Maybe abolishing private property altogether is the ultimate answer. I tend to agree with this. But my (perhaps nitpicking) point was about abolishing capitalism (as I understand it) rather than every necessary condition for capitalism. That’s what my initial question was getting at: if we’ve eliminated the employer/employee (or owner/worker) distinction, then we’ve eliminated the one feature that (arguably) distinguishes capitalism from other socioeconomic forms— like feudalism. — Xtrix
you read into that that my position was that the best course of action for the US is to do that which would instigate immoral activity on the part of the Russians. — Hanover
No, what you're frankly out to do is continuously reiterate your narrative that you have some special understanding of the situation that somehow evades everyone else and so you stomp your feet around like that should make us better believe you. — Hanover
I agree with you that capitalism has become more and more widespread, nearly universal, as a socio-economic model and practice; and I haven't said otherwise. This is now so deeply entrenched that I think there is little hope it will change; not as we might want it to and certainly not rapidly. This is because there is no clear figurehead which represents it which could be overthrown, as was possible with feudalism.
So, as I see it, sweeping, rapid change is unthinkable and not worth wasting any intellectual effort on. The only way to effect any (modest) change at all will be from within the system itself. The system is now a juggernaut which cannot willfully be stopped, although it could indeed collapse, and inevitably will, if we don't address the problems of overpopulation, environmental pollution and destruction, resource depletion, impoverishment and destruction of soils, global warming, etc, etc. Problem is we can't predict when or how that will happen, so for the time being it is possible to remain in general denial — Janus
The essence of capitalism is capital growth or profit, over and above any growth in actual products. — Janus
Everything I have written has to do with what I originally wrote, if not with the OP itself. — Janus
At a hearing of the House Committee on Homeland Security in September 2019, Soufan urged lawmakers to take the threat more seriously. The following month, 40 members of Congress signed a letter calling—unsuccessfully—for the U.S. State Department to designate Azov a foreign terrorist organization. “Azov has been recruiting, radicalizing, and training American citizens for years,” the letter said. Christopher Wray, the director of the FBI, later confirmed in testimony to the U.S. Senate that American white supremacists are “actually traveling overseas to train.”
The hearings on Capitol Hill glossed over a crucial question: How did Azov, an obscure militia started in 2014 with only a few dozen members, become so influential in the global web of far-right extremism? ... From across Europe and the U.S., dozens of fighters came to join Azov that year, many of them bearing tattoos and rap sheets earned in the neo-Nazi underground back home. The Ukrainian authorities welcomed many of them, and in some cases granted them citizenship."
It's why we don't throw bad parents in jail for the acts of their children. It's that quaint notion of free will. — Hanover
Well, the Somalian government (that use the blue flag with the white star) are happy that the US are back. But that small detail doesn't matter I guess. — ssu
They really need to improve their advertising for it, because at the moment it almost looks as if no one gives a shit because they're black. — Isaac
Stick to issues you know. — ssu
It really wasn't about Minsk protocols or NATO enlargement. That should be obvious when the leader starts to talk about denazification. — ssu
Market dependence needs to go lest we recreate similar issues— I think that’s right. I think production should be driven by needs and by use. But since it’s the capitalists that create many markets to begin with, deliberately trying to cultivate desire and demand -- even when that demand is harmful to the population or to local communities -- I would speculate that if you eliminate the capitalists, the markets will improve as well. — Xtrix
It can be more productive to expand the discussion of contemporary capitalism beyond the framework of “the exchange/production distinction so that production becomes production-for-market.” — Number2018
To not lose the original-Marxist critical anti-capitalist perspective, it is worth to combine an expanded socio-economic approach with the notions of various surplus-values, apparatuses of capture, relations of power, and individuazation. As a result of the conjunction of these dimensions, on the personal level, articulating theoretical or historical perspectives on capitalism is also a matter of enacting a particular subjectivity, agency, or identity. — Number2018
Is there a kernel of truth in my thinking the state taking on private risk is least talked about (albeit most consequential) because it is a critical phase of the economic life of a mature capitalist state wherein it starts to move toward socialism strategically?
Moreover, have you seen this movement towards state-run economy attributes in other mature capitalist economies that are nearing market saturation (in the absence of wars of conquest), thus suggesting as capitalism matures, it's compelled to move away from free market purity towards a complex, mixed capitalist-socialist economy? — ucarr
If you ask what is "capitalism" -well, that is only a concept and concepts only exist in relation to their context. So, conceptually, capitalism is simply the application of capital. Capital is the legitimization of any action by social agreement. Social agreement means investment by a communities shareholders. Finally, the success of one's actions is judged by the creation of greater capital and failure by the diminishment of all shareholder's capital. — ASmallTalentForWar
However, that is the only "real" version of capitalism available. It's like baseball. I can tell you all the rules involved in the game, but knowing every last detail of the rules of the game will not tell you anything about how an actual game will turn out.
So, do you want to play a game of baseball (or watch one) or know how the game is played? That is essentially the problem of defining capitalism. What happens on the field is not going to match perfectly to the rule book. — ASmallTalentForWar
But that is not capitalism in the ideal sense. — ASmallTalentForWar
However, even where capitalism can take root, it does not do so without the liberal ideology to support it. — ASmallTalentForWar
So, capitalism was inherently associated with early ideas of liberalism where individuals could make choices that were not constrained by the aristocratic society. It is an expression of social philosophy, and not primarily economic. — ASmallTalentForWar
You can't really define or understand capitalism unless you look at what its original proponents intended it to replace. — ASmallTalentForWar
The essence of capitalism is capital growth or profit, over and above any growth in actual products. — Janus
At heart, the implication is that money is the proper measurement of economic activity, but that is only true is the currency of transaction is limited by the real activity of an economy. — ASmallTalentForWar
It's about profit. — frank
The headache with capitalism is the concept of profit tied to the accumulation of currency. If the currency is connected to some real economic base then that makes sense in that its accumulation will be restrained by real world transactional value. However, when it becomes solely imaginary numbers, then the association with currency and profit is not truly capitalist. — ASmallTalentForWar
I think this is the first time in my posting on this philosophy forum that I have not successfully gotten the gist/understanding of the OP and further exposition on the OP on this thread. (I read the thread three times) And I don't mean to say that this is the fault of Streetlight. I mean, my reading comprehension, for some reason, is low when reading this thread. I take this seriously; and I don't have an answer. I'm sure this is a well thought-out thread. — L'éléphant
Interest, or the realization of profit, or increase in capital. without having to produce anything, seems to be the essence of capitalism. — Janus
Hopefully you know what the US nuclear triad means. Hence two of those legs of the triad aren't in any NATO country, but in CONUS and on (under) the seas. What are deployed in NATO countries are the old free fall nukes, which also can be dropped by some aircraft of NATO countries. But these are limited and notice that the nuclear weapons haven't been deployed to Eastern NATO states (the map above). So it's extremely unlikely that they would be deployed (meaning that they are storaged) into Sweden or Finland. — ssu