novaveritas
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jun 8, 2018
- Messages
- 991
jeezYes that’s correct, I’d kill u for your calling me a gamon if there was no police. Lol
gammon has 2 ms
lets not start this again, 5.45x39 says you wouldn't.
jeezYes that’s correct, I’d kill u for your calling me a gamon if there was no police. Lol
I'd like to think that wouldn't happen. you don't need a central authority to keep people from misbehaving, all you need is a strong (coherent / strong social bonds, not militarily strong) society to keep people like that in check
Capitalism is not bad. It's great. It's at the heart of so much wonderful innovation. It's just uncontrolled under regulated capitalism that is so harmful.
you can do that anyway. if the only thing stopping you from murdering people in cold blood is the fear of being caught and held accountable, then you are one of those violent psychopaths you fear will control society without a powerful central authorityif there was no police I could kill youfor any reason.
no matter how you go about it, capitalism requires growth to prosper, requires new markets to grow into. infinite growth is physically impossible though, so at some point you will absolutely reach a point where capitalism starts cannibalizing itself because there's no more room to grow. we may disagree on where that point lies, on where the optimal time is to transition to a system that functions and prospers under sustainability rather than growth, but that such a point exists is an immutable factJust because we have experienced harm from unrestrained capitalism doesn't mean we should ditch it. It just means we need more controls.
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Not only that, but by every measurable metric, capitalist countries are worse off than any other and the greatest "wealth" of these capitalist nations aren't from capitalism but from a combination of colonialism, imperialism, slavery, protectionism at their worst or at best, from social democracy measures at their best.
no, value is not imagined. labor has an inherent value because it's productive, materials and commodities have inherent value because things can be produced with them. things which are useful have real, objective value. money has no inherent value because it's only a placeholder for valueValue is all imagined.
no, value is not imagined. labor has an inherent value because it's productive, materials and commodities have inherent value because things can be produced with them. things which are useful have real, objective value. money has no inherent value because it's only a placeholder for value
that's exactly right. a loaf of bread will be more valuable to a hungry person than a sated one, but that it has value is still indisputable. how much value something has depends on context, but that doesn't mean that value doesn't really existI would say the answer is that it depends. Which means it is variable based on perception.
All value is perceived. Something is worth whatever someone is willing to part with for it.
that's exactly right. a loaf of bread will be more valuable to a hungry person than a sated one, but that it has value is still indisputable. how much value something has depends on context, but that doesn't mean that value doesn't really exist
capitalism doesn't need value to grow, it needs markets. i suspect but can't prove that the unavailability of new markets, via artificial restrictions (stuff like monopolies and rent seeking, not regulation, regulations are necessary for capitalism to thrive) are a big part of the reason why the boom/bust cycle has always been unavoidable under capitalismLimitless growth, in the sense of increased value, is possible.
Infinite growth is only impossible if it's tried to deal resources. But real resources aren't the only ones that exist. Value is all imagined. Sometimes it's from a finite resource, but it doesn't have to be.
Uhh, could you give me some examples of the countries better off that aren't capitalist?
i suspect but can't prove that the unavailability of new markets, via artificial restrictions (stuff like monopolies and rent seeking, not regulation, regulations are necessary for capitalism to thrive) are a big part of the reason why the boom/bust cycle has always been unavoidable under capitalism
overpopulation isn't a real issue. there's more than enough produced now to support billions more, it's just held hostage and wasted by the capitalist class because they'd rather murder everyone that they cant extract profit fromTathra don't you realize depopulation is the ultimate answer to human overpopulation, at which point ideology falls apart?
YES IT IS if we can ONLY live at 2 billion SUSTAINABLE IF GREEN... that's what scientists said. Don't make me source it.overpopulation isn't a real issue. there's more than enough produced now to support billions more, it's just held hostage and wasted by the capitalist class because they'd rather murder everyone that they cant extract profit from
overpopulation isn't a real issue. there's more than enough produced now to support billions more, it's just held hostage and wasted by the capitalist class because they'd rather murder everyone that they cant extract profit from