Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by hayze99 » Tue May 04, 2010 9:58 pm

Karl wrote:
hayze99 wrote:Ultimately, Hayek and all of that party closed the coffin up with the calculation debates. There's absolutely no way for a human being to even begin to understand how to allocate resources to a nation. I'd say the only chance for socialism is if computers get powerful and intelligent enough to do it more efficiently than the market; and considering that markets are unbelievably efficient, I don't see it happening any time soon.
This is perhaps the most sophisticated defense of capitalism out there. There is no doubt that capitalism has allowed for expansion and production that would not otherwise have been possible. To say that it is efficient in its allocation of resources is a gross error however when you consider the vast swathes of population that go without adequate food, shelter or healthcare. It is only profit which drives capitalism forward.

In relation to Hayek, the flaw in the market system is that prices don't tell you very much about value. The price of an SUV and the fuel it consumes tells me nothing of the effect using it might have on a Bangladeshi village getting flooded. I might value not doing that but the price doesn't reflect that.

You don't really need prices in order to solve complex problems either. The internet is a shining example of how humans can co-ordinate complex problems without reference to prices or the market.

The crisis we are experiencing now is a direct result of a systemic failure. It is a direct result of banks and other institutions believing that they were perfectly informed about the kinds of risk they were taking, that they had the computer power and the sophisticated knowledge to be able to take those risks but then not being able to price those risks at all. The crisis reflects the failure of capitalism even on its own terms to co-ordinate properly.
First of all, your posting is awesome, and so far has brought a bit of faith back to me about socialist ideas. Apart from the ideals, the whole issue has become unappealing because of all the pretentious wankers in university whose only arguments are "yeh, but we should all care about each other man", "capitalism is evil, man".

Just to reply to the point - The reason that price systems were ultimately developed by human beings, is because they were the best alternative as a marker for the value of a product. I'm sure you know (but I'll just explain it anyway), that this equates to demand, and for the most part always has. It's a misconception that before full capitalist society came with the industrial revolution and so on that people only based their trade on use values. Gems and gold and so on are a good example for this. Anyway, the reason for this, especially in contemporary society where we consume so much, is because humans cannot possibly process that much information. With a supply chain of thousands of individuals, how can you hold everything accountable and reflect it easily to a person? What if you miss one of the thousands of people out?

The capitalist answer to this, is not even allowing this to occur and rectifying the market when externalities appear. We're not 100% there yet, but we're definitely working on it. When a plant pollutes a river, it gains, and everyone on the river loses. The price mechanism is not fully taking into account the social cost of the product in question, and it is seen as market failure. Parties are taxed and subsidised accordingly in order to correct this market failure. This is a 100% capitalist mechanism, dealing with capitalist markets, all whilst taking into account social responsibility. It is a capitalist ideal that uneven social utility is a failure to our precious markets. The problem of how to allocate these costs is one that is shared with socialism. This is why (now) schools are subsidised and cigarette companies are taxed. Even when talking about demerit goods (goods which negatively affect those around them), such as cigarettes, the same applies. Keep in mind that this does not impinge on your personal freedom as a consumer, the only factors taken into account is when your consumption affects others negatively.

EDIT: And in reply to the starving kids theory - I just don't think that it can be put down to either capitalism or socialism; it has too many factors to be able to pin to one thing in another. Disease, war, religion, infrastructure, non-monetary politics. I don't see how socialism would alleviate the situation any better. It always comes down to a limit of resources, whether intellectual, political or physical. The alternatives to this is the sweatshop argument that's happening right now. Many people complain, but it's actually industrialising the countries. Singapore, roughly 50 years ago, was in the same sweatshop situation as places like Vietnam are now.

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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by feral witchchild » Tue May 04, 2010 10:56 pm

Does this question really need to be asked? lpl
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by the acid never lies » Wed May 05, 2010 12:03 am

feral witchchild wrote:Does this question really need to be asked? lpl
:|

Other than that, interesting points of view here. Will have to take care before I step in.

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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by Genevieve » Wed May 05, 2010 12:33 am

Greed is indeed apart of human nature when you consider that human nature consists of many behaviours and traits that appear in varrying degree from person to person. This is exactly the reason why I prefer capitalism and liberalism over communism and socialism. Collectives have consistently shown some sort of natural inclination to keep and expand power to fullfill this 'human greed', these collectives include governments and corporations.

The only thing more greedy than someone who has nothing is someone who has everything. In this case, governments are the ones who have everything. Governments have the most power and when you combine socialism with liberalism you get the corporatist neo-liberal mess we have these days where the money from the poor is redistributed among the rich and large corporations are given power and authority by a government. This is directly at odds with free market capitalism.

I know, I know, this is such an age old point to make; but we do not and never had anything resembling a free market state and thus, it's impossible to blame the ills of human civilisation on free market capitalism. The last thing a free market capitalist would do is agree with Reagan's policies seeing as they're in direct odds with free marketism.

As for 'inequality': Yes, I agree, some people are capable of less than others for whatever reason. Does that make them unequal? I wouldn't say so. Equality should only exist in the eye of the law and everyone of legal age should be equal to the law, regardless of gender, sexuality, ethnicity and so on. But just because a poorer person is less capable of sustaining themselves than a rich person is does not mean these people are unequal: a person who's lost their legs still has the right to walk, they're just incapable of it. This doesn't make them unequal. Should we cut off the legs of people who can walk to force this perceived 'equality' on the population?

The biggest inequality so far has come from a governing or coercive agents, not the dynamics of a free market.
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by feral witchchild » Wed May 05, 2010 12:47 am

the acid never lies wrote: :|
Don't give me that look. >: |
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by fuagofire » Wed May 05, 2010 12:57 am

yep

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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by the acid never lies » Wed May 05, 2010 7:12 am

Genevieve wrote:Greed is indeed apart of human nature when you consider that human nature consists of many behaviours and traits that appear in varrying degree from person to person. This is exactly the reason why I prefer capitalism and liberalism over communism and socialism. Collectives have consistently shown some sort of natural inclination to keep and expand power to fullfill this 'human greed', these collectives include governments and corporations.

Sure but we're living under Really Existing Capitalism in case you haven't noticed, this is the way we are raised to behave from square one. I don't see why you place 'individual greed' above 'collective greed' - are you implying that collectives are worse than individuals? You insist that people are 'naturally greedy'. Is it not fair to say however that human beings are naturally social? We don't each live atomised in a vacuum regardless of the system we live under so it is silly to presume that cronyism would be worse under socialism. There is plenty of under capitalism and the 'revolving door' between government and the private sector.

The only thing more greedy than someone who has nothing is someone who has everything. In this case, governments are the ones who have everything. Governments have the most power and when you combine socialism with liberalism you get the corporatist neo-liberal mess we have these days where the money from the poor is redistributed among the rich and large corporations are given power and authority by a government. This is directly at odds with free market capitalism.

Communism is about creating a classless society. As long as you have a ruling class (political or economic) then there will be problems. Suggesting that socialism is at the root of this inequality and that actually unfettered free market capitalism would be better is misguided. Your conception of the free market appears utopian - if the government had not intervened the economy would have collapsed thanks to such deregulation. Our industries can survive because of the subsidies they receive. Or do you think we should really leave everybody to sink or swim? What do you think this would to to our economy? Or to unemployment figures?

I know, I know, this is such an age old point to make; but we do not and never had anything resembling a free market state and thus, it's impossible to blame the ills of human civilisation on free market capitalism. The last thing a free market capitalist would do is agree with Reagan's policies seeing as they're in direct odds with free marketism.

So what does a free market state look like? Do you mean we should scrap welfare, health and housing subsidies, business incentives such as tax levies? Should taxes be scrapped altogether? Should everything be privatised? I am genuinely interested to know I am not deliberately caricaturing here.

As for 'inequality': Yes, I agree, some people are capable of less than others for whatever reason. Does that make them unequal? Yes I wouldn't say so. Equality should only exist in the eye of the law and everyone of legal age should be equal to the law, regardless of gender, sexuality, ethnicity and so on. But just because a poorer person is less capable of sustaining themselves than a rich person is does not mean these people are unequal: a person who's lost their legs still has the right to walk, they're just incapable of it. This doesn't make them unequal. Should we cut off the legs of people who can walk to force this perceived 'equality' on the population?

Okay... the problem is there shouldn't be a 'rich' and 'poor' in the first place. Socialism isn't about making everybody equally poor as you are suggesting. In case you haven't noticed, free education and free healthcare have helped people improve their life conditions immensely. Are you from the landed aristocracy? I only ask because if you're not, the chances are you or your ancestors have benefitted from the state which is why you are privileged today. The fact that our value system is bonkers means that you have people who are paid hundreds of times as much as others. Does this mean they work hundreds of times as hard? Obviously not. There are people who work hard all their lives and never amount to anything. Being born poor you have all sorts of odds stacked against you. Of course people are unequal.

The biggest inequality so far has come from a governing or coercive agents, not the dynamics of a free market.

Sorry to stress this but the free market is a fairy tale! The world is not made up of individual people setting up their apples and oranges in a global marketplace. What you have after every recession is a concentration of capital where more and more is owned by fewer and fewer people. This decentralised, everybody has as good a chance as anybody else, I am a self-made man mentality is a fantasy - it boggles the mind why you might want to see this run its course completely unfettered.

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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by nousd » Wed May 05, 2010 7:29 am

if peebs really thought about their best interests,
particularly what could happen to them,
they would be selfish enough to become socialists

this is apart from any benefits to be had from sharing with others
(which is a large part of the origin of joy)
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by magma » Wed May 05, 2010 7:43 am

I think socialism has perfect roots in human nature. The most natural human instinct is to be part of a caring family... the family unit is how humans made sure they'd always have enough... parents care for the young and eventually, the young take care of the old.

It seems that as communities expand, the "family" we rely on (and feel compelled to contribute to) expands to encompass an entire society.

Of course, human greed gets in the way, but that gets in the way with biological families too as any episode of Jeremy Kyle will tell you... but the majority of people just want to be pretty awesome to each other.
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by Karl » Wed May 05, 2010 10:03 pm

Hey Hayze thanks for your thoughtful reply. You raise an interesting point about extreme exploitation namely, how far is it justifiable in helping us reach a stage of industrialisation whereby we can fre ourselves from the tyranny of Nature. Here is my response to a few of the issues you have raised raised:
hayze99 wrote:I'd say the only chance for socialism is if computers get powerful and intelligent enough to do it more efficiently than the market; and considering that markets are unbelievably efficient, I don't see it happening any time soon.
You're right in a sense that the development of the technical basis of production is a pre-condition for a socialist society - i.e. we must have the ability to produce sufficient wealth to be able to move beyond a primitive relation to nature - but I don't see why this is specifically linked to computers. What do you mean by 'efficiency'? You seems to have some conception of socialism as state capitalism that would simply compete against capitalism on its own terms - i.e. the pursuit of ever-greater profits. That is not the purpose of the society I want to see...

But even on these terms, how efficient is a system that sub-ordinates everything to the creation of profit? - so we have 'deepwater horizon' that for want of a safety valve is pouring 9.5million litres of oil into the sea. Or a system that is so efficient as to produce millions of cars that are stockpiled on lots and never used, in the name of competition. Or that ploughs trillions into weapons production to satisfy the demands of inter-imperialist rivalry.
hayze99 wrote:the value of a product...equates to demand, and for the most part always has.
This is a little simplistic I'm afraid. I do not deny that supply and demand play an important role in the mechanism of competition. But supply and demand cannot explain the value around which a price flucuates. How can this be explained?
hayze99 wrote:It's a misconception that before full capitalist society came with the industrial revolution and so on that people only based their trade on use values.
Was someone arguing this to be the case? Not Marx. Commodity production has existed at least as far back as ancient Greece. However there is a big difference between a society in which commodities are produced (i.e. many pre-capitalist societies) and capitalism where generalised commodity production is the organising principle of the entire process of production.
hayze99 wrote:Anyway, the reason for this, especially in contemporary society where we consume so much, is because humans cannot possibly process that much information. With a supply chain of thousands of individuals, how can you hold everything accountable and reflect it easily to a person? What if you miss one of the thousands of people out?
Do you mean an individual human or that human beings as a collective group can't understand how to allocate resources?
Let's look at the options:

If it's as an individual, then you are attacking an enemy that doesn't exist (i.e. not socialism as I understand it). Perhaps you are thinking of Stalinism, in which case I agree! A dictator won't know how to allocate resources other than by his own authoritarian plan, but that's not the only way to plan an economy.

Incidentally the market is also a result of human actions, not a force of nature as you seem to be implying. In fact capitalism is full of planning within each production process (the capitalist is a dictator of his own operations) - the anarchy of production in the market place is simply the result of the competition between these autocrats.

Thankfully the job of allocating resources doesn't have to be done by an individual - it is perfectly possible to have an economy based on democratic control from below - unless you have any plausible reasons why this is not the case?
hayze99 wrote:The capitalist answer to this, is not even allowing this to occur and rectifying the market when externalities appear. We're not 100% there yet, but we're definitely working on it. When a plant pollutes a river, it gains, and everyone on the river loses. The price mechanism is not fully taking into account the social cost of the product in question, and it is seen as market failure. Parties are taxed and subsidised accordingly in order to correct this market failure. This is a 100% capitalist mechanism, dealing with capitalist markets, all whilst taking into account social responsibility. It is a capitalist ideal that uneven social utility is a failure to our precious markets.
The key sentence being "Parties are taxed and subsidised accordingly in order to correct this market failure." - who does this taxing and subsiding? The state? And who controls the state? In whose interests does it act? And when different states favour different interests.... you get Inter-state rivalry, imperialism and War.
hayze99 wrote:You say that the market is unable to allocate resources to a majority of people who cannot access food, shelter etc. I just don't think that it can be put down to either capitalism or socialism
Well it certainly can't be put down to socialism, because we don't live in a socialist society
hayze99 wrote:non-monetary politics

Explain?
hayze99 wrote:It always comes down to a limit of resources
For the vast majority of us the resources are very limited - At least 80% of humanity lives on less than $10 a day. Whilst just in this country alone the richest 1000 people increased their wealth by 30% this year, during an economic crisis...

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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by Pada » Wed May 05, 2010 11:06 pm

good thread cheers all!
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by Karl » Thu May 06, 2010 8:56 am

tr0tsky wrote:
Karl wrote: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?


You answered you own question in Das Kapital, vol. III:

"Just as the savage must wrestle with Nature to satisfy his wants, to maintain and reproduce life, so must civilised man, and he must do so in all social formations and under all possible modes of production. With his development this realm of physical necessity expands as a result of his wants; but, at the same time, the forces of production which satisfy these wants also increase. Freedom in this field can only consist in socialised man, the associated producers, rationally regulating their interchange with Nature, bringing it under their common control, instead of being ruled by it as by the blind forces of Nature; and achieving this with the least expenditure of energy and under conditions most favourable to, and worthy of, their human nature. But it nonetheless still remains a realm of necessity. Beyond it begins that development of human energy which is an end in itself, the true realm of freedom, which, however, can blossom forth only with this realm of necessity as its basis. The shortening of the working-day is its basic prerequisite."
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by fuagofire » Fri May 07, 2010 2:21 pm

magma wrote:I think socialism has perfect roots in human nature. The most natural human instinct is to be part of a caring family... the family unit is how humans made sure they'd always have enough... parents care for the young and eventually, the young take care of the old.

It seems that as communities expand, the "family" we rely on (and feel compelled to contribute to) expands to encompass an entire society.

Of course, human greed gets in the way, but that gets in the way with biological families too as any episode of Jeremy Kyle will tell you... but the majority of people just want to be pretty awesome to each other.
Yeah but imo it doesn't seem to work in big groups - you could get a group of 100 or so people who could run some form of socialism but i don't think its possible once you get larger than that.

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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by ben freeman » Fri May 07, 2010 3:10 pm

hayze99 wrote:
Ultimately, Hayek and all of that party closed the coffin up with the calculation debates. There's absolutely no way for a human being to even begin to understand how to allocate resources to a nation. I'd say the only chance for socialism is if computers get powerful and intelligent enough to do it more efficiently than the market; and considering that markets are unbelievably efficient, I don't see it happening any time soon.
This.

I believe that until we get to 'Star Trek' like levels of technology, where we got replicators and shit, socialism isn't gonna work.

It will have to be capitalism until then for society to be able to move forward, because it creates competition. And competition is needed to have technological advances to even get to these new levels. You give everybody equal shares, and nobody will have the motivation to do anything, people would be just sitting around with there thumbs in their ass. If you aren't allowed to have more than the next guy, what is the fucking point in even trying to work more, or create new technologies? People want possessions period.

Think of it like this: We all live in a society where we all get the same allocated possessions no more no less than their neighbors. How I am supposed to get a giant collection of records, studio gear, video games, etc, etc. ? I'll only have a certain amount of resources available for me to get these things I WANT. The point of capitalism is for me to be able to EARN my way to be able to have these things. It rewards you for working hard, which people should be doing anyway. If I lived in a pure socialist society, I wouldn't be doing SHIT, I'd just be hanging out the whole time, fuck working.

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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by ben freeman » Fri May 07, 2010 3:21 pm

And with today's cunsumeristic mindset, people want more shit than ever. There is no way people are going to give that up for a "sharing" society.

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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by rbnc » Fri May 07, 2010 3:35 pm

Is socialism a barrier a human nature? I hope so.
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by dubmatters » Fri May 07, 2010 4:55 pm

Slightly o/t but..

Why do the work shy dole scum have the same rights as the ordinary tax payer?

Bring back work camps and national service.

Teach the stnuc a thing or two about hard work!

We have become a country with a social underclass, who see themselves 'too' good for ordinary jobs yet they have the skillset of a fucking rat and contribute nothing to society. :u:
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by hayze99 » Fri May 07, 2010 6:29 pm

Okay, I'm going to build on this reply as I go along, because I'm a bit scattered right now.
Karl wrote:Hey Hayze thanks for your thoughtful reply. You raise an interesting point about extreme exploitation namely, how far is it justifiable in helping us reach a stage of industrialisation whereby we can fre ourselves from the tyranny of Nature. Here is my response to a few of the issues you have raised raised:
You're right in a sense that the development of the technical basis of production is a pre-condition for a socialist society - i.e. we must have the ability to produce sufficient wealth to be able to move beyond a primitive relation to nature - but I don't see why this is specifically linked to computers. What do you mean by 'efficiency'? You seems to have some conception of socialism as state capitalism that would simply compete against capitalism on its own terms - i.e. the pursuit of ever-greater profits. That is not the purpose of the society I want to see...

But even on these terms, how efficient is a system that sub-ordinates everything to the creation of profit? - so we have 'deepwater horizon' that for want of a safety valve is pouring 9.5million litres of oil into the sea. Or a system that is so efficient as to produce millions of cars that are stockpiled on lots and never used, in the name of competition. Or that ploughs trillions into weapons production to satisfy the demands of inter-imperialist rivalry.
Okay, now, first of all, these are all different things. Regarding the cars - this is a side effect of an efficient system - and a very minor one at that. The same could be said about stockpiles of bumper crops which are held back. (To take your own metaphorical style) - just as the cancer treatment that will save your life has very potent negative side-effect, so does the economy. This is a small price to pay for an efficient system which has given even the lowest earning bracket (in developed countries) fridges, cars, beds, televisions, and much more than the bare minimum for a comfortable life. We forget that before fordism came along the poor had a massive child mortality rate, were sleeping on straw beds, contracting leprosy, and usually would send their children to factories. The belief that the poor are not living vastly superior lives is one only reserved for the extreme consumer, who sees a non-widescreen tv as peasantry. Furthermore, taking a scientific approach, one needs to understand that no systems are perfect; or we'd have a perpetual motion machine built. Just as thermodynamic energy is lost in nearly all energy exchanges, so is some value in the market. This will never be fixed.

Regarding the oil valve - when capitalist society threatens them to prepare these safeties, levying them with massive fines and taxes, why do you think they would do it in a socialist society, where they're simply nudged, and told it's the right thing to do?

Weapons - well, again, that has nothing to do with capitalism. Weapons are purely political. The pure market has no use for weapons unless they are demanded by certain individuals.
This is a little simplistic I'm afraid. I do not deny that supply and demand play an important role in the mechanism of competition. But supply and demand cannot explain the value around which a price flucuates. How can this be explained?
Well, in a perfect market with perfect information, supply and demand would, in fact be the sole determinant of prices. However, due to the problems which I outlined as being massive brickwalls for socialism, information is extremely limited. With a homogenous item like wheat, where pretty much all information is given to everyone (anyone can grow and sell wheat; it doesn't require much info), due to competition, prices will always settle with demand. If anyone puts prices higher than those demanded, the wheat simply won't be bought. Any lower, and everyone will follow suit. The problem, is when information is vastly limited, such as in monopolies. Microsoft can do this because no other company has the information to simply create a doppelganger and undercut prices. They can therefore choose their own prices. This company structure is the equivalent to socialism, and it's what makes our market imperfect.
Was someone arguing this to be the case? Not Marx. Commodity production has existed at least as far back as ancient Greece. However there is a big difference between a society in which commodities are produced (i.e. many pre-capitalist societies) and capitalism where generalised commodity production is the organising principle of the entire process of production.
I understand there is a difference, but it is humungous; so what part of the difference, specifically, are you referring to here?
Do you mean an individual human or that human beings as a collective group can't understand how to allocate resources?
Let's look at the options:

If it's as an individual, then you are attacking an enemy that doesn't exist (i.e. not socialism as I understand it). Perhaps you are thinking of Stalinism, in which case I agree! A dictator won't know how to allocate resources other than by his own authoritarian plan, but that's not the only way to plan an economy.

Incidentally the market is also a result of human actions, not a force of nature as you seem to be implying. In fact capitalism is full of planning within each production process (the capitalist is a dictator of his own operations) - the anarchy of production in the market place is simply the result of the competition between these autocrats.

Thankfully the job of allocating resources doesn't have to be done by an individual - it is perfectly possible to have an economy based on democratic control from below - unless you have any plausible reasons why this is not the case?
I'm afraid this is one point where I have to completely disagree with you. I was talking about any quantity of human beings allocating resources; definately not one human being. As I stated earlier, information is not equal. Again, to use microsoft as an example, how would people understand, democratically, how to price their products? They simply wouldn't have enough information. Furthermore, a priori information is distorted between individuals, leading to unequal information. Some people would value products differently to others. Lastly, it is my opinion, that the general population are rather uninformed Even if you're talking about all the best economists in the world gathering together to set prices, it would not be efficient, the general public would be an absolute disaster. Regardless, how would one go about doing this? I feel I may have understood your point here, so please fill me in on anything I may have missed.

Regarding capitalism as a conscious development of human beings, again, I simply don't agree; still riding on the information problem. Again, I'm citing Hayek's theory of spontaneous orders. It argues that markets are a holistic system - the parts put together form a whole greater than those individual parts - it thus cannot be even close to being understood by any individuals. The same applies to language and law - no one man can understand them in their entirety, and no collection of people specifically led to their development. It was just the law of rising entropy turning simple systems into extremely complex systems.
The key sentence being "Parties are taxed and subsidised accordingly in order to correct this market failure." - who does this taxing and subsiding? The state? And who controls the state? In whose interests does it act? And when different states favour different interests.... you get Inter-state rivalry, imperialism and War.

Again, what is the alternative? The paradox of people not acting socially when threatened with massive fines, but then, in a socialistic system acting socially simply because 'it's the right thing to do' still holds here.
Well it certainly can't be put down to socialism, because we don't live in a socialist society
This still doesn't explain your stance. There's also no proof that it can put down to capitalism. Extreme poverty has existed since the dawn of civilization.
hayze99 wrote:non-monetary politics

Well, I'm mainly referring to the extreme corruption of politicians in many developing countries.


For the vast majority of us the resources are very limited - At least 80% of humanity lives on less than $10 a day. Whilst just in this country alone the richest 1000 people increased their wealth by 30% this year, during an economic crisis...
This is true, but first of all, citing currencies is meaningless. $10 in some countries will buy you an unbelievable amount of goods. Read below for my answer to this.

tl;dr: My main problem with the socialist ideas is that they flat out attack capitalism as a system. The problem is not capitalism - capitalism has brought us an incredible amount of wonderful developments and continues to do so. Capitalism does not favour anybody. Capitalism does not provide a system which automatically favours the bourgeoisie. It simply creates a system. A completely neutral system, with a certain amount of manipulability. This is where the problem comes. The greedy, evil humans manipulate this system, by an unbelievably tiny amount, and due to it's complexity, this creates a massive amount of negative effects (from our perspective in both respects). This has been going on for a long time, and is becoming increasingly worse. Again, this is not due to capitalism, it is due to human greed.

All that socialism serves to do is to increase the amount of manipulability in the system by putting it in further control of humans, who inherently are self-interested. What truly needs to be done is for socialists to stop thinking of capitalism as the enemy (firstly because it will never go away, and secondly because, ultimately, in their pure forms they strive for the exact same things) - and to work together, to close this gap of manipulation, rather than rip it wider. Capitalism, by definition, is not evil. It is simply a neutral spontaneous system. The people who attempt to manipulate it are evil, and need to be focused on.

So stop wasting your energy, socialists, trying to incriminate the wrong theories and people. Capitalism is not the idea that the rich should triumph over evil, it is simply the idea that this market is complex, beautiful, and inimitable - just like language and morals, and we need to fix it, not tear it down and attempt to rebuild it consciously. Would you argue to tear apart language? Law? Morals?

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ThomasEll
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by ThomasEll » Sat May 08, 2010 1:35 pm

Capitalist nature, not human nature is the barrier to socialism.
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-dubson-
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Re: Is human nature a barrier to socialism?

Post by -dubson- » Sat May 08, 2010 5:16 pm

TL_ wrote:Capitalist nature, not human nature is the barrier to socialism.
Done.

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