 schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
          schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
         It is exactly such situations that offer struggle. Humans are built to engage in struggle. — universeness
 Maw
Maw         
         Because since 1848, we’ve seen great strides in the whole Marxist revolution working out — schopenhauer1
 _db
_db         
         This privately owned situation is near impossible to change. — schopenhauer1
 schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
          Maw
Maw         
         Hippies in the 60s? What are we talking? Can’t be civil rights movement. — schopenhauer1
 schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
          schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
          Maw
Maw         
         This privately owned situation is near impossible to change.
It follows that it would then be best to not expose new people into this unjust, intractable situation. — schopenhauer1
 Maw
Maw         
         Marxisms were tried and failed. All you got is the Nordic model at best. — schopenhauer1
 schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
          universeness
universeness         
         It is exactly such situations that offer struggle. Humans are built to engage in struggle.
— universeness
This is bad faith. — schopenhauer1
 Agent Smith
Agent Smith         
          kudos
kudos         
          schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
         rather than a historical one that can be replaced. — _db
 schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
         Where is the rationality in antinatalism? — kudos
 kudos
kudos         
          schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
         Do you mean a Marxist would find it immoral to raise children under a system so contrary to their version of social good? — kudos
It’s not clear if Marx had ever claimed to have created a blueprint for a good world; could you define this good you claim Marxists are looking for? — kudos
We have a future that is somewhat bleak for those who are emotionally invested in consciously building this superstructure. — kudos
However, I don’t think it’s solely a personified reality-authoring that Marx and Engels had in mind. It is also a type of refinement of existing attitudes and values to their ideological core. — kudos
 180 Proof
180 Proof         
         Communism.It’s not clear if Marx had ever claimed to have created a blueprint for a good world; could you define this good you claim Marxists are looking for?
— kudos
Unexploited, unalienated worker paradise ... — schopenhauer1
 kudos
kudos         
         I don't think so. I think they had a project for a new way of socioeconomic life.
 schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
         I've sketched a quasi-convergence of "Marxism & antinatalism" in an old post (elaborated further in a second link embedded therein) to which you did not directly reply: — 180 Proof
 schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
         Was there ever a call out directly for radical change? Besides, what’s so radical about the working class controlling their path in collective will power? We consider that normal today in the form of guilds, unionization, labour parties, and practically nobody dares call themselves a Marxist.
TCM was less than a hundred pages long and it didn’t contain the itinerary for socioeconomic life in detail, but set forth the types of ideas that life would be built upon; how capitalism could revitalize itself from the core identity. I’m not an expert on Marx so someone can please correct me if I’m wrong, but the subject of Communist government did not represent a large portion of Marx’s work. — kudos
 180 Proof
180 Proof         
         Well, then don't breed, comrade.All of this just doesn't seem likely. Until then, best not throw more workers into the mix. — schopenhauer1
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