It seems hard to imagine the proletariat could possibly ever be a minority, as that would mean that a property-owning majority was somehow getting by on the labor of a minority. Hierarchy always seems to be a pyramid: it’s smaller at the top. — Pfhorrest
This is no admission at all. What you are saying shows that you have not come here to discuss ideas but to attack people.This is a remarkable admission and confirms my hunch that you’re here not to learn or to discuss but to propagandize and exchange fallacies with your comrades. — whollyrolling
Of course, it is the social groups that compete according to their needs and interests. But this conflict results in something that does not exactly correspond to any particular interest. Marx believed that it was possible to discover the laws governing this "impersonal" outcome of historical conflicts. In fact, he believed that his theory was a scientific explanation of the history of human conflict. According to him, it was the "impersonal" economy that ultimately determined human destinies. I don't know what you mean by "passive", but it was clear to him that it had its own laws and that it determined human behavior at the level of societies, even individually, in part.That economic structures determine the behaviour of social groups. Economic structures themselves are passive, they merely exist, they don't themselves determine anything. It's the necessities and responses of human social groups to them which determines their behaviour. — Isaac
Good point! My only doubt was as to the numbers of what might now qualify as the middle class. — Janus
Besides, capitalists shouldn’t defend communists lest they lose ther capitalism membership, right? — NOS4A2
Perfect. That means that each "field" or level of knowledge uses the "parameters" that are useful for its study. And history or sociology has its own, which are not those of nuclear physics or biology.Those parameters will be crucial to the development of any theory in their field. — Isaac
I'd agree with you that the result of individual systems interacting can be something which is not itself reducible to the outputs of those systems, but it's a step too far to suggest that it is not in any way constrained by them. Modelling human social institutions without reference to the human imperatives that constitute them is sloppy at best, regardless of the clear fact that the resultant institutions will be more complex than the constituent objectives. — Isaac
Have had much work, so I haven't had the time to respond or follow the discussion.Besides the fact that the proletarian (i.e. wage laborers) make up the majority of voting citizens it's curious that you think democracy dissolves into a literal dictatorship if a class conscious citizenry gains legitimate power and leverages it to further their own goals by reorganizing pre-existing property arrangements. — Maw
Well, this thread is about Marx, not Marxism, so I guess we are a bit stuck in the 19th Century. But of course I acknowledge that modern marxism isn't the same the movement was 150 years ago (or so).Marx oscillated throughout his lifetime between violent insurrection and peaceful democratic regime change, often as a result of whatever was going on in Europe, but if you can't grapple with the fact that a 64-year-old man changed his mind here and there during the course of 40+ years of a highly intellectually active life than you demonstrably can't handle this thread — Maw
Well, technically many CEO's and managers are "workers". They might have some bonus-system, but usually they aren't "owners" of the corporations, but hired hands. The ultra successful entrepreneur or family business are quite rare these days. Or would you consider high ranking officers, army generals, as "workers"?SSU: how do you define "worker"? Isn't a "worker" someone who is dependent on the wage he or she receives in exchange for labor? The wage, and the ability to labor, is everything to a worker. — Bitter Crank
And what's the problem with that? I consider myself middle class.Granted, a lot of people (just about everybody, it seems like) think they are "middle class". — Bitter Crank
Actually, the farmer is the perfect example of how problematic the class divide in Marxism is. Yes, the ordinary farmer might be even a millionaire if he sold everything, but then he or she would have nothing else than a fat bank account. Otherwise he or she might earn actually very little, so little that the job at McDonalds might give equivalent or better income. Yet if the farmer is a land owner, he or she is the root problem of everything to classic Marxism.As for the American farmer, blessed be the small farmer with less than 250 acres and only 40 cows to milk, most of them are bourgeoisie. True, they may drive a tractor in the spring and a combine in the fall (both equipped with air conditioning, GPS, computer tracking recording how much corn, soy, or wheat was gathered from each square yard (square meter) of the field) which starting purchase price is around $500,000. Or probably they hire farm workers. But the bigger their land holding, the less likely is it that they are actually laboring in agriculture. — Bitter Crank
Industrialization has finally come to agriculture, but that may be a subject for a different thread.What they are doing is much more a managerial function. — Bitter Crank
Not in my country, basically.They are poor neighbourhoods full of rubbish on the streets, shanty towns where illegal farm workers survive, semi-ruined housing buildings, immigrant concentrational camps in Greece or Italy. You don't have to go to Gambia to see something like the worst of Africa. But that is also hidden: we don't see slums on TV, we see places where bad people sell drugs until the good policeman arrives and... But we don't stop to think that drugs are the crust of poverty. Behind them is the wealth of the upper classes and the crumbs they leave for us subordinates. — David Mo
Protection of the rights of minorities is something that marxism is fundamentally opposed. It see's just this "rights" as a vessel for the enemies of proletariat. — ssu
I associated that with Rosseau (On the Origin of the Inequality of Mankind)Yet if the farmer is a land owner, he or she is the root problem of everything to classic Marxism. — ssu
“The first man who, having fenced in a piece of land, said "This is mine," and found people naïve enough to believe him, that man was the true founder of civil society. From how many crimes, wars, and murders, from how many horrors and misfortunes might not any one have saved mankind, by pulling up the stakes, or filling up the ditch, and crying to his fellows: Beware of listening to this impostor; you are undone if you once forget that the fruits of the earth belong to us all, and the earth itself to nobody.”
Not in my country, basically. This country has truly eradicated large scale rural povetry that there was in the 19th Century. It doesn't have shanty towns or people living on the streets in tents. — ssu
Otherwise he or she might earn actually very little, so little that the job at McDonalds might give equivalent or better income. Yet if the farmer is a land owner, he or she is the root problem of everything to classic Marxism. — ssu
Not in my country, basically. — ssu
That's what you have in the Nordic countries.You are living in delusion. The reason there is not more homelessness and poverty, and soon their will be, is ONLY because of social programs that exist to help the poor (and these are not even close to adequate). — JerseyFlight
There is a saying that the US is the richest Third World country in the World.. Further, I can't remember who, a study was done a few years back, maybe someone on this thread knows the reference?, that found the poverty in the United States to be comparable to third world countries. — JerseyFlight
You are the one living in a delusion and painting your own fantasies. Starting from thinking that I'm an American.You live in a delusion friend, and have been refuted many times over on this thread. — JerseyFlight
Finland.What country are you speaking, please? — David Mo
Did you visit the Soviet Union?You may be interested to know that at the time of declaring the end of the communist system at the end of 1991, what was known in liberal countries as "poverty" (i.e. having a lifestyle that would cost about $180 a month in a developed country, or less) was not even 5% of the Soviet population, and that because it had grown in the last five years. In the best moment of the Union it was less than 2%. The "misery" (people without housing, in street situation, without basic access to food and minimum means, etc.) practically did not exist. — David Mo
Such a political method is known as barbarism. — JerseyFlight
"The property in the soil is the original source of all wealth, and has become the great problem upon the solution of which depends the future of the working class."
Though this point might seem simple, it's most certainly not in our day and age. People do not think that wealth proceeds from the earth, most people believe it proceeds from innovation, pure idealism, but such idealism would have no matter to bring its form into being without the earth. — JerseyFlight
"At last comes the philosopher and demonstrates that those laws imply and express the universal consent of mankind. If private property in land be indeed founded upon such an universal consent, it will evidently become extinct from the moment the majority of a society dissent from warranting it."
Here Marx is attacking the philosopher for creating a false metaphysics which justifies oppressive power structures. Producing a metaphysics which justifies tyranny, is the default trajectory of every thinker that remains ignorant of class distinctions. In other words, though he thinks himself to be laboring in the domain of liberty, through ignorance he is actually reinforcing the oppression of the status quo. — JerseyFlight
"However, leaving aside the so-called "rights" of property, I assert that the economical development of society, the increase and concentration of people, the very circumstances that compel the capitalist farmer to apply to agriculture collective and organised labour, and to have recourse to machinery and similar contrivances, will more and more render the nationalisation of land a "Social Necessity", against which no amount of talk about the rights of property can be of any avail. The imperative wants of society will and must be satisfied, changes dictated by social necessity will work their own way, and sooner or later adapt legislation to their interests."
Marx's statement is already a fact. Social necessity has rendered the restructuring of private property absolutely imperative in order to meet the needs of society. But this is where it gets interesting, while Marx is assuredly correct, the question arises, even though serious changes are required, will necessity be enough to bring about an intelligent restructuring? The danger is that though the needs exist, a chain of power determines to defy these needs regardless of the ramifications. — JerseyFlight
No, it wasn't "great", whatever "great" is. I haven't been in the USSR, but I have been in Hungary and Cuba. At my host's house, a university professor, they didn't have a shower head. Not because they couldn't afford it, but because there was not in the store. But here we were talking about poverty. Not the level of consumption.The economy wasn't great. — ssu
(Btw, Guess you believe in all Chinese statistic too. Or North Korean?) — ssu
Yes, and the typical issue is that if in our criticism of our own society we are harsh and objective, we then tend to not treat other societies in the same way and even find excuses for them...typically some conspiracy theory of some sort.. I'm saying that you have to see things without the blinkers of propaganda. — David Mo
Oh they could afford it, but there wasn't any in store?At my host's house, a university professor, they didn't have a shower head. Not because they couldn't afford it, but because there was not in the store. — David Mo
When it came to the Soviet Union?Do you think that the World Bank's statistics are false? — David Mo
I think it's not so exceptional. Many West European countries are quite the same. And the closest example to the US is of course Canada. The real issue is how to find the golden road between the public and private sectors, how you get the best mix of public and private, between state programs like the various welfare programs and then leave to the market mechanism what it can handle the best. And avoid corruption or poor oligopoly competition. That's where the real discussion should be.Finland? You have chosen a really exceptional country. A model not very exportable. Like Iceland. — David Mo
You may be interested to know that at the time of declaring the end of the communist system at the end of 1991, what was known in liberal countries as "poverty" (i.e. having a lifestyle that would cost about $180 a month in a developed country, or less) was not even 5% of the Soviet population, and that because it had grown in the last five years. In the best moment of the Union it was less than 2%. The "misery" (people without housing, in street situation, without basic access to food and minimum means, etc.) practically did not exist. — David Mo
Would you please be so kind as to point at the source where "barbarism" is defined, as quoated by you? — god must be atheist
You apparently can't see he is describing the status quo, and establishes the observance of a universal truth. — god must be atheist
The chain of power is presented in an uprising or revolution. And you fear that the restructuring won't be intelligent... that is a very rational and valid fear. Restructuring may very well be done unintelligently. Both these notions don't contradict Marx's text. — god must be atheist
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