• Lauchs@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    This is what I always find amusing about the Communist argument.

    Like, the elected politicians and bureaucracy can’t be trusted enough to regulate industry under capitalism so we’ll centralize things and then trust them to regulate industry under Communism?

    Edit: whoof, should’ve thought about human nature when I dared to criticize communism. Almost lime there is another lesson somehwere there.

    so, it’s the goddamn weekend. How does everyone have so much free time this late on a Saturday? I’ll do my best to get back to y’all on a dirty capitalist’s time slot.

    • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      Like, the elected politicians and bureaucracy can’t be trusted enough to regulate industry under capitalism so we’ll centralize things and then trust them to regulate industry under Communism?

      If that’s your understanding of Communism, then you need to read The State and Revolution. Quite a lot of Communist theory is concerned with eliminating the concept of beauracracy.

      • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        When have attempts to reduce bureaucracy not yielded even more bureaucracy ? This isn’t a state V corporation issue either, bureaucracy thrives in both these places.

                  • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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                    3 months ago

                    I don’t know about Vietnam and Laos, but the three firsts ones are referred to as “regimes that controls all aspects of life”. I mean, how is that even possible without extensive bureaucracy ? Are you interpreting “bureaucracy” in some unusual or private meaning of the word ? Like, are the “bureaucrats” just considered state officials themselves to pretend they aren’t really a bureaucracy ?

                    “Bureaucracy is the administrative system governing any large institution, whether publicly owned or privately owned.”

                    I mean, either they stay out of the lives of the people or they make all those decisions themselves or they hire a large class of bureaucrats to take these decisions for them. AI hasn’t been around long enough to make it the bureaucracy.

        • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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          3 months ago

          Democracy does produce satisfactory outcomes, what changes reality is the structure of said democracy. Very few systems are direct democracies, and direct democracies themselves are flawed even in theory.

          You should read the text.

    • OurToothbrush@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      Like, the elected politicians and bureaucracy can’t be trusted enough to regulate industry under capitalism so we’ll centralize things and then trust them to regulate industry under Communism?

      Literally read State and Revolution by Lenin which talks about how people assume the state has a neutral character, but actually it has a class character reflecting who it is designed to serve.

    • orcrist@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      I feel like you’re ignoring a lot of background, but let’s run with your argument. Let’s assume that we have to have some elected politicians and some appointed or elected bureaucrats, and either we should try to have a capitalist system or a communist system of some kind.

      Let’s try to keep things as equal as possible, knowing that we really can’t, but just for the sake of argument. Which system is more likely to be corrupted? Remember, the express goal of capitalism is to throw wealth at the capitalists. If the regular person gets screwed, that’s not corruption, that’s a feature of the system… Oh, wait a second, I guess we already have an answer to our hypothetical, don’t we.

      But you did raise a good point. Any government, if it’s to function somewhat reasonably, needs to be one that has a lot of transparency, oversight, and accountability. If you don’t have those, it doesn’t matter how you start off because it’s going to end badly. So I agree with you, we shouldn’t be trusting politicians.