• DPUGT2
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    3 years ago

    It doesn’t leave it up the capitalists to “do the right thing”. My god, we’d be extinct as a species were that the case.

    It leaves it up to them to be greedy. Which I’m sure you’ll agree is something they’re at least passingly competent at. Why is greed important here? Because if there is a shortage, greedy people can earn obscene profits providing the goods in shortage. The more goods they have, the more than obscenely earn. If they don’t have enough, they are compelled to get more… as efficiently as possible.

    This mechanism isn’t without its bizarre failure modes. Take fishing, for instance. As some fish or another becomes rarer, its scarcity causes prices to rise… so instead of doing the right thing and letting populations recover, the temptation becomes ever more irresistible. Don’t let capitalism get anywhere near wildlife preservation, or if you do, study the implications (and perverse incentives) carefully first.

    There is a conflict of interest between making profits and providing necessities.

    There is very little conflict there. You make x profits if you sell y goods. If you sell 100y goods, you make 100x profits. And so on. Sometimes it’s not even linear, so the larger you scale the more you profit per unit.

    This is why even the poor in such countries are often obese. Capitalism could be said to over-provide more often than it under-provides.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
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      3 years ago

      Why is greed important here? Because if there is a shortage, greedy people can earn obscene profits providing the goods in shortage. The more goods they have, the more than obscenely earn. If they don’t have enough, they are compelled to get more… as efficiently as possible.

      This mode of production results in incredible waste with huge quantities of goods being destroyed to keep up the prices, planned obsolescence, modes of failure you describe, as well as many other kinds of idiocy.

      However, even more importantly, this doesn’t actually help with solving the problem of delivering goods to people who actually need them because those are who can least afford them.

      There is very little conflict there. You make x profits if you sell y goods. If you sell 100y goods, you make 100x profits. And so on. Sometimes it’s not even linear, so the larger you scale the more you profit per unit.

      Around half the food produced under capitalism is thrown away while people are literally starving on the streets. Thanks to the wonder of capitalism roughly 3.5 million people die from lack of clean water, 1.5 million people die from vaccinable diseases, and 9 million people die from hunger each and every year. That’s over a 140 million deaths every decade.

      http://horizons-newspaper.com/index.php/2020/02/27/tallying-capitalisms-death-toll/

      • ziproot
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        3 years ago

        Not to mention the millions of people who die from pollution. EDIT: By this I meant air particulate pollution. If you are looking at pollution in general, this is caused by all life forms. The comments below were referring to the claim above as it was originally stated.

        • DPUGT2
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          3 years ago

          Thankfully, the Soviet Union was a pollution-less utopia, eh?

          • ziproot
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            3 years ago

            I never said that. All I said was that under capitalism, millions of people die from pollution, which is true.

            EDIT: Here is my source: https://doi.pangea.de/10.1038/s41467-021-26348-y

            EDIT 2: This statement as written is not true, and the source does not mention anything about pollution in general. However, if I instead said that “millions of people die from air particulate pollution,” then I believe that statement would be true.

            • DPUGT2
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              3 years ago

              Then you don’t have a point at all. All human cultures and ideologies are, at their fundamental core, polluters. Capitalism holds no special place on that spectrum. Millions dies from pollution everywhere.

              • ziproot
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                3 years ago

                There were two economic systems in countries that industrialized: soviet-type socialism (where the means of production are controlled by a state) and capitalism (where the means of production are controlled by corporations). Of the countries with soviet-type socialism, none of them are democratic. This effectively means that none of the countries that industrialized had a means of production controlled by the community. While all human cultures and ideologies could very well have pollution at their core, we do not know this is true. I think the problem is that the rich can deal with pollution and the poor cannot. Since the poor outnumber the rich, with the poor actually in control, maybe pollution can be solved. This might not be the case, but we will not know unless we try.

                • DPUGT2
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                  3 years ago

                  While all human cultures and ideologies could very well have pollution at their core

                  Go look up the word “midden” and get back to me.

                  • ziproot
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                    3 years ago

                    Yes, if you are looking at all forms of pollution, you are indeed correct, as all life forms have to excrete waste. An extreme example of this is cyanobacteria likely causing a mass extinction.

                    However, I was referring to air particulate pollution, as shown by my source. I apologize for not being clearer. I have updated the original comment, but yes, you are indeed correct that all human cultures and ideologies have pollution at their core if you are looking at pollution in general.

      • DPUGT2
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        3 years ago

        This mode of production results in incredible waste with huge quantities of goods being destroyed to keep up the prices,

        Sure.

        And the alternative you guys offer is huge levels of deprivation, underground/gray/black markets, and so on.

        I know which I prefer.

        However, even more importantly, this doesn’t actually help with solving the problem of delivering goods to people who actually need them because those are who can least afford them.

        It does. The goods that people tend to need are commodities that are cheap enough that they’re given away.

        No one but anorexics starve in my country.

        away while people are literally starving on the streets.

        Please find some documentation that supports the extraordinary hypothesis that people are starving on the streets. Of all the problems that we have, that’s just not one of them. No one starves, few go hungry and never unless their personalities compel them to avoid welfare.

        Find another criticism. There are real ones, real ones that are pretty extreme even by my standards, ones compatible with your ideology. This one’s just fiction.

        • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆OP
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          3 years ago

          And the alternative you guys offer is huge levels of deprivation, underground/gray/black markets, and so on.

          Having actually grown up in USSR, I can tell you that the levels of deprivation I’ve seen living in the west are far greater.

          It does. The goods that people tend to need are commodities that are cheap enough that they’re given away.

          Except that they’re not given away. Poverty and need are rampant under capitalism.

          Please find some documentation that supports the extraordinary hypothesis that people are starving on the streets.

          Literally linked you a source. Here’s what things in US look like https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/31/us/food-insecurity-30-million-census-survey/index.html

          This one’s just fiction.

          Ironic that you’re telling somebody who has actual lived experience under both systems. You’re a victim of propaganda, and it’s very sad to see how close minded you are.