• Martineski@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    2 years ago

    I will be stepping down in ~7-14 days any suggestions on how to find someone that could take care of this community better than me? Thank you.

      • Martineski@lemmy.fmhy.mlOPM
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        2 years ago

        I think that I will maybe stay as a head mod just in case and will just respond to repots and such. But I don’t see myself as a person capable of steering the community in the right direction because I don’t have any deep knowledge about how society works. All I know is that the current society is not a good place for non-capitalists (people that don’t own assets that generate money). I just want for the world to be a better place for everyone, this is why I created !antiwork@lemmy.fmhy.ml, !fuckcars@lemmy.fmhy.ml and !righttorepair@lemmy.fmhy.ml. I’m still going to actively work on the other 2 subs but !antiwork@lemmy.fmhy.ml is something beyond my capabilities. I’m still very happy that I managed to create this community and kicksart it. If it goes actually mainstream I will even be in a postiton where I could brag that I’m the one that started it here. Something like that doesn’t happen often haha.

        But I’m totally going to still post there, even if I step down.

        • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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          2 years ago

          Definitely don’t step down.

          There’s far too many stray voices trying to influence this kind of community - you only have to look at reddit’s r/antiwork, where after one of their mods made a tit of themselves on Fox News, one of the users made r/workreform. r/workreform had 500,000 new users in a day, and then reddit admin forced the mod of that sub adopt their chosen powermods - they wouldn’t let him hold votes to elect mods from within the community. Said powermods convinced the founding mod to give them full power, after which they kicked him out and told him r/workreform was “now part of [their] projects, we thought you understood that”. He then went on to make r/workers_revolt but lost the all momentum he’d made with his sub.

          Hold onto your community. It’s yours. If someone else wants to make their own community to deliver their message, they should make their own community, not take over yours and leech all its subscribers.

          I’d be happy to assist with some moderation if you want. Either with this account, or with my alts on other instances - in particular kbin replies here seem to be somewhat isolated from the true federated conversation.

          • Martineski@lemmy.fmhy.mlOPM
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            2 years ago

            Yooo, do you think if I should appoint the creator of “work reform” and “workers revolt” as a mod of this community? I don’t know if he’s on this platform but from what I see the closed down their “workers revolt” sub because of reddit fuckups:

            Unlike various ‘pro-worker’ communities that have failed this extremely basic litmus test (why?), Workers Revolt has gone private indefinitely in solidarity with the site-wide protest against Reddit Inc’s mistreatment of its community, volunteer moderators, and third-party applications. See /r/ModCoord for more information. We may not come back. Reddit is not a safe platform for workers’ rights, as demonstrated by its behavior towards its employees, users, and pro-labor community.

            I don’t know much about him though, is he a good enough person to contact him and ask him to be a mod there?

          • Martineski@lemmy.fmhy.mlOPM
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            2 years ago

            Holy shit! I didn’t know about all that stuff that happened to work reform. I think that it may be better for me to stay and watch over actions of mods who will be maintaining the community instead of throwing all that responsibility on the admins of the instance.

            • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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              2 years ago

              Yeah there was a sticky post detailing all of it on r/workers_revolt, but like I say it all got swept under the rug. Obviously, the creator/mod had some culpability, because they gave full admin to someone else, but still. Also, the new mods of r/workreform banned people for talking about it.

              Edit: If you scroll down to the first posts on r/work_reform you can see some stuff about it, but most of the main posts and their allegations were removed.

              • Martineski@lemmy.fmhy.mlOPM
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                2 years ago

                I managed to think find this copy of a post that he made. I don’t think that I should ask him to be a mod there. You mentioned that he later decided to create “workers revolt” so maybe he changes his mind, idk. The copy:

                Hey everyone, I know this might disappoint some of you all, but I’ve decided to give up moderation.

                This shit is too stressful, I had to call work and take some days off, and in return I got absolutely nothing. Moderating this sub has literally cost me money. I don’t see how being in this position is going to benefit me in my life, ever.

                When I created r/WorkReform I did NOT expect it to explode to near 500k members. This shit is giganormous and I simply do not have the qualifications to keep on going at this stage, there’s too much to learn in such a small time frame that is being forced down my throat by the admins.

                I spent countless and countless hours trying to filter out the posts, comments, modmail, and all that, but seriously it’s just too exhausting. Oh and that’s without taking into consideration all the death threats I’ve been getting and all the fucking cringers scrutinizing my entire life and doxxing me all around reddit.

                Also, thanks to reddit admins for pressuring me out of this position. I had the intention of appointing moderators democratically but they pretty much are forcing us to appoint mods today and I refuse to go against the principles that I promised the community that I’d be doing. Huge fucking let down and I apologize for it.

                Anyway, now I can go back to my normal life I guess. It was definitely a wild ride. Thanks to everyone who has been supportive of me, I will forever remember you. I’m still gonna be around, just not as a mod. Y’all take care, this movement is never going to die.

                • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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                  2 years ago

                  Tbh I could be wrong about him starting workers_revolt, however it certainly was the case that he was pushed out by admin in favour of powermods.

  • Quacksalber@sh.itjust.works
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    2 years ago

    A note: Most countries subsidise their farmers because those countries realise that leaving food security up to the market is a bad idea.

  • bioemerl@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    Under modern food production systems that are entirely for profit we have had less famine in the world than any prior generation and especially far less famine in the world than in any communist nation that has tried to go and produce food without profit motives.

    Ideas like this one will lead far more people to starve.

    • Cornerspace@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      You’re spot on. Furthermore, under socialism/communism countless millions have starved to death due to governmental incompetence. The op has obviously never studied history.

  • fuklu@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    2 years ago

    It’s not a bug that capitalism is based on greed, it’s a feature. It works (relatively speaking) because it leverages humanity’s shittyness.

    Communism has failed to operate without corruption or authoritarianism, because it depends on people actually giving a shit about each other long term.

    • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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      2 years ago

      They both fail, but the problem isn’t the system. The problem is people. People try to put themselves into positions of power, retain their position of power and exploit that position of power. Capitalism and communism are simply attempted solutions, however unfortunately they don’t adequately deal with the human problem.

      With capitalism, people exploit the value exchange. They lie about how much something costs to source or produce, then lie about how much someone else should pay for it, and also about how much a worker’s time is worth. Such that you end up with people doing a lot and getting nothing and people doing very little if anything but getting lots.

      With communism, people put themselves in positions of power to decide how things should be distributed, then vigorously quell and dissenting voices that ask whether things are being distributed fairly. The end result is more or less the same as capitalism - a small portion of people getting a large portion of wealth.

      Any solution must take into account human tendencies to abuse the system, and make efforts to prevent it. However quite often perfection ends up being the enemy of progress - we don’t try new things because they might be abused, and end up sticking with the current system which is definitely being abused. This only benefits the abusers. Rather, we should aggressively try new social systems, but also regularly review and either reverse or continue to improve upon them. If nothing else, the changing system will disrupt abusers, as they have to constantly develop new methods.

      • fuklu@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        2 years ago

        Thanks for the thought provoking reply!

        My impression is that all systems fail long term and need to break down and be renewed after crisis. Once it becomes entrenched, I think odds are heavily against being able to try social systems.

        Have you seen a system like you describe, where a structure to continue change and experimentation is built in? To me capitalism with strong controls seems the most stable and successful (assuming your benchmark is population qualify of life not just GDP), e.g. some European systems.

        • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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          2 years ago

          Arrrrg I wrote out a big reply, was about to post, then realised I’d accidentally downvoted you. When I changed that downvote to an upvote my reply was reset. #lemmybugs.

          Here’s take 2.

          My impression is that all systems fail long term and need to break down and be renewed after crisis. Once it becomes entrenched, I think odds are heavily against being able to try social systems.

          I’d agree with this, genreally. It feeds into the point in my last paragraph: we need a changing system to destabilise incumbant powers, such that they cannot abuse the system as effectively. These changes must be driven by objective improvemnents, democratically decided. Furthermore, I would say that total democracy is a win.

          People will point to Brexit as an example of the hazards of giving people a vote. However, the truth is Brexit was a disinformation campaign - such a campaign cannot be maintained indefinitely, it can only be focused onto key events - particularly when it was driven by targeted lies (primarily on Facebook) immediately before a vote. You can say whatever you want if only the people who won’t question it see it, and by the time anyone else does it will be too late. If people had subsequent opporunities to decide how Brexit would be done, along with votes on whether or not to proceed down any particular route, things wouldn’t have been anywhere near as bad.


          I believe in a strong social safety net. The bare basics of human needs should be provided for any citizen: food, clothing, and shelter. Without these needs, people get desperate, and they turn feral. They resort to crime - which then easily becomes a habit. This is worse for everyone overall; by preventing this we help maintain a stable and productive society.

          The basics should be provided. If people want nice things, they should have to work for it. If you want a nice house, you need to work and earn enough. If you want nice designer clothes, you need to work. If you want a PS5/Sexbox/1337 PC you need to work for it and earn it. If you just want to rest on your laurels with the bare minimum, that should be an option, too.

          However lazing about doing nothing is incredibly fucking boring and unfulfilling. No one wants to live their life that way. The lifetime benefit scrounger is pretty much a myth - maybe there’s one or two who game the system, but it never lasts forever. People want to improve their position in life, they want to “pull themselves up by their bootstraps”, they just need the opportunity.

          I know this full well. I’ve had the luxury of not doing anything, I’ve skirted poverty but never quite truly fell into it. And it’s not anywhere anyone wants to be. However, even in my position success is limited - debtors and financiers prey upon anyone who falls below a certain line. If you pay off your credit cards every month, they’ll feed you more credit, then when you start building up debt they’ll rack up your interest rates such that your instinct is to dig in deeper in some vein hope of finding your way out.

          Meanwhile, the past is littered with famous artists, many musicians, who have spent some time living off the state. These stories have become fewer and fewer over the past couple decades - no one can live off the dole anymore. This begs the question: how much social development has the human race missed out on, given that young people have been stretched to their limit, such that they barely even want to contribute anything because their prospects are now so bleak?

          People shouldn’t be exploited to their limits. Particularly, citizens of any country shouldn’t be left to rot. Any great country that calls itself wealthy should be able to care for its people, such that these people can find their feet and positively contribute to the collective good. And that collective good must belong to everyone, not just those who sit at the top and do very little to contribute themselves.

          • SgtThunderC_nt@lemmy.zip
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            2 years ago

            Term limits for everything. If the morons are going to pick an idiot to run their village at least there’s a chance they’ll elect a smart man, if only by mistake.

            • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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              2 years ago

              Not even term limits, I’d say politics should be like jury duty. Everyone has to do it, they get paid time off work for it, they don’t get to make a career out of it.

              But there should also be some meritocracy. The EU actually manages that quite well - the European Commission is made up of “unelected bureaucrats”, but actually what that means is they’re made up of talented lawyers chosen by each member state. These lawyers write laws. Then, the democratically elected Members of European Parliament vote on the laws.

              The clever people who know how to write laws write the laws, then the people democratically vote on the laws. That’s a pretty good principle.

              The only difference I would add is that people should have a more direct say on their vote. If I want to vote on a particular law, I should be able to vote on that law. If I don’t care I should be able to pool my vote with some group that I align with, who can then vote on my behalf.

              If I don’t like how the group votes, I can leave and vote for another next time.

              None of this, “vote for a guy, then hope they do what I expect of them for the next 4 years” bollocks.

              Furthermore, after the first vote, there should be an opportunity for more votes. So if the group I align with votes against my interest, I have a chance to object later on, be it before the realisation of the policy or upon review after the policy has been running for some time.

              Sure, there are faults with this. People can be manipulated. However, you can’t manipulate people constantly, forever, and eventually good policy should win through.

              • SgtThunderC_nt@lemmy.zip
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                2 years ago

                Okay, so how do we get everyone to actually bother to vote? In the US we’ve been having problems trying to get equal representation at the polls and so far haven’t really done a great job of fixing it.

                Having a team of lawyers to draft and submit legal terms is a great idea, in fact it’s kind of the point of lawyers. The issue is having the people who vote on them be able to both understand them, and to check both the writer and the representative check each other for corruption. If you give the representative the ability to remove the lawyer then the representative holds the real power, if you don’t, you give the lawyer more power. We need a balance in there somewhere.

                Let’s also not forget that direct democracy has lead to the reversal of Roe v. Wade and the election of theocratic and fascistic leaders. How do we balance that?

                Capping terms at 1 or 2 prevents people from being able to consolidate and exploit their power. But we’ll still need leaders to vote on our behalf so how do we prevent corruption? What if we had a new institution whose sole job was to check the government and maintain an open forum where all opinions can be shared and argued.

                More than any of this, I really think the rich just need to be scared of the poor again.

                • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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                  2 years ago

                  You wouldn’t need everyone to vote on everything. However there is a natural incentive to vote on things that interest and affect you. Right now, people don’t vote because they don’t believe it will change anything - you vote for a person, but they’re no different to any other person. Meanwhile, if they were given the opportunity to vote on whether their tax money should go to fixing their roads or building a new school, more people will have an opinion on that and want to vote.

                  For things they don’t care about, they could either not vote, or better they could join a representative group. Rather than voting for a person to represent you for a set period, you join or leave a representative as you see fit. If you want to vote on a particular issue, or if the representative doesn’t vote the way you like, you withdraw your representative membership. Representatives would have to continue to act in the interests of their members, else they would lose their status.

                  I disagree that democracy led to Roe vs Wade being reversed. Trump was elected despite not having the most votes - which isn’t democratic - and then he appointed people to the court - not democratic - to rig the votes in their rulings. Even the opportunity to appoint new judges isn’t democratic, as they are appointed for life, so the timing of when one elects to retire or dies determines who gets to decide their replacement. This prevents the system from being democratic or fair - it is a political decision made by politicians, rather than a meritocratic decision made by experts of the profession. The legal profession should be picking judges, not politicians.

          • Lilith02@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            Your sentiment is why I don’t consider myself a communist. Capitalism can work well but it requires extraordinarily powerful regulations. Communism is maybe a bit better but still requires the same amount of regulation we’re failing to implement now.

            We need to fix capitalism before we make the move to communism.

            • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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              2 years ago

              I think a lot of the issue comes down to terminology. Communism has been bastardised and turned into a dirty word, it has very negative connotations for a lot of people. Most implementations of communism in the world don’t really fit the ideology, and now people think of the countries for the definition.

              I would first define socialist policy: that which is made for the greater good of society as a whole, rather than for the benefit of select groups at the expense of society.

              I think true communism is what you would get if you consistently implemented socialist policy again and again over a long period. If we develop robust policies that create a net benefit for the people as a group, we will end up having a communist society.

              But trying to jump and change to communism straight away is fraught with issues, because during the change sociopathic people will take the opportunity and steer things in their favour by implementing policy that benefits themselves over others.

      • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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        2 years ago

        I think it is interesting that when talking about systems designed to organize people, their labor, and what to produce, that you are blaming people. It’s kind of like blaming water for flowing down hill when you want it to go up into your kitchen sink. Maybe use pipes and pressurized water instead.

        If these systems don’t work, the issues are with the systems and not with the people.

        • ursakhiin@beehaw.org
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          2 years ago

          I don’t think they blamed people. I think they said the issue is that the systems didn’t account for people. That’s saying the systems are inadequate solutions for the scenario.

          It’s like saying an iron rod rusts when placed in salt water because it didn’t account for the salt water. The iron rod might be a good design but it’s not designed for that use.

      • GoodEye8@lemm.ee
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        2 years ago

        I feel like you’re misrepresenting or misunderstanding what communism is. You might base your opinion on the soviet union but they never actually achieved communism, and some would even say it was state capitalism and not even socialism. In fact it’s unlikely we’ll ever see what an actual communist society would be because it’s very much a vague utopia, and just a goal to strive towards.

        Communism by definition actually isn’t very clear because Marx never actually got into the details of how a communist society day to day life would look like. But he did postulate the primary idea of communism: “From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.” One idea of communism is that it’s stateless and classless, meaning there literally couldn’t be a small portion of people getting a large portion of wealth. Marx himself actually said that future communist institutions should be designed to be decided democratically by the people.

        • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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          2 years ago

          I’m going to copy my other comment as it covers my thoughts on this:

          I think a lot of the issue comes down to terminology. Communism has been bastardised and turned into a dirty word, it has very negative connotations for a lot of people. Most implementations of communism in the world don’t really fit the ideology, and now people think of the countries for the definition.

          I would first define socialist policy: that which is made for the greater good of society as a whole, rather than for the benefit of select groups at the expense of society.

          I think true communism is what you would get if you consistently implemented socialist policy again and again over a long period. If we develop robust policies that create a net benefit for the people as a group, we will end up having a communist society.

          But trying to jump and change to communism straight away is fraught with issues, because during the change sociopathic people will take the opportunity and steer things in their favour by implementing policy that benefits themselves over others.

          I absolutely agree with democratically deciding everything. I think technology has reached the point where we could give people that opportunity. We all have devices in our pockets that have the capability to communicate with everyone else, so we don’t need representatives to do it on our behalf (particularly when all too often they don’t actually represent us when they vote on policy). There are potential problems with this, of course, however these problems are primarily technical in nature and could be overcome.

      • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        In a way: when you legalize the most common forms of corruption and gaslight people into thinking of your favorite kinds of authoritarianism as normal and necessary, suddenly you don’t officially have a problem!

        That’s how the US and many other supposedly free and uncorrupted capitalist nations do it, anyway.

      • fuklu@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        2 years ago

        Relatively speaking, I’d say yes.

        The communist systems I’m aware of have failed hard on these due to not having built in outlets for negative human characteristics.

        • theneverfox@pawb.social
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          2 years ago

          No, we tried communism, the weird dielectric system of government that Lenin came up with.

          Communism, the market ideology, can exist within a capitalist framework - all we have to do is say “companies are owned and operated by employees. From now on, we cap ROI when loaning money, no more infinite payout because you provided startup capital”.

          Communes and entirely employee owned/operated companies exist, and they do well. They just don’t grow until they implode - they grow to a point and then stop letting people in

          Communism is a market system, not a system of government. It doesn’t need to be centralized - and centralization is the real problem IMO

          • fuklu@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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            2 years ago

            Yeah, agreed. I don’t think purism in either direction is great. To me well regulated capitalism with strong unions seems like a good balance.

        • m532@lemmy.ml
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          2 years ago

          Seems like your understanding of communism comes from cold war propaganda

          • fuklu@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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            2 years ago

            Actually from people who lived through it in the eastern bloc… the propaganda was mostly right.

        • Alien Nathan Edward@lemm.ee
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          2 years ago

          that’s a fair question. it seems like corruption is universal to all systems of organization and therefore not a good measure of the validity of any given system

    • DreamButt@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      Part of the issue with this take is that communism isn’t a system for organizing government, but rather that of labor and resources. It is not true that communism has failed. Rather it is true that communism under totalitarian regisms has failed. True Communism requires that the people have the power, which in turn would require a true Democracy

            • MelonTheMan@lemmy.world
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              2 years ago

              It’s my understanding they began as authoritarian regimes, so they have yet to be implemented. An authoritarian regime isn’t necessarily easy to install but it isn’t impossible, nor is a full democracy or some variant of it.

              One of the key tennents of a well governed body is that leaders (if there are any) should be easy to remove by the governed. An authoritarian regime immediately fails that requirement.

  • Athoss@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    If it’s not profitable for a company, another one comes and fills the market gap. Howerever in socialism if it’s not profitable, they just let people starve

  • redballooon@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    Just speaking logically, the last sentence doesn’t follow from the first. It’s just a statement on its own with no justification.

  • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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    2 years ago

    It costs money to produce food.

    The more people you want to feed, the more money it costs.

    Food production is not free. Food distribution is not free.

    If you have an alternative to capitalism, I’m open, but you can’t just stamp your feet and go “but it should be free!” It’s not, someone has to pay for the seed, irrigation, fertilization, equipment fuel and labor involved in production and distribution.

    p.s. Is it just me or is it the same people wanting $20+ hour minimum wage who also think food should be free?

    • Pleaseletmeinalready@lemm.ee
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      2 years ago

      “Our labor has conquered scarcity”… Bro they’ve conquered scarcity now? I didn’t even know! If someone has conquered the universal reality of scarcity they can ask whatever they want as minimum wage. 🤣

    • nintendiator@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      2 years ago

      It costs money to produce food.

      The more people you want to feed, the more money it costs.

      Food production is not free. Food distribution is not free.

      Then it should be a task of the State, as “feeding people” is, quite obviously, a task Too Big to Fail. And, as such, the State can (and should) just automatically print the money needed to reward the work done. Feeding the hungry should not depend on a “budget”. A budget is basically putting a price on human lives.

    • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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      2 years ago

      Yes, you are correct, food is not free. So does that mean it is good (per your morality) that people starve? The military is super expensive, but that hasn’t stopped us from deciding all Americans need protection and making that happen.

      Capitalism has done some good stuff, but it has also done some bad stuff too. It’s not an all or nothing proposition. I think if the majority of us agree everyone should have access to food, money should be a detail to solve, not a barrier.

      The question is, do you think food should be free? Have you ever thought about it seriously?

      • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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        2 years ago

        Morality doesn’t enter into it. If you want something that somebody else puts effort into producing, they need to be compensated for their effort, materials, etc. etc.

        I guess you could phrase that as a moral demand. You don’t have free access to the results of someone elses effort.

        You want to eat without paying someone? Grow your own food. Nothing stopping you. Oh, but you’ll have to pay for the land, seed, water, fertilizer, animals. Learn how to slaughter and butcher on your own because you can’t pay someone else to teach you those skills. You could learn to hunt, but then you’d have to make your own weapons because even re-loading supplies cost money.

        • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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          2 years ago

          Ok, so it sounds like in your case, the market is morality, if I am understanding you. So you would be cool with buying and selling slaves and paying hit men to kill people? All that would be good because everyone was paid?

          Have you though about this stuff seriously?

          • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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            2 years ago

            You’re making a disingenous slippery slope argument. The law isn’t about morality either, it’s about what is and is not legal.

            Slavery isn’t illegal because it’s immoral, it’s illegal because one person doesn’t have the right to take away another persons self determination. You can choose to hire them, and they can choose to work for you, but you can’t force them to do anything.

            By the same reason, you don’t have the right to take another persons food without paying them for it. That’s theft.

            • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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              2 years ago

              No, I am not making a slippery slope argument. I am just trying to understand your moral framework, or see if you have any.

              Yes, lets talk about laws, maybe that will help. Ok, laws are not just some magic thing that happens, they are developed by society, right? In fact you can argue that laws are related to morality. In a truly democratic society laws would derivative of morality, right?

              Humans develop constructs like laws and capitatim to help us do things. So it is important for us to not derive our morality from existing structures, because if we did, we could never evolve them in a way to help us do more/better things. I know this is kind of abstract and I am sorry about that.

              So you are using existing laws and economic systems to argue for the correctness of the current laws and economic systems. Using this approach I could argue that that Feudalism is pretty awesome because it is way better than the stone age, etc…

              This is why I am wondering if you have given any thought to your moral frame work, or if you have just accepted the status quo and are trying to justify it because you don’t have a framework.

              • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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                2 years ago

                No, laws have absolutely jack all to do with morality, and when they do (prohibition for example) they inevitably fail.

                Laws exist to define which rights supercede other rights.

                So, for example, in my state there are three cases where I can use lethal force:

                1. If someone is or is about to commit a violent felony on me.
                2. If someone is breaking into my house.
                3. If someone is or is about to commit a violent felony on someone else.

                So, I see a dude walking down the street swinging a machete (I live in Portland, it’s not as crazy as you’d think.)

                I don’t have the right to just plug the guy. That would be illegal. He has the right to be in public, swinging around a machete.

                Now, if he’s swinging it AT ME or someone else, or chasing them or threatening them, then it’s a different deal and my right to be safe in a public space supercedes his right to wave his arms in the air like he just don’t care.

                Again, laws are not present to pick moral winners and losers.

                • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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                  2 years ago

                  I completely disagree. Why are there laws to prevent people from killing each other? Why would we as a society bother to make that a thing? It’s morality. It’s the basis of everything.

                  If the most common moral framework didn’t hold that human life is valuable. Then we wouldn’t make those laws. It wouldn’t make sense for those laws to be on the books.

                  And yes the laws do and should pick winners and losers. If you are a serial killer, the laws are not in your favor, your a loser.

        • KᑌᔕᕼIᗩ@lemmy.ml
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          2 years ago

          So, one has to pay for the means of production including the land, which is just sitting there and required nobody to go to any effort?

          You see the problem there?

    • bstix@feddit.dk
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      2 years ago

      It does however get considerably cheaper to produce more food when production is scaled up. If enough people got together on the “free food” they could potentially do it cheaper than what capitalism provides.

      The issue however is that capitalism has already made food really fucking cheap. It’s actually too cheap. And that is because someone else is paying the true cost of providing it. Obviously the animals who sacrifice the their lives, but also the human workers who also sacrifice their lives, just to bring food for everyone. Everyone eats, nobody gets paid, except for the owners who also do none of the work.

      • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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        2 years ago

        On a per capita basis, yes. But the Doritos that sell for $6 a bag come out of a multi billion dollar organization (Frito Lay, part of Pepsi).

        Individuals coming together to produce a single bag of Doritos aren’t going to be able to do it for $6. They need the infrastructure of that multi billion dollar corporation to get there.

        • bstix@feddit.dk
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          2 years ago

          Yes, exactly. The problem is to get local produce cheaper than importing global crap. Distribution is a huge part of it. It shouldn’t be cheaper to transport crap food globally than for a domestic producer to deliver quality food, but it is.

          • Metallibus@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            I don’t understand how people overlook this so easily.

            People acknowledge the amount of work and labor required to produce food and insist food shouldn’t be cheap/free… But then just ignore the fact that we’re paying less money to also move that shit across the globe on giant machinery that had to be produced and burning fuels that had to be extracted and refined.

          • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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            2 years ago

            The thing is, you can’t source enough local produce to support any significant population. I live in a town of 641,162 (2021 numbers), you’re not going to deliver 1,923,486 meals a day, 702,072,390 meals per year, using only local resources. It simply can’t be done.

            Even on my property, for two people, I would not be able to produce 6 meals a day every day. I have to bring in outside resources.

            • Metallibus@lemmy.world
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              2 years ago

              And outsourcing this solves the problem how? You’re just making someone else deal with your locality’s problem.

  • tallwookie@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    under communism, food is only produced because the central planning committee set a quota for it. unfortunately, distribution requires resources the central planning committee did not account for and the foodstuffs rot in the fields.

  • argv_minus_one@beehaw.orgBanned
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    2 years ago

    Without capitalism, what motivates farmers to do their work? It’s miserable work that has yet to be automated, so they certainly aren’t going to do it just for fun.

    So no, we haven’t conquered scarcity. Not yet, anyway.

  • Jase@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Can confirm. I’m on disability and cannot afford food and medication and bills at the same time. My Internet will be cut later this month because I did the crime of paying for my medication so I didn’t want to kill myself. I am starving but at least I didn’t feel like my soul was being drained.

    It’s just depressing that if I want to feel slightly okay I have to not eat for days so I can justify getting my medication. Or dumpster diving to supplement food, which I’m gonna be doing in a couple hours.

    Life is suffering and I’m tired of it.

    • TechnoBabble@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      If you’re in the US, the Affordable Connectivity Program is available to low income families and it covers $30 a month off your existing internet bill.

      PCsForPeople (not sure if I can provide links on Lemmy) offers a free mobile hotspot plan with unlimited data that you can use as home internet, if you qualify for the ACP.

      Just an FYI, since there are programs that help, but not everyone is aware of them.

  • Alien Nathan Edward@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    During the pandemic I watched grocery stores buy poison to dump on their trash, which they paid armed people to guard. They then paid other people to haul it away. All this to prevent poor people from taking it away for free.

  • Nioxic@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    This is part of the reason that the governments pay farmers to grow various crops etc.

    we need food it needs to be as cheap as possible

    • Skasi@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      we need food it needs to be as cheap as possible

      I agree that we need food. Why do you say it needs to be as cheap as possible? The cheaper it is the less value people will give it and the more food will go to waste.

      • m532@lemmy.ml
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        2 years ago

        It needs to be cheap so poor people don’t die of starvation.

        I don’t understand how some people don’t get this. I think they don’t see the poor as humans.

        • Skasi@lemmy.world
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          2 years ago

          The problem is not the food price. The problem is the unfair distribution of wealth. The solution is to ensure every person can afford a decent standard of living.

          Making food cheaper just shifts the problem: More food imported (=>traffic, noise, co2), less incentive to produce food (=>scarcity), worse conditions for workers and livestock (=>unequality, animal abuse), higher reliance on preservatives, pest control and drugged livestock (=>potential negative side effects), more food waste (=>inefficiency).