this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2023
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[–] vamp07@lemm.ee -2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It's an academic exercise discussing the democratic system and how most voters are not looking at the long-term health of the country that they are leaving to their children or the children of others. I find nothing objectionable to Elon expressing his opinion, which by the way was very short and to the point. What's more concerning is how people get so riled up about these things and talking about Elon and how much they dislike him. The masses are being entertained and you are all falling for the bait.

[–] Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

It’s an objectively fascist belief to hold, there’s no need to tie it to the rest of Musks bullshit, because it’s disgusting enough on its own.

[–] Windex007@lemmy.world -1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I don't think that viewing the world through the else of "racist or not" is necessarily the best way to approach a thought experiment. There is an old, perpetually mis-attributed quote along the lines of "it is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain an idea without accepting it".

I happen to take personal objection with the notion that felons can't vote in the USA. It provides a path to disenfranchise undesirable votes by perhaps abusing the law, or creating laws specifically to diminish the voting capacity of groups. I think that's "facist", but simply applying that label without a good faith explanation towards that "what" and "why" doesn't lead to anyone learning anything about anything.

I've heard support of adding upper age limits on legislators under the justification of "they'll be dead before they ever feel the results of their bad decisions". I don't see that argument as fundamentally different.

To be clear, I am not in favour of anyone's vote getting taken away.

But I AM in favour of grown up discussions about how as a species, our ability to transform the earth has reached a point that our decisions can echo so far into the future, so far past our own lifespans, that it's become way too easy to let future generations hold the bag.

We already see it financially. The boomers policy absolutely pulled the ladder up behind them buttfucking millenials and genz.

The headline isn't"you must have children to vote", thats controversial and a bait solution.

Don't fall for it. accept and consider the actually existant issue that the incentive model for legislation who's effects push past the lifetime of decisioning stakeholders is broken... Because it is.

"A society is great when old men plant trees under who's shade they will never sit."

How do we make THAT happen?

[–] Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There’s hundreds of years of experimentation with different democratic formations. We have pretty solid data on what does and doesn’t work. Put simply, the entire system we have works exactly as intended. Minority rule by private property holders and owners of capital is expressly the intended outcome of our system. If you want better outcomes, you need a system predicated on creating those outcomes, not one predicated on ensuring elite rule in perpetuity. We’ve reformed the system hundreds of times, we‘be got to accept at some point that you can’t reform a system away from the very thing it was built to ensure.

I could get into a discussion about alternative and significantly more equitable and representative forms of organization, but that’s not what Musk is doing here. He’s doing, as he always does, the work of the far right while masking his intentions behind bullshit transparent “I’m just asking questions” shtick that I don’t understand how anyone ever fell for in the first place, much less how people buy it now.

[–] Windex007@lemmy.world -1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

If the system is working as intended, but giving minority rule to large businesses interests, then I think we all agree that discussing alternatives is appropriate, no?

Don't fall into the trap of thinking you need to involve Musk in this conversation at all. You don't. I'm not.

So, it sounds like we agree: our system has flaws. There aren't features in place that incentivise things like, not causing the planet to be uninhabitable in say, 150 years (when we're all dead anyway so not OUR problem).

So, what would you do? I'm sincerely asking in good faith. You have a soapbox and I'm listening.

[–] Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I am of the opinion that nothing short of a completely new constitution and reconstruction of our systems of governance will be sufficient. Complete dismantling of the Prison Industrial Complex, the Military Industrial Complex, and the school to prison pipeline are entirely necessary. Justice should be predicated on restoring and rehabilitation, not imprisonment and punishment.

If we continue with a representative system, representatives must be tied to the will of their constituents, with removal and possibly criminal charges for going against said will.

I think that any system which enshrines the right to private property will inevitably suffer corruption as those with capital are able to leverage it into more capital, which can be used to inevitably buy politicians. So I think that while personal property is acceptable, private property should be abolished entirely, and all workplaces turned over to the employees. We live in a system that promotes itself as ostensibly democratic, but 99% of the institutions we interact with on a daily basis are oligarchies at best, feudal dictatorships more often. You cannot have a democratic society when the decisions of how to utilize resources are made privately.

[–] Windex007@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

What does personal but non-private property even mean? I'm having trouble conceptualizing this modality of ownership, and I want to make sure I understand what you're saying before I start forming any kid of opinions

[–] Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Ahh it’s actually a rather common conception, dating back to at least the 1700s, and espoused by individuals such as Adam Smith.

Essentially, the things you use in your life. Your home, your car, your toothbrush. If you’re an artisan, the tools you use to create your goods. Essentially everything you own falls under personal property.

Private property, on the other hand can be defined as follows: Modern private property is the power possessed by private individuals in the means of production which allows them to dispose as they will of the workers' labor-power (that is, the ability of the worker to labor for certain periods).

One cannot utilize private property fully oneself, and must rely upon the labor of workers to transform the productive capacities of the factory and materials and machines into real, tangible products. No one man creates private property. Factory owners don’t create factories, laborers do. No man creates all the machines that run in a factory, other laborers do. But private property allows one to profit purely off of ownership. It is rent seeking at its height.

[–] Windex007@lemmy.world -1 points 1 year ago

It might not be as common as you think it is.

To be honest, I was pretty off-base in what my original assumption of what you were saying. I was imagining "personal but not private" meant that you could put your name on something, and there be a social agreement that it is "yours", but only as long as that arrangement serves the group (which is to say, it isn't really yours). My wife's grandmother is currently visiting us and has no end of stories of this effect w.r.t her life in a former Soviet state. Yes, you "had" an apartment... But not really. Everything you had was yours until it wasn't.

Maybe it's just because of recent conversations that I was primed to that understanding... But even then I wouldn't take it for granted when you talk to people that they'll immediately understand.

Anyways: I think you have some interesting ideas, and I appreciate you taking the time to delineate the notions of private vs personal property.

I think that what you are describing (basically just dismantling capitalism) doesn't intrinsically solve the problem of the human nature to scope policy decisions such that their negative consequences arrive after their lifetime. Maybe I'm missing something, but I just don't see how those dots are being connected.

And beyond that, as a constructive feedback, I challenge you to re-examine the "all or nothing" mentality you have around systemic change. What small, attainable steps could you take to trend the world towards such a vision without having to say things like "nothing short of the destruction of capitalism could work", because that is a paralyzing mindset.

Some capitalist European democracies make some pretty big forward-thinking plays. I think if you could push the needle in that direction, then it would make incremental steps to your final utopian system more attainable if that was your starting position.

Even just simply taking the patient time to engage in good faith in constructive dialogue, establishing a common vocabulary, ENABLES further conversation. This is SO much better for driving ideas forward than just calling something fascist. I appreciate the time.

[–] vamp07@lemm.ee -2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

What I find disgusting is not anybody’s expressed opinion on anything no matter how objectionable I may find it. What I do find disgusting is a political system that no longer works for the greater good of the society as a whole. The voting system is there to give the voting public the illusion that they hold the keys to change. Government and its servants for the lost part can disregard those votes. What matters is $$$ and how these $$$ can affect elections by a voting public that for the most part is uninformed and falls easily for simple slogans that the $$$ get repeated often enough till people believe them to represent the truth.

[–] Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

And somehow restricting the right to vote even further towards those with a material interest towards maintaining the system as is, while disenfranchising those most negatively effected by the system, will lead to better outcomes for those disenfranchised and disaffected groups?

[–] vamp07@lemm.ee -3 points 1 year ago

Well first this is never going to happen so the whole issues is academic. I would argue that it would not push the power to those with $$. The current system does that beautifully. You want the system of voting as watered down and in the hands of as many people as possible for $$ to have the highest impact on the outcome.