Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 7:47 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jul 20, 2023 5:02 am
So why would the selfish elites love it so darn much? Why would they be promoting it, and denigrating capitalism, or shutting down free markets, or fighting to eradicate small business and private enterprise? If you take Socialism on its smiling face, then surely that looks counterproductive to their goals...
Except they know it's not. It gives them
everything they want...only faster...and more of it.
That's undeniably a very astute and valid question.
So we know that some promote capitalism and some are clearly promoting 'socialism'.
Given that 'capitalism essentially means private ownership over economic entities, it seems pretty easy to understand why they would promote that, it is basically what allowed them to achieve enormous personal wealth and power to begin with and to preserve it. So that seems to be a rather obvious pick.
Socialism, on the other hand, as an ideal, implies societal or communal control over economic entities and their operations. So we have to give a little more thought to the question than with capitalism.
We might approach it cynically and ask ourselves "what will they gain from it." Perhaps we could even approach it idealistically and suppose that they have seen the error in their greed and wish to make amends for it. Who knows, but for the purpose of better safe than sorry, I'll assume worst case scenario, that they have selfish (as opposed to altruistic) motives which begs the question of what do they have to gain from it.
We could start with the assumption that they truly want societal or communal control over their economic activities instead of personal control, because that is fundamental to the definition of socialism and we'll assume they're not stupid and therefore know what 'socialism' would mean for them definitionally. From that standpoint it's a bit more puzzling. Are they really offering to surrender their personal control in favor of social participation (or maybe we should call it "meddling" from their perspective)?
Again let's take the cynical approach and assume they're not doing it for altruistic reasons. They somehow see an advantage in socialism for themselves that they do not perceive as present in capitalism.
What might that advantage be?
Looking at the history of social organization itself, we might equally ask why have liberal values won favor at all over the course of human social evolution? Why do any elites even allow it? Why not just brutally uphold a system which benefits them much more than everyone else-pay police to punish rebels and stomp out any dissent whatsoever. Wouldn't that be the most direct and straightforward approach to preserving selfish interests.
No doubt that is right. It would serve the elites to maximize their control and stomp everybody else's to death. So we might ask why they have not done so previously.
And I think there are some sensible suspicions as to why that's the case. Firstly, up to now, the means to do anything like that have been lacking. We're now in the first phase of near-global economics, near-global politics and near-global media. Before now, a despot's ambitions were always limited by the means he had to control and influence; and even handling a nation-sized chunk was often difficult. Now, with instantaneous communication, e-banking, and so on, new mechanisms of mass management are, for the first time, available.
There's still a problem, though. They're not quite consolidated. So long as they're not, no one man or one elite group can grab all the strings and pull in a direction he wants to go. The thorn in their side that remains is made of things like free enterprise, private ownership, alternative media, paper money, land ownership, individualism, critical thinking, and small business. These things are agents of fragmentation. They are not under centralized control. They serve the local or individual interest, not the interest of the megalomaniacs and ideologues.
This is an unruly situation, and they want to rule it. So what have they got to do? Denigrate indvidualism and critical thinking. Poison education. Shut down or buy out small business. End ownership of private land or capital. Centralize everything in the government, declaring it "in the public interest," and end self-reliance. In short, make all the masses Socialist, while keeping the elites free to act as they please.
Why do people like Fink, or Soros, or Bezos, or Pelosi or Biden, or Sanders or Obama, or Hollywood celebrities, or the whole WEF...why do they still have so much money? Don't they believe in equality? Why aren't they shelling that money out to the people who are starving and dying on the streets of Newsome's LA? Why aren't they funding homeless shelters in San Francisco? Why is it that they love Socialism for the people, but get so darn rich doing it? Don't they think their billions would help people? Aren't they Socialists?
Given where civilization is at this point, my guess is that trying to quell disent is more pragmatic to rulers than trying play an endless game of whack a mole through crushing it. There are very few fully functioning monarchies today. History has made it painfully clear what monarchs want and how they have schemed and manipulated society in order to uphold their power. Basically, any amatuer historian can spot the game. And stomping out dissent violently has historically had bad results when the elites who engaged in it are caught or disempowered by the people around them. The elites who engage in violence often face violence as a result, and that's scary for anyone, even the powerful to fear the people rising up with pitch forks and torches to storm the castle or bastille.
Yes. And overt violence causes revolutions. And they don't want that.
But what about undermining the economy, so people have to depend on centralized government? What about destroying education, so people can't think for themselves well anymore? What about monopolizing the media, so that people only hear what you want them to hear? These are much better tactics of control: and now, for the first time, they're really available on the needed scale.
So that eliminates brutal reppression as a relatively viable option for controlling dissent. But there's still propaganda, disinformation and deception available. Propaganda has been practiced since the invention of information. Since the very first time a valid and true idea popped into someone's mind, there was probably the simultaneous invention of deception and lying to counter it that popped into someone else's mind directly afterward.
So how might calling themselves "socialists" pose an advantage to someone who wanted exessive control os society. My first thought is to go to a common religious analogy often used in Christian theology, of the predator who disguises him or herself in the guise of a member of the "flock" in order to mislead or undermine the security of the flock. Castro, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, and others fit that bill as far as I'm concerned.
Bingo. Call yourself a "Socialist," and become a leader among the masses of Socialists.
But Socialism still serves your most important goal: centralization of control. It does it in the name of the people: but if you're pragmatic about it, who cares what the people think they are doing when they mass together, so long as they obediently mass together? Any ruse works. This is a good one.
Kim J Un calls his country a "democratic" republic. It's pretty clear why. He's certainly not going to advertise his regime as the Authoritarian Tyranny of Korea. He's going to say he's the "people's paradise." That's public relations 101 in my reckoning. That should be obvious. I don't therefore propose that the DPRK proves that 'democracy' is evil. That's the way I read it.
Well, Socialism has nothing to do with democracy, actually, so that's just fine. Democracy, as I said earlier, is rule by the people. Socialism is rule of the people by "The People's Party." That's just despotism in Socialist robes, as you suggest.
But it's Socialism that provides the essential robes that make the deception work. Whereas people would recognize you as a despot instantly if you rose up and said, "Everybody follow me," you can say essentially the same thing by changing it to, "Everybody has to follow the people's interests...
and I'm the guy who will show you what they are."
