• HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Meanwhile, I can’t, for the life of me, understand why anyone would want to be communist rather than being a libertarian socialist or anarchist. Unless they think that they’re the ones that will be telling people what to do, rather than be the ones getting told what to do?

    • chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      They go around calling people bootlickers. That’s projection. They fantasize about cozying up to Stalin and his jackbooted thugs. It’s the same fantasy as the one shared by Curtis Yarvin, Peter Thiel, and their neofeudalist followers. Same goes for all the MAGA morons, the Putinist Z radicals, the 50 cent army, and countless other authoritarian groups.

      The world is a very complicated, dangerous, and frankly scary place right now. When people are unable to cope with all the uncertainty they reach for a strongman. This leaves the rest of us Ambiguity tolerant folks to actually try to deal with all the insanity, or to keep our heads down.

      • goat@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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        2 months ago

        Beautifully put. Never considered it’s projection but that makes so much sense why they exclusively praise dictators as opposed to activists

    • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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      2 months ago

      M-Ls generally hold to the idea that revolution is necessary and M-L is, pretty indisputably, the most successful ideology at launching a worker’s revolution.

      Keeping Da Revolushion socialist is something I assume they think they’ll be able to do a better job at, if they’re not just in full on tankie denial.

      • tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip
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        2 months ago

        Yeah, I got downvoted once the MLs found my comment (in a .world thread) for wondering why far leftists were so convinced that the only answer was socialism (as opposed to soc dem) when we haven’t seen it work very well in the real world. I guess Cuba and China are good enough examples for them to be fully convinced that we shouldn’t emulate Scandinavia, because that’s built on oppression and China isn’t, or something like that.

        • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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          2 months ago

          The funny thing about Scandinavian economics is that it proves that social democracy both improves the average standard of living and doesn’t even inconvenience the oligarchy, the wealth gap in Scandinavian countries is (or was) larger than America’s. That’s also what they find unacceptable about it though.

          But you do need to note that Marxist revolutions don’t happen in countries where people are mostly comfortable or hopeful, they happen in Tsarist Russia and Warlord Era China, and I think that’s ultimately why they’re not willing to settle for compromise of what an actual centrist economic position looks like, it’s an expression of accelerationist thought.

          • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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            2 months ago

            it’s an expression of accelerationist thought.

            …And that’s the really terrifying thing. How many vulnerable people are they willing to see die for their accelerationist fantasy?

            • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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              2 months ago

              I think they’d argue that capitalism is on track to kill every living human being, but it’s not like China is meeting their climate goals so 🤷‍♂️

              • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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                2 months ago

                TBF, China is doing a good job at transitioning to renewables. Which isn’t the same as meeting their climate goals, but it’s better than we’re doing in the US overall.

                • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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                  2 months ago

                  Yeah, China is more than aware than oil dependency is both a guaranteed disaster and a national security issue when you don’t have any or enough, while our dumbass oil barons can’t quite grasp the idea that it’s a limited resource if nothing else.

                  • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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                    2 months ago

                    We’re trying to speedrun getting to the Fallout 2 prologue.

                    There’s no way in hell I’m going to be able to afford a spot in any of the vaults.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      Yeah, I’m also libertarian and generally a bit to the left of mainstream libertarianism, and I honestly don’t understand why anyone would legitimately be on the more authoritarian end of the spectrum.

      I appreciate that just plugging in libertarianism today could be bad, but surely most people want fewer people telling them what to do, right?

      • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        You would think. I mean, that’s the whole principle behind things like reproductive rights, or LGBTQ+ rights, isn’t it? The freedom to control your own body without the government telling you what you can and can’t do with it, as long as you aren’t directly harming someone else? And yet. Ignore the fact that Stalin et al. almost always had purges of LGBTQ+ people, and that the rights of women were–and are in current Russia–sharply curtailed.

        • alci@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          Not sure what people call libertarianism here. For me it’s the american mad child of anarchism, individualism and far right capitalism. Certainly not something I would support !

          • goat@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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            2 months ago

            my local libertarians unironically said that people shouldn’t pay for roads. They also ranted about drag queens despite them not existing in my area.

            Libertarian just screams to me, ‘remove minimum wage! more power to corporations! sell your health!’

            • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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              2 months ago

              Well, there are those. But libertarianism is a big tent, with everything from socialism to anarcho-capitalism underneath it.

              I went into detail on my personal ideology using specific issues as examples. I think drag queens are great, and I’d love to take my kids to a drag queen story telling session (provided the show was intended for kids). I think road users should pay for roads, and they should pay roughly proportional to their destruction of the roads (i.e. trucking companies should pay much more than regular cars), and we should be investing in alternatives to using roads (so trains, cycle paths, etc) because that should reduce overall costs.

              I do believe in eliminating the minimum wage, but that’s because I believe in the NIT (Negative Income Tax), so if you make under a certain amount, you’d receive a check in the mail, which would replace the minimum wage (i.e. it would guarantee everyone makes at least $7.5-15/hour, adjusted to local cost of living). I also believe in less power to corporations, and we get there by making it easier for small companies to compete against large orgs (i.e. remove liability protections for larger orgs).

                • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                  2 months ago

                  Why? All a minimum wage does is prevent people from taking jobs that would otherwise go to automated systems. If someone wants to work for $5/hr, who am I to say that’s wrong?

                  The real concern here, I think, is that the minimum wage isn’t enough to sustain an individual or a family. The solution there isn’t to raise the minimum wage, but to ensure everyone has enough, regardless of wage. So hand out cash so everyone has enough, and then let people work for whatever price they want. Cash handouts should only go to citizens or permanent residents IMO, but everyone is free to compete for whatever wage they feel is fair, and wealthy people can pay the difference.

                  • goat@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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                    2 months ago

                    Without minimum wage, companies will pay their workers the absolute least. That’s why there’s a minimum wage!

            • Mac@mander.xyz
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              2 months ago

              Libertariansism is just edgy facism. They pretend to have different ideals but in reality they only care about stomping on others.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            Then I guess I’ll describe a few policies I believe in and how that fits into my personal ideology. In general, libertarians believe in the Non-Aggression Principle, meaning if it requires an initiation of force to achieve some ends, it’s immoral. Many libertarians are willing to throw some asterisks on there for pragmatism, so I’m more interested in libertarianism as a direction, not an end goal.

            Welfare

            I support a UBI-like program called NIT. Basically (FPL = federal poverty line, LW = living wage):

            • $0 up to FPL - receive full benefits, no taxes due
            • FPL up to LW - receive graduated benefits
            • above LW - start paying taxes

            I want to eventually replace current welfare programs, but I’d start with Social Security, which rewards based on how much you put in, instead of how much you need. I think we should flip that on its head and give more to people with less saved, and nothing to people above a certain retirement income (they don’t need it), so it would be an actual safety net instead of a retirement plan. Benefits would be adjusted based on local cost of living.

            Justification:

            I find redistribution of wealth to technically go against the NAP (i.e. take from one to give to another), but welfare programs are worse because it generally rewards those with the time to navigate the welfare system. This would be automatic, when you file your taxes, if you’re below a certain income limit, you start getting payments.

            Immigration

            I’d like to move toward open borders, and make the immigration process as easy as possible. I’d make a one-time offer to currently undocumented immigrants to become documented; if they currently have a job or means to support themselves, they can stay, with some contingencies (i.e. start filing taxes, etc). I’d also increase the quotas for legal immigration, and work visas would constitute a 5-minute form, monthly digital reports for the first year to document your job situation, and if you get a stable job, this temporary visa would transform into a permanent one.

            Justification:

            Restricting free movement is immoral and against the NAP, unless there’s a legitimate reason to believe you’re moving with malicious intent (i.e. you’ll likely hurt someone).

            Taxes
            • eliminate tariffs - this is basically a national sales tax and is regressive
            • eliminate corporate taxes - they encourage companies to leave, discourage wage growth, etc
            • raise capital gains taxes for high income earners - should match regular income tax rates
            • tax corporate stock grants to high income earners (say, >$400k) as regular income - whether an exec gets stock or cash shouldn’t matter from a tax perspective
            • sales taxes, if they exist, should be included in the list price of goods at physical stores; online stores should only include it if they know the shipping address; they should continue to be itemized separately in receipts
            • property taxes are effective, and we should be moving closer to a land-value tax
            • create carbon tax, and estimate carbon footprint of all imports unless the importing org provides believable documentation

            We should require a balanced budget on average (say, over 10-years, tax revenue should match spending). A big part of this is spending cuts, primarily on our ridiculous defense spending.

            Justification:

            Taxes should be progressive, simple, and sufficient to fund the government. Taxes are a larger aggression against the poor than the wealthy. We should lean on Pigouvian taxes before resorting to regulations.

            Social Issues
            • end qualified immunity - bad cops should be required to defend themselves as private citizens
            • same-sex marriage - rework marriage as set of simple, legal contracts, which each has requirements and benefits; marriage should be defined by those entering into it, the IRS, hospitals, etc should only care about legal contracts
            • drugs - legalize marijuana, decriminalize use/possession of any controlled substance, and only enforce actual violations of rights (i.e. violence, abuse, etc)
            • prostitution - legalize nationally, but also require it to only happen in areas zoned for it (states can decide what that looks like)
            • abortion - few restrictions during the first trimester (i.e. normal duty of care rules) until learning the gender of the baby, no “convenience” abortions until viability, and funded delivery and adoption after viability if the child is unwanted; after the first trimester, abortion is only allowed to protect the life of the mother or relieve suffering from severe developmental issues

            Justification:

            In general, if doing X doesn’t impact others, X should be allowed. If doing X hurts yourself, doing X should be allowed, but controlled such that those selling it would have a duty of care (can’t provide to those they believe it would hurt). This would be broad enough to apply to things like credit cards, gambling, and microtransactions in games.

            For abortion, the rights of the mother and fetus need to be protected. To do that:

            • first trimester - privacy issue, because this is the highest risk of miscarriage
            • second trimester and beyond - symptoms tend to be much lighter, to carrying the baby to a safe term is reasonable
            • funded delivery and adoption - we cannot cause a financial hardship if we’re going to disallow abortion; decision must be made before delivery
            IP Law
            • dramatically reduce copyright duration - roll back to original law, which was 14 years, with an optional, one-time renewal; also expand fair use
            • dramatically reduce patent duration - 5-7 years, with an optional, one-time renewal if they can show economic need
            • keep trademark law as-is

            Justification:

            IP law in general is illegitimate, but smaller creators need some protection from larger orgs that can beat them in production and marketing. IP law has been abused by large orgs against smaller creators, so it needs to be rolled back, but I think eliminating it entirely is also irresponsible.

            Foreign Policy
            • no foreign wars w/o declaration of war by Congress
            • no funding for other countries unless they’re fighting a defensive war (i.e. fund Ukraine, not Israel)

            In general, I believe in:

            • broad expansion of individual liberties (drugs, prostitution, same-sex marriage, abortion)
            • simplification of taxes, and elimination of federal deficit
            • fewer restrictions on citizens and visitors alike
            • prefer Pigouvian taxes over regulations

            So I generally agree with Democrat rhetoric about social policy, Republican rhetoric about fiscal policy, and I disagree with both about most of what they actually do.

      • Mac@mander.xyz
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        2 months ago

        I lean authleft because it’s too easy to manipulate people into voting against their interests.

        I don’t like Libertarians.

    • barsquid@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      These ones love authoritarianism far more than they like leftist economics, so yeah I suspect that’s it.