The last, most difficult. and longest phase of the revolution will be the working class (which is, you know, most of the people in an industrialized country) learning how to be Socialist Citizens who can intelligently and competently manage their very large economy, regulate their own industrial activities for the common good, maintain a free, culturally rich society, attend promptly to the massive environmental problems which we have, and so forth. A lot of individual and group learning will have to take place in this revolution. The tricky part will be surviving this stage until we all get good at playing our respective roles. — Bitter Crank
That wouldn't be all of the workers getting an equal say in things, etc., would it? — Terrapin Station
You're still going to need structural hierarchies in some situations to produce things, but one thing that could be done is to rotate people in and out of positions--to take turns driving, basically.
But even if you don't do that, since workers are having equal say regularly, someone trying to negatively exploit others doesn't sustain a power relationship where the people being exploited can't do anything about it. — Terrapin Station
I just don't think it would be that simple. There's also group think- tyranny of the majority. Let's say you're part of the guild of the widget programmers... The other programmers are not to your liking. You don't like their style. Where do you go? Other widget programmer organizations? Who decides who is in and who is out? There has to be a level of coordination and autonomy to make decisions which a collective cannot always do. I am willing to bet either hierarchies will naturally form, or some form of exploitation, individual or group-based will ensue. Instead of an individual, it may be a process that becomes exploitive but deemed necessary. Then perhaps the labor itself is simply exploitive of the worker as the demands of the labor are such that the worker will simply need to be used and alienated for this product to be created. — schopenhauer1
But the main point of this thread is rather about the intractable problem of exploitation that Marx thinks can be resolved in his Manifesto and Das Kapital with a complete worker-led economy. — schopenhauer1
That doesn't mean that the manager deserves to be living in a penthouse. Managing the flow of work is just another job at which some people are better than others. A much higher level of thinking will be expected of brain researchers than will be expected of enterprise managers. Brain research is a job. Just because it is highly specialized and technically demanding, doesn't mean the brain researchers should live in palaces overlooking the ocean. — Bitter Crank
Does that sound familiar to you? Maybe I just need to hang out in better circles :chin: — ZhouBoTong
And I don't know how you have a perfect mini-example ready to support every idea you have, but great stuff. — ZhouBoTong
That doesn't mean that the manager deserves to be living in a penthouse. Managing the flow of work is just another job at which some people are better than others. A much higher level of thinking will be expected of brain researchers than will be expected of enterprise managers. Brain research is a job. Just because it is highly specialized and technically demanding, doesn't mean the brain researchers should live in palaces overlooking the ocean. — BitterCrank
I really like this part. But when I say stuff like that, I get the sense that everyone else in the room thinks I am crazy. I am fairly confident that you are an American who has lived through more than a couple decades...Have you found more or less acceptance for these ideas in your life? I get the sense that from Reagan until a couple years ago, American mindsets were generally headed in the opposite direction - something along the lines of, "of course the manager and the brain researcher deserve more money! what do you mean why?!?! Isn't it obvious?!?!"
Does that sound familiar to you? Maybe I just need to hang out in better circles :chin:
And I don't know how you have a perfect mini-example ready to support every idea you have, but great stuff. — ZhouBoTong
Well, the thing is people you specialise are specialised. Given that having a company full of managers would be pretty dumb the weight of responsibility falls on a few individuals. Such individuals require special abilities not everyone possesses OR is willing to learn. In other areas a person commits themselves to one specific area of interest in order to reap the benefits ... but they may fail. The issue is about planning, organisation, dedication and risk assessment. People good at this, who’ve put themselves in such positions, are more capable. You could argue that the workers can be their own manager, but I don’t see how that is going to work at all in high-end businesses because it is a matter of quick decision making not a matter of adding several layers of voting by people who spend more time dedicated to their role in the business - which would still have its own special perspective to some degree.
It isn’t ‘fair’ that not everyone is capable of managing a company. So what? Neither is it ‘fair’ for someone to work 70+ hours a week and suffer the burden of responsibility when those below lose their jobs, complain and strike. A certain degree of resolve is needed to manage, and a good manager will be one respected by the workers and who respects the workers. — I like sushi
Of course you be in favour of no innovation and a return to the stone age? In which case your position makes some sense, but you’d likely end up as a serf or slave due to the brutal nature of nature. My advice is to lap up the privilege you’ve inherited now because we’re living in a time of plenty so don’t be complacent with the knowledge and understanding that abounds.
Jealousy is not the best principle to live by. Go make something of yourself :) then you can give your excess money to your employees and live in squalor. Do that and see what happens I beg you. If you’re successful you may actually change attitudes and convictions - I’d certainly wish you all the best and cheerlead our efforts :) — I like sushi
can't imagine how a decentralized manufacturing system could coordinate all these elements coming together in one place as the finished product. — Bitter Crank
My little jibe was more or less about the benefits of listening to who most strongly disagrees with you — I like sushi
"why don't they deserve even more?" — ZhouBoTong
No body is entitled to specific share (unless it is workers, who from a socialist perspective, deserve it all). — Bitter Crank
That's my theory and I'm sticking with it. — Bitter Crank
Has anyone read “The Bottom Billion” ? Interesting book. Easy reading economics book where the author looks at the factors which play into a countries prosperity. — I like sushi
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