describing liberals here(?) Liberals are not left, they're on the right. Also, you sound like a Republican.
Most leftists are literally pro-capitalism though, not in the idealized sense of "we want free markets NOW!!" but viewing ideal society as capitalism but with welfare (self-described socialist/DSA/socdem types). No matter how you rename such society, it doesn't change what it's mode of production in reality is.
Lots of leftists can't even define what capitalism is either, which also puts their opposition to capital into question...
Imma be real, if you truly think that US are some backwards savages and the rest of the world is any better then maybe you're due for a break from the US-centric news cycles who only report on what's going on in the US. It really warps one's perspective on the current state of the world, xenophobia and bigotry runs everywhere and it's getting worse as profit rates and standard of living drops.
Besides, leftism as a term at first referred to anti-monarchist liberals. It's an insanely large and diverse camp in terms of views, vast majority of whom are pro-capitalist but don't market themselves as such since their focus is reformism and making lives better within capitalism like trans rights or "fair wage". Actual anti-capitalists (i.e. communists aligned with left opposition who are vehemently against commodity form) are insanely rare and often don't even identify themselves as leftists since they have very little in common with left wing of capital.
One quick peek at my profile and you’d learn super quick I’m extremely varied, global, and intersecting as most anarchists go.
leftism as a term at first referred to anti-monarchist liberals
By whom exactly🙃
Actual anti-capitalists (i.e. communists aligned with left opposition who are vehemently against commodity form) are insanely rare and often don’t even identify themselves as leftists since they have very little in common with left wing of capital.
I feel like you believe this is /c/[email protected] and not /c/[email protected].
Could you reframe you scopes a little broader, as actual anarchists engaging in honest conversation? ’Cause anarchism is completely against all forms of capital: the privatization of goods, services, tools, land, etc.. You don't have to be furtherest liberating (Monarch’s “left of privatization”), and fall back into communitizing all means of production (communism).
Kind of splitting hairs at this point, but if the defining feature of capitalism is the private ownership of business, then I'd say demsocs would still qualify as capitalists. But maybe we have different notions of capitalism.
Its not splitting hairs at all. Demsocs are straight up not capitalists. They believe in collective ownership, not private. You're confusing it for social democracy.
Ah yeah my bad. I confused it for what we have/had in Europe, like nordic model type stuff. But I guess that's socdems then. You have to admit the naming is confusing.
It's really not. Sure the naming might be confusing and basically a repetition of "Judeas Peoples Front". But the difference of ideology is rather noticeably large.
...are literally to the right of Democrats in the US. They're just technically not as far right as most Republicans. They occupy that tiny slice of space between the two kinds of conservatives.
*Most libertarians. Many, not most, are leftist. Libertarianism was originally a leftist term synonymous with anarchist socialist that got coopted by the right in the 70s.
No, they aren't. They all believe in free-marker Capitalism. Usually the unregulated, tax-free variety. Just because they also think drugs and abortion should be legal, doesn't make them "leftists".
You've convinced me with all of your evidence, whereas a simple wikipedia search tells you I'm right. Libertarianism was originally a leftist term synonymous with anarchist socialist that got coopted by the right in the 70s.
Source: I am a former libertarian who no longer calls himself one because I'm a socialist and libertarianism, despite having socialist beginnings, is no longer widely known as something compatible with socialism. I'm just educated enough to know the nuance, whereas some people are not as educated and therefore have a take that is more black/white and narrow-minded. If someone says "I'm a left-libertarian" some people would say that's an oxymoron because they're uneducated and know just enough to be confident in their ignorance, and I would actually get what they mean. I would urge them to stop calling themselves a libertarian, but I would get what they mean at least instead of being ignorant.
Either you're talking of libertarians like me. People just shy anarcho-communist (Or at least far cry of capitalist). Or self proclaimed anti-state lassiez-faire capitalism advocating folks. Which don't even fit the critieria for centre-left or centre even.
If you actually took the time to explore the results openly, you'd find significant libertarian critique of capitalism. Libertarian socialism, for example, is explicitly anti-capitalism; obviously though, as it encroaches on people's freedoms with wage labour, capital ownership, corporate bailouts, limited liability, etc. All the things that take something from people without their control or consent.
If you're seeing a lot of Dave Smith, that could be your algorithm tuned in favour of that content. While he is libertarian with drugs, foreign policy, privacy, etc. he only represents the utmost right flank of libertarianism that expresses individualistic freedoms from things like state rather than economics. Kind of like your Ron Paul kind of character that is pro-capitalism but fights to keep things like corporate control and market monopolies from encroaching on people's liberties too much, just as with any other undesired authority.
What nonsense.
Politics is not a one dimensional right and left split.
Real people, who have a personality beyond their political opinions, are all over the spectrum on issues.
Wow, you sound like a commie. /s :)
Which flavour, like McCarthy Commie, Tankie Commie or CND Commie? 😁
I think you kind of missed the point. What we're talking about is reality right now where in fact there are two dominant parties and two dominant voter bases in the US. In fact, most politicians at the national level situate themselves in one of those two groups.
All of the nuance that you described exists. It's absolutely real. And so is the above paragraph, so go back and read the original post and maybe you can uncover some meaning.
I don't think they mentioned a specific country in their sweeping statement?
I mean if you're talking about this version of capitalism, sure. But capitalism is more than one thing. These monolithic ideas that you are either capitalist or socialist or something else really downgrades the debate.
I have no love for what we have today. But there's a version of capitalism I could live with - it's just a far cry from what we have.
These overly simplistic memes don't do any favors, in my opinion. Saying if you believe in capitalism you are right wing is more alienating than galvanizing, and it reduces so many concepts down to such basic ones that there's no real meaning left.
Which version of capitalism would you prefer? Does it still involve the private ownership of the means of production?
Having a small business or store doesn't require capitalism.
It does if you employ someone
And employment was not invented until the 1800s either?
Much much earlier: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporation#History
Middle-ages at the latest at least in writing, but the idea of an employer we know of today probably goes way further back. People have owned and bought people longer than cities have had walls.
The ability for an individual to be able to fire someone is not really compatible with leftism. Employers don't really desire unions, ya know?
I think concern is placed on the wrong end, at least in terms of criticality.
I am less concerned about "maximums" right now. I know that's going to set off all kinds of alarm bells right now, but bear with me.
The two are intertwined for sure, but I'm mostly concerned with "minimums". If we had a society with Universal Basic Income, housing and Healthcare for everyone, and people had a safety net to pursue their passions, then I'm far less concerned about if someone has a billion dollars.
Again, they are both part of the same problem, but it's the focus. If billionaires were no longer allowed, and the money was re distributed amount people with 9 figure net worth already, it doesn't solve anything.
So yeah if people have the mobility to move from jobs, housing and Healthcare taken care of, and their basic needs met, I think it solves a lot of labor exploitation right away.
From there we can continue the debate, but I'm more concerned about taking care of everyone who is closer to the floor then worrying about the ceiling. I think there are capitalist ways that continue to reward actual breakthroughs and risks rather than the exploitation we have now.
I think that capitalism as we have it, but with a solid welfare state as you describe, is pretty close to my ideal society. But when I think about how such a system evolves over time in the presence of privately owned businesses, it seems to me that it is an unstable equilibrium. That is, it has an inherent tendency to break down the welfare state. I'll sketch the argument.
The first ingredient is that the owning class has an outsized influence on politics. This happens through a number of means, including:
Through these means they can influence politicians to pass laws that benefit the owning class. Note that it is not beneficial to politicians to do something about this. This is their bread and butter.
The next ingredient is that the welfare state as you and I would like to see it (UHC, UBI, and so on) is detrimental to the owning class. A solid welfare state means that workers have a much stronger position to negotiate from. Without UHC, refusing a crappy offer is much riskier since your health is at stake, for example. That is to say, the welfare state drives up operating costs for the owning class. As such, it is in their best interest to fight tooth and nail against the welfare state.
Combine these two ingredients, and you see that in the presence of privately owned businesses, you eventually lose whatever kind of welfare state you had. A similar argument shows that moving towards such a welfare state from our current system is very unlikely.
I would add that this isn't just speculation, it has historical precedent. The US created a powerful welfare state under FDR and it was slowly destroyed in exactly the way that you described. It's also important to note that it was racism that provided the owning class with the narrative they needed to convince the working class to support the erosion of their own welfare. The creation of the welfare state began with the compromise that the benefits would not extend to non-white Americans. When the civil rights movement successfully forced the issue and demanded that the benefits be universalized the owning class was able to ride the wave of the racist backlash all the way to a near-total rollback of the welfare state.
Ensuring that welfare for the people lasts requires that we directly and conclusively address the underlying causes of the inequality it is meant to alleviate. We must recognize that private ownership of the means of production is the direct cause of this inequality and will always reproduce it if it is not eliminated. And finally we must also address the social causes of inequality - racism, bigotry, xenophobia, sexism, etc. - so that they cannot be used as justification for the reconstruction of a system of inequality. Alongside an economic and political revolution we also need a cultural revolution.
You see similar patterns in western european countries. It's nice when empirical reality lines up with theory.
How exactly does wealth redistribution not solve anything? The disparity is the problem.
And how are you going to pay for that without wealth redistribution?
Yes, the disparity is the problem. But it needs to actually be spread out. Things like universal health care do that inherently if they properly raise taxes on the rich.
Redistributing wealth from the top 0.1% to the top 1% doesn't accomplish anything meaningful.
And yes, paying for it will come from taxing the rich. None of that has to do with capitalism exclusively.
I feel like we're after the same thing but you're more interested in attacking my idea than building something together or proposing something different. I'm sorry if that's harsh, but your questions are quite loaded and you didn't offer anything of substance yourself. The only thing you didn't deflect back to me was saying "the disparity is the problem", and that is precisely the point I was making. I'm specifically pointing out that it's about the full disparity.
I think I actually misinterpreted your original comment because of the typo in this sentence:
(I now realize you probably meant to write "among".)
I didn't realize you were saying, "it doesn't help if you redistribute wealth to the wrong people". And that sort of set the tone incorrectly for the rest of your comment. That materially changes how I read your comment, and I do mostly agree with your points.
I'm not sure I agree that this isn't exclusive to capitalism though. If you impose a tax that effectively caps wealth, then you are inherently compromising one of the core tenets of capitalism: private ownership of means of production. And I'm also not sure that this type of tax even goes far enough to prevent worker exploitation, but I guess we'll see if it ever actually happens.
Got it, apologies on the typo and subsequent misunderstanding.
I think we're both after the same thing - I guess I'm just trying to get the safety net before attacking the "top" of what is reasonable.
And I'm kind of OK with a nearly infinite top... As long as the tax rate makes sense. If you're at a 95% tax rate (and loopholes aren't rampant... Lot of ifs here) then go nuts. You'll be supplying a good life for many people, by force, as a result of good taxes and public policy.
The one without human beings at the helm.
Funny, that's what I think about communism.
It is almost like the people are the problem and not the ideology.
Yeah. You can have a left based on a version of 'value' where the productive apparatus is made for the benefit not of all, or the benefits of those who do the work, but for those who 'own', who reign, who hold dominion over.
I really don't see how this is so hard for these people to understand.
What are your skull measurements, BTW, fellow leftie?
Yeah, money is a great way of communication and valuation of work and goods over vast distances
I'm all for an easy token to valuate something and that's ok
But as you say, what we're doing now, is just not future proof
You don't need capitalism to have the concept of currency. It predates capitalism, and has existed in systems alongside capitalism.
True
It doesn't even seem current proof lol
at some point one realises the commies are idiots
it explains everything
The Kremlin: but Useful idiots!
See no true scotsman.
Left and Right are relative, not absolute terms.
Left and Right were absolute terms in the Girondine Convention. It just got passed down on to us.
In other words: they are relative.
This is a decent way to self-exclude yourself from relevancy in the political sphere.
Most of the global left is not strictly anti capitalist but rather advocate more nuanced systems.
Absolutely true statement. Capitalism may be nuanced and politics may be, but support for capitalism is not pro-left in the least.
How about he Sherman Antitrust Act. It is obviously left wing to oppose monopolies, and yet it fit into and supports a capitalist system. Even communist China has significant capitalist elements. Most notably, in "post capitalist" Star Trek, Jean-Luc Picard owned a fucking vineyard in France. You telling me everyone who wanted a French Vineyard got a French Vineyard?
China is not communist lol
Correct, China is socialist, the intermediary step between the capitalist mode of production and the communist mode of production.
If China is not communist, then America is not capitalist
(neither passes the purity test per definition)
Communism is per definition a stateless classless society. Capitalism is when the means of production is in private ownership which is the norm everywhere
Your definition of capitalism is wrong. Private enterprise/owning of production predates capitalism.
You can look to Smith or Marx for much more generous depictions.
Whart is the correct definition of capitalism then?
Smith in coming up with it viewed it as a system that would pay people based on hours worked so that the rich who sat around getting money off the backs of workers would be punished and the workers would be rewarded.
Marx saw it as a system that dispersed power from the nobles to the merchant class. (With socialism as the next step of expansion)
As a contrast to mercantilism we can say it's a non-protectionist system based on globalization/mass imports and exports.
Really the system never changed, the idea of capitalism was just a rebranding for the wealthy.
Eh, it’s also pretty centrist as well. I think you’re participating in a little bit of category sleight-of-hand there.
Bars.
I get it but it’s semantics and the way they use it is relative. We need to fight for the things that matter and avoid petty pitfalls.
No, see, its not semantics.
What are these things that matter that we are fighting for?
Preserving capitalism, just you know, we'll fix it this time, we just have to do (thing that is guaranteed to be undone by capitalism)!...
Or... not that, instead, identifying the instinct to do that as the entire main problem that causes or exacerbates all the other problems?
Its only semantics if you're in full-on capitalist realism mode, where the apocalypse is easier to imagine than the absence of capitalism.
That's how you get the Fallout timeline.
I hope we understand that the Fallout timeline is bad.
Smearing around the meaning of words is actually exactly how propoganda works. If you literally can't even know what someone is talking about or means, well, then you basically just make stuff up willy nilly, confusion increases, meaningful discussion becomes more and more impossible, and the status quo wins.
Man people can't seem to get their terms together. Some people define left as communist/anti capitalist. Some define it as just anyone who wants equity for minorities. Some people define it as anyone they don't like and them damn hippies.
People use "The Left" contextually. See the Overton window for reference.
How?
You are just stating what classical liberalism. If this isnt classical liberalism then what is the definition of classical liberalism? You should look up neo liberalism.
Also liberals are hardly leftist since they want free markets and zero regulations. Your picture says so
You are just stating what classical liberalism
Are you asking a question?
Liberalism is inherently left wing. In this sense im referring to autocracy vs democracy and nothing to do with capital. Big L Liberals still sit to the left in many regards. You might find some classical liberals in the conservative party but that is usually found to be faux virtue signaling, like the libraterians.
I give zero fucks about people who identify leftist as if opposing the right side of a spectrum is some sort of virtue.
"If youre violet then im ultraviolet"
Markets free of regulation is not inherently left wing. Markets must be regulated. Liberals disagree. Lockean theory is not left wing inherently.
Ok just ignore what I said
I am not ignoring the screenshot you posted. Thats your evidence. Your evidence shows liberalism isnt a left wing ideology inherently.
Im showing capitalism isnt inherently right wing. The complete opposite.
I disagree. You cannot be a leftist and a capitalist. You can be a centrist, but I will never let you call yourself a leftist while defending private property and the military necessary to defend it. You don't have the ability to argue with me and win because you lack all of the necessary evidence to prove me wrong, because it doesn't exist because it's a falsehood. Liberals are not leftists. They're capitalists and therefore not leftist. Leftism is necessarily an anti-capitalist position.
Don't make me pull out the leftists, liberals, and conservatives Venn diagram.
Edit: Pulling it out.
The terms left and right are only useful until they are not.
These days you need to dig down into peoples ideology until you ask the question, should all people be cared for by society? I dont know how many levels up from that we skate around on but its almost insane how we are scaffolded over real human principles.
Its as if we have a bunch of people yapping, jumping into every conversation, with no idea about the pillars we are build on.
Maybe it's just me but it really bothers me that the far right is on the left of the diagram, and yet, I think it would also bother me somewhat if it were rotated 90 degrees so the the far right was on the right but then liberals would be on top. Also, it doesn't make sense that the part where all three overlap says "hate leftists" which would mean that leftists hate leftists and ah ok I see that checks out.
Bankrupt ideology because of 3.
Only relevant to the progressive bent of neoliberalism, which is just rebranded conservatism.
There are plenty of Corporations that lean hard left. Capitalism is far better then socialism. It encourages choice and opportunity in better products. Economic diversity and stronger individual wealth. Problem is the consumer mentality, everyone wants convenience. Taxes are astronomical in many places, and every government agency provides nothing in promoting independence in individuals they "help". Every single tool of the rich is available to all. No body is taught a thing how to be responsible or harness the vast array of tools.
Also both the right and left seem to have forgotten polictians are our common enemy. None of them are trust worthy and they wealth they gain in office, the fraud they commit is swept under the rug.
Why are we grouped up and colored red or blue? Because war is peace for them. 1984 is already here. The left are the fascists with their politically correct and willful segregation practices. While many of the right are no better and fascists in their own right. Independent thought doesn't exist anymore. Not in any meaningful capacity.
What do you mean by this? I've never seen a corporation run democratically by the workers from the bottom up; it's always the opposite. Or is your idea of a "left" corporation one that puts a rainbow on their logo in June and engages in identity politics?
Agreed. We need to abolish the state.
You seem to be describing liberals here(?) Liberals are not left, they're on the right. Also, you sound like a Republican.
I am left speechless. What a load of bs you just wrote. Do you actually believe it?
Made me laugh, ngl
Hey buddy, you're in the wrong community.
Most leftists are literally pro-capitalism though, not in the idealized sense of "we want free markets NOW!!" but viewing ideal society as capitalism but with welfare (self-described socialist/DSA/socdem types). No matter how you rename such society, it doesn't change what it's mode of production in reality is.
Lots of leftists can't even define what capitalism is either, which also puts their opposition to capital into question...
Democrats, mob rule, is not liberatory: leftist.
Americans are illiterate fucks, no need to spread their dissonances.
Imma be real, if you truly think that US are some backwards savages and the rest of the world is any better then maybe you're due for a break from the US-centric news cycles who only report on what's going on in the US. It really warps one's perspective on the current state of the world, xenophobia and bigotry runs everywhere and it's getting worse as profit rates and standard of living drops.
Besides, leftism as a term at first referred to anti-monarchist liberals. It's an insanely large and diverse camp in terms of views, vast majority of whom are pro-capitalist but don't market themselves as such since their focus is reformism and making lives better within capitalism like trans rights or "fair wage". Actual anti-capitalists (i.e. communists aligned with left opposition who are vehemently against commodity form) are insanely rare and often don't even identify themselves as leftists since they have very little in common with left wing of capital.
One quick peek at my profile and you’d learn super quick I’m extremely varied, global, and intersecting as most anarchists go.
By whom exactly🙃
I feel like you believe this is /c/[email protected] and not /c/[email protected].
Could you reframe you scopes a little broader, as actual anarchists engaging in honest conversation? ’Cause anarchism is completely against all forms of capital: the privatization of goods, services, tools, land, etc.. You don't have to be furtherest liberating (Monarch’s “left of privatization”), and fall back into communitizing all means of production (communism).
I am not your typical black anarchist.
Have we not heard of liberals?
liberals are right wing.
even democratic socialists? genuinely curious, trying to map your spectrum
Democratic socialists are not capitalist, they're socialist. You're thinking of social democrats.
Kind of splitting hairs at this point, but if the defining feature of capitalism is the private ownership of business, then I'd say demsocs would still qualify as capitalists. But maybe we have different notions of capitalism.
Its not splitting hairs at all. Demsocs are straight up not capitalists. They believe in collective ownership, not private. You're confusing it for social democracy.
Ah yeah my bad. I confused it for what we have/had in Europe, like nordic model type stuff. But I guess that's socdems then. You have to admit the naming is confusing.
It is, but that tends to happen in politics. The Nazi party was nominally a socialist worker's party
It's really not. Sure the naming might be confusing and basically a repetition of "Judeas Peoples Front". But the difference of ideology is rather noticeably large.
Libertarians
...are literally to the right of Democrats in the US. They're just technically not as far right as most Republicans. They occupy that tiny slice of space between the two kinds of conservatives.
*Most libertarians. Many, not most, are leftist. Libertarianism was originally a leftist term synonymous with anarchist socialist that got coopted by the right in the 70s.
No, they aren't. They all believe in free-marker Capitalism. Usually the unregulated, tax-free variety. Just because they also think drugs and abortion should be legal, doesn't make them "leftists".
You've convinced me with all of your evidence, whereas a simple wikipedia search tells you I'm right. Libertarianism was originally a leftist term synonymous with anarchist socialist that got coopted by the right in the 70s.
Source: I am a former libertarian who no longer calls himself one because I'm a socialist and libertarianism, despite having socialist beginnings, is no longer widely known as something compatible with socialism. I'm just educated enough to know the nuance, whereas some people are not as educated and therefore have a take that is more black/white and narrow-minded. If someone says "I'm a left-libertarian" some people would say that's an oxymoron because they're uneducated and know just enough to be confident in their ignorance, and I would actually get what they mean. I would urge them to stop calling themselves a libertarian, but I would get what they mean at least instead of being ignorant.
Either you're talking of libertarians like me. People just shy anarcho-communist (Or at least far cry of capitalist). Or self proclaimed anti-state lassiez-faire capitalism advocating folks. Which don't even fit the critieria for centre-left or centre even.
Put into your search engine of choice, "libertarians on capitalism"
👍
I'm seeing dave smith coming up a lot and hes a capitalist
Thanks for the selective reporting.
If you actually took the time to explore the results openly, you'd find significant libertarian critique of capitalism. Libertarian socialism, for example, is explicitly anti-capitalism; obviously though, as it encroaches on people's freedoms with wage labour, capital ownership, corporate bailouts, limited liability, etc. All the things that take something from people without their control or consent.
If you're seeing a lot of Dave Smith, that could be your algorithm tuned in favour of that content. While he is libertarian with drugs, foreign policy, privacy, etc. he only represents the utmost right flank of libertarianism that expresses individualistic freedoms from things like state rather than economics. Kind of like your Ron Paul kind of character that is pro-capitalism but fights to keep things like corporate control and market monopolies from encroaching on people's liberties too much, just as with any other undesired authority.
Bears.