No, that's an aspect of being allowed to trade with other countries, which the Eastern bloc wasn't allowed while it was communist. (and it wasn't because the communists didn't want to trade).Yes, that's an aspect of freer markets for these countries. :-| — Thorongil
That's more of the combined effects of economic isolation and brutal dictatorship, not just command economy.No you won't. This is proven time and time again. Command economies are inefficient and ridden with corruption. Compare Chile to Venezuela today, for example. — Thorongil
Right, well you've only read in your history books, which are also propaganda to a certain extent, what happened. To expect that the enemies of communism would have said nice things about communism in their history books is of course silly. As I said, there were good parts and bad parts. I for one would not have thrived under communism, nor would I have liked it. But that's me. For some people it really was good.Okay, whatever you say, comrade Agustino. ;) — Thorongil
Why do you think it might explain it? — Agustino
Neoliberalism or neo-liberalism[1] refers primarily to the 20th-century resurgence of 19th-century ideas associated with laissez-faire economic liberalism. Such ideas include economic liberalization policies such as privatization, austerity, deregulation, free trade, and reductions in government spending in order to increase the role of the private sector in the economy and society. These market-based ideas and the policies they inspired constitute a paradigm shift away from the post-war Keynesian consensus which lasted from 1945 to 1980.
English-speakers have used the term "neoliberalism" since the start of the 20th century with different meanings, but it became more prevalent in its current meaning in the 1970s and 1980s, used by scholars in a wide variety of social sciences, as well as by critics. Modern advocates of free-market policies avoid the term "neoliberal"... neoliberalism "mutated" into geopolitically distinct hybrids as it travelled around the world. As such, neoliberalism shares many attributes with other contested concepts, including democracy. — Wikipedia
Neoliberalism sees competition as the defining characteristic of human relations. It redefines citizens as consumers, whose democratic choices are best exercised by buying and selling, a process that rewards merit and punishes inefficiency. It maintains that “the market” delivers benefits that could never be achieved by planning.
Attempts to limit competition are treated as inimical to liberty. Tax and regulation should be minimised, public services should be privatised. The organisation of labour and collective bargaining by trade unions are portrayed as market distortions that impede the formation of a natural hierarchy of winners and losers. Inequality is recast as virtuous: a reward for utility and a generator of wealth, which trickles down to enrich everyone. Efforts to create a more equal society are both counterproductive and morally corrosive. The market ensures that everyone gets what they deserve.
It seems to me that today both the right-wing and the left-wing pretty much peddle a neoliberal set of values, including political correctness, identity politics, what's good for the market is good for the people, consumerism, globalisation, sexual promiscuity, etc. Of course, there are exceptions on both sides, but despite the anti-neoliberal events of Trump's election, Brexit, etc. it seems that the neoliberal agenda is still going strong. Most of the Republican party is still neoliberal, and only allied with Trump for convenience. And the UK Conservatives pretty much remain as neoliberal as ever, except in a more underhanded fashion. — Agustino
So it's not a mystery at all that we noticed this decrease in the values of sexual mores (despite the increase in relationship instability) that is correlated with consumerism — Agustino
He notes that the "neo" in neoliberal means "fake" not "new" as it is normally used, these days. — Bitter Crank
No, that's an aspect of being allowed to trade with other countries, which the Eastern bloc wasn't allowed while it was communist. (and it wasn't because the communists didn't want to trade). — Agustino
That's more of the combined effects of economic isolation and brutal dictatorship, not just command economy. — Agustino
Right, well you've only read in your history books, which are also propaganda to a certain extent, what happened. To expect that the enemies of communism would have said nice things about communism in their history books is of course silly. As I said, there were good parts and bad parts. I for one would not have thrived under communism, nor would I have liked it. But that's me. For some people it really was good. — Agustino
So what makes them neoliberals? — Thorongil
They did not, so far as I'm aware, use that term to describe themselves. — Thorongil
Neoliberalism is a doctrine born out of the reinterpretation of liberalism in the years 1880-1890. — Akanthinos
I knew it wouldn't contain anything about identity politics, sexual promiscuity, and whatnot. — Sapientia
Right. Those are Agustino's (et al) obsessions. — Bitter Crank
*shakes head* self-congratulatory non-sense. You don't seem to understand the interrelations between these things. At least BC has tried to provide an alternative version (albeit wrong), but you Sappy :-}Yep. — Sapientia
Sure, it's not intended to contribute to it directly. That's a side-effect.Consumerism (as presented theoretically in advertising) is not intended to contribute to sexual license. — Bitter Crank
Wrong. You don't understand advertising theory, at least as it is applied in practice by people such as Claude Hopkins, John Caples, Eugene Schwartz, etc.Consumption is intended to take the place of sexual gratification. — Bitter Crank
Nope. More sex = more products sold. More condoms, more contraceptives, more sex toys, more porn, more medical drugs, more lawyer services (divorce), etc.A consumer economy tries to divert gratification from sex to buying products (which advertising sets up as a quick satisfying experience). — Bitter Crank
Again, that's not how advertising works.What confuses many people is that vaguely to specifically sexual imagery or innuendo is employed in advertising to transfer sexual attractiveness from our normal object (people) to tends of thousands of products — Bitter Crank
Yes, there are around 8 of what advertisers consider biologically programmed desires.Of course, libido isn't the only drive that advertisers work with. — Bitter Crank
No, not the directly intended object, but it is a side-effect of it. I've already outlined how. In order to sell you my weight loss product I have to sell you the benefit of losing weight, one of them being more sex. But that's not all, obviously. It's probably not even the primary benefit. Health and wellness would be the primary benefit. Feeling more energy, being happier, being more motivated, being more engaged in life, etc.Whatever theoretical model of advertising, selling, and closed sales is employed, "sexual promiscuity" isn't the object. Neither are political correctness or identity politics. — Bitter Crank
>:O Read one of the marketing greats. This is the idea they laugh at.Business is about selling stuff, or services, to people. Period. — Bitter Crank
If anything, I understand that democracy is nothing special. I don't have a fetish for it, the way you do.Because you seem a reasonable person in most respects, except for your opinions about politics, such as your frequent dismissals of the importance of democratic principles. It might be a consequence of not having been acculturated to democracy. — Wayfarer
Yeah, as if the neo-liberal elite will willingly renounce their money and power, in order to make space for social enterprises :-} . But yes, I am aware that the two (distributism and social enterprise) are very similar, although distributism is more complex and extensive than merely social enterprise.If your preferred economics is distributionism, that is pretty much what the relocalisation and social entrepreneur crowd are advocating as an antidote to corrupt neoliberalism - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_enterprise
So a smart government could get in behind an alternative. — apokrisis
And why can't a government-owned industry trade (presuming that other governments don't stop it from trading by force)? :sWhen you allow for private industry to a greater extent than it previously existed, then that industry, and thereby the country, can make more money by trading the products of that industry internationally. — Thorongil
Right, obviously - as I said before it's not the system, but other conditions that are more important.I won't deny any genuine goods provided by communism, but whatever they are, they could have been provided by another system, which means that communism still doesn't deserve any praise. — Thorongil
No, the Central Committee of the Communist Party (CCCP) was very much pro-family and anti-abortion, and otherwise socially conservative. Marxism(-Leninism) as it existed in the USSR and the Soviet Bloc was different than the Marxism espoused by the Western Marxists.I never thought I'd see you making a seemingly relativistic point here. It was really good for atheists who hated Christianity, the family, the kulak, the Jew, and so on, for example. — Thorongil
Yes, but they are also propagandists, and they're sympathetic to something they don't even understand. They read their own Marxism onto the Soviet Union.Little do you realize that there are and have been many people in Western history departments and among the general Western intelligentsia sympathetic to the Soviet Union. — Thorongil
Sure, I agree.Both ideologies were exceedingly murderous, but communism has by far the larger body count, a fact many communists like to downplay in various ways. — Thorongil
That's false, Putin has done very well for Russia.Putin is someone who has contributed to the economic isolation of Russia, is dictatorial, and is a craven political opportunist. — Thorongil
Putin actually is an Orthodox Christian and doesn't much admire the Soviet Union.I sense in the background of your remarks the positions of Putin, who pretends to be an Orthodox Christian, yet admires the Soviet Union and is a warmonger of the worst kind. — Thorongil
Yeah, the great social conservative Milton Friedman >:O >:O >:O . No, they weren't for that matter social conservatives. And even if some of them were, all that means is that they didn't understand the contradiction between their economic and social positions.social conservative positions — StreetlightX
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