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Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

Latest post Mon, Jun 23 2008 5:51 PM by meambobbo. 106 replies.
  • Fri, Jun 20 2008 8:45 PM In reply to

    • Juan
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    Mercantilism is a term older than Capitalism. I believe it was invented by Adam Smith and maybe firstly used in his Wealth of the Nations.
    I just checked.

    "Bounties upon the exportation of any homemade commodity are liable, first, to that general objection which may be made to all the different expedients of the mercantile system ; the objection of forcing some part of the industry of the country into a channel less advantageous than that in which it would run of ts own accord ;"
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  • Fri, Jun 20 2008 8:54 PM In reply to

    • Niccolò
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    Juan:
    Niccolo:
    Again, to what was Marx referencing when he coined the term "capitalism"?
    To laissez-faire and 'petty bourgeois freedoms' aka individual rights, which he so fanatically hated.

    It would be interesting to have a source for the claim that marx invented the term. I'm not saying it's not true, but I feel curious.

    No, he was specifically referencing capitalism as the most modern form of economic exploitation. How would one know about this economic exploitation? Simple, he observed it as wage slavery. Now, I know some of you will shriek at the thought of "wage slavery," but consider this,

     

     

    One of the ongoing roadblocks to left and libertarian reconciliation, one which deserves more of our attention, is the matter of conflation of context with causality, an intellectual error committed by most on both sides.

    Leftists typically blame markets for state-caused injustice that takes place in markets.

    Free-market libertarians often apply a shallow analysis that causes them to defend state-caused injustice merely because its visible manifestation is in the marketplace.

    Both fail to recognize that the market is the context, the cause is the state.

    Let’s look at the topic of wage slavery, for example.

    Every marginalized worker viscerally knows wage slavery to be a very real phenomenon — yet libertarians typically bury their heads in the sand and leftists typically fundamentally misunderstand the problem.

    Most libertarians deny the existence of wage slavery, seeing only the voluntaristic nature of the concept of wages in principle rather than the real world of state-tainted injustice in practice.

    Most radical leftists attack the voluntaristic nature of the concept of wages, assuming there is something inherently evil about wages for reasons that are mirror images of the intellectual errors commonly committed by libertarians.

    They’re both right and both wrong.

    A deeper libertarian analysis, a left libertarian analysis, points to the role of the state in artificially concentrating capital in the hands of state-allied big business — giving statist plutocrats far more bargaining power in the labor market than is their natural due. Injustice happens to play out in the marketplace, but the cause is the state.

    ---------

    Since the post on wage slavery generated a bit of a stir, perhaps it’s time to introduce a $10 word for the fifty cent concept of “screw the workers“.

    That word is oligopsony. Just as the word “oligopoly” is a more dispersed form of the concept of “monopoly”, so to oligopsony complements monopsony. Monopsony, in turn, is a mirror image of monopoly. Where a monopoly indicates only one seller, monopsony indicates one buyer.

    The essence of what I had to say about the concept of wage slavery is that the government-induced cartelization of industry creates oligopsony conditions in the labor market. It does this by artificially reducing the number of buyers of labor (businesses), thereby granting the existing ones an unnatural degree of bargaining power.

    Austrian economics is quite clear on the cartelizing effects in the business world of statism. By pointing to statism as the cause of resulting oligopsony conditions in the labor market, a compelling case can be made that the completely free market (i.e. anarchy) truly is the proletarian revolution.

     

    Brad Spangler


    Now, I would disagree with Brad on one specific issue. As we are Anarchists we do not want to make everyone a proletarian, but rather we wish to make all proletarians entrepreneurs - that is, we wish to make them entrepreneuriats.

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  • Fri, Jun 20 2008 8:57 PM In reply to

    • Niccolò
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    BlackSheep:

     

    Mercantilism is a term older than Capitalism. I believe it was invented by Adam Smith and maybe firstly used in his Wealth of the Nations. Either way, the original liberals fought mercantilism and they used that term as a pjorative thing to refer to monopolies and stuff (monopolies meaning exclusive explorative grants).

     

    Actually, he did not use the word mercantilism. He used the word mercantle system. The term was adopted from Germans in the 20th century. Before capitalism there was merchant capitalism, however. I believe that's what he's referencing... so basically, capitalism.

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  • Fri, Jun 20 2008 10:53 PM In reply to

    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    I don't necessarily want to become an entrepreneur.

    If I can sell my labor on the open market for a guaranteed rate and let someone else risk their capital in the process then I'm all for it. I really don't want my paycheck to reflect the profit/loss of the company I work for so I sell my labor at a discounted rate to reflect not only this non-risk premium but also the time preference of wages today vs higher wages later when the ultimate profits are realized from my labor contribution to the production cycle.

    You wish to take this option away from me because of some 'wage slavery' subjective view on my relationship with my corporate masters?

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  • Fri, Jun 20 2008 11:05 PM In reply to

    • Juan
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    sez comrade marx :

    "...Or perhaps Bastiat means, that a mode of production based on slavery is based on a system of plunder. In that case he treads on dangerous ground. If a giant thinker like Aristotle erred in his appreciation of slave labour, why should a dwarf economist like Bastiat be right in his appreciation of wage labour?"

    Isn't it amazing ? This clown calls Bastiat a 'dwarf economist' ? Regardless of his cheap rhetoric and other fallacies, it seems to me that marx was well aware of the meaning of laissez-faire, and it was the target of his 'awesome' analysis.

    Marx was explicitly attacking classical liberalism. He was no well meaning 'socialist' who opposed mercantilism and 'economic exploitation'.
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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 7:32 AM In reply to

    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    liberty student:

    Niccolò:
    Mercantilism is a recently invented term. Now, ask yourself, who invented the term? Well, I'd say capitalist apologists who want to save their precious capitalism by blaming the same animal for the world's problems.

    Again, to what was Marx referencing when he coined the term "capitalism"?

    Who cares what Marx was talking about?  He also had a lot of stupid ideas about class warfare, and had serious issues with any members of the productive class who wanted to work independently and for their own personal gain.

    We're back to leftist jargon juggling.

    Capitalism - private ownership of the means of production and/or activities that result in profit (the accumulation of capital)

    Socialism - public ownership of the means of production and a system that Mises disproved.

     

     

     

    Public ownership and state ownership are not necessarily the same thing. Indeed, the very fact that state property is often called "public" is obfuscatory and misleading, since the state most certainly is not the public. Since the state is an exclusive and oligarchal institution, state property cannot truly be "public" in any meaningful sense to begin with. Systems such as the USSR most certainly are not examples of public ownership. Also, "the accumulation of capital" takes place in state-communist societies - only the capital is monopolized into the state. More confusion, more confusion, more confusion.

    Private ownership by itself could likewise imply a plethora of thngs, some libertarian and others not. The private ownership of a gang of thugs or a rightful owner? Private ownership as a legal category or privilege or as a natural product of labor and exchange? Should one defend "private ownership" as such, regaurdless of context or clear principles of justice? By "private ownership" do we mean that which the state legally recognizes as such or what actually is "private ownership" in a libertarian sense? Hell, according to some people here, a monarch constitutes a "private owner". Is monarchy therefore "capitalism"?

    Once again, this is all far too vague, so vague that either category could refer to anything from forms of anarchism to forms of totalitarianism. And as I've tried to point out a million times before, this cold and arguably utilitarian approach sidesteps the fundamental question of aquisition: through what means is this "public" or "private" property obtained? If a group of people homestead a previously unused or a clearly abandoned piece of property or voluntarily aquire it somehow and then proceed to share or enact a policy of worker ownership of the means of production, is this "capitalism" or is this "socialism", is this "private property" or is this "public property"?

    Are all currently existing titles to "private property" (as well as historical ones) just according to a libertarian analysis? Is a fuedal monopolist a "capitalist"? Afterall, they "privately own" the means of production on the land. Or perhaps fascism is also "capitalism"? Afterall, there certainly were not worker run factories or anything remotely like that going on in fascist countries and for the most part property is "private" under the law. What exactly does "private" mean anyways? Exclusive control you say? Oh, well in that case the state is "private property" of the oligarchy who exclusively control it. More confusion, more confusion, more confusion.

    These kinds of questions pose a serious problem to the way that this is being presented and should clue you in as to why I tend to avoid cliche use of both the terms capitalism and socialism.

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 8:05 AM In reply to

    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    You wish to take this option away from me

    Noone has argued for taking that option away from you, and it's an option that I would quite likely choose myself. Rather, the entire point is to create a plurality of alternative options so that this is only one option out of many, and this can only be done by opening up competition in the broadest sense of the term. Is the notion of people being able to opt out and persue alternatives really this alien to you? If people want worker's self-management or if they prefer to be wage laborers, it's kind of irrelevant so long as they can pursue that option on the free market (of course, "the free market" does not necessarily refer to current conditions in which one's options are artificially restricted as a consequence of state intervention - defending such conditions in the name of "the free market" is the ugly fallacy of vulgar libertarianism that unfortunately so often rears its ugly head on the libertarian right). Noone has to take eachother's options away.

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 8:05 AM In reply to

    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    You wish to take this option away from me

    Noone has argued for taking that option away from you, and it's an option that I would quite likely choose myself. Rather, the entire point is to create a plurality of alternative options so that this is only one option out of many, and this can only be done by opening up competition in the broadest sense of the term. Is the notion of people being able to opt out and persue alternatives really this alien to you?

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 10:12 AM In reply to

    • Jon Irenicus
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    Isn't it amazing ? This clown calls Bastiat a 'dwarf economist' ? Regardless of cheap rhetoric and other fallacies, it seems to me that marx was well aware of the meaning of laissez-faire, and it was the target of his 'awesome' analysis.

    150+ years later, and the joke is on Marx though. Stick out tongue He was wrong even when he was writing - now it's just well known how wrong the pompous twit was.

    Niccolo, do you have a link to that article by Spangler?

    -Jon

    Understand this as you die, ever pathetic, ever fools.

    Librarian: "I will not stand for this!!" Mandy: "There's an empty chair right there."

    Irenicus' Diaries.

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 10:15 AM In reply to

    • Jon Irenicus
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    Hell, according to some people here, a monarch constitutes a "private owner". Is monarchy therefore "capitalism"?

    Strictly speaking, yes. I think you mean "free market" though - which is not something that characterizes a monarchical system at the level of law and order.

    -Jon

    Understand this as you die, ever pathetic, ever fools.

    Librarian: "I will not stand for this!!" Mandy: "There's an empty chair right there."

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 10:20 AM In reply to

    • Niccolò
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    Juan:
    sez comrade marx :

    "...Or perhaps Bastiat means, that a mode of production based on slavery is based on a system of plunder. In that case he treads on dangerous ground. If a giant thinker like Aristotle erred in his appreciation of slave labour, why should a dwarf economist like Bastiat be right in his appreciation of wage labour?"

    Isn't it amazing ? This clown calls Bastiat a 'dwarf economist' ? Regardless of cheap rhetoric and other fallacies, it seems to me that marx was well aware of the meaning of laissez-faire, and it was the target of his 'awesome' analysis.

    Marx was explicitly attacking classical liberalism. He was no well meaning 'socialist' who opposed mercantilism and 'economic exploitation'.

     

    No, Marx was conflating laissez-faire with the state of the economy in the 19th century. Much like many other state-socialists conflate laissez-faire with the state of the economy in the 21st century.

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 10:21 AM In reply to

    • Niccolò
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    Anonymous Coward:

    I don't necessarily want to become an entrepreneur.

    If I can sell my labor on the open market

     

    Will there be any interventions by the state on the open market?

     

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 10:33 AM In reply to

    • Niccolò
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    Bastiat was proven rationally, but I fail to see how he could have been proven empirically - Bastiat's system has never been seen, why regard it as though it has?

     

     

    Here is link 1 and link 2

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 12:57 PM In reply to

    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    Will there be any interventions by the state on the open market?

    If I read you correctly there would be intervention by somebody to put an end the this immoral 'wage slavery' and turn the proletariat in an entrepreneur class...sans the ability to own the means of production of their own entrepreneurial activities.

    Or the ability to pay someone in real wages as that would be slavery.

    I guess the only option left is to have all the workers equal owners in the endeavor and become as equally liable for the losses as they benefit from the profits and in order to work in these types of 'collectives' they would need to provide capital investment to provide an ownership claim along with their inclusion of their labor since the real fruits of their labor could realistically not generate profits for a year or more.

    Unless you are advocating the new workers get a share of the current profits at the expense of the former and current workers even though they didn't create any value to derive profits from.

    Going off the subject a bit though since the argument about 'what capitalism means' is as interesting as watching my dog lick herself.

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 12:59 PM In reply to

    • Niccolò
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    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !

    Anonymous Coward:

    If I read you correctly there would be intervention by somebody to put an end the this immoral 'wage slavery' and turn the proletariat in an entrepreneur class...sans the ability to own the means of production of their own entrepreneurial activities.

    Or the ability to pay someone in real wages as that would be slavery.

    I guess the only option left is to have all the workers equal owners in the endeavor and become as equally liable for the losses as they benefit from the profits and in order to work in these types of 'collectives' they would need to provide capital investment to provide an ownership claim along with their inclusion of their labor since the real fruits of their labor could realistically not generate profits for a year or more.

    Unless you are advocating the new workers get a share of the current profits at the expense of the former and current workers even though they didn't create any value to derive profits from.

    Going off the subject a bit though since the argument about 'what capitalism means' is as interesting as watching my dog lick herself.

     

    Please, just answer the question.

     

    Will there be any interventions by the state on the open market?

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  • Sat, Jun 21 2008 1:01 PM In reply to

    Re: Capitalism "exposed" as parasitical !