lpetrich
Contributor
AOC noted "But also, I feel like it’s not a coincidence that virtually every DSA candidate has been a person of color. I don’t think that’s an accident."
Referring to the Democratic Socialists of America. I think that it's from appealing to people who feel shut out of the political system, like that black man who stated that he thinks that politics is only for honkies.
JB then stated that he considers being a socialist part of his identity. After Bernie Sanders's campaign ended, he was taking a shower, and he thought to himself “You know what? Slavery was capitalism.” In the interview, he continued with "Black people were capital. We were property, and we had a price. That’s what capital is. It’s a piece of property, and that’s what we were. It’s messed up that capitalism brought Black people over here."
Capitalism apologists often respond that slavery was Not True Capitalism. But it is hard to avoid the conclusion that it is *a* form of capitalism. Antebellum-South plantation owners bought and sold slaves, and the crops that they grew were all cash crops. Subsistence farmers don't grow lots of tobacco and cotton and sugarcane.
Capitalism apologists often snicker that worker-run cooperatives are a form of capitalism, and I think that they are right about that. But it involves collective ownership of a business, something that they normally claim to oppose. Yet they don't object to stock ownership and business partnerships, both forms of collective ownership, even if very limited forms of it.
Referring to the Democratic Socialists of America. I think that it's from appealing to people who feel shut out of the political system, like that black man who stated that he thinks that politics is only for honkies.
JB then stated that he considers being a socialist part of his identity. After Bernie Sanders's campaign ended, he was taking a shower, and he thought to himself “You know what? Slavery was capitalism.” In the interview, he continued with "Black people were capital. We were property, and we had a price. That’s what capital is. It’s a piece of property, and that’s what we were. It’s messed up that capitalism brought Black people over here."
Capitalism apologists often respond that slavery was Not True Capitalism. But it is hard to avoid the conclusion that it is *a* form of capitalism. Antebellum-South plantation owners bought and sold slaves, and the crops that they grew were all cash crops. Subsistence farmers don't grow lots of tobacco and cotton and sugarcane.
Capitalism apologists often snicker that worker-run cooperatives are a form of capitalism, and I think that they are right about that. But it involves collective ownership of a business, something that they normally claim to oppose. Yet they don't object to stock ownership and business partnerships, both forms of collective ownership, even if very limited forms of it.