by americandream » Wed 15 Jan 2014, 17:36:41
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', 'I') simply do not believe that the ideas of Marx and Engels mean anything much, since they (obviously and clearly, beyond any reasonable doubt) do not describe the actions of any human populace under stress of resource depletion.
Marx's centrepiece, "Capital" is an analysis of capitalism. His political opinions are contained in separate manuscripts. For an explanation of capital's tendencies, nothing touches it. I use it in my long term view of the market, as a day trader. Paradoxically, it has probably made a more efficient capitalist market player of me on the fundamentals front. For example, when Roubini was calling the end of the system back in 2008, I went calmly about my business. I tend to ignore the analysts, especially the gold bugs.
So on a vocational level I have learnt a lot from it. So much so, that I assiduouly avoided employment, instead preferring to be my own boss. Of course, I am a chartist, but the fundamentals hold my nerve when all around me are panicking.
His analysis takes you all the way through to globalism and the emergence of a global culture where the sorts of cultural things we take for granted will have been replaced. You see this happening today with the more active cultural role, Asia and especially China is playing on the world stage. In movies, etc. These developmenst are a given as capitalists forge ties across cultural and national lines.
His political manuscripts which flesh out Capital essentially take us through the possible scenrios that will emerge post capital. Scenarios that include total collapse. The other options you list are quite possible. Our futures are not cast in die.