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Originally posted by Skyfloating
Put differently:
Imagine I have ten edible seeds. I can either give those ten seeds away or I can plant them to create a plant that will give off ten times the seeds I have right now.
Are you really suggesting I give people all ten seeds and plant none?
Originally posted by Skyfloating
Originally posted by iamcamouflage
When do you consider the most pure time frame of capitalism in America?
Industrial Revolution
Originally posted by Skyfloating
Originally posted by iamcamouflage
You say you are a capitalist who no longer really cares about money because you have plenty. Why dont you give all your workers a raise? Forget "investing" in the community. Pay the people who helped you get to where you are now.
You see...thats precisely where we differ massively. I believe that by investing and thereby making even more, more people can be ultimately helped than if I dont invest it and instead give it away.
I know that if I just give it away to them they will go and buy a bigger TV instead of invet it. Its OK for them to buy a bigger TV, but if I had invested it I could make enough for two people to buy a bigger TV.
When the majority of people decide they want to give freely and vote as such, should the world continue to be held back by the minority of those who still seek selfish ends?
What if 99% of the world converts to a humanitarian utopia. Should they all bow down to the 1% who don't want to help others?
Are you not forced to wear clothes in public, not kill people, pay your bills, etc? These are all forced with the leverage of their specific consequences, do you feel raped? These policies FORCED on you are in place for the good of all.
Let's say you have a group of kids at the babysitters. One kid gets there before the rest and hoards all the toys from the other later arriving children. Does the babysitter not say to the child "please share with the rest of the children?" Do we pity the child when he's forced to share? Do you equate his being forced to share to that of being raped?
By the logic of capitalism, that child worked hard to gather the resources and no one else deserves any of them. We could easily say the same thing about the natural resources which capitalist proclaim as their own on a daily basis. Ever hear that song "This land is your land, this land is my land, from the.....?"
This world needs to grow up and recognize that the land and resources really do belong to ALL of us and we need to share them, not allow a very small percentage of the population control them while the majority of those on the planet toil in filth, starvation, and poverty.
But this is all common sense, isn't it? Does this really need to be explained?
Originally posted by Magnum007
The plants that you gave away will in turn produce more seeds which will given back to you at an exponential level (more production), each person making more seeds than the next thanks to their different planting techniques (different working techniques to produce).
I just find it difficult to accept that everything is about money in capitalism,
Originally posted by brianmg5
Skyfloating, are you ignoring my request to debate the post I made? From what I've read of your other posts, I'm starting to agree with you on some of your points, however, I'm curiuos to know what you think of the allocation of natural resources as described below. This is the last time I'll ask so no worries if you don't want to respond, I've quoted what I orginally said below:
Originally posted by iamcamouflage
Ah yes the industrial revolution. When adults worked 70hr weeks for peanuts and children were the favorite factory worker. What a grand time this was for....the factory owner and super wealthy.
Originally posted by iamcamouflage
You arent just "giving" money away. You are investing in the worker that produced your wealth. An investment in the worker is the best investment you can make.
Assuming they dont eat the edible seeds instead of planting them. Which they will. As History has shown time and time and time again.
Originally posted by Magnum007
Capitalist will take the seeds, put it in an offshore seed bank, steal the other company's way of growing the seeds, expropriate people gain more land to grow more seeds, and then pay an illegal immigrant to collect the seeds at low cost... That is capitalism at its best...
Magnum
No good Capitalist exploits people. The idea is a marxist myth.
90% of the items you used today, including the Internet,
Originally posted by iamcamouflage
And there was TONS of exploitation that happened during this time.
Originally posted by amari
My own definition of socialism- Hand over your money to the government first and let the government decide how much of their money now you can keep and how you may spend their money. ^Y^
The second question arising before the people - that of leisure after work - is the indispensable condition of humanity. But bread and leisure can never be obtained apart from a radical transformation of existing society, and that explains why the Revolution, impelled by the implications of its own principles, gave birth to Socialism...
...Convinced that freedom without Socialism is privilege and injustice and that Socialism without freedom is slavery and brutality;...
In modern Anarchism we have the confluence of the two great currents which before and since the French Revolution have found such characteristic expression in the intellectual life of Europe: Socialism and Liberalism. Modern Socialism developed when profound observers of social life came to see more and more dearly that political constitutions and changes in the form of government could never get to the root of the great problem that we call the social question. Its supporters recognised that an equalising of social and economic conditions for the benefit of all, despite the loveliest of theoretical assumptions is not possible as long as people are separated into classes on the basis of their owning or not owning property, classes whose mere existence excludes in advance any thought of a genuine community...
Modern Anarcho-Syndicalism is a direct continuation of those social aspirations which took shape in the bosom of the First International and which were best understood and most strongly held by the libertarian wing of the great workers' alliance. Its development was a direct reaction against the concepts and methods of political Socialism, a reaction which in the decade before the first world war had already manifested itself in the strong upsurge of the Anarcho-Syndicalist movement in France, Italy and especially Spain, where the great majority of the organised workers had always remained faithful to the doctrines of the libertarian wing of the International.
Libertarian Socialism is a term essentially synonymous with the word "Anarchism". Anarchy, strictly meaning "without rulers", leads one to wonder what sort of system would exist in place of one without state or capitalist masters... the answer being a radically democratic society while preserving the maximal amount of individual liberty and freedom possible.
Libertarian Socialism recognizes that the concept of "property" (specifically, the means of production, factories, land used for profit, rented space) is theft and that in a truly libertarian society, the individual would be free of exploitation caused by the concentration of all means of wealth-making into the hands of an elite minority of capitalists....
The Libertarian or sometimes-called "anarcho-" capitalist movement was a reaction from the political right-wing against US president FDR's sweeping social democratic laws passed as a response to a powerful labor movement in the 1930's. The libertarian left had little interest in nationalizations or state-social-programs, arguing that they placed power into the hands of elite managers and not the workers themselves(pls note). The destruction of the original libertarian movement in the United States, (by mass deportations and imprisonment), as well as in Europe (The Fascist victories in Spain, Italy and Germany) left a vacuum in which was possible for one Dean Russell of the capitalist "Foundation for Economic Education" to write an article in the FEE publication, "Ideas on Liberty" of May, 1955 entitled "Who is a Libertarian?" which advocated that the right should "trademark and reserve for our own use the good and honorable word 'libertarian.'" In other cases, conservative Science Fiction writers such as Robert Heinlein and Poul Anderson used the term in their writing to depict fictionally virtuous forms of capitalism. It should be noted that these writers and others like them (Ann MaCaffrey, Daniel F. Galouye, Keith Laumer, etc.) supported the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. For more information see the article "Starship Stormtroopers" by Micheal Moorcock.
What these people did not know or chose to ignore was that at least two US libertarian socialist organisations already existed, one formed in July 1954 called the Libertarian League, started by Russell Blackwell, and the other formed in 1949 and called the Libertarian Book Club, an idea initiated by Gregory P. Maximoff, and formerly established by a number of anarchists, including: Bill & Sarah Taback, Joseph & Hannah Spivack, Joseph Aaronstam, Ida Pilot (a professional translator) and her companion Valerio Isca, and Esther and Sam Dolgoff. The Libertarian League of the 1920' was a simmilarly socialistic organization, but no longer existed. The Libertarian Book Club is based in New York City, and is still active today.
(This information is from the book "Fragments: A Memoir", by Sam Dolgoff, Pub. 1986 Refract Publications, Cambridge, England)