What should I live for or how should I live? — rossii
No they don't. They've gotten away with it for decades by making people focus on the culture war. — Mr Bee
Do you really think it is just to take the fruits of someone else’s labor without their consent? — NOS4A2
Communism explicitly aims to socialize the bourgeoisie, that is to say, repress and steal from the upper middle and rich classes and (supposedly) give to the poor working class. — Tzeentch
What do you believe? — Tzeentch
Who is more philosophically significant in the modern world? — Bret Bernhoft
Bill Hicks and Joe Rogan both spoke (at one point or another) about the importance of manifesting one's mind through the use of pragmatism, tools and self-reflection. — Bret Bernhoft
Those darned advertisers convincing people they need pointless luxuries! — Tzeentch
Wouldn't it be nice if we could take all of that money and instead use it for useful things? — Tzeentch
your characterization of advertising as a means to sell people things they don't need suggests you both consider people too stupid to make such choices for themselves and yourself an expert on determining what is best for others. — Tzeentch
You may be a closet authoritarian, I'm afraid. — Tzeentch
If you're the hippie commune type I take all of that back, — Tzeentch
Collectivism isn't the same as communism, and China isn't communist (anymore). — Tzeentch
But if you want to compare the domestic policies of the US with China and suggest they're similar then that is laughable. — Tzeentch
A big mess of repression, surveillance, authoritarianism, genocide, etc. — Tzeentch
After your endless displays of Trump boot-licking you would have us believe that you’re some sort of anarchist? I suppose it’s good that you recognize your lack of responsibility though, very Trumpian. — praxis
Capitalism did something amazing. It took the old aristocracy out of the picture and made everyone equal under the law. — Tate
In fact the entire advertising industry operates on the complete opposite goal: create desires for things not needed.
— Xtrix
Ah, one styles themselves the arbiter of who needs what. Spoken like a true 'collectivist'. — Tzeentch
A big mess of repression, surveillance, authoritarianism, genocide, etc. — Tzeentch
China — Tzeentch
Please don't use China as an example for successful collectivism. It's a powerful state. — Tzeentch
I understand collectivism to be a term to describe state policies — Tzeentch
Sure, capitalism is far from perfect, but at least a successful capitalist has to produce something others want to buy — Tzeentch
which is why its many evils also went along with many goods - history's collectivist projects cannot say the same. — Tzeentch
Though I understand collectivism to be a term to describe state policies (and in recent times also supranational organisations), and collectivist states to be states that act with collectivism as their goal. — Tzeentch
That despite having been tried and having produced by far the worst track record of any system in human history, — Tzeentch
The problem with collectivism is simple. It is the outright subjugation of the individual to the ideology of the state — Tzeentch
Let's suppose they were all beautifully innocent savages, which they certainly were not. ... What was it that they were fighting for, if they opposed white men on this continent? For their wish to continue a primitive existence, their right to keep part of the earth untouched, unused, and not even as property, but just keep everybody out so that you will live practically like an animal?
Except they too often get elected. — Banno
Someone made this inquiry from the US and the results absolutely horrible. — ssu
Well, it has been seven months from this exchange. All only a supply chain problem, still? — ssu
Of course there are many reasons for the inflation, the effects of the pandemic, the war and both previous fiscal and monetary policy. But as the US is now in recession, it's interesting to see what the Fed will actually do from here onwards. — ssu
Then in terms of wages, benefits, you’ve had what others thought you deserved. — NOS4A2
Trade unions, if they get powerful in the US, won't change the system. Sorry. They aren't going to be an engine of change. — ssu
And along with safety issues and other work related stuff, higher wages are the objectives of trade unions. — ssu
The government, in the USA at least, has been mostly anti-labor and pro-capitalist.
— Moliere
Since the 1980s, yes. Before that, no. — Tate
setting up a new dynamic that made the labor movement possible. — Tate
Yea, it's true. — Tate
If unionization is one step away from communism, then that 98% of Finnish active officers belong to a trade union makes me smile. After all, it's just an army that has since it's inception fought and prepared to fight Bolshevism, the Soviet Union and Soviet infiltration until the end of the Cold War and basically has been the only institution where Finlandization didn't happen at all. You really will not find in Finnish officer ranks an officer with political ideas like Hugo Chavez. — ssu
Far better example would be the United Kingdom and it's Labour party and politicians like Tony Blair or Gordon Brown (not just Jeremy Corbyn). — ssu
The Myth of the Individual in the USA mitigated against the uptake of unions. A Real Man stands on his own, not needing others to help him negotiate his workplace contract.
Hence the Myth of the Individual helped ceed power to corporations, resulting in the failed democracy that is the modern USA. — Banno
The worst faulty idea about trade unions is that they are a socialist endeavour promoting socialism. — ssu
Union dues was another tax. Shitty workers never got fired or reprimanded so we all just stooped to their level. — NOS4A2
I always hated working for a union. — NOS4A2
I'd say this isn't lost on the majority of union people. I know that my preferred way of looking at unions is as institutions for working people to obtain power over the economy -- that is, a kind of socialism — Moliere
Unions have self-inflicted wounds, certainly, some of them near fatal. But it Is also the case that unions, unionizing, union leadership, union thinking -- all of it has been subject to really sustained attacks by both corporations and government. Legal barriers have been placed in the way of union formation. Unions are restricted in their ability to support each other (no secondary boycotts, for instance). State governments have stood ready to assist in breaking strikes (like, by protecting scabs crossing picket lines). There are companies specializing in anti-union strategies. There is a strong anti-unionization bias in media. ETC. — Bitter Crank
My work history has been mostly in the non-profit sector--an area as in need of unions as any other, but is additionally hobbled by do-good thinking that discourages unions. I was a member of AFSCME while employed at the University. AFSCME didn't seem to be very effective at this location. Some groups at the U were represented by the Teamster Union, which seemed to be a better representative and organizer. — Bitter Crank
Alot of experts still think that this will significantly cut down climate emissions so I'll take it. — Mr Bee
Do you have any views about what a phenomenological approach to this model might be? In the light of the process of being and becoming and how we are constantly changing and reinventing self - how does this sit alongside your more pragmatic model which seems to rest upon a realist worldview? Does this make sense? — Tom Storm