• 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