Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by The Red Fox » Mon Jun 27, 2011 10:54 pm

Coito ergo sum wrote:
Cormac wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:No, I understood it. I was attempting to amplify, not argue.

Ah. Good.

I wouldn't like to be considered a Marxist.

Although, some of his analysis had something to it - specifically, the relationship of economics to politics. Although, in this he wasn't all that original...
One of my theories on Marx was that he really didn't see the proletariat as having any ability to contribute to government and that giving them the vote was meaningless. There ought to be a knowledgeable ruling party that would set the rules, and the proletariat would follow. The idea was that the equalization of everything (among the proles...) and selling the notion that that they were no longer ruled by a King would make them satisfied with their position. The conditions in, say, Czarist Russia were ripe for this because Communism could offer the serfs (who were no better off than abject slaves) could lift the serfs up a bit collectively, too. So, once you did that, then they would see they were better off than under their former despot and be happy with their lot.
Certainly not in their initial form. His theory was that knowledgeable oversight of a ruling socialist party would teach people to become self-governing communists.
What winds up happening, though, is the notion of a stateless communism, where the community functions for the collective benefit of the community never materializes because nobody knows how to make it materialize and how policy will be set and laws made without a State. So, there must be a State, and in a State which has plenary authority to control the citizenry, with the only goal to be communal advantage and communal equality, then there is nowhere to go but despotism over the individual.
Stateless societies can only work if the entire population is willing to partake and they are all at or above a certain level of knowledge. Without total control over one's actions and knowledge of all areas of running a country such a society will not be possible as there will still be dependent citizens who require leadership of some form. This is the inherent flaw of all stateless ideologies, Communist, Anarchist, Libertarian or otherwise. Humanity is not currently at a stage where technology or knowledge is at an advanced enough state to make stateless societies feasible. Though I do see the technology reaching that stage first. Lenin was convinced that it would take 500 years for humanity to reach a stage where communism was possible. His lust for power convinced him that was too long a time period to wait and instead decided to enslave Johhny Lunchboxavich "for his own good". C'est la vie.
We have some threads about this - particularly one about "what is 'true' communism" around the forum - it's a little old and inactive at this point. But, not a single proponent of Marxism or communism or any form or iteration thereof could (or can) explain how society is supposed to get to the "ideal" state and in fact to a person they can't even really describe what that ideal stateless society looks like (how laws are made without a state, how public policy is set without a state, how law enforcement is managed without a state, etc.). In my view, people have a fanciful notion of a society where everyone is treated equally, nobody has excessive wealth, everyone is cared for equally, nobody is hungry, and everyone is relatively happy, and they call that "communism" or "Marxism." Then they disclaim any responsibility for knowing how to get there and simply claim that the efforts so far have been screwed up by colonial countries and capitalist interference, or by the bastardization of the system by power hungry fascists. When asked how the "true" communism would come to be or how it would work, only generalities are offered - "there are many ways this could come to pass..." etc.
Many political philosophers, particularly anarchist ones, have attempted to map the details of such a society. I don't think people's objections about outside interference can be completely disregarded. I would imagine that a US which pursued a neutral or friendly foreign policy towards Cuba would have resulted in that nation's inhabitants being in a better position than they are now.
There also appears, in many proponents of communism and marxism, kind of a disconnect from it - like that living in a communist society would not impact them or reduce their standard of living in any way. There is sort of an unstated assumption that all it means is taking poor people and making them not poor anymore. That ain't it, though. If there was a global Marxist system imposed now, countries like the UK, Canada, the US, France and Australia, Germany, the Scandinavian countries - those are the wealthy elites who have been unfairly reaping the benefits of the labor of the poor in the world.....a great shift would take place, and everyone in the West would take a humongous hit.....if not get lined up against the wall and shot....but, that's another story...
We can only take a look at what happened in authoritarian socialist nations. Communism is a stateless ideology and therefore it's only speculation what would happen. Though I agree, westerners would be in for a massive shock when their consumer goods end up rising 100% in price because the production either shifted back to the west where decent wages need to be paid, or western wages began to be paid in sweat shops and factories in the far-east
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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Cormac » Mon Jun 27, 2011 11:09 pm

The Red Fox wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Cormac wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:No, I understood it. I was attempting to amplify, not argue.

Ah. Good.

I wouldn't like to be considered a Marxist.

Although, some of his analysis had something to it - specifically, the relationship of economics to politics. Although, in this he wasn't all that original...
One of my theories on Marx was that he really didn't see the proletariat as having any ability to contribute to government and that giving them the vote was meaningless. There ought to be a knowledgeable ruling party that would set the rules, and the proletariat would follow. The idea was that the equalization of everything (among the proles...) and selling the notion that that they were no longer ruled by a King would make them satisfied with their position. The conditions in, say, Czarist Russia were ripe for this because Communism could offer the serfs (who were no better off than abject slaves) could lift the serfs up a bit collectively, too. So, once you did that, then they would see they were better off than under their former despot and be happy with their lot.
Certainly not in their initial form. His theory was that knowledgeable oversight of a ruling socialist party would teach people to become self-governing communists.
What winds up happening, though, is the notion of a stateless communism, where the community functions for the collective benefit of the community never materializes because nobody knows how to make it materialize and how policy will be set and laws made without a State. So, there must be a State, and in a State which has plenary authority to control the citizenry, with the only goal to be communal advantage and communal equality, then there is nowhere to go but despotism over the individual.
Stateless societies can only work if the entire population is willing to partake and they are all at or above a certain level of knowledge. Without total control over one's actions and knowledge of all areas of running a country such a society will not be possible as there will still be dependent citizens who require leadership of some form. This is the inherent flaw of all stateless ideologies, Communist, Anarchist, Libertarian or otherwise. Humanity is not currently at a stage where technology or knowledge is at an advanced enough state to make stateless societies feasible. Though I do see the technology reaching that stage first. Lenin was convinced that it would take 500 years for humanity to reach a stage where communism was possible. His lust for power convinced him that was too long a time period to wait and instead decided to enslave Johhny Lunchboxavich "for his own good". C'est la vie.
We have some threads about this - particularly one about "what is 'true' communism" around the forum - it's a little old and inactive at this point. But, not a single proponent of Marxism or communism or any form or iteration thereof could (or can) explain how society is supposed to get to the "ideal" state and in fact to a person they can't even really describe what that ideal stateless society looks like (how laws are made without a state, how public policy is set without a state, how law enforcement is managed without a state, etc.). In my view, people have a fanciful notion of a society where everyone is treated equally, nobody has excessive wealth, everyone is cared for equally, nobody is hungry, and everyone is relatively happy, and they call that "communism" or "Marxism." Then they disclaim any responsibility for knowing how to get there and simply claim that the efforts so far have been screwed up by colonial countries and capitalist interference, or by the bastardization of the system by power hungry fascists. When asked how the "true" communism would come to be or how it would work, only generalities are offered - "there are many ways this could come to pass..." etc.
Many political philosophers, particularly anarchist ones, have attempted to map the details of such a society. I don't think people's objections about outside interference can be completely disregarded. I would imagine that a US which pursued a neutral or friendly foreign policy towards Cuba would have resulted in that nation's inhabitants being in a better position than they are now.
There also appears, in many proponents of communism and marxism, kind of a disconnect from it - like that living in a communist society would not impact them or reduce their standard of living in any way. There is sort of an unstated assumption that all it means is taking poor people and making them not poor anymore. That ain't it, though. If there was a global Marxist system imposed now, countries like the UK, Canada, the US, France and Australia, Germany, the Scandinavian countries - those are the wealthy elites who have been unfairly reaping the benefits of the labor of the poor in the world.....a great shift would take place, and everyone in the West would take a humongous hit.....if not get lined up against the wall and shot....but, that's another story...
We can only take a look at what happened in authoritarian socialist nations. Communism is a stateless ideology and therefore it's only speculation what would happen. Though I agree, westerners would be in for a massive shock when their consumer goods end up rising 100% in price because the production either shifted back to the west where decent wages need to be paid, or western wages began to be paid in sweat shops and factories in the far-east
Communist societies have no motivational driver.

They are not capable of effective distribution of even essential goods.

Central control is a stagnating force. Any such society will inevitably crumble and become subject to forces seeking to secure power. (At least until we're actually plugged into a hive mind. Which would be YUCKY).
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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by The Red Fox » Mon Jun 27, 2011 11:24 pm

Cormac wrote:Communist societies have no motivational driver.
The intended motivation is supposedly to work for altruistic reasons and for the good of the community. Money and greed are far more effective motivating tools.
They are not capable of effective distribution of even essential goods.
Centrally controlled societies tend to have that flaw. Unless you're willing to break society up into smaller tribal units which produce their own supplies. Tribes have been the only form of communist societies on this planet so far and they proved very ineffective once the population increased.
Central control is a stagnating force. Any such society will inevitably crumble and become subject to forces seeking to secure power. (At least until we're actually plugged into a hive mind. Which would be YUCKY).
Interconnectedness could potentially increase with technology. Christ, that'd be a utopia. Everyone connected to a social network 24/7. It'd be like having facebook implanted in your brain. Not even the borg were that cruel and merciless.
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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Seth » Tue Jun 28, 2011 3:10 am

Pensioner wrote:I think Seth is a bigger Dick taker than the other guy, you know what these religious nut jobs are like.
Sadly for your theory, it happens that I'm not a religious person, I'm a non-theistic Tolerist.

Death to Marxists and tyrants.
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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Coito ergo sum » Tue Jun 28, 2011 12:21 pm

The Red Fox wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Cormac wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:No, I understood it. I was attempting to amplify, not argue.

Ah. Good.

I wouldn't like to be considered a Marxist.

Although, some of his analysis had something to it - specifically, the relationship of economics to politics. Although, in this he wasn't all that original...
One of my theories on Marx was that he really didn't see the proletariat as having any ability to contribute to government and that giving them the vote was meaningless. There ought to be a knowledgeable ruling party that would set the rules, and the proletariat would follow. The idea was that the equalization of everything (among the proles...) and selling the notion that that they were no longer ruled by a King would make them satisfied with their position. The conditions in, say, Czarist Russia were ripe for this because Communism could offer the serfs (who were no better off than abject slaves) could lift the serfs up a bit collectively, too. So, once you did that, then they would see they were better off than under their former despot and be happy with their lot.
Certainly not in their initial form. His theory was that knowledgeable oversight of a ruling socialist party would teach people to become self-governing communists.
There's the rub. Every individual CAN'T be self-governing, because even people who have been "taught" (query: who has this knowledge to impart?) will always have a myriad different ideas what is best for "society," and very often what a person things is best for the society as a whole just so happens to also be pretty good for themselves as well. Self governing proles was promised, but how can that be anything other than a red herring? How - in actual practice - can every single prole be left to his own self-governing devices? How are laws made? How is economic, agricultural and industrial policy set? ...if all proles are self governing, then those questions still remain to be answered.
The Red Fox wrote:
What winds up happening, though, is the notion of a stateless communism, where the community functions for the collective benefit of the community never materializes because nobody knows how to make it materialize and how policy will be set and laws made without a State. So, there must be a State, and in a State which has plenary authority to control the citizenry, with the only goal to be communal advantage and communal equality, then there is nowhere to go but despotism over the individual.
Stateless societies can only work if the entire population is willing to partake and they are all at or above a certain level of knowledge.
Not only that, but there must be "agreement." Everyone could be flat out geniuses, educated in all the major disciplines, and yet there will be a myriad differing opinions on what to do economically, agriculturally, industrially and in every other aspect of society. And, how can there be a "stateless" society when even people with "above a certain level of knowledge commit crimes?" Whatever organization makes and imposes laws is a State. Isn't it? Therefore, not "stateless."
The Red Fox wrote:
Without total control over one's actions and knowledge of all areas of running a country such a society will not be possible as there will still be dependent citizens who require leadership of some form.
Nobody has total control over one's actions, and nobody can have total control over one's actions. Nobody can have knowledge of all areas of running a country. Not even the most seasoned politician in the world today, not a single elected leader, not a single economist, philosopher, professor, journalist, polemic, or any other person on the face of the earth has knowledge of all areas of running a country.

What's more, even if EVERYONE had total control over their own actions and knowledge of all areas of running a country, a stateless society could not come to be. Even person with that control and knowledge will differ markedly, dramatically and in a myriad ways, as to what should be done communally and individually. Any mechanism for resolving those disputes and opting for one person's view over another person's view is what? Isn't it a State? If you put things up to a majority vote, then you have a legislature. Once you have a legislature, you need a mechanism to administer the decisions of the legislature and enforce the legislation. Once you have those things, you have a government and a State.

The Red Fox wrote:
This is the inherent flaw of all stateless ideologies, Communist, Anarchist, Libertarian or otherwise. Humanity is not currently at a stage where technology or knowledge is at an advanced enough state to make stateless societies feasible. Though I do see the technology reaching that stage first. Lenin was convinced that it would take 500 years for humanity to reach a stage where communism was possible. His lust for power convinced him that was too long a time period to wait and instead decided to enslave Johhny Lunchboxavich "for his own good". C'est la vie.
Technology can allow every individual to participate in government, but that doesn't mean there is no State. It just means there are 7 billion legislators in Congress or Parliament.
The Red Fox wrote:
We have some threads about this - particularly one about "what is 'true' communism" around the forum - it's a little old and inactive at this point. But, not a single proponent of Marxism or communism or any form or iteration thereof could (or can) explain how society is supposed to get to the "ideal" state and in fact to a person they can't even really describe what that ideal stateless society looks like (how laws are made without a state, how public policy is set without a state, how law enforcement is managed without a state, etc.). In my view, people have a fanciful notion of a society where everyone is treated equally, nobody has excessive wealth, everyone is cared for equally, nobody is hungry, and everyone is relatively happy, and they call that "communism" or "Marxism." Then they disclaim any responsibility for knowing how to get there and simply claim that the efforts so far have been screwed up by colonial countries and capitalist interference, or by the bastardization of the system by power hungry fascists. When asked how the "true" communism would come to be or how it would work, only generalities are offered - "there are many ways this could come to pass..." etc.
Many political philosophers, particularly anarchist ones, have attempted to map the details of such a society. I don't think people's objections about outside interference can be completely disregarded. I would imagine that a US which pursued a neutral or friendly foreign policy towards Cuba would have resulted in that nation's inhabitants being in a better position than they are now.
Sure, because we would have traded with them more (i.e. engaged in capitalism).

But, in any case, before we jump off the cliff and say "let's make the whole world communist, because that's the only way we can have it tried without interference" we ought to have an example of a test case that works or even comes close to working. If North Korea can't communally run its country and manage its population so everyone in it can be fed and housed and cared for, what makes anyone in the world think that we could do the same thing globally?
The Red Fox wrote:
There also appears, in many proponents of communism and marxism, kind of a disconnect from it - like that living in a communist society would not impact them or reduce their standard of living in any way. There is sort of an unstated assumption that all it means is taking poor people and making them not poor anymore. That ain't it, though. If there was a global Marxist system imposed now, countries like the UK, Canada, the US, France and Australia, Germany, the Scandinavian countries - those are the wealthy elites who have been unfairly reaping the benefits of the labor of the poor in the world.....a great shift would take place, and everyone in the West would take a humongous hit.....if not get lined up against the wall and shot....but, that's another story...
We can only take a look at what happened in authoritarian socialist nations. Communism is a stateless ideology and therefore it's only speculation what would happen.
Sure, but even the speculation is opaque at best. Other than "it will be a society where people live in harmony, and all do what's best for the community, and everyone is cared for and nobody is poor" - what exactly IS a stateless society? How are laws made? Are there laws at all? Are there cops? Are there prisons? Is there a stock exchange and banking system? How? Is it privately arranged by those who want to participate? Or, is their a bureau or ministry? If so, whither statelessness? Do private individuals run businesses? How? The list of basic questions that I would think anyone advancing the idea of communism as a good thing would need to have an answer to goes on and on....
The Red Fox wrote:
Though I agree, westerners would be in for a massive shock when their consumer goods end up rising 100% in price because the production either shifted back to the west where decent wages need to be paid, or western wages began to be paid in sweat shops and factories in the far-east
Or, when they are lined up against the wall and shot because they have stolen from the proletariat their whole lives. The average westerner is equivalent to the haute bourgiosie of Marx's time. Even most of "the poor" in the evil western capitalist countries live at a level worlds superior to what the proletariat in Marx's day lived. They were slaves, living in huts, digging with their hands daily, and having what little they did produce stolen from them. Today, the poor have cars, houses, heat, electricity, running water, and free health care. Communism offers the poor in the west greater poverty, in the name of equalization with those that still live in abject servility in China, India, Africa, and elsewhere.

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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Coito ergo sum » Tue Jun 28, 2011 12:32 pm

The Red Fox wrote:
Cormac wrote:Communist societies have no motivational driver.
The intended motivation is supposedly to work for altruistic reasons and for the good of the community. Money and greed are far more effective motivating tools.
Not only that, but one person's altruism can be another person's evil. What is "the good of the community" to different groups of people within a community will invariably be completely different. What's better economic policy? What's better agricultural policy? What fertilizer should be used? What growing methods should be used? Should a new tool or device be manufactured and used for agriculture? Are the correct answers to these questions merely a function of education and knowledge? Or, isn't it invariably the case that on all such questions there are schools of thought, arguments, debates, and differing opinions on what is "good" and what is "altruistic?" And, if I think that it is for the good of the community that a new kind of harvesting machine be used in the communal farms because it will increase production and feed more people better food, then those that oppose me are not advancing the good of the community. And, when they feel my idea is ludicrous and a self-serving boondoggle, then they will think that I too am not advancing the good of the community.
The Red Fox wrote:
They are not capable of effective distribution of even essential goods.
Centrally controlled societies tend to have that flaw. Unless you're willing to break society up into smaller tribal units which produce their own supplies.
Those are called countries, and cities, and villages....all of which we have now. So, no need to create communism in order to accomplish that. Moreover, there will never be a situation where groups live separately on the Earth and produce their own goods and services without need to deal with other groups. If we have separate tribal units living near each other, and tribal unit 1 has a drought but tribal unit 2 does not, then unit 1 will ask for assistance. If tribal unit 2 thinks they don't have enough to spare, then tribal unit 1 will have to decide whether to lay down and die, or do something about it. If tribal unit 2 does have some to spare, they may have another need themselves and seek to "trade" with tribal unit 1. Whither communism?
The Red Fox wrote:
Tribes have been the only form of communist societies on this planet so far and they proved very ineffective once the population increased.
If indeed they were even communist. They were and are typically monarchical and/or oligarchical.
The Red Fox wrote:
Central control is a stagnating force. Any such society will inevitably crumble and become subject to forces seeking to secure power. (At least until we're actually plugged into a hive mind. Which would be YUCKY).
Interconnectedness could potentially increase with technology. Christ, that'd be a utopia. Everyone connected to a social network 24/7. It'd be like having facebook implanted in your brain. Not even the borg were that cruel and merciless.
Perhaps that is the inevitability - the next step to be humans merging their minds into one organism, essentially. It may seem dystopian to us, but once it comes to be it will feel normal to those involved, most likely.

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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Animavore » Tue Jun 28, 2011 12:39 pm

Hugo Chavez is a legend.

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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Coito ergo sum » Tue Jun 28, 2011 12:44 pm

Looks like young Hugo there pissed his pants.

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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Animavore » Tue Jun 28, 2011 12:47 pm

I know. That's why I picked it :lol:
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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Cormac » Tue Jun 28, 2011 4:17 pm

The Red Fox wrote:
Cormac wrote:Communist societies have no motivational driver.
The intended motivation is supposedly to work for altruistic reasons and for the good of the community. Money and greed are far more effective motivating tools.
They are not capable of effective distribution of even essential goods.
Centrally controlled societies tend to have that flaw. Unless you're willing to break society up into smaller tribal units which produce their own supplies. Tribes have been the only form of communist societies on this planet so far and they proved very ineffective once the population increased.
Central control is a stagnating force. Any such society will inevitably crumble and become subject to forces seeking to secure power. (At least until we're actually plugged into a hive mind. Which would be YUCKY).
Interconnectedness could potentially increase with technology. Christ, that'd be a utopia. Everyone connected to a social network 24/7. It'd be like having facebook implanted in your brain. Not even the borg were that cruel and merciless.

Agreed.
Agreed.
Yep, the reality is that utopia is a false concept - dystopia is not. Any utopian concept will, when probed, reveal its true fascistic core.
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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by The Red Fox » Tue Jun 28, 2011 6:32 pm

Coito ergo sum wrote:There's the rub. Every individual CAN'T be self-governing, because even people who have been "taught" (query: who has this knowledge to impart?) will always have a myriad different ideas what is best for "society," and very often what a person things is best for the society as a whole just so happens to also be pretty good for themselves as well. Self governing proles was promised, but how can that be anything other than a red herring? How - in actual practice - can every single prole be left to his own self-governing devices? How are laws made? How is economic, agricultural and industrial policy set? ...if all proles are self governing, then those questions still remain to be answered.
Some vague bollocks about collective will. That's the other inherent flaw in Marx's theory: he does bugger all to actually outline any of this in detail, hence the offshoots of Leninism, Stalinism, Maoism etc, with all greatly differing results. Ho Chi Minh's Vietnam was much different to Leninist Russia but they both claimed Marx as the basis of their political ideas. In other words critiquing Marx is like punching holes in Swiss cheese.
Not only that, but there must be "agreement." Everyone could be flat out geniuses, educated in all the major disciplines, and yet there will be a myriad differing opinions on what to do economically, agriculturally, industrially and in every other aspect of society. And, how can there be a "stateless" society when even people with "above a certain level of knowledge commit crimes?" Whatever organization makes and imposes laws is a State. Isn't it? Therefore, not "stateless."
The first thing to do is define what a state actually is. Everyone has different ideas of what does and does not constitute a state. A truly anarchist group, collective or nation would have to ensure there was no scarcity of products, which is currently impossible. From a philosophical point of view, what exactly is a crime? Is it an action deemed unjustifiable by the majority? In which case that would be tyranny of the majority. Some would argue that crime does not exist if the crime (or act) can be justified in the mind of the perpetrator.
Nobody has total control over one's actions, and nobody can have total control over one's actions. Nobody can have knowledge of all areas of running a country. Not even the most seasoned politician in the world today, not a single elected leader, not a single economist, philosopher, professor, journalist, polemic, or any other person on the face of the earth has knowledge of all areas of running a country.
Which is another reason why a stateless society cannot currently exist without descending into anarchy. Even anarchies such as Somalia end up having their populations form small groups and factions, it's human nature. I honestly believe the concept of stateless societies are impossible to realise; they contradict the human instinct for forming collective groups.
What's more, even if EVERYONE had total control over their own actions and knowledge of all areas of running a country, a stateless society could not come to be. Even person with that control and knowledge will differ markedly, dramatically and in a myriad ways, as to what should be done communally and individually. Any mechanism for resolving those disputes and opting for one person's view over another person's view is what? Isn't it a State? If you put things up to a majority vote, then you have a legislature. Once you have a legislature, you need a mechanism to administer the decisions of the legislature and enforce the legislation. Once you have those things, you have a government and a State.
Yep. It doesn't need to go that far; once you have a group of any kind or any number hierarchy will establish itself and therefore it cannot be anarchy. Someone will always dominate in decision making.
Technology can allow every individual to participate in government, but that doesn't mean there is no State. It just means there are 7 billion legislators in Congress or Parliament.
And it only takes one dissenter to throw a spanner in the works.
Sure, because we would have traded with them more (i.e. engaged in capitalism).

But, in any case, before we jump off the cliff and say "let's make the whole world communist, because that's the only way we can have it tried without interference" we ought to have an example of a test case that works or even comes close to working. If North Korea can't communally run its country and manage its population so everyone in it can be fed and housed and cared for, what makes anyone in the world think that we could do the same thing globally?
North Korea represents a total failure of the state to manage anything other than the military and the cult based around the Kim family.. It's more an illustration of what would happen if Scientology ran a nation. Besides, nation states are too numerous to run communally. There's too much anonymity and disconnect. Plus, more components, i.e. citizens, the more potential for a breakdown somewhere.
Sure, but even the speculation is opaque at best. Other than "it will be a society where people live in harmony, and all do what's best for the community, and everyone is cared for and nobody is poor" - what exactly IS a stateless society? How are laws made? Are there laws at all? Are there cops? Are there prisons? Is there a stock exchange and banking system? How? Is it privately arranged by those who want to participate? Or, is their a bureau or ministry? If so, whither statelessness? Do private individuals run businesses? How? The list of basic questions that I would think anyone advancing the idea of communism as a good thing would need to have an answer to goes on and on....
The means of production would fall into public ownership. A factory would be run by the workers there, for example. 'The state' would not need to exist as people would have been de-programmed from their capitalist indoctrination to became altruistic and sharing people with no desire for personal greed and therefore acquisitive crimes such as theft would disappear. If there were laws and agents to enforce them, the laws would need to be agreed upon by majority consensus and the agents of enforcement would attain, and lose, their posts by majority consensus. That's one interpretation I've read, there are many others.
Or, when they are lined up against the wall and shot because they have stolen from the proletariat their whole lives. The average westerner is equivalent to the haute bourgiosie of Marx's time. Even most of "the poor" in the evil western capitalist countries live at a level worlds superior to what the proletariat in Marx's day lived. They were slaves, living in huts, digging with their hands daily, and having what little they did produce stolen from them. Today, the poor have cars, houses, heat, electricity, running water, and free health care. Communism offers the poor in the west greater poverty, in the name of equalization with those that still live in abject servility in China, India, Africa, and elsewhere.
The assumption amongst western communists (remember that the vast majority are liberal, educated, middle class and bourgeois themselves, following in the tradition of all great liberators of us poor proles. Like Marx, Lenin, Tony Benn . . . ) is that the poor would be elevated to the status and standards of living as the middle class, rather than the middle and upper class reduced to the status of proles. The intention has always been to raise standards of living. But that's impossible when farms get collectivised and there's no bread.
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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Cormac » Tue Jun 28, 2011 6:59 pm

[quote="The Red Fox"] Long answer rubbishing communism and anarchism[quote]


(With which I agree).

BUT - what kind of red are you to talk like that?#

;)
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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by The Red Fox » Tue Jun 28, 2011 7:23 pm

Cormac wrote:
The Red Fox wrote: Long answer rubbishing communism and anarchism

(With which I agree).

BUT - what kind of red are you to talk like that?#

;)
Aw shit. I've been rumbled!

:leave:

Everyone in my town thinks I'm a communist because I went into a pub two years ago wearing an ushanka with a soviet badge on the front (It's my winter hat, I added the badge to piss people off). I've now been barred from said pub and the older folks give me funny looks on the street. :lol:
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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Cormac » Tue Jun 28, 2011 7:38 pm

The Red Fox wrote:
Cormac wrote:
The Red Fox wrote: Long answer rubbishing communism and anarchism

(With which I agree).

BUT - what kind of red are you to talk like that?#

;)
Aw shit. I've been rumbled!

:leave:

Everyone in my town thinks I'm a communist because I went into a pub two years ago wearing an ushanka with a soviet badge on the front (It's my winter hat, I added the badge to piss people off). I've now been barred from said pub and the older folks give me funny looks on the street. :lol:
I think you are a communist because you have the word "red"in your name... :ask:
FUCKERPUNKERSHIT!


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You're my wife now!

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Re: Hugo Chavez has prostate cancer

Post by Coito ergo sum » Tue Jun 28, 2011 7:43 pm

The Red Fox wrote:
And it only takes one dissenter to throw a spanner in the works.
That's why in countries purporting to follow communism, dissenters are traitors, and tend to get imprisoned or shot.
The Red Fox wrote:
Sure, but even the speculation is opaque at best. Other than "it will be a society where people live in harmony, and all do what's best for the community, and everyone is cared for and nobody is poor" - what exactly IS a stateless society? How are laws made? Are there laws at all? Are there cops? Are there prisons? Is there a stock exchange and banking system? How? Is it privately arranged by those who want to participate? Or, is their a bureau or ministry? If so, whither statelessness? Do private individuals run businesses? How? The list of basic questions that I would think anyone advancing the idea of communism as a good thing would need to have an answer to goes on and on....
The means of production would fall into public ownership. A factory would be run by the workers there, for example.
That's not "public" ownership. That's worker ownership. If it's public ownership then citizens who aren't concerned with the factory also are party owners.

But, the weird thing is - nothing is stopping workers from owning factories now.
The Red Fox wrote: 'The state' would not need to exist as people would have been de-programmed from their capitalist indoctrination to became altruistic and sharing people with no desire for personal greed and therefore acquisitive crimes such as theft would disappear.
That, to me, sounds ludicrous, because even if everyone is altruistic and sharing, there are questions as to how much sharing and altruism is sufficient. Are we to give all of ourselves to the point of Indian guru-like stoicism? Are we only to have one item of clothing and give the rest of our labor away for free, working 80 hours a week for the good of the community? Why not? Why would less or more sacrifice be reasonable and who is to judge?
The Red Fox wrote:
If there were laws and agents to enforce them, the laws would need to be agreed upon by majority consensus and the agents of enforcement would attain, and lose, their posts by majority consensus. That's one interpretation I've read, there are many others.
That's basically what we have now. We have elected leaders who lose their jobs if we vote them out. But, the folly in taking it further is that the public voting on law enforcement officials is like any sort of judge or local official election - about 3 people know anything about them, and the rest just vote for whoever's name sounds the most familiar.
The Red Fox wrote:
Or, when they are lined up against the wall and shot because they have stolen from the proletariat their whole lives. The average westerner is equivalent to the haute bourgiosie of Marx's time. Even most of "the poor" in the evil western capitalist countries live at a level worlds superior to what the proletariat in Marx's day lived. They were slaves, living in huts, digging with their hands daily, and having what little they did produce stolen from them. Today, the poor have cars, houses, heat, electricity, running water, and free health care. Communism offers the poor in the west greater poverty, in the name of equalization with those that still live in abject servility in China, India, Africa, and elsewhere.
The assumption amongst western communists (remember that the vast majority are liberal, educated, middle class and bourgeois themselves, following in the tradition of all great liberators of us poor proles. Like Marx, Lenin, Tony Benn . . . ) is that the poor would be elevated to the status and standards of living as the middle class, rather than the middle and upper class reduced to the status of proles. The intention has always been to raise standards of living. But that's impossible when farms get collectivised and there's no bread.
It's only possible in a state of plenty, which has always been a concern of mine about communism. Unless there is plenty for everyone, communism theoretically means that nobody gets enough. Scarce resources, when divided equally, means that nobody gets enough.

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