
Originally Posted by
WI-Tom
You are saying Chomsky agreed with me--agreed with me about what? Because I certainly don't agree with the quotation you posted. I'm not sure why you'd think I did.
It doesn't support my position at all. Chomsky is claiming that there were universal economic systems that were better than capitalism, with more freedom and less slavery, from classical antiquity onward. That's absurd. At a small scale, in pre-agricultural times or societies, that kind of freedom probably existed. In fact, I think small scale is one of the things that makes alternatives to capitalism easier to conceive and execute. Much harder in a world of globalization.
My "position" is mainly to question things, which I see as having great value even when answers don't immediately present themselves. But here's a few thoughts of mine:
1. Capitalism is by its inherent qualities a system for concentrating wealth and power in the hands of the few, diverting most benefits to the wealthy few and imposing as many costs on the non-wealthy majority as possible. It also promotes increased consumption, inventing new "needs" so it can open new markets. And some of those externalized costs--the environmental ones--have become an existential threat to human civilization. I don't think anyone can reasonably disagree with this, though I'm sure some will try.
2. There really is no such thing as "unregulated" capitalism. It's either regulated in favor of the wealthy (as it is now), or in favor of equity and fairness for the majority (which has sometimes been done much better than it is now, but has never been perfect). I also think that trying to move regulation toward the equitable side of things is very important, and can offer huge improvements without abandoning capitalism. But, I also think that reforming regulation is treating the symptoms. Treating symptoms is important, and has real value. But I'd much rather deal with the root cause (e.g. I can use ice and anti-inflammatories for a running injury, and it will help--but it would be far better to fix the underlying biomechanical issues that caused the problem). Capitalism has serious biomechanical problems that no amount of regulation will cure. The problems will remain even when the symptoms are masked.
3. Better alternatives than capitalism can, in theory at least, be found and effectively implemented. And we ought to try, because the problems of capitalism are serious enough that staying with it is not a winning game. I see the role of cooperatives quite differently than David G--I think, done correctly, they are inherently anti-capitalist. He'll probably disagree. That's OK. We can keep thinking our own way about that.
4. Better alternatives may have already been proposed, and (because of interventions from those opposing them--e.g. the U.S.) have not received a fair trial yet. On the other hand, perhaps they would fail even under ideal circumstances without outside interference. So perhaps it's true that capitalism is the best system yet devised. (Which still doesn't mean a better one can't be found).
5. The assumption that any form of socialism or communism will inevitably devolve into Stalinism is just that--an assumption. That's just like believing that the Wright brothers would never achieve powered flight because every attempt to do so before them failed.
Now this:
You've misunderstood. Questioning assumptions and reflecting on consequences is not complaining, even when no solutions are presented. On the contrary, questioning beliefs and values is a crucial step toward improving things.
But, you want thoughts. Here's one from Aldo Leopold:
"A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise."
Here's one from Wendell Berry:
"The ideal of competition always implies, and in fact requires, that any community must be divided into a class of winners and a class of losers. The losers simply accumulate in human dumps. The idea that the displaced and dispossessed “should seek retraining and get into another line of work” is, of course, utterly cynical. There is no limit to the damage and the suffering implicit in this willingness that losers should exist as a normal economic cost.
The danger of the ideal of competition is that it neither proposes nor implies any limits. It proposes simply to lower costs at any cost, and to raise profits at any cost. It does not hesitate at the destruction of the life of a family or the life of a community. It pits neighbor against neighbor as readily as it pits buyer against seller. Every transaction is meant to involve a winner and a loser. And for this reason the human economy is pitted without limit against nature."
Now Keith:
You seem surprised that I didn't agree with that quotation. I find that odd. I may agree with Chomsky on lots of things--he's a very smart guy, very insightful--but that one was pure nonsense. I've never made that claim, or anything like it.
I agree that we agree more than disagree. My understanding of our differences is that you are more optimistic than I think is warranted by reality, and you think the opposite. I think, too, that I tend to explore things at a hypothetical, visionary, theoretical level to arrive at first principles. And I think you are more focused on immediate practical aspects, such as "How do we get from capitalism to something better, if indeed something better can be found?" (I think you're skeptical that it can be).
I think the world needs both kinds of thinking. The danger I see is that, by focusing only on the immediately practical, we risk abandoning the open exploration of alternatives that are desperately needed.
I appreciate that we can disagree and discuss without insulting each other!
Tom