Bomb#20
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That isn't capitalism verses socialism. That was democracy verses authoritarianism.1. the question of wether socialism works or capitalism works is an unanswerable question
West German Embassy, Prague, Czechoslovakia, 1989
So show me a society where the means of production were collectively owned that didn't become an authoritarian police state.Yeah. The thing that made the Soviet/Warsaw Pact bloc an intolerable place to live was Socialism.
To paraphrase James Carville, "It's not just the economy, stupid".
Why on earth would you guys imagine anyone can set up an authoritarian process for making the decisions about the economy -- the decisions about what ought to be done, where, for whom, and to what extent -- and not have that authority spill out onto everything else? When the government decides for whom newsprint will be produced, do you think it's going to direct people to deliver it to anti-government newspapers?Socialism - an economic system wherein decisions about what ought to be done, where, for whom, and to what extent, is determined by a authoritarian process,
If decisions about what ought to be done, where, for whom, and to what extent, are determined without an authoritarian process, but are instead negotiated among the doers themselves, then the outcome will be some complicated compromise where vast numbers of different people's divergent goals are simultaneously promoted to some extent, but any given goal is severely obstructed due to being traded off against all the others. Using an authoritarian process makes it possible for one goal to be assigned overall priority over another even when pursuing the one depends on cooperation from whoever is pursuing the other. Consequently, the authoritarian process is more effective at achieving just about any one goal, but kind of stinks at simultaneously satisfying lots of competing goals. If we could just agree about which goals should have higher priority than which, the authoritarian process would be ideal. Lots of political movements form out of like-minded people who are in pretty broad agreement about which goals are worth pursuing and which aren't, so the authoritarian process naturally appeals to them -- sometimes so much so that when one of these movements wins the political contest and takes power, its leaders choose to impose the authoritarian process on the economic system. This frequently leads to a great deal of immediate progress towards the movement's mutually agreed high-priority goals.
The trouble is, this system kind of stinks at simultaneously satisfying lots of competing goals; it's only really effective at pursuing one goal at a time. When those in charge of the authoritarian process for making the decisions, about what ought to be done, where, for whom, and to what extent, figure out that they can't make more than one goal their top priority, they invariably decide the highest priority goal is keeping themselves in power.