• Yawnder@lemmy.zip
      ·
      1 year ago

      Anyone with an ounce of knowledge in surveys or data manipulation can see it. The question is about the sentiment towards capitalism. It's not about actually supporting it, or wanting to participate in it, etc.

      Most youths do want to be able to work and save money to buy what they want.

      Do people like the state capitalism has reached? No, because of the imbalance of power. Is it because of capitalism? No. Look at communist countries and the imbalance is even worse. (Not talking about socialist society because it's capitalism with more rights and more sharing, but it's still capitalism.)

      • Sephitard9001 [he/him]
        ·
        1 year ago

        There has only been socialist societies like the USSR. There hasn't been a communist society yet. China is currently working toward a socialist society. What I think you're talking about are capitalist/imperialist countries with social safety nets built off exploitation of the 3rd world.

        Anyway, the citizens in China approve of their government at a much higher rate than Americans do, and more Chinese citizens believe they live in a democracy that represents them than Americans do. So no, the vague wishy washy "power imbalance" you're referring to is not "worse" in countries run by communists.

        • Yawnder@lemmy.zip
          ·
          1 year ago

          It's not worse? In the west, you're generally fined, at worse jailed, after having a go at a trial. In China and North Korea, you get disappeared or executed if they feel like it, or sent to a labour camp. If that's not more of an imbalance, not sure what it is.

          But by all means, if you think it's so much better in China because the population approves (lol), be my guest!

          • Sephitard9001 [he/him]
            ·
            1 year ago

            If the Chinese are more oppressed, why does America have 4x smaller population but more prisoners per capita AND total number?

            • Yawnder@lemmy.zip
              ·
              1 year ago

              First, the US is not "the west". It's one of the countries in the west, and it's not nearly similar to other western countries.

              Second, what numbers would you believe for China? The one that doesn't mention the millions in labour camp, or the ones that don't list indebted servitude, or the one that denies any kind of abduction ever took place?

              • Sephitard9001 [he/him]
                ·
                1 year ago

                The U.S. is The West. It's the hegemon. What determines if a country is a 1st world country in "the West" is if they are subservient to America or not. That's why Japan is "the West" despite being as far east as you can get relatively. America is also coincidentally the topic of the article we're discussing so I'm not sure why you're trying to draw a line there either way.

                And what do you mean by labor camps? The interment camps that western media has even conceded were temporary and have already closed since 2018? The ones where the estimated millions was just a number extrapolated from interviewing a handful of people? Did you even read the original report on this topic or are you just half remembering alarmist BBC articles about it

                • Yawnder@lemmy.zip
                  ·
                  1 year ago

                  Wtf you're talking about about the west being the US?
                  The west is generally accepted to mean Europe and America.

                  Also, good job chilling the Chinese discourse about how the Uyghur situation would not be true...

                  There is nothing close to that, and the other things I mentioned but you just ignore, in the west. The closest would be Guantanamo, which is a few orders of magnitude smaller.

                  • Sephitard9001 [he/him]
                    ·
                    edit-2
                    1 year ago

                    That's not true. Japan and Australia and even South Korea are also considered western nations despite being across the Earth. Specifically because they are subservient to the U.S. and oriented their societies to serve capital and U.S. geopolitical interests.

                    What happened when Australia tried to seek independence from America's leash in the 70's? They got slapped back down into their place. South Korea was established as a fascist dictatorship by U.S. General Douglas MacArthur invading after Korea started to buck off America's Japanese attack dog. The fascists there held hands with America while slaughtering or jailing leftists and other dissidents all the way up to the late 80's. Despite that, they're "western". Only because they're subservient to the U.S.

                    Can you find me a "Western" nation that opposes U.S. interests?

                    And no, the re-education camps are not similar to Guantanamo, since you are not tortured and you are released. You do not learn trade and language in Guantanamo Bay lmao. Also it's interesting to me you didn't mention Abu Ghraib

          • Kuori [she/her]
            ·
            1 year ago

            damn thank god the u.s. doesn't execute anybody

              • Kuori [she/her]
                ·
                1 year ago

                okay my bad. thank god the u.s. doesn't just "disappear or execute people if it feels like it". close enough to exact?

              • duderium [he/him]
                ·
                1 year ago

                ‘In the report, the scholars estimated that India suffered 165 million excess deaths due to British colonialism between 1880 and 1920. “This figure is larger than the combined number of deaths from both World Wars, including the Nazi holocaust,” they noted.’

                https://mronline.org/2022/12/14/british-empire-killed-165-million-indians-in-40-years/

                That’s just the British in India for a forty-year period. Do you want to talk about how many people the USA has killed since 9/11?

                • Yawnder@lemmy.zip
                  ·
                  1 year ago

                  Oh, right. Then let's look at the time of the Han dynasty and feudal china then, because that's what's relevant! /s

                  • AlkaliMarxist
                    ·
                    1 year ago

                    No, Feudal China is not relevant to a discussion on the relative violence and oppression done by capitalist and socialist states, because it is neither.

                    • Yawnder@lemmy.zip
                      ·
                      1 year ago

                      That's not the point of that whole thing anyways, but people moving the goal posts lead to that. The whole point is that the problem is not capitalism, it's the imbalance of power, and the people actually wielding that power.

                      • AlkaliMarxist
                        ·
                        1 year ago

                        The point other people are making though is that you're selectively emphasizing stories of brutality from socialist countries while discounting the brutality that exists under capitalism in order to draw a false equivalence between the two systems; an equivalence that needs to exist in order to justify your position that it doesn't matter whether a state is socialist or capitalist.

                        The fact is that the violence done by capitalist states is far greater than that done by socialist states. In any time frame. The violence of colonialism belongs to capitalism, the violence of fascism belongs to capitalism, the violence of gunboat diplomacy - of wars fought by private contractors for the bottom line of arms manufactures and mineral exploitation companies - is the violence of capitalism. This doesn't even cover the internal, inherent violence of capitalism. To dispose of food while people starve, because feeding them is not profitable, is violence. To deny lifesaving medical treatment, because it cannot be supplied at a profit, that is violence. To spill poison into drinking water to save money, then when people protest, to lock them away and force them to labour, that is violence. Strike-breakers, Pinkertons, McCarthyism, police killings of activists, funding of right-wing militia to coup socialist governments, embargos denying medicine and food to socialist countries. All of this is violence, done by capitalists, to protect the rights of capital.

                        You are told that these things are not capitalist violence, they are just society functioning as normal. However you are flooded with rumour, conspiracy theories and propaganda about the violence in socialist countries, so you come to the conclusion that both are bad and that it isn't worth understanding the difference.

                        • Yawnder@lemmy.zip
                          ·
                          1 year ago

                          Again, the whole point I'm saying isn't "there is nothing wrong with capitalism". It's that most of what's wrong within capitalism is also wrong within other systems because they're not proper to capitalism.

                          Capitalism is being able to accumulate capital and use them to your benefits. This survey pretends that 51% of the youth are not individualistic, that they would prefer that whether or not they work hard or not shouldn't benefit them individually, and that they'll just be happy being provided whatever the people as a whole deem proper.

                          That's just plain false.

                          Are people disillusioned about how things are? Of course. They're unhappy because they are in a weak position, not because of the system itself.

                          • CyborgMarx [any, any]
                            ·
                            1 year ago

                            Capitalism is being able to accumulate capital and use them to your benefits

                            You know what really benefits capitalists, taking over the state, and you know what makes that easy, having lots of capital

                            In other words a systemic incentive for capitalism to degard into capitalist oppression because of an inherent feature specific to capitalism

                            You literally dont know what capitalism is or how power manifests in the world

                              • CyborgMarx [any, any]
                                ·
                                edit-2
                                1 year ago

                                Yeah dumb fuck that's definitely what I said lmao

                                You're like a child who still thinks Santa is real, you welded some half-baked Tolkienian conception of power onto your brain, where power is some nebulous metaphysical, all-consuming entity that corrupts everything it touches, instead of what it really is which is a series of social relationships meditated thru the dominant mode of production and its environs

                                The first step in forming coherent political beliefs is recognizing you severely miseducated yourself with mass media and literary tropes, there's a real world out there, and you should engage with it instead of shooting your mouth about concepts you don't comprehend

                      • CyborgMarx [any, any]
                        ·
                        1 year ago

                        Capitalism is what causes that power imbalance, how anyone can sit there and pretend the mode of production that reproduces all human civilization doesn't effect the balance of power is beyond brain broken, you are literally arguing with reality dumbass

                        Keep coping

                        • Yawnder@lemmy.zip
                          ·
                          1 year ago

                          So you're saying there is no power imbalance of similar scale in socialist or communist societies? Funny man.

                          • CyborgMarx [any, any]
                            ·
                            1 year ago

                            No power imbalance caused by the accumulation of capital, yes you dumb fuck, how is this difficult for you to grasp?

                            • GarbageShoot [he/him]
                              ·
                              1 year ago

                              Well, there necessarily is still a power imbalance on an individual or per-capita basis, but that's what the DotP is meant to counteract on an absolute basis.

                          • s0ykaf [he/him]
                            ·
                            edit-2
                            1 year ago

                            So you're saying there is no power imbalance of similar scale in socialist or communist societies?

                            of similar scale? there absolutely isn't, especially when you get off your own head and realize your country (meaning the main tool of your dominant classes) doesn't exist in isolation. and the fact you're talking about "socialist or communist" societies really shows you have no idea what you're talking about, despite all your unwarranted certainty

                  • CyborgMarx [any, any]
                    ·
                    1 year ago

                    lmao what a stupid and irrelevant comment, you literally think like a 5 year old

                    • Yawnder@lemmy.zip
                      ·
                      1 year ago

                      I replied with the same kind of stupidity as the comment I was replying to. The difference is that I marked it explicitly as sarcasm because I knew it was absurd, while the comment I was replying to was supposed to be serious.

                      • CyborgMarx [any, any]
                        ·
                        1 year ago

                        lmao holy shit you're a dumbass, you're comment and the haphazard comparison you were trying to make is irrelevant because we don't live under feudalism, we live under capitalism, try to keep up

              • GarbageShoot [he/him]
                ·
                1 year ago

                What do you think prison labor is? Have you not read the 13th Amendment?

                  • GarbageShoot [he/him]
                    ·
                    1 year ago

                    Your social democratic circlejerk country of choice only exists and can only exist at the moment based on the actions of the US. It simply isn't escapable when discussing the present state of things. It is like disparaging the crassness of a hog when you are a flee on its back; The thing you are insulting is the very basis of the thing you're praising continuing to exist, so you cannot coherently grandstand about it.

          • CascadeOfLight [he/him]
            ·
            1 year ago

            Yeah, imagine if the US imprisoned huge numbers of a particular ethnic minority and made them do forced labor for essentially free

            Show

          • brain_in_a_box [he/him]
            ·
            1 year ago

            In the West you have your entire village leveled, your wedding drone striked, and your government overthrown and replaced by fascists who use dogs to torture dissidents.

          • GarbageShoot [he/him]
            ·
            1 year ago

            Pure vibes-based politics. You cannot name a single law the DPRK has besides "no entering or leaving without approval" "internal internet only", and laws every other country has.

      • BurgerPunk [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        1 year ago

        Not talking about socialist society because it's capitalism with more rights and more sharing, but it's still capitalism.)

        jesse-wtf

      • Gelamzer
        ·
        edit-2
        11 months ago

        deleted by creator