6/8/2011 5:13:29 PM
It's not the only way to do it, just a way. Average hours per unit, but all books for production are kept open (worker hours, inputs and outputs for the shop, etc). It's not democratically determined, it's averaged. You might feel, intuitively, that workers would gold brick as they do currently under capitalist employment. With the operations open to public scrutiny and with no added incentive to work yourself to the bone (if it's not life or death, a matter of survival), people aren't going to drag their feet making widgets any more than they have to. When I work, for instance, I get exactly as much out as I put in (as an academic researcher). It doesn't make sense for me to sit at my desk and pretend to work, I could just go home instead. Plus, nobody cares how long it appears I work, just what I accomplish.
6/9/2011 6:55:03 AM
Just realized I used "price" where I meant to say "value" above. Otherwise it looks weird. Too late to edit, although it's worth pointing out that prices may need to be used during a transition period. It's also worth pointing out that I wouldn't want to put industry into the hands of just any group of workers. The poorly educated lower classes of America, for instance, would probably make a mess of things and that's why education is so important. You need workers capable of, say, intelligently reading a graph. Seeing as how a lot of "college educated" TWW'ers can't even do this, the problem of actually teaching people basic mental skills is first and foremost.The problem as I see it is that education, for a society like ours, has to be limited. Nobody learns philosophy, intellectual history, the original arguments, the threads of thought anymore. Now it's all about producing workers (even skilled workers) that don't ask questions or think critically outside of their fields. If you look at academia, for instance, this is the case. People are by and large vaguely leftist (mostly welfarists) but they don't really pay attention to public affairs and write/discuss them like intellectuals used to.
6/9/2011 7:31:41 AM
6/9/2011 10:13:19 AM
One of the glaring faults I see within this theoretical system is what seems to be an assumption that equality of ability will come through ample education. The principle of "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need" is extremely offensive to me. If one worker can produce one widget in 30 minutes, while another can only produce one widget every 10 hours, why should they come out on equal ground? People should be able to freely go where their talents can be utilized, and they should be rewarded for their talents.Socialism sounds great if you're completely inept and don't want to do any work. If you're someone that takes their work seriously and tries to excel at whatever you do, then it sounds like a miserable, oppressive system to live under. This is what I mean when I say socialism ignores human nature.[Edited on June 9, 2011 at 11:42 AM. Reason : ]
6/9/2011 11:41:39 AM
maybe not the best place to put this, but not really worthy of its own thread.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dcuqM1LEi5c&feature=youtu.be
6/9/2011 2:32:44 PM
6/10/2011 10:27:03 AM
6/10/2011 10:28:05 AM
6/10/2011 11:57:54 AM
6/10/2011 12:22:55 PM
I want to point out that your analysis thus far, which you've admitted stems from "thinking about how things might affect each other" in a theoretical vacuum defined mostly by your own intuition, has been based on a string of demonstrable, factually incorrect statements about history and systems. How can you expect to make reliable inferences about human nature if your prism for analysis has been handed to you by simple-minded 20th century propaganda?[Edited on June 10, 2011 at 12:30 PM. Reason : .]
6/10/2011 12:29:04 PM
McDanger...you gotta stop being an asshole over some stupid shit brah. I've posted next to nothing in this thread and all you've given is static. As someone who thoroughly detests what has become of our Crony Capitalist economy I am interested to hear how any alternative may work. That I haven't spent the countless hours studying this shit surely doesn't garner the rage you constantly spew.Regarding these type of comments:
6/11/2011 10:26:11 AM
6/11/2011 11:09:25 AM
6/11/2011 11:19:54 AM
^ This is perhaps a better response than I provided. I'm way too much of a purist sometimes, and really the "actual" definition of socialism might do well to take on a different name to provide misunderstandings. Kris is right, although I really don't like calling them "socialist-like" ... maybe "in the direction of socialism". Any other use of the word trains people in the current vein, that socialism requires or IS central planning. Planned capitalism is just that; it's not socialism.That being said it's just my fussiness over language and I don't disagree with what Kris said in any material way. I don't like a view of socialism that sees it as planned capitalism + welfarism, though. This is the chief American misconception about the left.[Edited on June 11, 2011 at 11:25 AM. Reason : .]
6/11/2011 11:23:44 AM
The thing I like about capitalism is that it has the ability to get better. That advantage cannot be understated when compared to a static system like central planning. It has known problems which will simply not get better, while capitalism at least has the potential to get better. It's difficult for me to look at central planning as anything less than a principal-agent problem or something similar.
6/12/2011 2:15:43 AM
How would capitalism get better? Supply and demand doesn't get smarter, central planners, at least, could possibly get smarter.
6/12/2011 11:31:44 AM
The winners of democratic elections are not going to get smarter. However, people under capitalism can use experimentation to learn what modes of organization and trade are better by constructing new patterns from the bottom up while liquidating the inferior. Capitalism is a continuous process of creative destruction. Central planning seems to find it extremely difficult to destroy anything, even structures capitalism destined for destruction (GM, Chrysler, etc).
6/12/2011 1:10:46 PM
6/12/2011 4:35:16 PM
6/13/2011 9:21:10 AM
And in capitalism customers always have the option of making the "better" more profitable by offering to pay more.
6/13/2011 9:53:11 AM
People do not always have the option to just pay more. Lonesnark's advice for capitalism: "Just get more money, dummy"
6/13/2011 10:21:09 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_income_tax
6/13/2011 10:57:56 AM
6/13/2011 11:07:42 AM
^ As far as I can tell, goods today compared to my childhood are cheaper, yes, but also much higher quality. If customers are as stupid as you suggest when spending their own money on themselves, why do you believe they suddenly become brilliant when they step into a voting booth to spend other people's money on themselves?[Edited on June 13, 2011 at 11:35 AM. Reason : .,.]
6/13/2011 11:33:32 AM
Clearly the low-quality person that your pet system produces is the supremum of working class intelligence
6/13/2011 11:50:51 AM
6/13/2011 11:58:06 AM
6/13/2011 1:07:16 PM
6/13/2011 1:41:51 PM
6/13/2011 3:12:43 PM
6/13/2011 3:37:57 PM
I just don't get by what mechanism the planned economy can "get better". The statement is with education/learning/models it can but no one here has shown any example or theoretical way it can.I had a similar thought to Lonesnark, I see no real difference between voting with a wallet and checking a box.Regarding "education", again, what is that mechanism that people that are by and large retarded are suddenly going to become bright?
6/13/2011 5:04:42 PM
^^ you've really gotten way to interested in your own red herring, I wasn't talking about the durability of goods since that has nothing to do with anything.
6/13/2011 5:24:56 PM
Kris, you're just talking platitudes and generally just talking "past" me.
6/13/2011 5:37:42 PM
6/13/2011 5:51:23 PM
6/13/2011 6:21:33 PM
6/13/2011 6:28:39 PM
6/13/2011 10:06:55 PM
6/14/2011 9:20:04 AM
6/14/2011 10:05:07 AM
6/14/2011 10:26:50 AM
It's amazing that you can read the mind of everyone who goes to gamble so you can say something like "people are more concerned with immediate payoff than whether it's actually a good idea or not."
6/14/2011 10:54:16 AM
6/14/2011 11:07:36 AM
6/15/2011 1:13:11 PM
6/15/2011 1:13:49 PM
6/16/2011 6:46:08 AM
6/16/2011 7:05:37 AM
Come on, really? The idea that with enough information and enough modeling of the human psyche you can make an economy do whatever it is you want whenever you want it and have the outcome perfectly predicted.
6/16/2011 7:17:47 AM
@_@
6/16/2011 7:39:38 AM
My overlords keep me too busy to be internet hip. I have no idea what that means.[Edited on June 16, 2011 at 8:25 AM. Reason : .]
6/16/2011 8:02:01 AM