• Cowbee [he/they]
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    1 month ago

    Im feeling a little ignored with that answer when im saying the power structures can be largely automated, and used by individuals, which certainly must be outside the comprehension of marxist teachings.

    I’m half-ignoring it because if you were at all familiar with Marxism, you’d know that this was a prediction of Marxism that has come true with time. Automation is a key aspect of Marx’s predictions and analysis, as well as the expectation for technological progress.

    Additionally, while capitalism might end, we have no guarantee about its replacement. If any time in history could yield a unique power structure it would be now.

    Marxists believe Socialism is what Capitalism is necessarily leading to because decentralized markets form centralized monopolist syndicates with complex internal planning, ripe for aquisition into the public ownership and centrally planned. Ie, Capitalism prepares Socialism.

    Seems more relevant to try to influence the power structure than to destroy it. I say that not because it currently cant be destroyed, but that it wont, and this only becomes more true as time goes on as capability of automated power structures increases. Our comfort is ample to keep the system safe.

    1. You say “seems like” with no logical justification.

    2. Your argument that automation preserves rather than accelerates the demise of Capitalism is unfounded, and goes directly against the Tendency for the Rate of Profit to Fall, which was logically proven back in Marx’s era.

    3. Our comfort is constantly declining as disparity rises as Capitalism decays.

    • lightrush@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      Marxists believe Socialism is what Capitalism is necessarily leading to because decentralized markets form centralized monopolist syndicates with complex internal planning

      Jesus fucking Christ, I was just talking to a friend about how big corporations with hundreds of thousands of employees resemble centrally planned economies, and how consolidations creates them all around us and the only thing stopping them from becoming fewer is the attempts of some governments that haven’t been regulatory-captured yet to stop it. But regulatory-capture increases with wealth accumulation so if you keep running the system, it tends to total central planning. I haven’t read Marx and neither has he.

      On a separate but related point - what stops the system from being somewhat disrupted by labor in a way that redistributes huge amounts of the accumulated wealth, restoring the regulatory regime in favor of labor and restarting the cycle from that point, then repeat. In other words, what’s stopping it from doing a depression-FDR-redistribution every 100 years? I can absolutely see the inevitable end without labor intervention but to my current brain it seems possible to maintain it with. Is this wrong in some obvious way?

      • Cowbee [he/they]
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        1 month ago

        See, this is exactly what Marx was talking about when he said the decay of Capitalism would cause more radicalization and class awareness. What starts off as hard to see due to the vast competition of many competing Capitalits becomes increasingly apparent. Ideas are determined by material conditions.

        To answer your question, Social Democracies can help suppress revolution, but not prevent its necessity nor turn back the clock. Technological progress remains, and thus you can’t beat the Tendency for the Rate of Profit to Fall. In the modern world, Nordic countries are seeing sliding safety nets, and depend heavily on exploitation of the Global South via exporting Capital to have commoditied made with a lower price of labor (a process Marxists call Imperialism).

        Rosa Luxemburg’s Reform or Revolution actually answers a lot of your question, if you’re willing to read a short book. It’s in section 4 of my “intro to Marxism” list so it will have terms you may not understand if you don’t read the buildup works, but you can still try to read it and see someone answer your very questions 124 years ago.

    • tee9000@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I just want to say your effort is appreciated and fair points regarding what i dont know about marxism.

      1. I think my conjecture that the power structures wont be destroyed is justification enough to not seek to destroy them. My “seems like” is alternative to working with the power structure, but i understand i dont have data to substaniate my belief that individuals wont overcome centralized supercomputer data analytics commanding autonomous enforcement.

      2. I didnt say capitalism would be preserved, but that the current power structures would. I dont think there will be a compelling motivation for an impervious power structure to maintain the illusion of freedom. Profit falling off doesnt dissolve societal hierarchy if the power structure still enforces it by identity rather than wealth.

      3. Our discomfort doesnt have much time to motivate us before we willingly accept the power structure (due to no alternative).

      That said, im not convinced an omnipresent evil is guaranteed to arise from capitalism, just a self-interested entity.

      • Cowbee [he/they]
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        1 month ago

        I think you need to do more research and come up with logical arguments for these beliefs that aren’t just vibes, but empirical data and observations.

        • tee9000@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Im not a historian, nor revolutionist, and i have the benefit of just shitting on your assertions. But i am your target audience. And i still dont know how you are going to convince me to read a stack of history books or pick up an AK.

          My self interest will probably just make me want to fight for the system as long as i can instead of enduring hardship. Anyways nice talking to you.

          • Cowbee [he/they]
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            1 month ago

            And this takes me back to what I said previously, if Marxism is indeed correct, then as material conditions deteriorate due to sharpening of contradictions in Capitalism, then there will likely be a point in the future that you become more willing to read theory, and I’ll be right here.

            You aren’t actually my target audience. My target audience is made up of people already radicalized by this deterioration of Capitalism, but this doesn’t affect everyone equally. If you are not radicalized, then it is likely that you’re not radicalized yet, at which point you will enter my target audience.

            • tee9000@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              If it is indeed correct, indeed. Hopefully we all get equality in paradise in the end.

              • Cowbee [he/they]
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                1 month ago

                We will likely not see Communism, but we will be a part of the numerous water droplets that cumulatively bore through stone.