by AgentR11 » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 12:09:24
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('americandream', '.') Hence this is an objective journey which cannot be hurried, try as we may to mould the material to our ideals. Marx's cautioned against seeking to impose communism, especially in a world still vastly rural and peasant. There has to be that critical mass for systemic shifts of the magnitude that has seen humanity advance in stages.
But at the time that Marx was writing, there was no way to completely remove human labor from the stream of production; the people he envisioned as coming to assume power as a group would all be involved in the production of goods that society needs to function. In contrast, we are moving into a time where it very well could be that a few thousand grow virtually ALL the food consumed by 300+ million; that a few hundred thousand industrialists and their keyman employees produce almost all the durable and consumable goods wanted; leaving 90%+ completely out of the productive sphere, and completely lacking the skills to reenter.
I'm just not sure Marx's progression can occur anymore; the producers and the Nobility do not need the participation or cooperation of the remaining 90%; they only need them to stay out of the way; while at the same time, they have insulated themselves from any form of real contact and made the production stream both durable and non-invadable. (walk into a just in time production line without the capitalist keeping the flow of materials going, and its a pile of useless scrap in a day.)
This does pose a problem on the consumption side, those durable goods and foodstuffs need loving homes in order to be of value, so the question stops being about who is controlling the means of production, and is becoming about how to sustain and allocate consumption amongst the 90%+ who produce nothing of real value.
We have the food thing down I think, food stamp cards are now providing that method to tens of millions of Americans. But how do we go about moving thousands of F150s, gameboys, Chinese made clothing, and lazy-boy recliners? You can't sell that notion under the guise of "helping the poor"... the poor don't want to even feed an F150. I guess you have to go with what we got, millions of paper shufflers, inspectors and service employees.
In contrast, does the post capitalist world of Marx's construct even have the capability to keep the lights on? I
Personally, I just don't see a progression to Marx's communism; I'm seeing a move towards a modified Feudal order, where capitalism thrives as a dependent form within the members of the Nobility who do not view business and finance as beneath them, but rather, view it as their very lifeblood. The peasants maintain most of the government's power, but the Nobility are essentially immune to it, since they can reside in any country that they might wish to, and move on a whim; or even reside completely outside the boundaries of any nation for an indefinite period of time. The Nobility nudge the chaos that is the world's governments, keeping most of them conducive to the maintenance of their power, but leaving the great issues of the day (wedge issues) in the hands of the peasants. They do not care whether abortion is legal or not, they care whether they can take 1, borrow 9, buy for 10, sell for 20, repay 10, $9 profit for $1 investment.
And.. unfortunately for those that might wish to prevent this progression; they've learned from the past, having a King is bad. Kings get captured. An amorphous blob of a million minor nobility with a few thousand more powerful ones, is a much harder beast to stop.