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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 18th, 2023

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  • You keep saying that but offer no actual corrections to say where I’m wrong or what is right.

    The reason is because of much of what you have written, for example…

    in many countries that have applied communism people still get exploited.

    Various examples occur throughout your comments appearing as reactionary or liberal obfuscations of communism, and its differences with capitalism, or that seem unaware of general criticisms of capital.

    You may feel my characterizations are inaccurate, and you may be correct, but I feel that they are representative of your argumentation, by its heavy assimilation of various tropes common within bad faith engagement with leftism.



  • No one is rejecting human rights in the sense you are suggesting, but some may object to human rights in the sense of its being merely a packaging for norms and values that are generally shared, as would be the same sense of an objection against moral theories.

    Ellerman appears to be rejecting private property by replacing it with a construct designated as inalienable responsibility. He assumes we will accept the construct, but ultimately, he gives us no reason more convincing than that it affirms the conclusion he wishes to uphold, and that he assumes we will want him to reach, of equitable relations of production.

    Ultimately, there is little to be remarked about one or the other, except whose interests they serve, or which consequences they produce.

    The rulers’ function has been to repress workers.

    The workers’ struggle has been to protect each other while seeking to overcome the conditions of oppression. In that, I see no need for us of either particular construct, private property or inalienable responsibility.







  • unfreeradical@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldOne Mississippi
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    1 year ago

    By some measures, Musk’s decisions managing Twitter/X should earn him one million lifetimes of homelessness.

    I know no one personally who would remain secure after losing billions of dollars, yet I keep hearing that owners take all the risks and workers are always protected from hardship.


  • Much of our perception is logarithmic, which is predictable, since patterns occur from proportion of quantities. Absolute quantities are meaningless in themselves. Even ten dollars as a quantity is meaningless except through prior experience understanding the value of a single dollar. Every value except the smallest is tenfold greater than some other value of at least some consequence.







  • unfreeradical@lemmy.worldtoWork Reform@lemmy.worldOne Mississippi
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    1 year ago

    I am not denying any of the differences, but the differences you both have with billionaires is even greater, as the billionaire occupies a role in society of power and domination, through control of resources and assets that are utilized socially, for the necessity that we produce our shared sustenance.



  • You are probably not vastly different from a millionaire, just someone with less pomp and perhaps pretentiousness than some millionaires may have.

    You may even know someone who secretly holds such wealth but feels too embarrassed to make it known.

    A billionaire is someone who has the social role of controlling a vast section of society, through private ownership of resources and assets that are needed by others for use.