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On March 09 2024 20:16 Sbrubbles wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 19:48 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 18:54 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 18:42 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 15:40 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 13:42 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:On March 09 2024 13:13 KwarK wrote:On March 09 2024 10:35 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 08:11 KwarK wrote: I think, of all the things that were said, the idea that there’s nothing more leftist than killing Trotsky/socialists was my favourite. It wasn't the capitalist pigs that killed Trotsky, bro. Anyway, you strike me as totally clueless. Full of factoids, devoid of understanding. If you accidentally say something insightful I'll respond, otherwise you're on ignore. Lol "You it's actually because Hitler persecuted socialists, trade unionists, and communists that he's left wing. That's how it works." Sevencck's completely backwards understanding of history and politics reminds me of how modern-day Republicans think they're the ones to thank for ending slavery, as they continue to wave their Confederate flags, drool over pro-slavery monuments, whitewash history textbooks to hide their shame, obsess over their conservative Southern heritage, and dog whistle about how black lives *don't* matter. I have a degree in history, specializing in 20th century, what about you? You really have no idea what you're talking about. Stalin purged and imprisoned millions, and they certainly weren't all republicans. Was he not a socialist? What about Pol Pot? Or Mao? There's nothing remotely odd about one group of believers purging another. Almost any group imaginable will purity spiral. If there are guns involved people get shot. If this is news to you the world must be confusing. By definition, you can't have socialism in a totalitarian dictatorship. The definition of socialism, both academically and in popular conversation, is far from obvious, so you might as well state yours if you're gonna make such an argument. For example, if I were asked for the definition of socialism I would say "collective ownership of the means of production" and that indeed neither requires nor precludes a totalitarian dictatorship. Socialism means workers control/own the means of production. If the state controls the means of production and the government is controlled by the people (democracy), you have state socialism. If the state controls the means of production and the government is a totalitarian dictatorship, the people have zero control over the means of production. In a totalitarian dictatorship people don't really own anything. They're at the mercy of the state. Their rights and possessions can be taken away on a whim. The point you're making is that in a totalitarian state there are no rights, therefore state ownership doesn't equate to collective ownership, and if we're indeed talking about full-on 100% totalitarian state then I suppose you're right, but the USSR wasn't totalitarian like that full sense. The USSR depended heavily on socialist ideology for maintaining legitimacy, so completely breaking the collective ownership of capital at the absolute leader's whim would break the very foundation of the regime (even if rampant corruption exposed its hypocrisy). The collective ownership wasn't breakable, it was just exercised through the state, so I disagree that the totalitarianism of the USSR disqualifies from calling it a socialist state as your comment implies. In a somewhat similar fashion, Hitler's totalitarianism doesn't mean his state wasn't capitalist. Large industrialists thrived during much of the war. You might say their capitalist property rights were at the mercy of Hitler's whims, but these were respected to a degree, at least until 1942. Would you also imply that Hitler's germany wasn't capitalist? In what way exactly were the workers controlling the means of production in the USSR?
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Northern Ireland22945 Posts
On March 09 2024 16:25 sevencck wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 06:43 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 06:07 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:46 Simberto wrote:On March 09 2024 04:39 Broetchenholer wrote:On March 09 2024 04:19 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:15 JimmiC wrote:On March 09 2024 03:38 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 03:18 Liquid`Drone wrote:On March 09 2024 02:26 sevencck wrote: [quote]
Thank you for proving my point. NSDAP = National Socialist German Workers Party. There were actually some socialists in the NSDAP early on, but hitler sure as fuck wasnt one, and they were largely murdered (on hitler's command) during the night of long knives in 1934. Hitler's rise should be understood in its historical context, namely that the market was increasingly considered an outdated model for economic coordination and the future would be about state coordination and control of the means of production. There was always going to be disagreement about how that control was meant to be instantiated. Yes, Hitler purged members of his party who had other ideas about how the means were to be controlled. So did Mussolini. So did Stalin. Trotsky was bumped off, along with millions of other Russians. This is all intra-left dispute, namely how best to control and manage the means of production, it is not an argument relevant to authentic right-wing politics, of which Mises, Hayek, Friedman, etc. were good examples. Classical liberalism does not occupy itself with how best to control the means of production (and therefore doesn't butcher each other over disagreements). That you include Hitler and Mussolini in as Left shows you don't remotely understand the term. Left just means evil to you the way capitalism means evil to GH. You don't understand what you're talking about, and I do not wish to explain it to you further. You need to read and study a subject before you profess your expertise to the world. Duuuude! You know who got rich in Nazi Germany? Nazi Germany industrials. Hitler started on a populist platform to give state money to war widows and wanted to have more control over industry, but not by socialist policies but instead by race ideology. His economic policies were more left wing then a economic libertarian, that does not make him left wing though. And acting as if comparisons to hitler are only about his economic policies as a statesman, makes it sound you believe the only thing bad about hitler was that he wasn't a libertarian, which is, to put it mildly the worst take ever. I'll be honest here. I have literally no idea how to deal with someone who legitimately claims that the Nazis, and Hitler specifically, were leftwing or socialists. Someone who puts Mussolini at the left end of the spectrum. I thought that to be a silly meme. Also, coming to the conclusion that WW2 was basically an intra-left conflict is kinda amazing. One would basically need to start right at the beginning at the most core definitions to be able to have any discussion here, because i am quite certain that basically none of the definitions of words that sevencck uses is even remotely related to those that other people use. That makes communication incredibly hard to do. I guess i would be kinda interested in how sevencck would define "socialist" or "left". A liberal advocates liberty and believes society is capable of self organizing with sufficient (albeit imperfect) intelligence to generate sustainable habitation on this planet. A leftist advocates revolution, either economically or culturally, and believes that society needs to be organized in a more intelligent fashion by those with "greater" vision in service of sustainable habitation on this planet.The people who believe the means of production are not distributed properly are advocating a revolution against that form of self organization in order to redistribute them. The people who believe gender relations have not self organized intelligently are advocating a revolution against that self organization to fix them, even over such things as pronouns. The people who believe the gaming culture is not sufficiently inclusive are advocating a revolution against the self organization therein to reconstruct it. The people who believe the society and economy has not self organized with sufficient intelligence to tackle environmental issues are advocating a revolution against that self organization. The list is endless. I don't consider both equally valid or the truth to be in the middle. When everything is said and done, the liberal holds the flesh and blood human being and his independence of conscience as the object of value. The leftist holds an abstraction of society as the object of value. Yet it is the flesh and blood reality which is naturally higher in value than whatever social abstraction man can generate in his mind.Paving over the flesh and blood reality to prioritize the social abstraction will always yield the same result. In order of bolded statements: - No, in the economic sphere at least, the leftist critique is more that those with economic power effectively already are the folks guiding things with ‘greater vision’ in a de facto sense.
- No, the general concept is that that system is not actually self-organised in any sense to begin with.
- This isn’t even a particularly left wing battlefield to begin with, and anyway in a more broad sense it’s one that is fought in the domain of capitalism and market forces and equilibrium anyway. If we’re talking self-organising, and supply and demand as a mechanism, there are many more women, gay folks and well, basically all sorts of non hetero white dudes playing games than before, and those changes will manifest in the kind of products people demand. If anything it’s stereotypical ‘gamer bros’ who are the ones trying to artificially ringfence the hobby against organic change, in this specific example.
- This is backwards. At the core left wing politics don’t deal in abstractions, but in conditions and reality and especially power in its various forms, but especially economically. In a crude sense abstract values, ideas or rights only matter insofar as you can actualise them. The distinction between so-called positive and negative liberty is absolutely core, even if the terminology was coined long after left wing politics had exerted huge influence.
1. The criticism that political power follows economic power is not uniquely leftist. It is pretty close to a statement of fact, people merely disagree on why it happens and what to do about it. Again, many leftists wish to lift the means of production out of private hands, which is an innately revolutionary proposition. 2. No, it isn't. There's an entire Marxist literature which outlines how the capitalist economy functions, along with commentaries on how bourgeois groups hold on to power at the expense of the marginalized. It explicitly claims there is self organization. 3. Again, I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the state of gaming per se, I'm saying things like removing power from "white male gamers" is a revolutionary proposition, and not in line with the ecological and emergent change you're referring to. It's actually a good example of a revolutionary overthrow of the so-called status quo. The "white male gamer" is a non-human abstraction that becomes the primary reality, and so is the future "inclusive gaming culture" that the individual must be made to bend to. Since there is no utopia, there will always be another revolution. It is an innately puerile state of being, rebellion against the oversights and imperfections of the universe. Working for change, improvement, and evolution within a fundamental acceptance of things is a more liberal outlook, and this is the distinction that I have drawn to answer the other person's question about how I might define the difference. I mean it depends on what one means by ‘self organisation’
1. It’s only innately revolutionary if one considers the previous state of affairs to be some organic, natural process, rather than itself being something guided by power, and the pursuit of more power by various actors.
3. White male gamers were the chief demographic in the hobby in its nascent stages. They aren’t nearly as demographically dominant now, one would expect the hobby to organically change to reflect that.
I can give you one of these, not both. Otherwise the framing is essentially ‘the left shouldn’t do anything, even if it’s via the exact mechanisms I consider otherwise acceptable’ in a rather arbitrary fashion.
As per the bolded I mean, who isn’t doing this to some degree? Humanity has spent thousands of years dealing with the hand nature gave us and innovating to overcome it. The fundamental acceptance of what things exactly?
And these things aren’t static either. What gains the left do make don’t become some fundamental fabric of the universe, other traditions will wield their political power to try and roll back what the left previously achieved.
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On March 09 2024 22:16 maybenexttime wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 20:16 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 19:48 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 18:54 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 18:42 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 15:40 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 13:42 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:On March 09 2024 13:13 KwarK wrote:On March 09 2024 10:35 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 08:11 KwarK wrote: I think, of all the things that were said, the idea that there’s nothing more leftist than killing Trotsky/socialists was my favourite. It wasn't the capitalist pigs that killed Trotsky, bro. Anyway, you strike me as totally clueless. Full of factoids, devoid of understanding. If you accidentally say something insightful I'll respond, otherwise you're on ignore. Lol "You it's actually because Hitler persecuted socialists, trade unionists, and communists that he's left wing. That's how it works." Sevencck's completely backwards understanding of history and politics reminds me of how modern-day Republicans think they're the ones to thank for ending slavery, as they continue to wave their Confederate flags, drool over pro-slavery monuments, whitewash history textbooks to hide their shame, obsess over their conservative Southern heritage, and dog whistle about how black lives *don't* matter. I have a degree in history, specializing in 20th century, what about you? You really have no idea what you're talking about. Stalin purged and imprisoned millions, and they certainly weren't all republicans. Was he not a socialist? What about Pol Pot? Or Mao? There's nothing remotely odd about one group of believers purging another. Almost any group imaginable will purity spiral. If there are guns involved people get shot. If this is news to you the world must be confusing. By definition, you can't have socialism in a totalitarian dictatorship. The definition of socialism, both academically and in popular conversation, is far from obvious, so you might as well state yours if you're gonna make such an argument. For example, if I were asked for the definition of socialism I would say "collective ownership of the means of production" and that indeed neither requires nor precludes a totalitarian dictatorship. Socialism means workers control/own the means of production. If the state controls the means of production and the government is controlled by the people (democracy), you have state socialism. If the state controls the means of production and the government is a totalitarian dictatorship, the people have zero control over the means of production. In a totalitarian dictatorship people don't really own anything. They're at the mercy of the state. Their rights and possessions can be taken away on a whim. The point you're making is that in a totalitarian state there are no rights, therefore state ownership doesn't equate to collective ownership, and if we're indeed talking about full-on 100% totalitarian state then I suppose you're right, but the USSR wasn't totalitarian like that full sense. The USSR depended heavily on socialist ideology for maintaining legitimacy, so completely breaking the collective ownership of capital at the absolute leader's whim would break the very foundation of the regime (even if rampant corruption exposed its hypocrisy). The collective ownership wasn't breakable, it was just exercised through the state, so I disagree that the totalitarianism of the USSR disqualifies from calling it a socialist state as your comment implies. In a somewhat similar fashion, Hitler's totalitarianism doesn't mean his state wasn't capitalist. Large industrialists thrived during much of the war. You might say their capitalist property rights were at the mercy of Hitler's whims, but these were respected to a degree, at least until 1942. Would you also imply that Hitler's germany wasn't capitalist? In what way exactly were the workers controlling the means of production in the USSR?
If you want to make a point, by all means do it and I'll respond, but I don't like answering a one-liner in a post that doesn't meaningfully engage with mine.
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Northern Ireland22945 Posts
On March 09 2024 16:55 GreenHorizons wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 07:55 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 07:30 GreenHorizons wrote:On March 09 2024 07:06 FlaShFTW wrote:On March 09 2024 05:48 GreenHorizons wrote:On March 09 2024 05:25 FlaShFTW wrote:On March 09 2024 05:17 GreenHorizons wrote:On March 09 2024 01:00 FlaShFTW wrote:+ Show Spoiler +Biden did extremely well and handled a lot of the big questions that were going to be thrown his way. Massive applause for him, though I hope he can have this sort of energy ready for a debate, as that's when a lot of voters get swung. The prepared, read off a teleprompter style of speeches really are great for Biden and he can even go off script a few times and still show some fire. As we now know the nominees and who's running this election, here's my way too damn early election prediction. Explanation: Rust belt states are very close, and I expect the undecided voters (about 10%) to split favorably for Biden at the moment. Whereas Nevada, Arizona, and Georgia are all around 48-49% Trump atm so Biden has too much ground to make up there at the moment. Obviously, this map is pretty worthless at this stage of the race but cheers to the first predictions of the year. Will update as time goes on. The hardest part for that map is Michigan where Biden is currently losing to Trump and down ~8% compared to his 2020 polling at this point. Question is if Biden campaigning to the right (his use of "illegals" at the SOTU, and rallying Republicans to crackdown on the border is emblematic of that) will help him win Michigan. I'm not optimistic it will. Trump's best polls only have him around 45/46%, which means there's a lot of undecided voters still out there. I think the undecided is going to split favorably for Biden (hopefully). Agree with others that this is a fucking travesty that the polls are even this close with how utterly messed up Trump has been. But as alluded to before, the Republican and Trump war chest is going to be tiny compared to the Democrats. This will play farther down the ticket. It's certainly going to be an interesting campaign season. One problem is whether Biden can court the people struggling to decide between him and Trump (nevermind the absurdity of this) by campaigning to the right without depressing the turnout of people to his left. One way that manifests is Biden/Democrats tossing of undocumented immigrants to the wolves and Biden using an outdated slur to refer to them during the SOTU. The far left wing of the party and the voter block were never going to be enthusiastic about voting for him regardless. And they will refuse to even want to vote for him unless he literally gives them 100% of what they want, which is impossible. Doesn't matter how much good or catering he does to them (opening a temp port to Gaza is already a fucking huge step and a hot mic catching him saying he's going to have a "come to jesus" talk with Bibi soon have not budged pro-Palestine voters an inch). Further, I don't think he's necessarily campaigning TO the right, but creating a message that moderate conservatives can still get behind when they're so disgusted with Trump. I think you're mistakenly conflating "the far left of the party" with "people far to the left of the party". It's not about folks like myself that aren't voting for Biden. It's about people that voted for Biden and more or less planned to in 2024 but are being turned off by Biden supporting what ~half of his voters identify as a genocide and "creating a message that moderate conservatives can get behind" (a euphemism for stuff like dog whistles, the crackdown on the border, cop cities, mobilizing the national guard to "fight crime", and so on from my perspective). I’m not sure how impactful the former can be if his direct opponent for the office is hardly going to be better in that particular domain, if not worse. It may impact turnout and enthusiasm which could prove crucial nonetheless, but won’t see folks cross the aisle as it were. Personally I don’t feel the latter necessarily means embracing the worst of conservative policy sentiment. I think it’s more cultural and in messaging, in a crude sense it’s ’hey we may have disagreements on the how, but we all love the country and its people and let’s work across aisles, our opponents aren’t inhuman monsters’. If nothing else amongst his flaws as a politician Biden’s got a good record in this particular domain. The problem with this is well firstly I’m not sure how many folks are even on the fence to begin with. Secondly you’re adopting this tact when the other party have essentially completely abandoned it wholesale. Obama tried it as well and IMO it didn’t bear much fruit for him either. Appealing to some kind of communal idea of what everyone wants and values, with divergence on the ‘how’ only works if there’s significant shared commonality and your political opponents adopt a somewhat similar approach. That just isn’t the case, and whatever voting bloc that responds really well to that messaging is likely dwarfed by partisans. Sure Obama could play nice in public proclamations about working with the GOP, but the GOP would simultaneously say the rather moderate changes proposed by Obamacare equalled him wanting to institute death panels who’d dictate who lived or died. Biden has the exact same problem, just worse. You can’t pull the ‘Republicans are also chest-beating Americans like us Dems, we just disagree on the details’ in the context of well, everything the GOP have done in the Trump era While still obviously problematic, it'd be a lot less concerning if all Biden was doing was his "I miss hanging out with segregationists" and "McConnell never, never, never, misrepresented anything" schtick, but the dog whistles ("illegals"), crackdown on the border, cop cities, mobilizing the national guard to "fight crime", supporting genocide, and so on, are all being done by Democrats/Biden. The general hasn't even actually started yet, so it's only going to get worse. As will the shaming and blaming of anyone that doesn't obsequiously fall in line to be tossed under the bus. Yeah fair point.
Aside from my personal moral objections I’m also unsure how effective such a course is either. How large is that non-voting/wavering cohort that rhetoric of that kind or actual policies will pull over. As well as how many of the wavering left you actively put off from trying to court the aforementioned.
At least in the UK every time Labour try this it feels counter-productive, maybe it’s the spheres I inhabit. Trying to out-arsehole the party of a long record of being rather good arseholes doesn’t really ring all that true. If you’re so inclined, go with the folks where it’s at the core of their party’s DNA.
Not that I especially agree with them, but if there is one broad cohort that feels winnable in a sizeable sense it’s the ‘I kind of lean left but the culture wars have gone too far’ types. They’ll generally already agree with Dem, or in my case Labour policy off the bat, minus that area.
Whereas trying to outdo the tough on crime, law and order parties on those topics, yeah that’s a tough sell.
Criticisms aside I still hope the Dems keep Trump out again, although like yourself if they don’t I pretty much can 100% guarantee the left will be blamed for others not listening to their concerns, as per
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On March 09 2024 22:28 Sbrubbles wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 22:16 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 20:16 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 19:48 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 18:54 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 18:42 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 15:40 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 13:42 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:On March 09 2024 13:13 KwarK wrote:On March 09 2024 10:35 sevencck wrote: [quote]
It wasn't the capitalist pigs that killed Trotsky, bro. Anyway, you strike me as totally clueless. Full of factoids, devoid of understanding. If you accidentally say something insightful I'll respond, otherwise you're on ignore. Lol "You it's actually because Hitler persecuted socialists, trade unionists, and communists that he's left wing. That's how it works." Sevencck's completely backwards understanding of history and politics reminds me of how modern-day Republicans think they're the ones to thank for ending slavery, as they continue to wave their Confederate flags, drool over pro-slavery monuments, whitewash history textbooks to hide their shame, obsess over their conservative Southern heritage, and dog whistle about how black lives *don't* matter. I have a degree in history, specializing in 20th century, what about you? You really have no idea what you're talking about. Stalin purged and imprisoned millions, and they certainly weren't all republicans. Was he not a socialist? What about Pol Pot? Or Mao? There's nothing remotely odd about one group of believers purging another. Almost any group imaginable will purity spiral. If there are guns involved people get shot. If this is news to you the world must be confusing. By definition, you can't have socialism in a totalitarian dictatorship. The definition of socialism, both academically and in popular conversation, is far from obvious, so you might as well state yours if you're gonna make such an argument. For example, if I were asked for the definition of socialism I would say "collective ownership of the means of production" and that indeed neither requires nor precludes a totalitarian dictatorship. Socialism means workers control/own the means of production. If the state controls the means of production and the government is controlled by the people (democracy), you have state socialism. If the state controls the means of production and the government is a totalitarian dictatorship, the people have zero control over the means of production. In a totalitarian dictatorship people don't really own anything. They're at the mercy of the state. Their rights and possessions can be taken away on a whim. The point you're making is that in a totalitarian state there are no rights, therefore state ownership doesn't equate to collective ownership, and if we're indeed talking about full-on 100% totalitarian state then I suppose you're right, but the USSR wasn't totalitarian like that full sense. The USSR depended heavily on socialist ideology for maintaining legitimacy, so completely breaking the collective ownership of capital at the absolute leader's whim would break the very foundation of the regime (even if rampant corruption exposed its hypocrisy). The collective ownership wasn't breakable, it was just exercised through the state, so I disagree that the totalitarianism of the USSR disqualifies from calling it a socialist state as your comment implies. In a somewhat similar fashion, Hitler's totalitarianism doesn't mean his state wasn't capitalist. Large industrialists thrived during much of the war. You might say their capitalist property rights were at the mercy of Hitler's whims, but these were respected to a degree, at least until 1942. Would you also imply that Hitler's germany wasn't capitalist? In what way exactly were the workers controlling the means of production in the USSR? If you want to make a point, by all means do it and I'll respond, but I don't like answering a one-liner in a post that doesn't meaningfully engage with mine. I am pointing out that fact that you haven't provided any evidence for the workers collectively owning or controlling the means of production in the USSR. They didn't exert any power. Trade unions were illegal. The businesses were managed by party-appointed managers. Everything was organized top-down. Ordinary people earned subsistence wages while party elites raked in all the profits and lived in luxury.
You are conflating publicly declaring certain values with actually upholding them. If the owner of a company tells his employees "this is our company" but materially nothing changes, the workers have no say in how the owner runs the company, they continue to live paycheck to paycheck while he rakes in all the profits, would you say they still collectively own the company?
And to say that the Soviet Union wasn't fully totalitarian is incredibly ignorant. During its first four decades, the USSR used tens of millions of slaves in the Gulag and similar camps, working them to death. It moved people from one place to another like cattle, starved millions of people at gunpoint and summarily executed hundreds of thousands at the very least. Sure, things weren't nearly as bad in the post-Stalinist era, but the working class still had no say in the matter of running the economy or the country.
I repeat my question: how did the working class exert its ownership/control of the means of production?
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On March 10 2024 01:03 maybenexttime wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 22:28 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 22:16 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 20:16 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 19:48 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 18:54 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 18:42 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 15:40 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 13:42 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:On March 09 2024 13:13 KwarK wrote: [quote] Lol "You it's actually because Hitler persecuted socialists, trade unionists, and communists that he's left wing. That's how it works." Sevencck's completely backwards understanding of history and politics reminds me of how modern-day Republicans think they're the ones to thank for ending slavery, as they continue to wave their Confederate flags, drool over pro-slavery monuments, whitewash history textbooks to hide their shame, obsess over their conservative Southern heritage, and dog whistle about how black lives *don't* matter. I have a degree in history, specializing in 20th century, what about you? You really have no idea what you're talking about. Stalin purged and imprisoned millions, and they certainly weren't all republicans. Was he not a socialist? What about Pol Pot? Or Mao? There's nothing remotely odd about one group of believers purging another. Almost any group imaginable will purity spiral. If there are guns involved people get shot. If this is news to you the world must be confusing. By definition, you can't have socialism in a totalitarian dictatorship. The definition of socialism, both academically and in popular conversation, is far from obvious, so you might as well state yours if you're gonna make such an argument. For example, if I were asked for the definition of socialism I would say "collective ownership of the means of production" and that indeed neither requires nor precludes a totalitarian dictatorship. Socialism means workers control/own the means of production. If the state controls the means of production and the government is controlled by the people (democracy), you have state socialism. If the state controls the means of production and the government is a totalitarian dictatorship, the people have zero control over the means of production. In a totalitarian dictatorship people don't really own anything. They're at the mercy of the state. Their rights and possessions can be taken away on a whim. The point you're making is that in a totalitarian state there are no rights, therefore state ownership doesn't equate to collective ownership, and if we're indeed talking about full-on 100% totalitarian state then I suppose you're right, but the USSR wasn't totalitarian like that full sense. The USSR depended heavily on socialist ideology for maintaining legitimacy, so completely breaking the collective ownership of capital at the absolute leader's whim would break the very foundation of the regime (even if rampant corruption exposed its hypocrisy). The collective ownership wasn't breakable, it was just exercised through the state, so I disagree that the totalitarianism of the USSR disqualifies from calling it a socialist state as your comment implies. In a somewhat similar fashion, Hitler's totalitarianism doesn't mean his state wasn't capitalist. Large industrialists thrived during much of the war. You might say their capitalist property rights were at the mercy of Hitler's whims, but these were respected to a degree, at least until 1942. Would you also imply that Hitler's germany wasn't capitalist? In what way exactly were the workers controlling the means of production in the USSR? If you want to make a point, by all means do it and I'll respond, but I don't like answering a one-liner in a post that doesn't meaningfully engage with mine. I am pointing out that fact that you haven't provided any evidence for the workers collectively owning or controlling the means of production in the USSR. They didn't exert any power. Trade unions were illegal. The businesses were managed by party-appointed managers. Everything was organized top-down. Ordinary people earned subsistence wages while party elites raked in all the profits and lived in luxury. You are conflating publicly declaring certain values with actually upholding them. If the owner of a company tells his employees "this is our company" but materially nothing changes, the workers have no say in how the owner runs the company, they continue to live paycheck to paycheck while he rakes in all the profits, would you say they still collectively own the company? And to say that the Soviet Union wasn't fully totalitarian is incredibly ignorant. During its first four decades, the USSR used tens of millions of slaves in the Gulag and similar camps, working them to death. It moved people from one place to another like cattle, starved millions of people at gunpoint and summarily executed hundreds of thousands at the very least. Sure, things weren't nearly as bad in the post-Stalinist era, but the working class still had no say in the matter of running the economy or the country. I repeat my question: how did the working class exert its ownership/control of the means of production?
The working class owned the property collectively through the state. The state owns the factories and the factories are put to use for the collective needs people and organized through the will of state. An authocratic state, but this doesn't change the ownership question. There is no alternative ownership! There is no party member who actually owns factory X Y or Z, even if there is great corruption and there is great misuse. The corruption and misuse would have to have been total and complete to truly change this, and no, I would not say the USSR reached this point, evidenced by the massive increase in income inequality post-dissolution of the socialist regime. If corruption was such that the politicians were and had always been the "true" owners of capital (with a veneer of socialism as you imply) this increase would not have been so brutal.
It's the same thing for capitalist states with authocratic regimes as was very common during the Cold War and still exist today: it doesn't matter that these authocratic regimes can to some degree break these property rights, they are still capitalist because even in states we call totalitarian there are limits.
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United States41539 Posts
On March 10 2024 02:03 Sbrubbles wrote:Show nested quote +On March 10 2024 01:03 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 22:28 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 22:16 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 20:16 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 19:48 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 18:54 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 18:42 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 15:40 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 13:42 DarkPlasmaBall wrote: [quote]
Sevencck's completely backwards understanding of history and politics reminds me of how modern-day Republicans think they're the ones to thank for ending slavery, as they continue to wave their Confederate flags, drool over pro-slavery monuments, whitewash history textbooks to hide their shame, obsess over their conservative Southern heritage, and dog whistle about how black lives *don't* matter. I have a degree in history, specializing in 20th century, what about you? You really have no idea what you're talking about. Stalin purged and imprisoned millions, and they certainly weren't all republicans. Was he not a socialist? What about Pol Pot? Or Mao? There's nothing remotely odd about one group of believers purging another. Almost any group imaginable will purity spiral. If there are guns involved people get shot. If this is news to you the world must be confusing. By definition, you can't have socialism in a totalitarian dictatorship. The definition of socialism, both academically and in popular conversation, is far from obvious, so you might as well state yours if you're gonna make such an argument. For example, if I were asked for the definition of socialism I would say "collective ownership of the means of production" and that indeed neither requires nor precludes a totalitarian dictatorship. Socialism means workers control/own the means of production. If the state controls the means of production and the government is controlled by the people (democracy), you have state socialism. If the state controls the means of production and the government is a totalitarian dictatorship, the people have zero control over the means of production. In a totalitarian dictatorship people don't really own anything. They're at the mercy of the state. Their rights and possessions can be taken away on a whim. The point you're making is that in a totalitarian state there are no rights, therefore state ownership doesn't equate to collective ownership, and if we're indeed talking about full-on 100% totalitarian state then I suppose you're right, but the USSR wasn't totalitarian like that full sense. The USSR depended heavily on socialist ideology for maintaining legitimacy, so completely breaking the collective ownership of capital at the absolute leader's whim would break the very foundation of the regime (even if rampant corruption exposed its hypocrisy). The collective ownership wasn't breakable, it was just exercised through the state, so I disagree that the totalitarianism of the USSR disqualifies from calling it a socialist state as your comment implies. In a somewhat similar fashion, Hitler's totalitarianism doesn't mean his state wasn't capitalist. Large industrialists thrived during much of the war. You might say their capitalist property rights were at the mercy of Hitler's whims, but these were respected to a degree, at least until 1942. Would you also imply that Hitler's germany wasn't capitalist? In what way exactly were the workers controlling the means of production in the USSR? If you want to make a point, by all means do it and I'll respond, but I don't like answering a one-liner in a post that doesn't meaningfully engage with mine. I am pointing out that fact that you haven't provided any evidence for the workers collectively owning or controlling the means of production in the USSR. They didn't exert any power. Trade unions were illegal. The businesses were managed by party-appointed managers. Everything was organized top-down. Ordinary people earned subsistence wages while party elites raked in all the profits and lived in luxury. You are conflating publicly declaring certain values with actually upholding them. If the owner of a company tells his employees "this is our company" but materially nothing changes, the workers have no say in how the owner runs the company, they continue to live paycheck to paycheck while he rakes in all the profits, would you say they still collectively own the company? And to say that the Soviet Union wasn't fully totalitarian is incredibly ignorant. During its first four decades, the USSR used tens of millions of slaves in the Gulag and similar camps, working them to death. It moved people from one place to another like cattle, starved millions of people at gunpoint and summarily executed hundreds of thousands at the very least. Sure, things weren't nearly as bad in the post-Stalinist era, but the working class still had no say in the matter of running the economy or the country. I repeat my question: how did the working class exert its ownership/control of the means of production? The working class owned the property collectively through the state. The state owns the factories and the factories are put to use for the collective needs people and organized through the will of state. An authocratic state, but this doesn't change the ownership question. There is no alternative ownership! There is no party member who actually owns factory X Y or Z, even if there is great corruption and there is great misuse. The corruption and misuse would have to have been total and complete to truly change this, and no, I would not say the USSR reached this point, evidenced by the massive increase in income inequality post-dissolution of the socialist regime. If corruption was such that the politicians were and had always been the "true" owners of capital (with a veneer of socialism as you imply) this increase would not have been so brutal. It's the same thing for capitalist states with authocratic regimes as was very common during the Cold War and still exist today: it doesn't matter that these authocratic regimes can to some degree break these property rights, they are still capitalist because even in states we call totalitarian there are limits. Let’s say there was a Tsar who owned everything. The state and the Tsar were one. State owned/controlled would, in that context, not mean owned by the people, it would mean owned by the Tsar. The people would have no power in the state and so state ownership would not imply popular ownership. Now let’s say the Tsar styled himself as general secretary of the party. The people would still not own anything.
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On March 09 2024 17:40 Broetchenholer wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 16:25 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 06:43 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 06:07 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:46 Simberto wrote:On March 09 2024 04:39 Broetchenholer wrote:On March 09 2024 04:19 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:15 JimmiC wrote:On March 09 2024 03:38 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 03:18 Liquid`Drone wrote: [quote]
There were actually some socialists in the NSDAP early on, but hitler sure as fuck wasnt one, and they were largely murdered (on hitler's command) during the night of long knives in 1934. Hitler's rise should be understood in its historical context, namely that the market was increasingly considered an outdated model for economic coordination and the future would be about state coordination and control of the means of production. There was always going to be disagreement about how that control was meant to be instantiated. Yes, Hitler purged members of his party who had other ideas about how the means were to be controlled. So did Mussolini. So did Stalin. Trotsky was bumped off, along with millions of other Russians. This is all intra-left dispute, namely how best to control and manage the means of production, it is not an argument relevant to authentic right-wing politics, of which Mises, Hayek, Friedman, etc. were good examples. Classical liberalism does not occupy itself with how best to control the means of production (and therefore doesn't butcher each other over disagreements). That you include Hitler and Mussolini in as Left shows you don't remotely understand the term. Left just means evil to you the way capitalism means evil to GH. You don't understand what you're talking about, and I do not wish to explain it to you further. You need to read and study a subject before you profess your expertise to the world. Duuuude! You know who got rich in Nazi Germany? Nazi Germany industrials. Hitler started on a populist platform to give state money to war widows and wanted to have more control over industry, but not by socialist policies but instead by race ideology. His economic policies were more left wing then a economic libertarian, that does not make him left wing though. And acting as if comparisons to hitler are only about his economic policies as a statesman, makes it sound you believe the only thing bad about hitler was that he wasn't a libertarian, which is, to put it mildly the worst take ever. I'll be honest here. I have literally no idea how to deal with someone who legitimately claims that the Nazis, and Hitler specifically, were leftwing or socialists. Someone who puts Mussolini at the left end of the spectrum. I thought that to be a silly meme. Also, coming to the conclusion that WW2 was basically an intra-left conflict is kinda amazing. One would basically need to start right at the beginning at the most core definitions to be able to have any discussion here, because i am quite certain that basically none of the definitions of words that sevencck uses is even remotely related to those that other people use. That makes communication incredibly hard to do. I guess i would be kinda interested in how sevencck would define "socialist" or "left". A liberal advocates liberty and believes society is capable of self organizing with sufficient (albeit imperfect) intelligence to generate sustainable habitation on this planet. A leftist advocates revolution, either economically or culturally, and believes that society needs to be organized in a more intelligent fashion by those with "greater" vision in service of sustainable habitation on this planet.The people who believe the means of production are not distributed properly are advocating a revolution against that form of self organization in order to redistribute them. The people who believe gender relations have not self organized intelligently are advocating a revolution against that self organization to fix them, even over such things as pronouns. The people who believe the gaming culture is not sufficiently inclusive are advocating a revolution against the self organization therein to reconstruct it. The people who believe the society and economy has not self organized with sufficient intelligence to tackle environmental issues are advocating a revolution against that self organization. The list is endless. I don't consider both equally valid or the truth to be in the middle. When everything is said and done, the liberal holds the flesh and blood human being and his independence of conscience as the object of value. The leftist holds an abstraction of society as the object of value. Yet it is the flesh and blood reality which is naturally higher in value than whatever social abstraction man can generate in his mind.Paving over the flesh and blood reality to prioritize the social abstraction will always yield the same result. In order of bolded statements: - No, in the economic sphere at least, the leftist critique is more that those with economic power effectively already are the folks guiding things with ‘greater vision’ in a de facto sense.
- No, the general concept is that that system is not actually self-organised in any sense to begin with.
- This isn’t even a particularly left wing battlefield to begin with, and anyway in a more broad sense it’s one that is fought in the domain of capitalism and market forces and equilibrium anyway. If we’re talking self-organising, and supply and demand as a mechanism, there are many more women, gay folks and well, basically all sorts of non hetero white dudes playing games than before, and those changes will manifest in the kind of products people demand. If anything it’s stereotypical ‘gamer bros’ who are the ones trying to artificially ringfence the hobby against organic change, in this specific example.
- This is backwards. At the core left wing politics don’t deal in abstractions, but in conditions and reality and especially power in its various forms, but especially economically. In a crude sense abstract values, ideas or rights only matter insofar as you can actualise them. The distinction between so-called positive and negative liberty is absolutely core, even if the terminology was coined long after left wing politics had exerted huge influence.
1. The criticism that political power follows economic power is not uniquely leftist. It is pretty close to a statement of fact, people merely disagree on why it happens and what to do about it. Again, many leftists wish to lift the means of production out of private hands, which is an innately revolutionary proposition. 2. No, it isn't. There's an entire Marxist literature which outlines how the capitalist economy functions, along with commentaries on how bourgeois groups hold on to power at the expense of the marginalized. It explicitly claims there is self organization. 3. Again, I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the state of gaming per se, I'm saying things like removing power from "white male gamers" is a revolutionary proposition, and not in line with the ecological and emergent change you're referring to. It's actually a good example of a revolutionary overthrow of the so-called status quo. The "white male gamer" is a non-human abstraction that becomes the primary reality, and so is the future "inclusive gaming culture" that the individual must be made to bend to. Since there is no utopia, there will always be another revolution. It is an innately puerile state of being, rebellion against the oversights and imperfections of the universe. Working for change, improvement, and evolution within a fundamental acceptance of things is a more liberal outlook, and this is the distinction that I have drawn to answer the other person's question about how I might define the difference. You Do know though that Liberalismus is a movement of the 17th to 19th century that was responsible for overthrowing the Status quo, most famously in the frech Revolution. your framing of every Rebellion against the Status quo is leftist only works if You define before what You consider to be a real Status quo and what is a fake Status quo. as trump is rallying his supporters against the Establishment, He is clearly leftist, making hin again extremely close to hitler. or is your fake philosophy artificially narrowed so that only libertarians can represent Status quo and everyone else is leftist?
I'm trying to articulate a general distinction relevant to contemporary culture that will highlight the reason for conflict and disagreement economically and culturally across Western nations.
But I'll bite. Let's call the American Revolution fundamentally liberal (the French Revolution is not a good example of liberalism). The AR was not about revolution against man's nature and unfairness, but against tyranny and arbitrary power. They were not using external secular institutions as a tool to overthrow man's interiority (racism, sexism, transphobia, greed, etc.), and that's the difference. They accepted that these things exist and trusted the virtue of the people.
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United States41539 Posts
On March 10 2024 02:39 sevencck wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 17:40 Broetchenholer wrote:On March 09 2024 16:25 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 06:43 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 06:07 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:46 Simberto wrote:On March 09 2024 04:39 Broetchenholer wrote:On March 09 2024 04:19 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:15 JimmiC wrote:On March 09 2024 03:38 sevencck wrote: [quote]
Hitler's rise should be understood in its historical context, namely that the market was increasingly considered an outdated model for economic coordination and the future would be about state coordination and control of the means of production. There was always going to be disagreement about how that control was meant to be instantiated. Yes, Hitler purged members of his party who had other ideas about how the means were to be controlled. So did Mussolini. So did Stalin. Trotsky was bumped off, along with millions of other Russians. This is all intra-left dispute, namely how best to control and manage the means of production, it is not an argument relevant to authentic right-wing politics, of which Mises, Hayek, Friedman, etc. were good examples. Classical liberalism does not occupy itself with how best to control the means of production (and therefore doesn't butcher each other over disagreements).
That you include Hitler and Mussolini in as Left shows you don't remotely understand the term. Left just means evil to you the way capitalism means evil to GH. You don't understand what you're talking about, and I do not wish to explain it to you further. You need to read and study a subject before you profess your expertise to the world. Duuuude! You know who got rich in Nazi Germany? Nazi Germany industrials. Hitler started on a populist platform to give state money to war widows and wanted to have more control over industry, but not by socialist policies but instead by race ideology. His economic policies were more left wing then a economic libertarian, that does not make him left wing though. And acting as if comparisons to hitler are only about his economic policies as a statesman, makes it sound you believe the only thing bad about hitler was that he wasn't a libertarian, which is, to put it mildly the worst take ever. I'll be honest here. I have literally no idea how to deal with someone who legitimately claims that the Nazis, and Hitler specifically, were leftwing or socialists. Someone who puts Mussolini at the left end of the spectrum. I thought that to be a silly meme. Also, coming to the conclusion that WW2 was basically an intra-left conflict is kinda amazing. One would basically need to start right at the beginning at the most core definitions to be able to have any discussion here, because i am quite certain that basically none of the definitions of words that sevencck uses is even remotely related to those that other people use. That makes communication incredibly hard to do. I guess i would be kinda interested in how sevencck would define "socialist" or "left". A liberal advocates liberty and believes society is capable of self organizing with sufficient (albeit imperfect) intelligence to generate sustainable habitation on this planet. A leftist advocates revolution, either economically or culturally, and believes that society needs to be organized in a more intelligent fashion by those with "greater" vision in service of sustainable habitation on this planet.The people who believe the means of production are not distributed properly are advocating a revolution against that form of self organization in order to redistribute them. The people who believe gender relations have not self organized intelligently are advocating a revolution against that self organization to fix them, even over such things as pronouns. The people who believe the gaming culture is not sufficiently inclusive are advocating a revolution against the self organization therein to reconstruct it. The people who believe the society and economy has not self organized with sufficient intelligence to tackle environmental issues are advocating a revolution against that self organization. The list is endless. I don't consider both equally valid or the truth to be in the middle. When everything is said and done, the liberal holds the flesh and blood human being and his independence of conscience as the object of value. The leftist holds an abstraction of society as the object of value. Yet it is the flesh and blood reality which is naturally higher in value than whatever social abstraction man can generate in his mind.Paving over the flesh and blood reality to prioritize the social abstraction will always yield the same result. In order of bolded statements: - No, in the economic sphere at least, the leftist critique is more that those with economic power effectively already are the folks guiding things with ‘greater vision’ in a de facto sense.
- No, the general concept is that that system is not actually self-organised in any sense to begin with.
- This isn’t even a particularly left wing battlefield to begin with, and anyway in a more broad sense it’s one that is fought in the domain of capitalism and market forces and equilibrium anyway. If we’re talking self-organising, and supply and demand as a mechanism, there are many more women, gay folks and well, basically all sorts of non hetero white dudes playing games than before, and those changes will manifest in the kind of products people demand. If anything it’s stereotypical ‘gamer bros’ who are the ones trying to artificially ringfence the hobby against organic change, in this specific example.
- This is backwards. At the core left wing politics don’t deal in abstractions, but in conditions and reality and especially power in its various forms, but especially economically. In a crude sense abstract values, ideas or rights only matter insofar as you can actualise them. The distinction between so-called positive and negative liberty is absolutely core, even if the terminology was coined long after left wing politics had exerted huge influence.
1. The criticism that political power follows economic power is not uniquely leftist. It is pretty close to a statement of fact, people merely disagree on why it happens and what to do about it. Again, many leftists wish to lift the means of production out of private hands, which is an innately revolutionary proposition. 2. No, it isn't. There's an entire Marxist literature which outlines how the capitalist economy functions, along with commentaries on how bourgeois groups hold on to power at the expense of the marginalized. It explicitly claims there is self organization. 3. Again, I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the state of gaming per se, I'm saying things like removing power from "white male gamers" is a revolutionary proposition, and not in line with the ecological and emergent change you're referring to. It's actually a good example of a revolutionary overthrow of the so-called status quo. The "white male gamer" is a non-human abstraction that becomes the primary reality, and so is the future "inclusive gaming culture" that the individual must be made to bend to. Since there is no utopia, there will always be another revolution. It is an innately puerile state of being, rebellion against the oversights and imperfections of the universe. Working for change, improvement, and evolution within a fundamental acceptance of things is a more liberal outlook, and this is the distinction that I have drawn to answer the other person's question about how I might define the difference. You Do know though that Liberalismus is a movement of the 17th to 19th century that was responsible for overthrowing the Status quo, most famously in the frech Revolution. your framing of every Rebellion against the Status quo is leftist only works if You define before what You consider to be a real Status quo and what is a fake Status quo. as trump is rallying his supporters against the Establishment, He is clearly leftist, making hin again extremely close to hitler. or is your fake philosophy artificially narrowed so that only libertarians can represent Status quo and everyone else is leftist? I'm trying to articulate a general distinction relevant to contemporary culture that will highlight the reason for conflict and disagreement economically and culturally across Western nations. But I'll bite. Let's call the American Revolution fundamentally liberal (the French Revolution is not a good example of liberalism). The AR was not about revolution against man's nature and unfairness, but against tyranny and arbitrary power. They were not using external secular institutions as a tool to overthrow man's interiority (racism, sexism, transphobia, greed, etc.), and that's the difference. They accepted that these things exist and trusted the virtue of the people. This is the pro slavery revolution, yes?
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On March 09 2024 23:00 WombaT wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 16:55 GreenHorizons wrote:On March 09 2024 07:55 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 07:30 GreenHorizons wrote:On March 09 2024 07:06 FlaShFTW wrote:On March 09 2024 05:48 GreenHorizons wrote:On March 09 2024 05:25 FlaShFTW wrote:On March 09 2024 05:17 GreenHorizons wrote:On March 09 2024 01:00 FlaShFTW wrote:+ Show Spoiler +Biden did extremely well and handled a lot of the big questions that were going to be thrown his way. Massive applause for him, though I hope he can have this sort of energy ready for a debate, as that's when a lot of voters get swung. The prepared, read off a teleprompter style of speeches really are great for Biden and he can even go off script a few times and still show some fire. As we now know the nominees and who's running this election, here's my way too damn early election prediction. Explanation: Rust belt states are very close, and I expect the undecided voters (about 10%) to split favorably for Biden at the moment. Whereas Nevada, Arizona, and Georgia are all around 48-49% Trump atm so Biden has too much ground to make up there at the moment. Obviously, this map is pretty worthless at this stage of the race but cheers to the first predictions of the year. Will update as time goes on. The hardest part for that map is Michigan where Biden is currently losing to Trump and down ~8% compared to his 2020 polling at this point. Question is if Biden campaigning to the right (his use of "illegals" at the SOTU, and rallying Republicans to crackdown on the border is emblematic of that) will help him win Michigan. I'm not optimistic it will. Trump's best polls only have him around 45/46%, which means there's a lot of undecided voters still out there. I think the undecided is going to split favorably for Biden (hopefully). Agree with others that this is a fucking travesty that the polls are even this close with how utterly messed up Trump has been. But as alluded to before, the Republican and Trump war chest is going to be tiny compared to the Democrats. This will play farther down the ticket. It's certainly going to be an interesting campaign season. One problem is whether Biden can court the people struggling to decide between him and Trump (nevermind the absurdity of this) by campaigning to the right without depressing the turnout of people to his left. One way that manifests is Biden/Democrats tossing of undocumented immigrants to the wolves and Biden using an outdated slur to refer to them during the SOTU. The far left wing of the party and the voter block were never going to be enthusiastic about voting for him regardless. And they will refuse to even want to vote for him unless he literally gives them 100% of what they want, which is impossible. Doesn't matter how much good or catering he does to them (opening a temp port to Gaza is already a fucking huge step and a hot mic catching him saying he's going to have a "come to jesus" talk with Bibi soon have not budged pro-Palestine voters an inch). Further, I don't think he's necessarily campaigning TO the right, but creating a message that moderate conservatives can still get behind when they're so disgusted with Trump. I think you're mistakenly conflating "the far left of the party" with "people far to the left of the party". It's not about folks like myself that aren't voting for Biden. It's about people that voted for Biden and more or less planned to in 2024 but are being turned off by Biden supporting what ~half of his voters identify as a genocide and "creating a message that moderate conservatives can get behind" (a euphemism for stuff like dog whistles, the crackdown on the border, cop cities, mobilizing the national guard to "fight crime", and so on from my perspective). I’m not sure how impactful the former can be if his direct opponent for the office is hardly going to be better in that particular domain, if not worse. It may impact turnout and enthusiasm which could prove crucial nonetheless, but won’t see folks cross the aisle as it were. Personally I don’t feel the latter necessarily means embracing the worst of conservative policy sentiment. I think it’s more cultural and in messaging, in a crude sense it’s ’hey we may have disagreements on the how, but we all love the country and its people and let’s work across aisles, our opponents aren’t inhuman monsters’. If nothing else amongst his flaws as a politician Biden’s got a good record in this particular domain. The problem with this is well firstly I’m not sure how many folks are even on the fence to begin with. Secondly you’re adopting this tact when the other party have essentially completely abandoned it wholesale. Obama tried it as well and IMO it didn’t bear much fruit for him either. Appealing to some kind of communal idea of what everyone wants and values, with divergence on the ‘how’ only works if there’s significant shared commonality and your political opponents adopt a somewhat similar approach. That just isn’t the case, and whatever voting bloc that responds really well to that messaging is likely dwarfed by partisans. Sure Obama could play nice in public proclamations about working with the GOP, but the GOP would simultaneously say the rather moderate changes proposed by Obamacare equalled him wanting to institute death panels who’d dictate who lived or died. Biden has the exact same problem, just worse. You can’t pull the ‘Republicans are also chest-beating Americans like us Dems, we just disagree on the details’ in the context of well, everything the GOP have done in the Trump era While still obviously problematic, it'd be a lot less concerning if all Biden was doing was his "I miss hanging out with segregationists" and "McConnell never, never, never, misrepresented anything" schtick, but the dog whistles ("illegals"), crackdown on the border, cop cities, mobilizing the national guard to "fight crime", supporting genocide, and so on, are all being done by Democrats/Biden. The general hasn't even actually started yet, so it's only going to get worse. As will the shaming and blaming of anyone that doesn't obsequiously fall in line to be tossed under the bus. Yeah fair point. Aside from my personal moral objections I’m also unsure how effective such a course is either. How large is that non-voting/wavering cohort that rhetoric of that kind or actual policies will pull over. As well as how many of the wavering left you actively put off from trying to court the aforementioned. At least in the UK every time Labour try this it feels counter-productive, maybe it’s the spheres I inhabit. Trying to out-arsehole the party of a long record of being rather good arseholes doesn’t really ring all that true. If you’re so inclined, go with the folks where it’s at the core of their party’s DNA. Not that I especially agree with them, but if there is one broad cohort that feels winnable in a sizeable sense it’s the ‘I kind of lean left but the culture wars have gone too far’ types. They’ll generally already agree with Dem, or in my case Labour policy off the bat, minus that area. Whereas trying to outdo the tough on crime, law and order parties on those topics, yeah that’s a tough sell. Criticisms aside I still hope the Dems keep Trump out again, although like yourself if they don’t I pretty much can 100% guarantee the left will be blamed for others not listening to their concerns, as per That's part of my point. I obviously disagree with their politics, but not only are they at risk of failing, their success is inextricably linked to the sacrificing of various members of oppressed groups (Palestinians and immigrants are prominent atm). On top of that, Democrats are emboldening the fascists by normalizing supporting genocide, using the national guard to "fight crime", othering immigrants with bigoted language, building cop cities across the country, and so on.
People love the trolley analogy but fail to recognize Democrats insist on throwing oppressed people on their tracks to lure Republicans at the switch to throw it their way. They do this while shaming and blaming people for not excitedly jumping on the tracks and trying to help throw the switch to run themselves and their loved ones over. It's morally repugnant, and as you note, likely ineffective.
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On March 10 2024 02:03 Sbrubbles wrote:Show nested quote +On March 10 2024 01:03 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 22:28 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 22:16 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 20:16 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 19:48 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 18:54 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 18:42 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 15:40 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 13:42 DarkPlasmaBall wrote: [quote]
Sevencck's completely backwards understanding of history and politics reminds me of how modern-day Republicans think they're the ones to thank for ending slavery, as they continue to wave their Confederate flags, drool over pro-slavery monuments, whitewash history textbooks to hide their shame, obsess over their conservative Southern heritage, and dog whistle about how black lives *don't* matter. I have a degree in history, specializing in 20th century, what about you? You really have no idea what you're talking about. Stalin purged and imprisoned millions, and they certainly weren't all republicans. Was he not a socialist? What about Pol Pot? Or Mao? There's nothing remotely odd about one group of believers purging another. Almost any group imaginable will purity spiral. If there are guns involved people get shot. If this is news to you the world must be confusing. By definition, you can't have socialism in a totalitarian dictatorship. The definition of socialism, both academically and in popular conversation, is far from obvious, so you might as well state yours if you're gonna make such an argument. For example, if I were asked for the definition of socialism I would say "collective ownership of the means of production" and that indeed neither requires nor precludes a totalitarian dictatorship. Socialism means workers control/own the means of production. If the state controls the means of production and the government is controlled by the people (democracy), you have state socialism. If the state controls the means of production and the government is a totalitarian dictatorship, the people have zero control over the means of production. In a totalitarian dictatorship people don't really own anything. They're at the mercy of the state. Their rights and possessions can be taken away on a whim. The point you're making is that in a totalitarian state there are no rights, therefore state ownership doesn't equate to collective ownership, and if we're indeed talking about full-on 100% totalitarian state then I suppose you're right, but the USSR wasn't totalitarian like that full sense. The USSR depended heavily on socialist ideology for maintaining legitimacy, so completely breaking the collective ownership of capital at the absolute leader's whim would break the very foundation of the regime (even if rampant corruption exposed its hypocrisy). The collective ownership wasn't breakable, it was just exercised through the state, so I disagree that the totalitarianism of the USSR disqualifies from calling it a socialist state as your comment implies. In a somewhat similar fashion, Hitler's totalitarianism doesn't mean his state wasn't capitalist. Large industrialists thrived during much of the war. You might say their capitalist property rights were at the mercy of Hitler's whims, but these were respected to a degree, at least until 1942. Would you also imply that Hitler's germany wasn't capitalist? In what way exactly were the workers controlling the means of production in the USSR? If you want to make a point, by all means do it and I'll respond, but I don't like answering a one-liner in a post that doesn't meaningfully engage with mine. I am pointing out that fact that you haven't provided any evidence for the workers collectively owning or controlling the means of production in the USSR. They didn't exert any power. Trade unions were illegal. The businesses were managed by party-appointed managers. Everything was organized top-down. Ordinary people earned subsistence wages while party elites raked in all the profits and lived in luxury. You are conflating publicly declaring certain values with actually upholding them. If the owner of a company tells his employees "this is our company" but materially nothing changes, the workers have no say in how the owner runs the company, they continue to live paycheck to paycheck while he rakes in all the profits, would you say they still collectively own the company? And to say that the Soviet Union wasn't fully totalitarian is incredibly ignorant. During its first four decades, the USSR used tens of millions of slaves in the Gulag and similar camps, working them to death. It moved people from one place to another like cattle, starved millions of people at gunpoint and summarily executed hundreds of thousands at the very least. Sure, things weren't nearly as bad in the post-Stalinist era, but the working class still had no say in the matter of running the economy or the country. I repeat my question: how did the working class exert its ownership/control of the means of production? The working class owned the property collectively through the state. The state owns the factories and the factories are put to use for the collective needs people and organized through the will of state. An authocratic state, but this doesn't change the ownership question. There is no alternative ownership! There is no party member who actually owns factory X Y or Z, even if there is great corruption and there is great misuse. The corruption and misuse would have to have been total and complete to truly change this, and no, I would not say the USSR reached this point, evidenced by the massive increase in income inequality post-dissolution of the socialist regime. If corruption was such that the politicians were and had always been the "true" owners of capital (with a veneer of socialism as you imply) this increase would not have been so brutal. It's the same thing for capitalist states with authocratic regimes as was very common during the Cold War and still exist today: it doesn't matter that these authocratic regimes can to some degree break these property rights, they are still capitalist because even in states we call totalitarian there are limits. There is an erroneous step in your ownership chain that you are assuming without even asserting. The working class did not have ownership or control over the state.
Whether you want to call it oligarchy, aristocracy, or something else, there was a ruling class that was distinct from the working class.
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On March 10 2024 02:03 Sbrubbles wrote:Show nested quote +On March 10 2024 01:03 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 22:28 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 22:16 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 20:16 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 19:48 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 18:54 Sbrubbles wrote:On March 09 2024 18:42 maybenexttime wrote:On March 09 2024 15:40 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 13:42 DarkPlasmaBall wrote: [quote]
Sevencck's completely backwards understanding of history and politics reminds me of how modern-day Republicans think they're the ones to thank for ending slavery, as they continue to wave their Confederate flags, drool over pro-slavery monuments, whitewash history textbooks to hide their shame, obsess over their conservative Southern heritage, and dog whistle about how black lives *don't* matter. I have a degree in history, specializing in 20th century, what about you? You really have no idea what you're talking about. Stalin purged and imprisoned millions, and they certainly weren't all republicans. Was he not a socialist? What about Pol Pot? Or Mao? There's nothing remotely odd about one group of believers purging another. Almost any group imaginable will purity spiral. If there are guns involved people get shot. If this is news to you the world must be confusing. By definition, you can't have socialism in a totalitarian dictatorship. The definition of socialism, both academically and in popular conversation, is far from obvious, so you might as well state yours if you're gonna make such an argument. For example, if I were asked for the definition of socialism I would say "collective ownership of the means of production" and that indeed neither requires nor precludes a totalitarian dictatorship. Socialism means workers control/own the means of production. If the state controls the means of production and the government is controlled by the people (democracy), you have state socialism. If the state controls the means of production and the government is a totalitarian dictatorship, the people have zero control over the means of production. In a totalitarian dictatorship people don't really own anything. They're at the mercy of the state. Their rights and possessions can be taken away on a whim. The point you're making is that in a totalitarian state there are no rights, therefore state ownership doesn't equate to collective ownership, and if we're indeed talking about full-on 100% totalitarian state then I suppose you're right, but the USSR wasn't totalitarian like that full sense. The USSR depended heavily on socialist ideology for maintaining legitimacy, so completely breaking the collective ownership of capital at the absolute leader's whim would break the very foundation of the regime (even if rampant corruption exposed its hypocrisy). The collective ownership wasn't breakable, it was just exercised through the state, so I disagree that the totalitarianism of the USSR disqualifies from calling it a socialist state as your comment implies. In a somewhat similar fashion, Hitler's totalitarianism doesn't mean his state wasn't capitalist. Large industrialists thrived during much of the war. You might say their capitalist property rights were at the mercy of Hitler's whims, but these were respected to a degree, at least until 1942. Would you also imply that Hitler's germany wasn't capitalist? In what way exactly were the workers controlling the means of production in the USSR? If you want to make a point, by all means do it and I'll respond, but I don't like answering a one-liner in a post that doesn't meaningfully engage with mine. I am pointing out that fact that you haven't provided any evidence for the workers collectively owning or controlling the means of production in the USSR. They didn't exert any power. Trade unions were illegal. The businesses were managed by party-appointed managers. Everything was organized top-down. Ordinary people earned subsistence wages while party elites raked in all the profits and lived in luxury. You are conflating publicly declaring certain values with actually upholding them. If the owner of a company tells his employees "this is our company" but materially nothing changes, the workers have no say in how the owner runs the company, they continue to live paycheck to paycheck while he rakes in all the profits, would you say they still collectively own the company? And to say that the Soviet Union wasn't fully totalitarian is incredibly ignorant. During its first four decades, the USSR used tens of millions of slaves in the Gulag and similar camps, working them to death. It moved people from one place to another like cattle, starved millions of people at gunpoint and summarily executed hundreds of thousands at the very least. Sure, things weren't nearly as bad in the post-Stalinist era, but the working class still had no say in the matter of running the economy or the country. I repeat my question: how did the working class exert its ownership/control of the means of production? The working class owned the property collectively through the state. The state owns the factories and the factories are put to use for the collective needs people and organized through the will of state. An authocratic state, but this doesn't change the ownership question. There is no alternative ownership! There is no party member who actually owns factory X Y or Z, even if there is great corruption and there is great misuse. The corruption and misuse would have to have been total and complete to truly change this, and no, I would not say the USSR reached this point, evidenced by the massive increase in income inequality post-dissolution of the socialist regime. If corruption was such that the politicians were and had always been the "true" owners of capital (with a veneer of socialism as you imply) this increase would not have been so brutal. It's the same thing for capitalist states with authocratic regimes as was very common during the Cold War and still exist today: it doesn't matter that these authocratic regimes can to some degree break these property rights, they are still capitalist because even in states we call totalitarian there are limits. I guess that would make North Korea a democratic country in your book. ;-)
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On March 09 2024 16:25 sevencck wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 06:43 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 06:07 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:46 Simberto wrote:On March 09 2024 04:39 Broetchenholer wrote:On March 09 2024 04:19 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:15 JimmiC wrote:On March 09 2024 03:38 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 03:18 Liquid`Drone wrote:On March 09 2024 02:26 sevencck wrote: [quote]
Thank you for proving my point. NSDAP = National Socialist German Workers Party. There were actually some socialists in the NSDAP early on, but hitler sure as fuck wasnt one, and they were largely murdered (on hitler's command) during the night of long knives in 1934. Hitler's rise should be understood in its historical context, namely that the market was increasingly considered an outdated model for economic coordination and the future would be about state coordination and control of the means of production. There was always going to be disagreement about how that control was meant to be instantiated. Yes, Hitler purged members of his party who had other ideas about how the means were to be controlled. So did Mussolini. So did Stalin. Trotsky was bumped off, along with millions of other Russians. This is all intra-left dispute, namely how best to control and manage the means of production, it is not an argument relevant to authentic right-wing politics, of which Mises, Hayek, Friedman, etc. were good examples. Classical liberalism does not occupy itself with how best to control the means of production (and therefore doesn't butcher each other over disagreements). That you include Hitler and Mussolini in as Left shows you don't remotely understand the term. Left just means evil to you the way capitalism means evil to GH. You don't understand what you're talking about, and I do not wish to explain it to you further. You need to read and study a subject before you profess your expertise to the world. Duuuude! You know who got rich in Nazi Germany? Nazi Germany industrials. Hitler started on a populist platform to give state money to war widows and wanted to have more control over industry, but not by socialist policies but instead by race ideology. His economic policies were more left wing then a economic libertarian, that does not make him left wing though. And acting as if comparisons to hitler are only about his economic policies as a statesman, makes it sound you believe the only thing bad about hitler was that he wasn't a libertarian, which is, to put it mildly the worst take ever. I'll be honest here. I have literally no idea how to deal with someone who legitimately claims that the Nazis, and Hitler specifically, were leftwing or socialists. Someone who puts Mussolini at the left end of the spectrum. I thought that to be a silly meme. Also, coming to the conclusion that WW2 was basically an intra-left conflict is kinda amazing. One would basically need to start right at the beginning at the most core definitions to be able to have any discussion here, because i am quite certain that basically none of the definitions of words that sevencck uses is even remotely related to those that other people use. That makes communication incredibly hard to do. I guess i would be kinda interested in how sevencck would define "socialist" or "left". A liberal advocates liberty and believes society is capable of self organizing with sufficient (albeit imperfect) intelligence to generate sustainable habitation on this planet. A leftist advocates revolution, either economically or culturally, and believes that society needs to be organized in a more intelligent fashion by those with "greater" vision in service of sustainable habitation on this planet.The people who believe the means of production are not distributed properly are advocating a revolution against that form of self organization in order to redistribute them. The people who believe gender relations have not self organized intelligently are advocating a revolution against that self organization to fix them, even over such things as pronouns. The people who believe the gaming culture is not sufficiently inclusive are advocating a revolution against the self organization therein to reconstruct it. The people who believe the society and economy has not self organized with sufficient intelligence to tackle environmental issues are advocating a revolution against that self organization. The list is endless. I don't consider both equally valid or the truth to be in the middle. When everything is said and done, the liberal holds the flesh and blood human being and his independence of conscience as the object of value. The leftist holds an abstraction of society as the object of value. Yet it is the flesh and blood reality which is naturally higher in value than whatever social abstraction man can generate in his mind.Paving over the flesh and blood reality to prioritize the social abstraction will always yield the same result. In order of bolded statements: - No, in the economic sphere at least, the leftist critique is more that those with economic power effectively already are the folks guiding things with ‘greater vision’ in a de facto sense.
- No, the general concept is that that system is not actually self-organised in any sense to begin with.
- This isn’t even a particularly left wing battlefield to begin with, and anyway in a more broad sense it’s one that is fought in the domain of capitalism and market forces and equilibrium anyway. If we’re talking self-organising, and supply and demand as a mechanism, there are many more women, gay folks and well, basically all sorts of non hetero white dudes playing games than before, and those changes will manifest in the kind of products people demand. If anything it’s stereotypical ‘gamer bros’ who are the ones trying to artificially ringfence the hobby against organic change, in this specific example.
- This is backwards. At the core left wing politics don’t deal in abstractions, but in conditions and reality and especially power in its various forms, but especially economically. In a crude sense abstract values, ideas or rights only matter insofar as you can actualise them. The distinction between so-called positive and negative liberty is absolutely core, even if the terminology was coined long after left wing politics had exerted huge influence.
1. The criticism that political power follows economic power is not uniquely leftist. It is pretty close to a statement of fact, people merely disagree on why it happens and what to do about it. Again, many leftists wish to lift the means of production out of private hands, which is an innately revolutionary proposition. 2. No, it isn't. There's an entire Marxist literature which outlines how the capitalist economy functions, along with commentaries on how bourgeois groups hold on to power at the expense of the marginalized. It explicitly claims there is self organization. 3. Again, I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the state of gaming per se, I'm saying things like removing power from "white male gamers" is a revolutionary proposition, and not in line with the ecological and emergent change you're referring to. It's actually a good example of a revolutionary overthrow of the so-called status quo. The "white male gamer" is a non-human abstraction that becomes the primary reality, and so is the future "inclusive gaming culture" that the individual must be made to bend to. Since there is no utopia, there will always be another revolution. It is an innately puerile state of being, rebellion against the oversights and imperfections of the universe. Working for change, improvement, and evolution within a fundamental acceptance of things is a more liberal outlook, and this is the distinction that I have drawn to answer the other person's question about how I might define the difference.
Just replace "revolution" with "change". Me deciding to get a snickers bar once a month isn't a revolution. Someone suggesting I say "shit" less isn't them pushing for a revolution. There's a level of gravitas to the term that I don't think any level of removing power from "white male gamers" in gaming could meet.
You rely on a lot of strange use of terminology in your argumentation ("non-human abstraction", generous application of "revolution", alternate definitions of "leftist", etc) that makes it pointless to try engage with you; any conversation had necessitates backtracking to agree upon terms in the first place.
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Northern Ireland22945 Posts
On March 10 2024 05:15 Fleetfeet wrote:Show nested quote +On March 09 2024 16:25 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 06:43 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 06:07 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:46 Simberto wrote:On March 09 2024 04:39 Broetchenholer wrote:On March 09 2024 04:19 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:15 JimmiC wrote:On March 09 2024 03:38 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 03:18 Liquid`Drone wrote: [quote]
There were actually some socialists in the NSDAP early on, but hitler sure as fuck wasnt one, and they were largely murdered (on hitler's command) during the night of long knives in 1934. Hitler's rise should be understood in its historical context, namely that the market was increasingly considered an outdated model for economic coordination and the future would be about state coordination and control of the means of production. There was always going to be disagreement about how that control was meant to be instantiated. Yes, Hitler purged members of his party who had other ideas about how the means were to be controlled. So did Mussolini. So did Stalin. Trotsky was bumped off, along with millions of other Russians. This is all intra-left dispute, namely how best to control and manage the means of production, it is not an argument relevant to authentic right-wing politics, of which Mises, Hayek, Friedman, etc. were good examples. Classical liberalism does not occupy itself with how best to control the means of production (and therefore doesn't butcher each other over disagreements). That you include Hitler and Mussolini in as Left shows you don't remotely understand the term. Left just means evil to you the way capitalism means evil to GH. You don't understand what you're talking about, and I do not wish to explain it to you further. You need to read and study a subject before you profess your expertise to the world. Duuuude! You know who got rich in Nazi Germany? Nazi Germany industrials. Hitler started on a populist platform to give state money to war widows and wanted to have more control over industry, but not by socialist policies but instead by race ideology. His economic policies were more left wing then a economic libertarian, that does not make him left wing though. And acting as if comparisons to hitler are only about his economic policies as a statesman, makes it sound you believe the only thing bad about hitler was that he wasn't a libertarian, which is, to put it mildly the worst take ever. I'll be honest here. I have literally no idea how to deal with someone who legitimately claims that the Nazis, and Hitler specifically, were leftwing or socialists. Someone who puts Mussolini at the left end of the spectrum. I thought that to be a silly meme. Also, coming to the conclusion that WW2 was basically an intra-left conflict is kinda amazing. One would basically need to start right at the beginning at the most core definitions to be able to have any discussion here, because i am quite certain that basically none of the definitions of words that sevencck uses is even remotely related to those that other people use. That makes communication incredibly hard to do. I guess i would be kinda interested in how sevencck would define "socialist" or "left". A liberal advocates liberty and believes society is capable of self organizing with sufficient (albeit imperfect) intelligence to generate sustainable habitation on this planet. A leftist advocates revolution, either economically or culturally, and believes that society needs to be organized in a more intelligent fashion by those with "greater" vision in service of sustainable habitation on this planet.The people who believe the means of production are not distributed properly are advocating a revolution against that form of self organization in order to redistribute them. The people who believe gender relations have not self organized intelligently are advocating a revolution against that self organization to fix them, even over such things as pronouns. The people who believe the gaming culture is not sufficiently inclusive are advocating a revolution against the self organization therein to reconstruct it. The people who believe the society and economy has not self organized with sufficient intelligence to tackle environmental issues are advocating a revolution against that self organization. The list is endless. I don't consider both equally valid or the truth to be in the middle. When everything is said and done, the liberal holds the flesh and blood human being and his independence of conscience as the object of value. The leftist holds an abstraction of society as the object of value. Yet it is the flesh and blood reality which is naturally higher in value than whatever social abstraction man can generate in his mind.Paving over the flesh and blood reality to prioritize the social abstraction will always yield the same result. In order of bolded statements: - No, in the economic sphere at least, the leftist critique is more that those with economic power effectively already are the folks guiding things with ‘greater vision’ in a de facto sense.
- No, the general concept is that that system is not actually self-organised in any sense to begin with.
- This isn’t even a particularly left wing battlefield to begin with, and anyway in a more broad sense it’s one that is fought in the domain of capitalism and market forces and equilibrium anyway. If we’re talking self-organising, and supply and demand as a mechanism, there are many more women, gay folks and well, basically all sorts of non hetero white dudes playing games than before, and those changes will manifest in the kind of products people demand. If anything it’s stereotypical ‘gamer bros’ who are the ones trying to artificially ringfence the hobby against organic change, in this specific example.
- This is backwards. At the core left wing politics don’t deal in abstractions, but in conditions and reality and especially power in its various forms, but especially economically. In a crude sense abstract values, ideas or rights only matter insofar as you can actualise them. The distinction between so-called positive and negative liberty is absolutely core, even if the terminology was coined long after left wing politics had exerted huge influence.
1. The criticism that political power follows economic power is not uniquely leftist. It is pretty close to a statement of fact, people merely disagree on why it happens and what to do about it. Again, many leftists wish to lift the means of production out of private hands, which is an innately revolutionary proposition. 2. No, it isn't. There's an entire Marxist literature which outlines how the capitalist economy functions, along with commentaries on how bourgeois groups hold on to power at the expense of the marginalized. It explicitly claims there is self organization. 3. Again, I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the state of gaming per se, I'm saying things like removing power from "white male gamers" is a revolutionary proposition, and not in line with the ecological and emergent change you're referring to. It's actually a good example of a revolutionary overthrow of the so-called status quo. The "white male gamer" is a non-human abstraction that becomes the primary reality, and so is the future "inclusive gaming culture" that the individual must be made to bend to. Since there is no utopia, there will always be another revolution. It is an innately puerile state of being, rebellion against the oversights and imperfections of the universe. Working for change, improvement, and evolution within a fundamental acceptance of things is a more liberal outlook, and this is the distinction that I have drawn to answer the other person's question about how I might define the difference. Just replace "revolution" with "change". Me deciding to get a snickers bar once a month isn't a revolution. Someone suggesting I say "shit" less isn't them pushing for a revolution. There's a level of gravitas to the term that I don't think any level of removing power from "white male gamers" in gaming could meet. You rely on a lot of strange use of terminology in your argumentation ("non-human abstraction", generous application of "revolution", alternate definitions of "leftist", etc) that makes it pointless to try engage with you; any conversation had necessitates backtracking to agree upon terms in the first place. Gamers rise up! Seize your snickers!
But yes, terminology aside hey it’s worth at least trying to unpack what makes each other tick. I’m not really seeing anything other than a bunch of arbitrary distinctions being made to delegitimise left causes and ideas.
So it’s ‘innately puerile’ or ‘utopian’ to look at capitalism and go ‘hey we think this thing kinda sucks’, but when a market’s demographics shift and appetites change in something like gaming, that’s fair game to complain about?
Hope I’m not being uncharitable it just doesn’t strike me as a particularly coherent analysis of the left and how it interacts with wider society.
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On March 10 2024 05:46 WombaT wrote:Show nested quote +On March 10 2024 05:15 Fleetfeet wrote:On March 09 2024 16:25 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 06:43 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 06:07 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:46 Simberto wrote:On March 09 2024 04:39 Broetchenholer wrote:On March 09 2024 04:19 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:15 JimmiC wrote:On March 09 2024 03:38 sevencck wrote: [quote]
Hitler's rise should be understood in its historical context, namely that the market was increasingly considered an outdated model for economic coordination and the future would be about state coordination and control of the means of production. There was always going to be disagreement about how that control was meant to be instantiated. Yes, Hitler purged members of his party who had other ideas about how the means were to be controlled. So did Mussolini. So did Stalin. Trotsky was bumped off, along with millions of other Russians. This is all intra-left dispute, namely how best to control and manage the means of production, it is not an argument relevant to authentic right-wing politics, of which Mises, Hayek, Friedman, etc. were good examples. Classical liberalism does not occupy itself with how best to control the means of production (and therefore doesn't butcher each other over disagreements).
That you include Hitler and Mussolini in as Left shows you don't remotely understand the term. Left just means evil to you the way capitalism means evil to GH. You don't understand what you're talking about, and I do not wish to explain it to you further. You need to read and study a subject before you profess your expertise to the world. Duuuude! You know who got rich in Nazi Germany? Nazi Germany industrials. Hitler started on a populist platform to give state money to war widows and wanted to have more control over industry, but not by socialist policies but instead by race ideology. His economic policies were more left wing then a economic libertarian, that does not make him left wing though. And acting as if comparisons to hitler are only about his economic policies as a statesman, makes it sound you believe the only thing bad about hitler was that he wasn't a libertarian, which is, to put it mildly the worst take ever. I'll be honest here. I have literally no idea how to deal with someone who legitimately claims that the Nazis, and Hitler specifically, were leftwing or socialists. Someone who puts Mussolini at the left end of the spectrum. I thought that to be a silly meme. Also, coming to the conclusion that WW2 was basically an intra-left conflict is kinda amazing. One would basically need to start right at the beginning at the most core definitions to be able to have any discussion here, because i am quite certain that basically none of the definitions of words that sevencck uses is even remotely related to those that other people use. That makes communication incredibly hard to do. I guess i would be kinda interested in how sevencck would define "socialist" or "left". A liberal advocates liberty and believes society is capable of self organizing with sufficient (albeit imperfect) intelligence to generate sustainable habitation on this planet. A leftist advocates revolution, either economically or culturally, and believes that society needs to be organized in a more intelligent fashion by those with "greater" vision in service of sustainable habitation on this planet.The people who believe the means of production are not distributed properly are advocating a revolution against that form of self organization in order to redistribute them. The people who believe gender relations have not self organized intelligently are advocating a revolution against that self organization to fix them, even over such things as pronouns. The people who believe the gaming culture is not sufficiently inclusive are advocating a revolution against the self organization therein to reconstruct it. The people who believe the society and economy has not self organized with sufficient intelligence to tackle environmental issues are advocating a revolution against that self organization. The list is endless. I don't consider both equally valid or the truth to be in the middle. When everything is said and done, the liberal holds the flesh and blood human being and his independence of conscience as the object of value. The leftist holds an abstraction of society as the object of value. Yet it is the flesh and blood reality which is naturally higher in value than whatever social abstraction man can generate in his mind.Paving over the flesh and blood reality to prioritize the social abstraction will always yield the same result. In order of bolded statements: - No, in the economic sphere at least, the leftist critique is more that those with economic power effectively already are the folks guiding things with ‘greater vision’ in a de facto sense.
- No, the general concept is that that system is not actually self-organised in any sense to begin with.
- This isn’t even a particularly left wing battlefield to begin with, and anyway in a more broad sense it’s one that is fought in the domain of capitalism and market forces and equilibrium anyway. If we’re talking self-organising, and supply and demand as a mechanism, there are many more women, gay folks and well, basically all sorts of non hetero white dudes playing games than before, and those changes will manifest in the kind of products people demand. If anything it’s stereotypical ‘gamer bros’ who are the ones trying to artificially ringfence the hobby against organic change, in this specific example.
- This is backwards. At the core left wing politics don’t deal in abstractions, but in conditions and reality and especially power in its various forms, but especially economically. In a crude sense abstract values, ideas or rights only matter insofar as you can actualise them. The distinction between so-called positive and negative liberty is absolutely core, even if the terminology was coined long after left wing politics had exerted huge influence.
1. The criticism that political power follows economic power is not uniquely leftist. It is pretty close to a statement of fact, people merely disagree on why it happens and what to do about it. Again, many leftists wish to lift the means of production out of private hands, which is an innately revolutionary proposition. 2. No, it isn't. There's an entire Marxist literature which outlines how the capitalist economy functions, along with commentaries on how bourgeois groups hold on to power at the expense of the marginalized. It explicitly claims there is self organization. 3. Again, I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the state of gaming per se, I'm saying things like removing power from "white male gamers" is a revolutionary proposition, and not in line with the ecological and emergent change you're referring to. It's actually a good example of a revolutionary overthrow of the so-called status quo. The "white male gamer" is a non-human abstraction that becomes the primary reality, and so is the future "inclusive gaming culture" that the individual must be made to bend to. Since there is no utopia, there will always be another revolution. It is an innately puerile state of being, rebellion against the oversights and imperfections of the universe. Working for change, improvement, and evolution within a fundamental acceptance of things is a more liberal outlook, and this is the distinction that I have drawn to answer the other person's question about how I might define the difference. Just replace "revolution" with "change". Me deciding to get a snickers bar once a month isn't a revolution. Someone suggesting I say "shit" less isn't them pushing for a revolution. There's a level of gravitas to the term that I don't think any level of removing power from "white male gamers" in gaming could meet. You rely on a lot of strange use of terminology in your argumentation ("non-human abstraction", generous application of "revolution", alternate definitions of "leftist", etc) that makes it pointless to try engage with you; any conversation had necessitates backtracking to agree upon terms in the first place. Gamers rise up! Seize your snickers! But yes, terminology aside hey it’s worth at least trying to unpack what makes each other tick. I’m not really seeing anything other than a bunch of arbitrary distinctions being made to delegitimise left causes and ideas. So it’s ‘innately puerile’ or ‘utopian’ to look at capitalism and go ‘hey we think this thing kinda sucks’, but when a market’s demographics shift and appetites change in something like gaming, that’s fair game to complain about? Hope I’m not being uncharitable it just doesn’t strike me as a particularly coherent analysis of the left and how it interacts with wider society.
I said it was innately puerile to exist in a state of revolution against the universe and its various injustices. Look up the Tocqueville effect if you want another articulation of much the same. And give me a break, when people are trying to overthrow the hegemony of "incorrect" pronouns I think my point stands. I'm genuinely surprised by the reading comprehension. Snickers bar? What? Are you trying to not understand?
Anyway I'm out for a bit. I'll check back as the election goes on and the tolerant left's paroxysms of tolerance blossom further. The commitment to ignorance really makes the schadenfreude easier.
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Northern Ireland22945 Posts
On March 10 2024 06:09 sevencck wrote:Show nested quote +On March 10 2024 05:46 WombaT wrote:On March 10 2024 05:15 Fleetfeet wrote:On March 09 2024 16:25 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 06:43 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 06:07 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:46 Simberto wrote:On March 09 2024 04:39 Broetchenholer wrote:On March 09 2024 04:19 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:15 JimmiC wrote: [quote] That you include Hitler and Mussolini in as Left shows you don't remotely understand the term. Left just means evil to you the way capitalism means evil to GH. You don't understand what you're talking about, and I do not wish to explain it to you further. You need to read and study a subject before you profess your expertise to the world. Duuuude! You know who got rich in Nazi Germany? Nazi Germany industrials. Hitler started on a populist platform to give state money to war widows and wanted to have more control over industry, but not by socialist policies but instead by race ideology. His economic policies were more left wing then a economic libertarian, that does not make him left wing though. And acting as if comparisons to hitler are only about his economic policies as a statesman, makes it sound you believe the only thing bad about hitler was that he wasn't a libertarian, which is, to put it mildly the worst take ever. I'll be honest here. I have literally no idea how to deal with someone who legitimately claims that the Nazis, and Hitler specifically, were leftwing or socialists. Someone who puts Mussolini at the left end of the spectrum. I thought that to be a silly meme. Also, coming to the conclusion that WW2 was basically an intra-left conflict is kinda amazing. One would basically need to start right at the beginning at the most core definitions to be able to have any discussion here, because i am quite certain that basically none of the definitions of words that sevencck uses is even remotely related to those that other people use. That makes communication incredibly hard to do. I guess i would be kinda interested in how sevencck would define "socialist" or "left". A liberal advocates liberty and believes society is capable of self organizing with sufficient (albeit imperfect) intelligence to generate sustainable habitation on this planet. A leftist advocates revolution, either economically or culturally, and believes that society needs to be organized in a more intelligent fashion by those with "greater" vision in service of sustainable habitation on this planet.The people who believe the means of production are not distributed properly are advocating a revolution against that form of self organization in order to redistribute them. The people who believe gender relations have not self organized intelligently are advocating a revolution against that self organization to fix them, even over such things as pronouns. The people who believe the gaming culture is not sufficiently inclusive are advocating a revolution against the self organization therein to reconstruct it. The people who believe the society and economy has not self organized with sufficient intelligence to tackle environmental issues are advocating a revolution against that self organization. The list is endless. I don't consider both equally valid or the truth to be in the middle. When everything is said and done, the liberal holds the flesh and blood human being and his independence of conscience as the object of value. The leftist holds an abstraction of society as the object of value. Yet it is the flesh and blood reality which is naturally higher in value than whatever social abstraction man can generate in his mind.Paving over the flesh and blood reality to prioritize the social abstraction will always yield the same result. In order of bolded statements: - No, in the economic sphere at least, the leftist critique is more that those with economic power effectively already are the folks guiding things with ‘greater vision’ in a de facto sense.
- No, the general concept is that that system is not actually self-organised in any sense to begin with.
- This isn’t even a particularly left wing battlefield to begin with, and anyway in a more broad sense it’s one that is fought in the domain of capitalism and market forces and equilibrium anyway. If we’re talking self-organising, and supply and demand as a mechanism, there are many more women, gay folks and well, basically all sorts of non hetero white dudes playing games than before, and those changes will manifest in the kind of products people demand. If anything it’s stereotypical ‘gamer bros’ who are the ones trying to artificially ringfence the hobby against organic change, in this specific example.
- This is backwards. At the core left wing politics don’t deal in abstractions, but in conditions and reality and especially power in its various forms, but especially economically. In a crude sense abstract values, ideas or rights only matter insofar as you can actualise them. The distinction between so-called positive and negative liberty is absolutely core, even if the terminology was coined long after left wing politics had exerted huge influence.
1. The criticism that political power follows economic power is not uniquely leftist. It is pretty close to a statement of fact, people merely disagree on why it happens and what to do about it. Again, many leftists wish to lift the means of production out of private hands, which is an innately revolutionary proposition. 2. No, it isn't. There's an entire Marxist literature which outlines how the capitalist economy functions, along with commentaries on how bourgeois groups hold on to power at the expense of the marginalized. It explicitly claims there is self organization. 3. Again, I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the state of gaming per se, I'm saying things like removing power from "white male gamers" is a revolutionary proposition, and not in line with the ecological and emergent change you're referring to. It's actually a good example of a revolutionary overthrow of the so-called status quo. The "white male gamer" is a non-human abstraction that becomes the primary reality, and so is the future "inclusive gaming culture" that the individual must be made to bend to. Since there is no utopia, there will always be another revolution. It is an innately puerile state of being, rebellion against the oversights and imperfections of the universe. Working for change, improvement, and evolution within a fundamental acceptance of things is a more liberal outlook, and this is the distinction that I have drawn to answer the other person's question about how I might define the difference. Just replace "revolution" with "change". Me deciding to get a snickers bar once a month isn't a revolution. Someone suggesting I say "shit" less isn't them pushing for a revolution. There's a level of gravitas to the term that I don't think any level of removing power from "white male gamers" in gaming could meet. You rely on a lot of strange use of terminology in your argumentation ("non-human abstraction", generous application of "revolution", alternate definitions of "leftist", etc) that makes it pointless to try engage with you; any conversation had necessitates backtracking to agree upon terms in the first place. Gamers rise up! Seize your snickers! But yes, terminology aside hey it’s worth at least trying to unpack what makes each other tick. I’m not really seeing anything other than a bunch of arbitrary distinctions being made to delegitimise left causes and ideas. So it’s ‘innately puerile’ or ‘utopian’ to look at capitalism and go ‘hey we think this thing kinda sucks’, but when a market’s demographics shift and appetites change in something like gaming, that’s fair game to complain about? Hope I’m not being uncharitable it just doesn’t strike me as a particularly coherent analysis of the left and how it interacts with wider society. I said it was innately puerile to exist in a state of revolution against the universe and its various injustices. Look up the Tocqueville effect if you want another articulation of much the same. And give me a break, when people are trying to overthrow the hegemony of "incorrect" pronouns I think my point stands. I'm genuinely surprised by the reading comprehension. Snickers bar? What? Are you trying to not understand? Anyway I'm out for a bit. I'll check back as the election goes on and the tolerant left's paroxysms of tolerance blossom further. The commitment to ignorance really makes the schadenfreude easier. I was merely riffing off the previous post with my snickers reference.
By all means pop out, but feels a bit rich to claim there’s a ‘commitment to ignorance’ when you’ve effectively popped in, claimed ‘left wing people believe x’ in a topic full of left wing people and departed just as quickly back out. Hardly some commitment to learning and having one’s assumptions channeled like…
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They knew about the snickers bar. I look forward to their return of empty words as they fight the ghosts of ideas they've made, while claiming it's different people making ghosts of ideas and that their ideas are flesh-and-blood.
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On March 10 2024 06:24 WombaT wrote:Show nested quote +On March 10 2024 06:09 sevencck wrote:On March 10 2024 05:46 WombaT wrote:On March 10 2024 05:15 Fleetfeet wrote:On March 09 2024 16:25 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 06:43 WombaT wrote:On March 09 2024 06:07 sevencck wrote:On March 09 2024 04:46 Simberto wrote:On March 09 2024 04:39 Broetchenholer wrote:On March 09 2024 04:19 sevencck wrote: [quote]
You don't understand what you're talking about, and I do not wish to explain it to you further. You need to read and study a subject before you profess your expertise to the world. Duuuude! You know who got rich in Nazi Germany? Nazi Germany industrials. Hitler started on a populist platform to give state money to war widows and wanted to have more control over industry, but not by socialist policies but instead by race ideology. His economic policies were more left wing then a economic libertarian, that does not make him left wing though. And acting as if comparisons to hitler are only about his economic policies as a statesman, makes it sound you believe the only thing bad about hitler was that he wasn't a libertarian, which is, to put it mildly the worst take ever. I'll be honest here. I have literally no idea how to deal with someone who legitimately claims that the Nazis, and Hitler specifically, were leftwing or socialists. Someone who puts Mussolini at the left end of the spectrum. I thought that to be a silly meme. Also, coming to the conclusion that WW2 was basically an intra-left conflict is kinda amazing. One would basically need to start right at the beginning at the most core definitions to be able to have any discussion here, because i am quite certain that basically none of the definitions of words that sevencck uses is even remotely related to those that other people use. That makes communication incredibly hard to do. I guess i would be kinda interested in how sevencck would define "socialist" or "left". A liberal advocates liberty and believes society is capable of self organizing with sufficient (albeit imperfect) intelligence to generate sustainable habitation on this planet. A leftist advocates revolution, either economically or culturally, and believes that society needs to be organized in a more intelligent fashion by those with "greater" vision in service of sustainable habitation on this planet.The people who believe the means of production are not distributed properly are advocating a revolution against that form of self organization in order to redistribute them. The people who believe gender relations have not self organized intelligently are advocating a revolution against that self organization to fix them, even over such things as pronouns. The people who believe the gaming culture is not sufficiently inclusive are advocating a revolution against the self organization therein to reconstruct it. The people who believe the society and economy has not self organized with sufficient intelligence to tackle environmental issues are advocating a revolution against that self organization. The list is endless. I don't consider both equally valid or the truth to be in the middle. When everything is said and done, the liberal holds the flesh and blood human being and his independence of conscience as the object of value. The leftist holds an abstraction of society as the object of value. Yet it is the flesh and blood reality which is naturally higher in value than whatever social abstraction man can generate in his mind.Paving over the flesh and blood reality to prioritize the social abstraction will always yield the same result. In order of bolded statements: - No, in the economic sphere at least, the leftist critique is more that those with economic power effectively already are the folks guiding things with ‘greater vision’ in a de facto sense.
- No, the general concept is that that system is not actually self-organised in any sense to begin with.
- This isn’t even a particularly left wing battlefield to begin with, and anyway in a more broad sense it’s one that is fought in the domain of capitalism and market forces and equilibrium anyway. If we’re talking self-organising, and supply and demand as a mechanism, there are many more women, gay folks and well, basically all sorts of non hetero white dudes playing games than before, and those changes will manifest in the kind of products people demand. If anything it’s stereotypical ‘gamer bros’ who are the ones trying to artificially ringfence the hobby against organic change, in this specific example.
- This is backwards. At the core left wing politics don’t deal in abstractions, but in conditions and reality and especially power in its various forms, but especially economically. In a crude sense abstract values, ideas or rights only matter insofar as you can actualise them. The distinction between so-called positive and negative liberty is absolutely core, even if the terminology was coined long after left wing politics had exerted huge influence.
1. The criticism that political power follows economic power is not uniquely leftist. It is pretty close to a statement of fact, people merely disagree on why it happens and what to do about it. Again, many leftists wish to lift the means of production out of private hands, which is an innately revolutionary proposition. 2. No, it isn't. There's an entire Marxist literature which outlines how the capitalist economy functions, along with commentaries on how bourgeois groups hold on to power at the expense of the marginalized. It explicitly claims there is self organization. 3. Again, I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with the state of gaming per se, I'm saying things like removing power from "white male gamers" is a revolutionary proposition, and not in line with the ecological and emergent change you're referring to. It's actually a good example of a revolutionary overthrow of the so-called status quo. The "white male gamer" is a non-human abstraction that becomes the primary reality, and so is the future "inclusive gaming culture" that the individual must be made to bend to. Since there is no utopia, there will always be another revolution. It is an innately puerile state of being, rebellion against the oversights and imperfections of the universe. Working for change, improvement, and evolution within a fundamental acceptance of things is a more liberal outlook, and this is the distinction that I have drawn to answer the other person's question about how I might define the difference. Just replace "revolution" with "change". Me deciding to get a snickers bar once a month isn't a revolution. Someone suggesting I say "shit" less isn't them pushing for a revolution. There's a level of gravitas to the term that I don't think any level of removing power from "white male gamers" in gaming could meet. You rely on a lot of strange use of terminology in your argumentation ("non-human abstraction", generous application of "revolution", alternate definitions of "leftist", etc) that makes it pointless to try engage with you; any conversation had necessitates backtracking to agree upon terms in the first place. Gamers rise up! Seize your snickers! But yes, terminology aside hey it’s worth at least trying to unpack what makes each other tick. I’m not really seeing anything other than a bunch of arbitrary distinctions being made to delegitimise left causes and ideas. So it’s ‘innately puerile’ or ‘utopian’ to look at capitalism and go ‘hey we think this thing kinda sucks’, but when a market’s demographics shift and appetites change in something like gaming, that’s fair game to complain about? Hope I’m not being uncharitable it just doesn’t strike me as a particularly coherent analysis of the left and how it interacts with wider society. I said it was innately puerile to exist in a state of revolution against the universe and its various injustices. Look up the Tocqueville effect if you want another articulation of much the same. And give me a break, when people are trying to overthrow the hegemony of "incorrect" pronouns I think my point stands. I'm genuinely surprised by the reading comprehension. Snickers bar? What? Are you trying to not understand? Anyway I'm out for a bit. I'll check back as the election goes on and the tolerant left's paroxysms of tolerance blossom further. The commitment to ignorance really makes the schadenfreude easier. I was merely riffing off the previous post with my snickers reference. By all means pop out, but feels a bit rich to claim there’s a ‘commitment to ignorance’ when you’ve effectively popped in, claimed ‘left wing people believe x’ in a topic full of left wing people and departed just as quickly back out. Hardly some commitment to learning and having one’s assumptions channeled like… Maybe dude’s off to tell the white supremacists and neo Nazis that they ought support Biden instead of Trump. God bless.
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United States41539 Posts
Trump today clarified that his plan for peace in Ukraine is for Russia to win. No support from the US at all. None. Then Russia wins. Then peace? That is, of course, assuming Russia stops. After all they stopped after Chechnya, and Georgia, and Crimea. They’ll probably stop after Ukraine. Romania at most. Maybe Poland.
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On March 11 2024 11:27 KwarK wrote: Trump today clarified that his plan for peace in Ukraine is for Russia to win. No support from the US at all. None. Then Russia wins. Then peace? That is, of course, assuming Russia stops. After all they stopped after Chechnya, and Georgia, and Crimea. They’ll probably stop after Ukraine. Romania at most. Maybe Poland.
He said that last month too, and Biden appropriately called Trump out on this during the SotU address. Trump wants to extort our NATO allies like some sort of Mafia boss (how fitting that his name is Don), while enabling Putin. https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2024/02/10/politics/trump-russia-nato/index.html
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