• NutWrench@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    “The good of the people” is a noble enough goal. Unfortunately, the people in charge of these movements are people who deliberately seek power, and for the most part, those people are vain greedy, brutal, a-holes.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      people in charge of these movements are people who deliberately seek power

      “Don’t trust anyone who tells you what to do”

      “Okay, I’m not going to trust you.”

      “No, you idiot! That’s not what I meant!”

      So, anyway, let’s talk about why the Anarchists of the Spanish Civil War got absolutely rolled by the well organized and disciplined Fascists. Then maybe pop over to Russia, China, Cuba, Korea, and Vietnam, and consider why Marxism have had a better record on self defense.

  • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Communism Killed 100 Zillion People

    Now the massive population of China and Venezuela and Vietnam and Cuba and California are going to take over the world

    No, they aren’t doing Real Communism. That’s just Authoritarian State Capitalism.

    Yes, we have to fight them. That’s why we need the western governments to spend trillions of dollars on private military services.

    We have to kill all 100 Zillion of them. Because they’ve been infected with the Mind Virus of Communism.

  • stingpie@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Communist logix

    we need to abolish private property so everybody has equal power.

    we class of people to maintain public ownership

    After all, how can we enforce public ownership without a more powerful class of enforcers?

  • jimitsoni18@lemmy.zip
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    11 hours ago

    I know I would be attacked by entire fediverse, but I want to say that charity also has egoism as backing cause. People help other people because it makes them feel good. And people expect themselves to be noticed or praised or rewarded, even if they tell themselves and everyone else that they don’t.

    Also don’t presume that I am a capitalist, before you decide to attack me.

    • steeznson@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      I remember looking at charity jobs when I was graduating with my humanities degree before I got into tech. Revealingly, the alumi I was speaking to who worked in the sector said something like, “At it’s core you need to remember that working for a charity is essentially a sales job.”

      Made me nope tf out of there lol.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      People help other people because it makes them feel good. And people expect themselves to be noticed or praised or rewarded, even if they tell themselves and everyone else that they don’t.

      People want their labor to be recognized. But you don’t need to wield an Elon Musk level of deranged dictatorial financial clout in order to experience self-actualization for your efforts.

      Pride in your work also comes with a degree of autonomy and creative freedom. A draconian profit driven privatized capitalist restaurant or clinic or school isn’t going to care whether the staff feed or heal or educate anymore. All they care about is driving up profits. By contrast, a (good) chef cares that people like the food. They care about evolving their craft. They care about the experience they are producing, even when that may mean the dish doesn’t make someone else money.

      There’s a balance to be struck between enterprises with scarce resources and people with a desire to feel accomplished in their craft.

      But you can strike that balance with good administrative leadership. The reward for a day’s work can be a beautiful place to live and a happy neighborhood, rather than a single incredibly rich guy hosting an award show for his pet favorites and using these token elites as an excuse to make the rest of his staff live in poverty.

    • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      I agree with you. If I have anything to give when I see someone in need, I give it to them. Not because I have some grand sense of purpose or anything. I do it because it makes me feel warm inside, it puts me in a better mood for the whole day knowing that someone else’s life is now a little easier because of me. Does that change the fact that I’ve made someone’s life a little easier?

    • selokichtli@lemmy.ml
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      3 hours ago

      “People help other people because it makes them feel good”. I’d say the meaning is “people help others in need so they can feel good”. Is there a problem with this? If someone in need of help receive that help, they will feel alleviated, while people giving help will feel good. I don’t know, it sounds great to me. Even if the helping ones wouldn’t feel a thing, like robots, it would be still great, in my book, because someone in need is being attended.

      Now, if the helping ones feel bad for helping, and the others feel good, then I can see an issue. The only problem I could see is to be angry because there are people in need to start with.

    • witx@lemmy.sdf.org
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      5 hours ago

      Kind of. I agree partly. My mother used to knit winter clothes, for free, for some institutions and she wasn’t the one delivering them. They never knew who she was, and she didn’t bother.

    • hikaru755@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      I mean, you’re not wrong, but your point is also kinda meaningless. Of course, you only ever do things because there’s something in it for you, even if that something is just feeling good about yourself. If there was truly nothing in it for you, then why would you do it?

      But that misses the point of the “people are inherently selfish” vs “people are inherently generous” discussion, because it’s not actually about whether people do things only for themselves at the most literal level, instead it’s about whether people inherently get something out of doing things for others without external motivation. So your point works the same on both sides of the argument.

      • kronisk @lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        Of course, you only ever do things because there’s something in it for you,

        No, sometimes you do things because you care about other people and want to help them. That you also probably feel better about yourself than you would if you did shitty things all day doesn’t mean that feeling is the only and single motivation.

        • hikaru755@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          Well, but what does “caring” mean? It means that their well-being affects your emotions. At its very core, you wanting to help people you care about comes from wanting to create positive emotions in yourself or avoiding negative ones (possibly in the future, it doesn’t have to be an immediate effect). If those emotions weren’t there, you wouldn’t actually care and thus not do it.

          Edit to clarify: I’m not being cynical or pessimistic here, or implying that this means that everyone is egotistical because of this. The point I was trying to make is that defining egotism vs. Altruism is a little bit more complex than just looking at whether there’s something in it for the acting person. We actually need to look at what’s in it for the acting person.

    • kronisk @lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      We hear that argument a lot, and though some people’s charity may be motivated purely by egoism I don’t think it applies to the majority at all. The argument assumes that if doing something makes you feel good, then that feeling must be the sole motivation for that action, which is dubious. And if we follow this logic to its natural conclusion, every action that does not make you feel bad is egoistic, and the concept becomes completely meaningless. Saving a child from falling down a cliff? Egoistic! Intervening when someone is treated unfairly? Egoistic! Giving up your chair for an elderly person on a crowded bus? Egoistic!

      Let’s take this last (admittedly small, everyday, non-dramatic) example. Sure, you could give up your seat purely because you want to look like a good person to others (although it’s doubtful anyone would even notice). It’s also possible to experience this feeling called empathy, to see an elderly person struggling to keep their balance while standing up and to want to alleviate that particular suffering. Everyone else is sitting down looking at their phones, so there’s no community pressure to speak of. No one would call you out if you just pretended not to notice. And the discomfort from standing up on a really crowded bus on a bumpy road could easily outweigh that little buzz you get from doing good.

      I’ll go even further; it’s even possible, in a scenario like this, to not even think about how it’s going to make you feel or your self-image or whatever. You just want to help someone else because it’s in your power to do so. If this isn’t an example of not being egoistic, what would be? What would be the opposite of egoism? To act completely dispassionately?

      And what about someone sacrificing their own life to save another? Striving to do good in the world does feel better, yes, but empathy is also a burden. Still, there are genuinely good people out there, that do good deeds and do not take any credit for it, even do it anonymously. And I can tell you from experience, not all of them walk around on clouds feeling like saints. Some of them even experience crippling guilt because they feel they do not do enough. How is that egoism?

    • shneancy@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      that’s a very grim way of looking at goodness. Of course doing things you believe are making a positive change makes you feel good, of course helping your community makes you feel good, and it does feel nice to be recognised and known as a good person.

      It’s a strange ambient idea in our society, that to be truly good you must suffer, and never find joy in the good things you do. Not to turn conspiratorial, but to me it sounds like a cope from actually selfish people who look at people who do nice things and think to themselves “they’re only doing it to be popular and feel good about themselves, why else would anyone do anything”

      • jimitsoni18@lemmy.zip
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        1 hour ago

        Egoism isn’t a positive or negative word. It is a word that describes human behaviour, and anyone who declares it to be positive or negative would be wrong. Egoism is something that makes you happy, or gives you a feeling of gain or happiness.

        This isn’t the standard definition of egoism, but I like to think about it this way.

  • kittenzrulz123@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    16 hours ago

    The very existence of society and the fact that we aren’t blindly killing eachother for resources proves that civilization is not based on humanities animalistic instincts. Therefore the claim that humans cannot overcome their own base instincts (as claimed by many Liberals) would imply that we are no morally or intellectually superior to animals.

    • chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      You can see it all play out in a microcosm on reality shows like Survivor. People cooperate and compete. They cooperate TO compete. They cooperate when it benefits them the most, and betray each other when they think they’re most likely to get away with it. Some people are more trustworthy than others. Some are extremely likely to betray, but then they struggle to benefit from cooperation.

      Groups of people engaged in a kind of eusocial super cooperation are very rare and tend to be fairly small. They also tend to act the most like a clique; being highly discriminatory against the outgroup.

    • bufalo1973@lemmy.ml
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      8 hours ago

      My take on this is that the greatness in humanity comes from being a bunch of egoistic assholes capable of doing the right thing and help each other.

      A selfless person doing something selfless is normal. A egoist doing something egoistic is normal. An egoist doing something altruistic is what raises us from pure instinct to humanity.

  • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    Yeah, and eating hot dogs also goes against human nature. That shit didn’t exist in 3,500 BCE.

    • HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      are you really saying emulsified rat lips, chicken trimmings, porkins, and beef slurry didn’t exist in 3500 BCE?

      • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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        8 hours ago

        People used to use almost all parts of animals. Being able to be super picky is more modern extravagance and it’s good the parts are still used. Unnecessary waste otherwise

  • frightful_hobgoblin@lemmy.ml
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    21 hours ago

    the initial argument only applies to Utopian Socialism anyway – fighting for your personal interest is exactly the point of communism, destroying all the enemies of the working class

    • lugal@sopuli.xyz
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      8 hours ago

      Depends on the definition. Kropotkin, who self identified as anarcho communist, wrote a scientific book literally called Mutual Aid

      • frightful_hobgoblin@lemmy.ml
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        7 hours ago

        That’s my point. It’s all about doing self-interested things like mutual aid. Mutual defense is in my self-interest. A dairy co-operative is in the farmers’ interest. Zebras move in herds because it is in their mutual self-interest.

        The initial comment is saying communism is about self-sacrifice, against human nature. Kropotkin (I’ve read the book three times btw) convincing makes the case that it’s the opposite of self-sacrifice: about pursuing our natural mutual interest according to our evolutionary imperatives. Kropotkin would say that ruthless competition is against our evolutionary nature and imperatives because it disadvantages survival.

    • bufalo1973@lemmy.ml
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      It’s not “destroying all the enemies of the working class” but “destroying classes so we end up being working class”. The idea (as I understand it) is that working class is the one that creates things while bourgeois class is only a parasite. So everyone should be creating something and not sucking the blood of others.

    • MissJinx@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      You don’t tho because you still have people in power. Even if it’s a policeman. That’s enough

  • EABOD25@lemm.ee
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    20 hours ago

    People are neither inherently selfish or inherently generous. People are survivors regardless of what is necessary to do so. A human will give the shirt off his back to his neighbor but will spite a customer service worker because they’re in a bad mood or feel slighted. Your tribe is your most important social aspect

    • Quacksalber@sh.itjust.works
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      19 hours ago

      But it is that selfishness that communism can’t control for and that capitalism only dampens the effect of. You need a system that counteracts those selfish tendencies in order to reach lasting stability.

      • steeznson@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        I agree with this. Communist like systems where there is central control of resources encourages corruption as people vie to get closer to the central control of the resources. Capitalism is just more honest about the fact that many people - not all of them - are fundamentally self-interested and entices them into cooperation with others by offering the carrot of individual rewards. Those are probably the same people that would try to exploit the system if it were more centrally controlled.

      • Sop@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        15 hours ago

        ‘A system that counteracts those selfish tendencies’ you mean a system in which:

        • housing is not controlled by companies with no moral incentive to keep them liveable and affordable?
        • people don’t learn from a young age that their value is directly connected to their willingness to fuck people over for money?
        • there is no monetary incentive to create artificial deficits in essential goods like housing and food?
        • the whole economy is not based on ‘cheap labour’ and the illegal extraction of minerals from other countries?
        • sub_ubi@lemmy.ml
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          18 hours ago

          It reserves selfishness for a handful of weirdos, and allows every worker to be selfless.

        • Quacksalber@sh.itjust.works
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          11 hours ago

          In that it makes it open. In capitalism, ot is assumed that everyone is a selfish actor. Under communism, everyone is supposed to work together for the greater good, and when they aren’t, you can’t call them out, because they would accuse you of ‘undermining the unity’. And because they tend to be in positions of power, you will end up in the Gulag.

  • DarkCloud@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    We’re always going to end up with people who can manipulate a crowd being in charge. We’re stupid like that.

    • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      This is what I always find amusing about the Communist argument.

      Like, the elected politicians and bureaucracy can’t be trusted enough to regulate industry under capitalism so we’ll centralize things and then trust them to regulate industry under Communism?

      Edit: whoof, should’ve thought about human nature when I dared to criticize communism. Almost lime there is another lesson somehwere there.

      so, it’s the goddamn weekend. How does everyone have so much free time this late on a Saturday? I’ll do my best to get back to y’all on a dirty capitalist’s time slot.

      • OurToothbrush@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        Like, the elected politicians and bureaucracy can’t be trusted enough to regulate industry under capitalism so we’ll centralize things and then trust them to regulate industry under Communism?

        Literally read State and Revolution by Lenin which talks about how people assume the state has a neutral character, but actually it has a class character reflecting who it is designed to serve.

      • orcrist@lemm.ee
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        13 hours ago

        I feel like you’re ignoring a lot of background, but let’s run with your argument. Let’s assume that we have to have some elected politicians and some appointed or elected bureaucrats, and either we should try to have a capitalist system or a communist system of some kind.

        Let’s try to keep things as equal as possible, knowing that we really can’t, but just for the sake of argument. Which system is more likely to be corrupted? Remember, the express goal of capitalism is to throw wealth at the capitalists. If the regular person gets screwed, that’s not corruption, that’s a feature of the system… Oh, wait a second, I guess we already have an answer to our hypothetical, don’t we.

        But you did raise a good point. Any government, if it’s to function somewhat reasonably, needs to be one that has a lot of transparency, oversight, and accountability. If you don’t have those, it doesn’t matter how you start off because it’s going to end badly. So I agree with you, we shouldn’t be trusting politicians.

      • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        17 hours ago

        Like, the elected politicians and bureaucracy can’t be trusted enough to regulate industry under capitalism so we’ll centralize things and then trust them to regulate industry under Communism?

        If that’s your understanding of Communism, then you need to read The State and Revolution. Quite a lot of Communist theory is concerned with eliminating the concept of beauracracy.

        • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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          7 hours ago

          When have attempts to reduce bureaucracy not yielded even more bureaucracy ? This isn’t a state V corporation issue either, bureaucracy thrives in both these places.

          • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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            17 hours ago

            Democracy does produce satisfactory outcomes, what changes reality is the structure of said democracy. Very few systems are direct democracies, and direct democracies themselves are flawed even in theory.

            You should read the text.

      • Skua@kbin.earth
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        19 hours ago

        To be fair, I don’t have to trust elected politicians to distrust unelected CEOs and other upper management more

        • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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          19 hours ago

          But it’s not like companies or business entities won’t have folks in charge of them under communism… Someone has to run the whatevers…

          • SquirtleHermit@lemmy.world
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            18 hours ago

            But it’s also not like the person who runs the whatevers has to be beholden to shareholders and profits. They could instead be incentivized to prioritize the collective well being of the workers.

            And for that matter, politicians and the bureaucracy also live in a system that incentivizes (to the tune of millions in bribes) them to prioritize the interests of businesses owners, and thusly shareholders and profits, at the cost of the common good. Which is a major reason they can’t be trusted.

            • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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              17 hours ago

              Or, as has happened in capitalism, people will find ways to bend the system to benefit themselves. Except this time without boards so much as bribable officials and whatnot.

              • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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                14 hours ago

                Capitalism is explicitly designed for people to benefit themselves at the expense of others. Capital begets more capital in a positive feedback loop that results in massively powerful billionaires.

                If you elect representatives, those representatives are checked somewhat by the threat of being voted out. Capitalism has no such check. Sure, ostensibly people can choose not to buy a product, but unregulated capitalism selects for monopolies.

              • SquirtleHermit@lemmy.world
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                16 hours ago

                And now we find ourselves at the beginning of the meme.

                Also, I find “people are greedy” to be an uncompelling reason to support a system that incentivizes greed and exploitation. If people bending a system to benefit themselves is a problem, then the system should be designed to be resistant to this, in a way that incentivizes promoting the common good. Or at the very least shouldn’t encourage these problems.

                Capitalism encourages these problems.

          • GregorGizeh@lemmy.zip
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            18 hours ago

            Ideally, supervision over most non critical sectors would fall to randomly drafted, single term committees of the people, think jury duty except better compensated and obviously with bureaucratic resources available to enable these committees to fulfil their role adequately.

            Now this isn’t suited for everything, but in either system any true oversight is done by the people, not the state.

            • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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              17 hours ago

              Half of America wants to vote for trump and you want to trust in random people? That seems like a wild leap of faith.

              • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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                3 hours ago

                You already trust these people today. They run/own many large corporations today which dramatically affect our lives in multitude of ways. Except today we can’t get remove them from these positions of power under the current system.

                It’s thanks to this in part that your aunt keeps indulging her imaginary pain when she thinks about your lifestyle.

              • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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                16 hours ago

                It’s more like 30% and that’s with Americans being some of the most wildly mis-educated people out there. I’m sick of seeing sortition shit, but sicker still of misanthropy.

                • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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                  15 hours ago

                  Okay, would you rather the Germans who voted AFD? Or the rise of the French National Party? Or Fidesz in Hungary? Or PPV in Denmark?

              • escapesamsara@lemmings.world
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                15 hours ago

                Around 30% tops but more importantly what do those trump supporters want? The exact same things you do, they just believe different causes for the problems we all see and thus have wildly different solutions.

                • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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                  15 hours ago

                  Shit, you’d better tell that to my aunt who told me how my lifestyle hurts her.

  • AItoothbrush@lemmy.zip
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    7 hours ago

    Ok but socdem. And before you try to make a counter argument with [insert nordic country that is actually capitalist] just think about how they always call the ussr and china communist while they arent.

    • OurToothbrush@lemmy.ml
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      5 hours ago

      Ok but socdem. And before you try to make a counter argument with [insert nordic country that is actually capitalist]

      ??? That is a novel take “let us split power with our oppressors, but Nordic countries don’t do that”

      they always call the ussr and china communist while they arent.

      Yeah the USSR was and China is a transitionary socialist state lead by a communist party.

      Get it together people.

    • frightful_hobgoblin@lemmy.ml
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      7 hours ago

      Ok but socdem. And before you try to make a counter argument with [insert nordic country that is actually capitalist] just think about how they always call the ussr and china communist while they arent.

      What are you trying to say?

    • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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      7 hours ago

      Does it really matter what scheme the elites use to wring out all surplus value out of the population to repurpose for their own ends ?