• carl_marks[use name]@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    China ended most collective ownership and switched to market socialism

    The definition of socialism is when workers are the dominant class in society (i.e. the owners of the means of production aka collective ownership). So this sentence doesn’t make sense to me.

    Also China can be described as markert socialist but more accurately they have a mixed economy of SOEs, worker coops (e.g. Huawei), and privately run/capitalist enterprises (that have party members on board of directors).

    pretty authoritarian state

    Any state in the world is authoritarian. Because ANY type of organization requires authority. (Even volunteer militias). Read Engels Essay “On authority” for the Argument being made

    Now the market’s taken for granted; its principles haven’t changed towards communism in the decades since it’s been implemented. That seems like abandoning the idea of implementing communism and just maintaining their socialist market economy for now.

    Ok basically you’re asking when Xi is going to press the communism button and I agree that they are keeping it at socialism for now.

    Again communism is a higher stage and can’t exist within a context of other countries being able to organize state power to invade a “communist” country.

    I was talking about communism and how you claim that, for defense reasons, it can only be implemented globally.

    I mean you know what class and class interests are, right? When you have landowners and capitalists and states that represent their interests, they will inevitably attack.

    I think we agree that socialism doesn’t dismantle the state and isn’t utopic. I think we’ve been collectively bamboozled

    Bamboozled by whom? And what are we being bamboozled about? I’m so confused by this

    Socialism will eventually dismantle the state and it wither away, when all contradictions and class interests have been resolved. (The state is an extension of class interests after all). You mention that socialism existed for decades and nothing happens, when capitalism, feudalism, slavery each existed for hundreds of years. Socialism is in its infancy still and has been struging to be born from the old system over the last decades (cold war, Operation Condor, Operation gładio, etc)

    • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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      2 months ago

      Yeah, I’ll concede that market socialism was the wrong word. I swear I realized that and edited it before replying, bu apparently that didn’t make it.

      Saying that every state is authoritarian is missing the point. When we say that a state is authoritarian, we mean that relatively, the people are much more oppressed by the elite. Even anarchists only oppose hierarchical authority.

      what are we being bamboozled about?

      There was a misunderstanding where I said that anything you can’t implement is utopic and you assumed that I meant socialism.

      Again communism is a higher stage and can’t exist within a context of other countries being able to organize state power to invade a “communist” country.

      Can we talk about volunteer militias?

      Socialism will eventually dismantle the state and it wither away, when all contradictions and class interests have been resolved.

      But are they? Yes, China has lifted a ton of people out of poverty, but as long as most employees don’t own the means of production, they are being oppressed, and the hands of the means of production don’t seem to have been transferring.

      • carl_marks[use name]@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        Saying that every state is authoritarian is missing the point. When we say that a state is authoritarian, we mean that relatively, the people are much more oppressed by the elite.

        Sorry I disagree with trying to quantify “authority” in order to put in relation. It’s becomes meaningless. Authority either exists or doesn’t, it’s a binary.

        Even anarchists only oppose hierarchical authority.

        As I’m reading the link I see that the author compares Bakunins understaning of authority, to that of Engels. The Author’s interpretation of Engel’s text is, that it argues against anarchists, when in fact it argues against “anti-authoritarians” and therebay misunderstands it significantly lol (Ctrl+F “anarchist” yourself https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1872/10/authority.htm). The author of your link further highlights their misunderstanding in the section “Does organisation imply the end of liberty?” and says "Engels argument proves too much. As every form of joint activity involves agreement and “subordination,” then life itself becomes “authoritarian.” Yes, Engels indeed proves that “authoritarian” is a meaningless term and authority can have different forms.Engels doesn’t even say anything about wether organization ends liberty. Engels acturally argues that “authorty” transforms. “If we took Engels’ argument seriously then we would have to conclude that living makes freedom impossible!” That’s not even what Engel’s is saying in the text.

        Engel’s defintion of authority (“Authority, in the sense in which the word is used here, means: the imposition of the will of another upon ours; on the other hand, authority presupposes subordination. […]” is quite elegant. Organization Engel’s defines as “combined action”. Engels further asks the abstract question whether organization [combined action] is possible without authority [the imposition of the will of another].

        In your link the author writes “However, Engels is simply confusing two different things, authority and agreement.” and literally falls into “These gentlemen think that when they have changed the names of things they have changed the things themselves.” Further down your author writes: “For a given task, co-operation and joint activity may be required by its very nature.” and uses and example of the organization of train networks. (Guess what example Engels used to showcase how authority is transformed?)

        Read Engels yourself if you don’t believe me. There’s a qualitative difference between reading about Marx, Engels, Stalin, Lenin, Mao and reading them.

        But are they? Yes, China has lifted a ton of people out of poverty, but as long as most employees don’t own the means of production, they are being oppressed,

        Yes they are. Hardly seems oppressive, when Harvad’s Long-term survey reveals Chinese government satisfaction

        and the hands of the means of production don’t seem to have been transferring.

        Yes it is. The fact that you have the state tightly regulate capitalism and outright forbidding the formation of a financial capitalist class (China’s banks are public. Find out how Jack Ma is doing after they tried to ascend to financial capitalist by creating ANT pay), have a state that works in the interest of the majority (Stopping the Real Estate Bubble and make housing affordable, while with a 95% homeownership rate; Massive Public transport; Renweable engergies, etc.) and also encourages worker coops (e.g. Huawei) and China’s Revised Company Law looks very promising (Keep in mind it’s the economist, but damn even that makes it sound so good https://archive.md/VIEPf ).

        • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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          2 months ago

          You can’t just make things binary. If I say billionaires are either taxed or not or say that socialism/happiness either exists or not and there’s no point quantifying or comparing it, you’d certainly disagree.

          If you need clarification: when we say more authoritarian, we mean that the authority gets more upset when their authority is breached/potentially reached and enforces their authority a lot harder. Some escalating examples of such enforcement are: “the rejection of political plurality, the use of strong central power to preserve the political status quo, and reductions in democracy, separation of powers, civil liberties, and the rule of law.”

          The document I linked is about the much narrower topic on how “On Authority” does not refuteanarchy or eliminating the state. It’s not supposed to be a refutation of the essay itself.

          Long-term survey reveals Chinese government satisfaction

          Yeah, because unlike America, most people don’t really care about politics or whether you can read Wikipedia. However, I’m a hacker-person, so I care that we have basically no direct representation and Tencent owns the lifeblood of everything online. Is the quality of life better than the USA? I think so. Does the government get more things done than the USA? Probably. Can people say what they want and organize what they want? Depends. Is the government controlled by the workers? Certainly not. I’ve been there for half of life, so please don’t lecture me on how life actually is there.

          Yeah, they control all the finance. No, I don’t see how that means the workers are getting more of or closer to getting the means of production. Unions have nearly no power. The third part of that law you sent, worker’s representatives, just seems like extending the ruling elite’s reach further. Not to mention that the housing bubble hasn’t stopped. It’s much better than the situation in the USA, sure, but it’s crazy how the (actually pretty nice) microdistrict we live in continues to have prices rise even after a pretty big corruption scandal.

          • carl_marks[use name]@lemmy.ml
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            2 months ago

            You can’t just make things binary. If I say billionaires are either taxed or not or say that socialism/happiness either exists or not and there’s no point quantifying or comparing it, you’d certainly disagree.

            I’d certainly agree. You can’t quantify “Authority”. You can quantify billionairs (one can have more billions than another). You can’t quantify “being taxed”, you can however quantify the taxed amount. Also you can’t quantify “socialism”.

            “the rejection of political plurality, the use of strong central power to preserve the political status quo, and reductions in democracy, separation of powers, civil liberties, and the rule of law.”

            You can’t quantify these either.

            Is the government controlled by the workers? Certainly not.

            That’s a very abstract question. When one in 15 is a CPC member the, PRCs government represent workers interests? Certainly.

            Yeah, they control all the finance. No, I don’t see how that means the workers are getting more of or closer to getting the means of production.

            Not what I’m saying? I gave you examples on how the state represents workers interests.

            Unions have nearly no power.

            Good. They can be used as a wedge against the workers state as we saw in the Western toppling of the SU.

            The third part of that law you sent, worker’s representatives, just seems like extending the ruling elite’s reach further.

            How so?

            Not to mention that the housing bubble hasn’t stopped.

            Then you’re not following news. The fact that western media is screeching about how CNs real estate market crashed says otherwise.