An 'ethno-nationalist state'? :eyes:BTW, the more egalitarian and inclusive the US becomes the less it would be a nation-state. A nation is usually a group of people who have ethnicity in common. — frank
Well then the US, at least, has never been a nation-state. 'Country', I suppose, is a less tribalist term. — 180 Proof
it's easier for like-minded to come together to form a small commune (where people can come and go), — jorndoe
Any societythat gravitates too much towards either sidewill collapse. — Christoffer
is a well-defined system of governance, and one with an absolutely disastrous track record at that. — Tzeentch
Lets answer the question: "is communism a feasible method of organizing states and large communities?" — Tzeentch
That's what I said, both are extremes that eventually lead to collapse. And we've also seen somewhat of a pure individualistic society through the neoliberalism movement in the 80s. Most of the Millennial generation has been formed as individualists and many of the problems today are the result of individualism, even though we've not seen a nation embracing it fully, since that would almost be anarchistic.
It has zero track record on a large scale. A label is not a system. — Vera Mont
Put an incorruptible AI administrator in charge instead of self-proclaimed leaders who seek power, glory and wealth.
It isn't the system that corrupts the organizers; it's the organizers who corrupt the system - every system. — Vera Mont
Communism, as stated earlier, is a clearly defined way of governing states. — Tzeentch
I'm assuming you have an idealized version of communism in mind, that (hopefully) doesn't include all the atrocity. — Tzeentch
there's no point in trying to defend something that has been so utterly and completely poisoned by its real, real-life implementations. — Tzeentch
Do you think a new political system can be born from the minds of people beholden to the establishment? — Ying
You’re stripped off your assets that is your house or any other property that you’ve managed to acquire and given to the state who in their wisdom wish to share it with the not so well off. — invicta
Supposed communist countries tend to become something else, something that (to me anyway) is not what the philosophers envisioned. — jorndoe
And we've also seen somewhat of a pure individualistic society through the neoliberalism movement in the 80s. Most of the Millennial generation has been formed as individualists and many of the problems today are the result of individualism, even though we've not seen a nation embracing it fully, since that would almost be anarchistic. — Christoffer
I never said it works on large scale. Of course, nor does any other ideology; all political systems are more or less dysfunctional; all collapse sooner or later in their history. — Vera Mont
I said all thought is individual. — Vera Mont
Anyway, in a nation-state or tribe or empire, you have to contribute. In a monarchy, a theocracy, a military dictatorship or a democratic socialist republic, you have to contribute in order to receive a share, unless the polity or ruling elite exempt you for some reason (illness, injury, extreme age or youth are the standard exemptions) and the society has the wherewithal to carry you. There is some variation in the range of choices any individual has in deciding what, when and how much to contribute, but that's more a function of prosperity and technological advancement than style of social organization. — Vera Mont
What's difficult is deliberate transition from one kind of economy to another. — Vera Mont
All societies eventually collapse, don't they, given time? — BC
The soviet system collapsed, but not merely from internal flaws. — BC
It cannot be said that any of the problems of today are the result of individualism. Greed, egotism, self-concern, which are often associated with individualism, are all of them perennial problems, not limited to any specific political epoch, and found in collectivists as much as in individualists. — NOS4A2
There is no individualism. There has never been any individualism. Everywhere we look the individual is subordinate to a collective state, bound to act in compulsory cooperation with people that are not his brethren or friend, and under rules that are not his own. — NOS4A2
Far from a liberal individualism, we have adopted the individualism of Carlyle, "the vital articulation of many individuals into a new collective individual". We have adopted collectivism. — NOS4A2
It has convinced people that their master is themselves. They now believe the conditional life of a conscript, a serf, a slave, is freedom, and an absolutist oligarchy is democracy. They believe that since they get to exercise their sovereignty on an astronomical basis (according to how many times the earth revolves around the sun), every few years voting for which mammal gets to dominate them, that they too are in control.
I suspect that this condition more so than individualism has led to the problems of today. — NOS4A2
Individualism is perhaps the biggest myth and scam of modern times. Philosophically dubious at best, ignores one of human beings’ most basic traits (social creatures), accepts the illusion of “self” as a kind of irreducible entity a la the atom, and is an outgrowth of some of the worst parts of Western culture.
All that aside, the most important point is that this kind of self-worshipping fundamentalism has been adopted and used by the ruling class, since at least Von Mises and Hayek in modern times, culminating in Friedman and, to a less serious degree, Ayn Rand. Much like Christians who want to justify what they want, they cherry-pick the ideas, these ideas become the ruling ideas, and provide cover and justification for plutocracy.
We see the results of neoliberal policies, as you rightly point out. By almost every measure, the results have been egregious — except for the ruling class, to which 50 trillion dollars have been transferred over 40 years. All in the name of individualism: small government, “government is the problem,” and other “libertarian” (read: unwitting plutocrat apologists) slogans.
And when this undeniable wealth inequality, monopolization, failure of the “free markets” (another useful fantasy), financialization, bailouts, etc., is pointed out — what’s blamed? The “state,” of course.
So yeah, individualism is a complete sham. But even if it wasn’t used to rob the population to enrich .0001% of the world, it’d still be quite ridiculous. — Mikie
possible (technically), sure, what about realistic/feasible (in light of observations)? You mentioned "not fixed", which might imply diversity, yes? — jorndoe
It's not individualism that is a sham. It's our western society pretending it works for the benefit of the individual that is the sham.
In fact, there's nothing individualist about our society. In the west it is not uncommon for half one's income to be taken directly in the form of tax. Meanwhile governments infringe pretty much at will upon individuals' constitutional and human rights whenever it suits them.
These are signs of a deeply collectivist society. We simply do a good job at hiding that fact, because governments have no interest in furthering ideas that would seek to limit the powers of government. Likewise, people who seek power over others have no interest in futhering ideas that seeks to take that power away.
Better pretend that philosophies of individual worth and freedom are the problem. — Tzeentch
Better pretend that philosophies of individual worth and freedom are the problem. — Tzeentch
That's the positive side of individualism, but the negatives like social fragmentation, inequality, egoism and selfishness, lack of social responsibility, loss of meaning and connection. — Christoffer
Individualism first and foremost states that the individual has inherent value, and from a moral perspective cannot simply be bulldozed by states or collectives. In my opinion, that idea is the very cornerstone of humanism. Wherever the value of the individual is not acknowledged we find, pretty much categorically, inhumanity. Human rights and constitutions are based on the idea that individuals have rights. I could go on. — Tzeentch
This is why I find it deeply disturbing that people on this forum have taken such an adversarial stance towards individualism, apparently attributing to it all the negative traits of our society. — Tzeentch
Individuals left to their own devices will generally seek voluntary, mutual beneficial relations with others. They will pursue happiness, but that happiness often includes the happiness of others. They will prefer coexistence over conflict, etc. — Tzeentch
Note also that individualism understands every individual to have inherent value, so self-aggrandizement at the expense of others - egotism - isn't has nothing to do with individualism. — Tzeentch
But some functions better than others, and the ones that don't function well are the ones falling into the extremes. — Christoffer
And with careful programming, over a long period of time, you can Pavlov an entire people into obedience, i.e thought crimes. — Christoffer
What is easier, higher taxes for social welfare/UBI? Or that everyone individually thinks of ways to contribute? — Christoffer
What's difficult is deliberate transition from one kind of economy to another. — Vera Mont
Which is what will happen soon with automation if predictions fall correctly. — Christoffer
But the Russians had Pavlov! Why didn't they program all those individuals?Viewed through a simplified lens, it showed that the strict collective ideology that tries to hold everyone together towards a singular goal couldn't accommodate the chaos that is individual thought and will. — Christoffer
People do not agree with each other, it's basic human nature, so how can a society be built upon keeping society moving in a singular direction without force? — Christoffer
The way they're all doing right now? Even the more robust socialist-leaning democracies. They're not all the same age, or at the same point in their economic development, or in the same circumstances and international relations. But they are all facing the same global threats and reacting individually, with mutual distrust - which pretty much assures their destruction. — Vera Mont
I doubt any authoritarian regime has the longevity to control a people's collective thought. Obedience is easy to obtain through fear; controlling thought is a different matter. In that, capitalism is much more effective: they do it though misdirection, flattery and blandishment, rather than threats. Religion, of course, is the ultimate system of thought-control. — Vera Mont
Level of difficulty doesn't come into it: what's easiest is whatever people are willing to support, and the government is competent to organize - but coercion works, too. In all social organizations, it is necessary for members to contribute. The more fairly and evenly the burden is distributed, the more stable a political system tends to be. — Vera Mont
I'm not convinced that that transition is deliberate. It seems more like a logical conclusion of capitalism which has been steadily sawing at the branch it sits on. The contingency plans for when the inevitable happens seem to me far less developed than the catastrophe. (Not unlike the covid crisis: it had been predicted for a couple of decades; intelligent precautions laid out by responsible health agencies -- governments balked, blathered and pretended to prepare, each according to its systemic nature.) — Vera Mont
But the Russians had Pavlov! Why didn't they program all those individuals? — Vera Mont
Who picked the singular direction? It's relatively easy to get general consensus on matters that benefit the population at large. People contribute for their common good or defence. What they object to is making sacrifices for the benefit of a few. And they usually put up with quite a lot of that, too, as long as the system feels stable; they don't revolt until the rulership is already teetering on its corruption. — Vera Mont
Scandinavian social democracies aren't falling, they're far more stable than most other nations with less socialist systems. — Christoffer
They've also flocked back to the Orthodox church, embraced western fundamentalism and consumerism, supported conservative measures regarding the personal life of citizens, fresh waves of antisemitism; lots of illusion, delusion and collusion, as well as lots and lots of organized international crime. All the symptoms of a very sick nation. What's any of it to do with communism?They have, and even now there are hundreds of thousands if not millions of people in Russia still believing in the Soviet dream. Some people still believe that Russia is the biggest empire in the world. — Christoffer
Sez who? And what does it mean? That anyone who intends to do good is damned? God hates good intentions and Satan likes them? So, if you want to be saved, plan to do evil?The road to hell is paved with good intentions. — Christoffer
Even a society that in its formation formulates a singular direction that everyone at that time thinks is a good collective direction — Christoffer
might soon end up disagreeing and then the leaders need to remove such people to protect the glorious nation and singular vision that everyone agreed upon. — Christoffer
In fact, there's nothing individualist about our society. In the west it is not uncommon for half one's income to be taken directly in the form of tax. Meanwhile governments infringe pretty much at will upon individuals' constitutional and human rights whenever it suits them. — Tzeentch
that might be understandable, for the US at least.elected officials like the Frump, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert, Wendy Rogers, Ted Cruz, ... — Jan 27, 2023
Against taxes (along the lines of NOS4A2)?
That would rule out communism and whatever socialist aspects of society. — jorndoe
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.