Link: https://www.ozy.com/the-new-and-the-next/who-really-loves-blockchain-socialists/397843/

wHy YoU sHoULd cArE

  • Cryptocurrencies have traditionally been driven by libertarians. Now socialists are embracing blockchain as a weapon against capitalist states.
  • Cryptocurrencies and blockchain have traditionally been the preserve of the libertarian right.
  • A growing number of socialists see blockchain as the weapon their political movement needs, from helping fund protest movements to avoiding sanctions and increasing government accountability.

To many millennials, Adrian’s sharp turn to the left is recognizable.

After graduating from college, he had student debt and a job he describes as shitty, in addition to working as an Uber driver. “I went deeper into left-wing theory during this period,” says Adrian (because Adrian doesn’t want his radical politics to interfere with his life, he asked that we not use his real name). “But I was also searching for ways to make rent. Which made me have a closer look at stocks and eventually cryptocurrencies.”

As Adrian got hooked on blockchain, a whole new world opened up. “It was a wormhole from there,” he says. “I realized we could automate away the capitalists.”

It’s an idea that a small but growing set of left-wingers are exploring. Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, blockchain and the underlying technology have traditionally been the preserve of the libertarian right. Many of the field’s leading figures are libertarians, and some of their economic beliefs are foundational for the community.

Socialists, though, are increasingly embracing the potential of blockchain to assist their political plans. This year Cryptocommunism, a book by French philosopher Mark Alizart, was translated into English. Yanis Varoufakis, the former finance minister of Greece and a left-wing icon, has repeatedly mused about the uses of Bitcoin for the left. The socialist government of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro started a botched cryptocurrency experiment in 2018 to evade U.S. sanctions. Adrian himself hosts a podcast about cryptocurrencies and has founded a Reddit community called r/CryptoLeftists.

“Leftists often see blockchain as a libertarian toy that’s only good for buying drugs, which I think is wrong,” says Matthew McKeever, executive associate editor of the academic journal Inquiry and a research assistant at the University of Hong Kong. McKeever doesn’t consider himself a socialist, but he has written about the relation between socialism and blockchain. “The technology has elements that deserve attention from the left,” he says.

WITH BLOCKCHAIN, YOU DON’T NEED TO DEPEND ON A CENTRALIZED AUTHORITY.

- ADRIAN, A LEFTIST CRYPTOCURRENCY ENTHUSIAST

Broadly speaking, blockchain could serve socialists in two ways. The narrow option is to use blockchain technologies to better organize. A cryptocurrency might be used to allow money transfers to persecuted activists, similar to how Wikileaks received donations in bitcoin after its accounts were blocked for leaking classified information. Nigerian activists have used cryptocurrencies to raise funds for their recent protests against police brutality, after traditional banking channels were shut off. “For socialists, it could be good to organize without taking a detour through large capitalist companies, whose interests are anti-aligned with yours,” says McKeever.

But beyond that, blockchain might also be useful to build a socialist economy. Adrian mentions a hypothetical case in which the government might be able to distribute housing through blockchain and cryptocurrencies.

Capitalism, says Adrian, allows individuals to accumulate infinite amounts of capital, and in turn buy up houses as investments. To transition this to a system based on need, a token, or coin, which gives every citizen the right to a house, could be used. The community would then decide which categories of people are eligible for which houses. A single person, for example, might get a different token, and in turn access to a different selection of houses, than a couple with three children. In this way, blockchain would allow socialists to distribute goods and services without a market. “We need to distribute housing based on need, instead of through the market,” Adrian says.

The Venezuelan experiment with the petro, a cryptocurrency backed up by oil, is the odd one out. The attempt had more to do with evading U.S. sanctions than moving to socialism.

But even beyond Venezuela, traditional libertarians don’t agree with the cryptosocialists’ views. “Cryptocurrency technology is fundamentally libertarian,” says Diego Zuluaga, associate director of financial regulation studies at the libertarian think tank Cato Institute.

For him, libertarianism doesn’t just mean free markets. He argues that cryptocurrencies preserve the ability of individuals to do with their money as they please, instead of centralizing that power. And for Zuluaga, the plans of leftists like Adrian run counter to that fundamental libertarian belief about cryprocurrencies. “Most socialists like hierarchies,” he says. “They just want to replace private sector hierarchies with public sector ones.”

“They don’t know what they’re talking about,” responds Adrian, noting how capitalist economies are still highly centralized. Cryptosocialists argue that turning to blockchain could eliminate bureaucrats from the equation. “With blockchain, you don’t need to depend on a centralized authority,” Adrian says, returning to his housing example. “The alternative is for a socialist government to organize the housing supply, which creates technocratic dependencies.”

Blockchain would also be open source, allowing citizens to review the software underlying government decisions. In a sense, it would help avoid an age-old problem for socialism: that its utopian sentiments tend to get bogged down in stale bureaucracies. To back this up, Adrian references socialist philosopher Friedrich Engels: “He said that we need to transition the state from a government of people, to the administration of things.” Perhaps blockchain is the revolution that socialism needs.

  • Gonzalo [they/them]
    hexagon
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    Cursed shitlib thinking. If the tech wasn’t disastrous for the environment, it could have potential, but right now it doesn’t.

    • wantonviolins [they/them]M
      ·
      3 years ago

      This. The ideas of distributed ledgers and frictionless, decentralized transactions are fine and could be genuinely useful, but every other aspect of cryptocurrencies in their present form (mining, validation, every value of X in “proof of X”, primary use as speculative assets, etc.) should make any leftist extremely wary.

      • Sphere [he/him, they/them]
        ·
        3 years ago

        every value of X in “proof of X”

        See, the specific X (work) is exactly where the environmental problem with cryptocurrencies lies at present, though. You need some kind of proof in order to make a distributed ledger allowing frictionless, decentralized transactions possible at all (otherwise bad actors can poison the whole thing). Proof of work requires the expenditure of computing resources in a wasteful way, but there ought to be some kind of proof that isn't so wasteful.

        Now, the libertarian goldbug aspect of crypto politics is also a problem, but there's no reason that these things have to be set up to be deflationary; they simply have been so far because it drives speculation and fits with the crazy politics of the scene.

          • wantonviolins [they/them]M
            ·
            3 years ago

            It’s still horseshit because proof of stake is essentially centralization with extra steps, which is part of what I was alluding to when I said “proof of X”. We don’t have a method of proof that fixes enough of the issues to allow any of the promise to be realized.

            • Sphere [he/him, they/them]
              ·
              3 years ago

              Yeah but this criticism is just as applicable to proof of work, so it's at least an improvement over the current system. Stake is the lazy way to solve the problem of Sybil attacks (attacks that work by flooding a system with fake actors). But any effective proof system has to have some way to deal with Sybil attacks or it simply won't work in the real world.

  • DeathToBritain [she/her,they/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    there are just better ways to do the things this guy wants to do. like by all means, admit you wanna make a quick buck off of the meme money, I literally do not think there is anything wrong with that it's just like any other day trading of assets tbqh which Marx himself did. but acting like this 'technology' is key towards building socialism is a joke

    • Gonzalo [they/them]
      hexagon
      ·
      3 years ago

      Absolutely nothing wrong with grifting shitty capitalists, I agree.

  • comi [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    Blockchain can be beautifully used to embed marks of the workers along the processing though, like you buy stuff and can see johnny from recycling center 21 spent 30s on this metal. But that won’t happen prolly till the revolution. Also, exchange can be done without government which is somewhat neat

    • AMWB [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      3 years ago

      I agree. I think in theory it is an extremely promising technology.

      Here is a different example of how it can work on the distribution side of things. A family gets 500 cryptodollars to spend on food every week. Instead of being accumulated by the store, the dollars are reset the next week. The demand for all of the individual commodities are aggregated and the data is passed on to the distributor.

      Whether you believe in market socialism or a moneyless planned economy, this kind of market is a powerful tool that could square the circle between centralized planning and decentralized freedom of choice.

      BTW I didn't read any of the original post. I don't think this is happening. The internet was theoretically perfect for anarchists and libertarians and look at it now. Crypto will also suck.

    • Gonzalo [they/them]
      hexagon
      ·
      3 years ago

      I don’t blame them for playing with the tech, but thinking it’s going to get us FALGSC is delusional.

      • ClathrateG [none/use name]
        ·
        edit-2
        3 years ago

        'media company' that bought their traffic/views

        They impersonated a YouTube exec to try to scam millions from Goldman Sachs www.forbes.com/sites/johanmoreno/2021/10/08/ozy-media-ceo-said-google-wanted-to-invest-25-million-into-the-company-after-impersonating-youtube-executive/

        https://eugenesrobinson.substack.com/p/ozy-rules-the-house-negro-gets-it goes into the CEOs narcissism and racism

  • Alex_Jones [he/him]
    ·
    3 years ago

    I'm saving that picture so that I can hurt my friends in real life.