"democracy works so well for government so it must work great for production!" - a retard
5/31/2011 9:09:42 PM
"I believe that production should be lorded over by an unplanned mass of authoritarian structures" -- A baby who bases his knowledge of economics on "World of Warcraft"
5/31/2011 9:11:11 PM
well lets put all these idiots in charge of production. they dont know how any of it works, but surely if there're enough retards they'll figure it out.[Edited on May 31, 2011 at 9:14 PM. Reason : aa]
5/31/2011 9:14:01 PM
expert knowledge has value. unskilled labor doesnt.the solution is to train the unskilled, not to over inflate their value.
5/31/2011 9:15:16 PM
what are you talking about? You seem to be rambling half thought things without giving us the context.
5/31/2011 9:18:14 PM
direct worker control can never create viable businesses on any large scale since large entities require far too much specialization for democratic processes to be effective. So even if you tried to create a worker owned business, through both neccesity and as a natural result of competetion between people, heirarchies will form and the least skilled will lose out on compensation and control over the business.As a society we should be trying to elevate the abilities of every worker so that the gap between the heriarchies is as small as possible. We can do this through public education, but it requires more time, effort. and money than the government and the people are willing to put forward.
5/31/2011 9:34:52 PM
5/31/2011 9:40:17 PM
^^ check out Mondragon -- an interesting example of a worker controlled Cooperativehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mondragon_Corporation[Edited on May 31, 2011 at 9:41 PM. Reason : arrows]
5/31/2011 9:41:01 PM
5/31/2011 11:03:42 PM
5/31/2011 11:34:53 PM
5/31/2011 11:57:09 PM
6/1/2011 12:07:23 AM
6/1/2011 1:19:54 AM
6/1/2011 8:35:24 AM
6/1/2011 12:55:34 PM
"Economic freedom"? For who? Capital?
6/1/2011 8:25:04 PM
6/2/2011 1:41:17 AM
I have no problem with socialism, so long as it's completely voluntary for all involved. In fact I would love to live in a place where people are free to form socialist societies without interference from states.The problem is I don't believe that a voluntary socialist society is sustainable. Just not enough incentive.
6/2/2011 9:58:04 AM
6/2/2011 11:48:28 AM
No because the volume sellers make more profit and sell products too cheap driving the real businesses out of business. They also pay their workers significantly less. Since these volume sellers make up the majority of the market, they offer the majority of the jobs. The small, struggling businesses are lucky to even be open so to find one that is hiring more than close relatives would be a stretch. New workers really don't have much of a choice. Neither do consumers. Capitalism is great on a small scale. Big business capitalism fails.I love how people who are pro-capitalism always use ideal situations when explaining how good capitalism is. You never hear them talk about Walmart.
6/2/2011 11:59:38 AM
6/2/2011 12:13:42 PM
6/2/2011 1:07:27 PM
6/2/2011 2:38:44 PM
6/3/2011 7:36:17 AM
Sorry, just skimming the thread because I don't care so much as to bother understanding failed systems....do we have any working examples of collective owned businesses currently existing? It doesn't seem like there are any real barriers to them forming. If this way is clearly superior then why aren't they springing up all over the place and naturally over time supplanting the current status quo business structure? Why do startup companies that are on the cusp of going big time start bringing in execs...why don't they form collectives to make the decisions?[Edited on June 3, 2011 at 7:51 AM. Reason : .]
6/3/2011 7:50:22 AM
6/3/2011 7:52:02 AM
So...no? I'm not trolling here. You reacted about as I expected. Right now, this moment while I'm taking a shit and waiting on an appraiser to arrive, I'm not interested in studying the theory of socialism. I asked a simple question. If there are ready examples of this stuff in action that proves to me that it is a legitimate system and I'll actually take the time to go study it some more. Feel free to give me those examples or at a minimum concoct a theory about why they don't exist (evil capitalist suppressing people, making them dumb so they don't see they light, etc).And if I'm a rube, fan fucking tastic. I'll die a happier man than you for certain.
6/3/2011 8:30:47 AM
^you should have skimmed more closely
6/3/2011 8:53:54 AM
Mondragon doesn't seem to be a true cooperative as defined in this thread.
6/3/2011 9:06:50 AM
The workers own all means of production. All decisions are made (relatively) democratically. Its pretty damn close.
6/3/2011 9:10:37 AM
6/3/2011 9:16:47 AM
6/3/2011 9:53:28 AM
This thread has a high barrier of entry, and is controlled by the elite few, like McDanger.I suggest intervention by the mods to make it more accessible to the common Internet user.
6/3/2011 11:50:09 PM
Worker run cooperatives are an excellent example of locally controlled voluntary socialism. It can only exist in a capitalist system, as it is only there that the property rights of the collective will be respected. Under a state-socialist system the local collective would lose its authority and be run from Washington just as many firms under capitalism are run from New York. But as d357r0y3r said and no one addressed, every worker cooperative I know of did not start that way. They all were founded as traditional capitalist entities with owners and workers, became a functional concern, and then became a cooperative either by sale or will to the workers. Someone I met once made a living this way. He would start a new company every two to five years, get it running and profitable, and then sell the whole business to his workers so he could use the money to go off and start another one. He claimed his motivation was it took him about that long to learn everything about that industry would move on before he got bored. So, per d357r0y3r's question, in the socialism being described in this thread, how will society produce new from scratch worker run firms? Worker run firms don't last forever, a schism or loss of profitability eventually develops and the workers liquidate the firm. Also, as population grows and technology changes new types of firms will be needed. Well, if the workers own the firm from day one then it would make it difficult to start another firm from the proceeds of selling said firm to said workers. So tell me how you think the process will work without company founders. [Edited on June 4, 2011 at 2:27 AM. Reason : .,.]
6/4/2011 2:22:21 AM
6/4/2011 8:49:23 AM
6/4/2011 9:50:28 AM
6/4/2011 10:42:33 AM
6/6/2011 8:56:06 AM
I am a practical person, so unless you can describe the possible inner workings of your future society then why do you think anyone should support you? Obama wants to reorganize the healthcare industry, is it really that ridiculous for us to ask how it is going to work when he is done? Well, you want to completely reorganize society, yet you have neither a roadmap for getting there (bottom-up violence I guess) nor what it might look like when you get there, just a bunch of talking points about how awesome workers are and how evil the capitalists are (ignoring that the vast majority of your fellow citizens are both workers and own capital and are usually voters as well).
6/6/2011 11:35:26 AM
6/6/2011 2:07:17 PM
That is the first post you have ever mentioned "Workers councils", something I can finally look up and see what you are talking about:"On a larger scale, a group of delegates may in turn elect a higher delegate to pursue their mandate, and so on, until the top delegates are running the industrial system of a state. In such a system decision power raises bottom-up from the agendas of the workers themselves, and there is not a decision imposition from the top, as would happen in the case of a power seizure by a supposedly revolutionary party."Quite interesting. Wikipedia is full of description of how such a system would actually operate, so I no longer need to rely entirely upon "A LOT different" as my sole point of discussion. Such a system would fall victim to the calculation problem, as attempting to organize a whole economy without prices to coordinate activity necessitates top-down coordination which will fall victim to information shortages, as lower worker councils would have a strong incentive to lie to their upper coordinators and being elected the upper coordinators would lack the will to enforce accountability on their lowers. The system described is very similar to the one I believe Brezhnev attempted to implement in Soviet Russia. While moving power out of the Politburo helped manage the information overload, it was at the cost of plan conformity and it became prohibitively difficult for firms to coordinate their activities with other firms. I highly recommend the book used in my "History of the 20th century" course here at NCState called The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Economy by Philip Hanson.
6/6/2011 4:36:10 PM
6/6/2011 4:54:22 PM
6/6/2011 6:12:34 PM
6/7/2011 3:21:00 PM
6/7/2011 8:03:44 PM
6/8/2011 12:11:01 PM
It's worth pointing out again that this is the quote that pushed me over the edge:
6/8/2011 12:48:40 PM
6/8/2011 1:52:53 PM
6/8/2011 2:37:25 PM
Again, you can simply tie value to average hours of labor per unit produced. There's no perverse incentive or even ability to blow that number out of proportion because first of all, the ledger of all industrial activities is now open to public scrutiny, and second of all, people aren't receiving things in exchange for what they produce. Needs are simply accounted for, and people labor toward common goals of survival and quality of life. The difference is that the process is mentalized from start to finish and treated scientifically; production is fully visible and results can be assessed by any and everyone. Expansion of productive capacities rather than being tools of private warfare and competition over profits becomes an expression of the peoples' need and will to survive.The idea isn't to "enforce shitty inequality" on everybody; if such a system were the inevitable result of socialism (universal misery) then clearly we couldn't pursue that as an option.[Edited on June 8, 2011 at 2:52 PM. Reason : .]
6/8/2011 2:51:52 PM