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A bird's eye view of the vineyard

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Public Inquiry
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Human Rights in Ireland
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Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

offsite link Fifteen Year-Old Swiss Girl Taken into Care After Parents Refuse to Consent to Course of Puberty Blo... Wed Jul 24, 2024 15:00 | Dr Frederick Attenborough
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offsite link The Threat to Democracy Wed Jul 24, 2024 11:29 | James Alexander
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The post Wanted: Climate Researcher to Write Extreme Weather Just-So Stories to Serve Up to Credulous Media appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

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Sinn Féin with Karl Marx

category national | anti-capitalism | opinion/analysis author Saturday March 08, 2008 11:57author by Cael - Sinn Féin Poblachtach Report this post to the editors

Socialism for the 21st Century

Personally, the biggest problem I see with private property is that western society has not been able to put any limit on it. It has become, or always was, psychotic.

Following on from another thread/article which got very far off topic, I thought it worth while to address some points regarding Sinn Féin Poblachtach's relation to the writings of Karl Marx:

I think its a common mistake to get hung up on the writings of one man; Karl Marx. Marx even said himself that he wasnt a Marxist - if that ment the way he was being interpreted by the young intellectuals of his time. Marx's ideas were not unique at the time. Many people were thinking the same way, but Marx formulated these ideas much more elegantly and in much more detail than anyone else. Michael Davitt, for example, was in favour of nationalising the big landlord estates rather than creating a nation of small holders. He did not need to read Marx to realise that this would lead to a very conservative society that would lack the will or motivation to struggle for genuine social justice. To suggest that all of socialism is to be found in the writings of Marx is pure nonsense. Marx would have been the first to recognise this. Marx made some mistakes, as did Lenin. Neither lived long enough to be able to correct them. This is our task. No doubt we will make many mistakes too, but the aim of socialism is a very good one, and well worth the risk.

Personally, the biggest problem I see with private property is that western society has not been able to put any limit on it. It has become psychotic.

Freud told the myth of the Primal Father and the Ban on Incest. At first the father took all the women and goods for his exclusive enjoyment and left the sons with nothing. Then the sons killed the father and instituted the ban on incest, where all the brothers would share the goods of the tribe. The Women's movement has made some progress in extending this contract to the women of the tribe as well. The psychotic nature of capitalism is that it pushes against this social contract, and back towards the enjoyment of the Primal Father, i.e. it extolls unfettered possession of all the capitalist can get his hands on, without regard for the other members of society. This is the structural nature of capitalism, and cannot be reformed, Those who enter Leinster House with the hope of reforming capitalism are doomed to failure. I have great respect for Joe Higgins, but within the context of Leinster House he could be nothing else but the court jestor, his logical arguments easily ignored and his colourful turns of phrase repeated with gleeful delight. In fact his presence in Leinster House merely allowed the gombeens to point to him as an example of how "democratic" the place is, as it even allows the likes of Joe Higgins to have his say - though not to strike too close to the bone; Higgins was ruled out of order when he tried to refer to land speculators as parasites. The Provisionals have failed to make any impact at all - not even some memorable turns of phrase.

Related Link: http://admin2.7.forumer.com/viewforum.php?f=10
author by Cael - Sinn Féinpublication date Sat Mar 08, 2008 15:22author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Anyone wanting to jump into this debate could do worse than reading Marx's views on Private Property and Communism at this link:

Related Link: http://admin2.7.forumer.com/viewtopic.php?t=8087
author by Living in 2008publication date Sun Mar 09, 2008 10:12author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Well, Cael, as most of us here have been without property for centuries, many of us are now experimenting at being enslaved by it, including the computer I am looking at.

Marx was right to say:
"(5) A being only considers himself independent when he stands on his own feet; and he only stands on his own feet when he owes his existence to himself. A man who lives by the grace of another regards himself as a dependent being. But I live completely by the grace of another if I owe him not only the maintenance of my life, but if he has, moreover, created my life – if he is the source of my life."

The problem is that communism as practised in the last 100 years didn't allow anyone to stand on their own feet. Everyone was dependent on the state instead, and the state didn't once wither away as Marx hoped it would. The electorate prefers the crassness of materialism to the impossible promise of a leadership that ends up running a form of feudalism.

author by Cael - Sinn Féinpublication date Sun Mar 09, 2008 22:39author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Your refering to soviet style Communism, which clearly had major flaws. The work of formulating a system which can bring genuine democratic control of the economy is ongoing. Im not sure Im understanding you right, but you seem to be saying that Stalinism didnt bring any increase in happiness or justice, so lets just stick with what we have? My appologies if Im misreading you.

Related Link: http://admin2.7.forumer.com/index.php
author by Living in 2008publication date Sun Mar 09, 2008 23:17author address author phone Report this post to the editors

We have some democratic control - acts are passed limiting prices and fostering competition, etc.

And some state ownership of industry - ESB, An Post, Iarnrod, etc.

But not total control, and not total state ownership, because that doesn't work.

Our "democratic" aspect is a bit flakey as well, but that's also much better than industrial conscription. The fact is, most politicians of all parties want to spend money and are not too fussed about generating it.

author by Caelpublication date Sun Mar 09, 2008 23:27author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Yes "democracy" is pretty flaky here all right. Its more of a charade Id say. The limits you mention are to keep things running reasonably smoothly between capitalists, and to try to stop them driving the general population to actual revolt. They are certainly not in place to help the people, and are certainly not there to exert any sort of democratic control over capital. You not really correct in say that no politicians are interested in generating capital,only inspending it. Have a look at Venezeula.

author by Living in 2008publication date Mon Mar 10, 2008 08:23author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Better flakey than dead bodies all over.

In the last century trade unions and leftist politicians came to realize at least that pension plans buying shares was a good way to save money for their members, and are constrained by that. And by their own generous salaries and pension plans. But it works, mostly.

Capital is now beamed around between satellites and is beyond control. All you can do is use it as best you can.

Venezuela is generating capital, but only because foreign science and capital developed their oil industry in the first place, and then started consuming it. That sucked in a labour force that remained poor and votes for Chavez. He didn't create anything, but he can use the money wisely - or not.

author by Cael - Sinn Féinpublication date Mon Mar 10, 2008 19:14author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I think you are judging Chavez unfairly. Sure he is in a much better position than a lot of countries because of oil, but his government still has to make wise decisions about how best to use resources. It seems to me that Chavez is leading the way in demonstrating a working socialism for the 21st century. Its based on state/people's investment in the country's major industries and the provision of state/people's
venture capital to small and medium businesses. This leads to a situation where the workers become the end for which capital works, rather than, as in liberal capitalism, the workers remain a means to the unknown ends of autonomous capital.

I would recommend you to read a very good article at the related link titled "A New Program for Democratic Socialism."

Related Link: http://admin2.7.forumer.com/viewtopic.php?t=8551
author by Cael - Sinn Féinpublication date Tue Mar 11, 2008 17:53author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Just in regard to you comment about better flakey than bodies all over. You thinking this is a direct result of the kind of capitalist disinformation we get bombarded with all the time from the media. But that is the less subtle end of the scale. The usual is that the present status quo is the only thing realistic - the only show in town, as Gerry Adams likes to say. The threat is that if socialist policies - particularly in regard to land pricing, were implemented, there would be a flight of capital out of the country and we would all be left in poverty. This threat does not stand up in Ireland for a number of reasons.

One is that there is already a flight of capital under the current neo-liberal system. Irish residents hold security assets of over 1.2 trillion euro abroad. Nine billion was invested in foreign commercial property deals by Irish residents in 2006 alone.

Another is that, if you take out the public service, land/housing transactions and domestic consumption - which are not transferable out of the country anyway, you are left with the foreign multinationals - which account for over ninety per cent of 26 county exports. Now, the foreign multinationals would be delighted if land prices were controlled in Ireland. Such controls would mean that their workers would not be forced to seek higher wages to pay insane repayments and rents, and would leave Ireland able to compete with Eastern Europe in attracting foreign capital.

Related Link: http://admin2.7.forumer.com/index.php
author by Cael - Sinn Fein Poblachtachpublication date Wed Mar 12, 2008 13:36author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Basically, in Ireland capital = land. The native Irish economy has not developed beyond that. Most land is inherited - so the usual profile of the "Irish capitalist" is not the successful entrepreneur, scientist or even celeb personality, but the doctor, lawyer or farmer who has inherited some land. The inherent conservative nature of these people means that they will never invest in anything but land and construction. This represents a dead hand on the Irish economy. The mass of people become mere machines supplying an increase of cash capital to the land capital of a tiny group. The Irish economy, under the weight of this dead hand simply cannot generate companies large enough to enter the world market. Only a very few Irish companies have managed this. Not a single new Irish company has been quoted on the US Nasdaq since 1999. Meanwhile, Isreal, with a population similar to Ireland lists seventy companies on the Nasdaq. Today, we face a land crisis as acute as anything Michael Davitt faced. Again, a tiny group of feckless individuals hold the rest of us to ransom. People may vote reps into Leinster House, but this tiny group calls the shots. How long can we tolerate this? Ten years of unprecedented global boom has been squandered down a property drain. Irish manufacturing has an even smaller world market share than it did 15 years ago. The multinationals are looking to cheap land and a young educated workforce in Eastern Europe - and we have nothing to replace them with. Meanwhile, this tiny group of landowners send the money the mortgage payers give them abroad into fantastic property schemes all over the globe. Over twelve thousand billion already.

Related Link: http://admin2.7.forumer.com/index.php
author by Caelpublication date Wed Mar 12, 2008 17:01author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Sorry, thats twelve hundred billion, not twelve thousand billion

author by Living in 2008publication date Thu Mar 13, 2008 12:00author address author phone Report this post to the editors

You are right, but below that tiny group are hundreds of thousands who are better off now in a smaller way. We have tried to get up off our knees in the last few centuries and have made an imperfect start in the 1990s. Political freedom meant nothing without an economic benefit as well.

Take the council estates built by county councils (in these "26 counties") from the 1930s on. When people had the chance to "buy the key" / buy their freehold at a discount, they did. I have neighbours who bought their homes in the 1970s for £1,500 - a lot of money then - and are now sitting on a €350,000 asset. Some will blow the difference in the pub, at the races, on a car, and others are buying flats in Spain to rent out, or travelling the world.

The whole land question moved away from Davitt's ideal nationalisation solution because a poor farmer on 15 acres in about 1900 could not afford to make improvements without borrowing against his asset. The state would have replaced the Anglo-Irish landlords, and the margin in farming wasn't big enough to allow the state to lend money to farmers for improvements. What started as a cash-flow solution has ended up looking like a huge rip-off, but a lot of farmers also went bust between 1900 and 1990.

As for the fat cats, enough is never enough. But in a match if you are winning 10-9 you are not going to slack off until your opponent levels up to 10-10, you are going to try for 11-9.

author by Cael - Sinn Feinpublication date Thu Mar 13, 2008 14:29author address author phone Report this post to the editors

This is the usual argument for modern neo-liberalism. The little man has got a little share of the cake. In reality, it dosnt matter to the average person what the house they own is worth, because most people will just live in it. They wont re-mortgage it to buy flats in Spain. And even if they did , how does this modernise the Irish economy? How does it lessen our dependence on the multi-nationals? Of course, those who are paying the rack rents in the cities, particularly Dublin, and those who are paying mortgages in negative equity would certainly question what neo-liberalism has done for them. For this economy to start working for the Irish people we need to stop pouring money into the accounts of a tiny few landowners, who have no idea what to do with that money - except buy more land abroad. They are bleeding us to death. 1200 billion is some haemorrage.

Related Link: http://admin2.7.forumer.com/index.php
author by Humanpublication date Wed Mar 19, 2008 18:04author address author phone Report this post to the editors

in Ireland every begger looks down on another begger, i think they would rather stay beggers and have it to say that they are better than someone than live in equality where they coudnt look down on anybody.

author by Cael - Sinn Féin Poblachtachpublication date Sat Mar 22, 2008 15:08author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Ive just been reading in an article on the IRBB that the situation is actually worse than I had said. When you leave out the value of principal residences, then 1% of the population "own" 36% of the wealth. 17% of the population live in constant borderline poverty. And some people imagine there is democracy in Ireland??

The article is from IRIS and is called "A nation divided by wealth." It can be read at the related link.

Related Link: http://admin2.7.forumer.com/viewforum.php?f=10
author by High Kingpublication date Sun Mar 23, 2008 09:33author address author phone Report this post to the editors



"When you leave out the value of principal residences"

To omit the above is a corruption and that fact only highlights the immature nature of a corrupt organisation.

author by Cael - Sinn Féin Poblachtachpublication date Sun Mar 23, 2008 15:30author address author phone Report this post to the editors

High King, a chara, even if you leave in the value of ordinary peoples homes, then you still get a figure of 1% of the population owning 20% of the wealth. 5% of the population own 40% of the wealth. However, most people do not consider their homes to be an "asset" to be used as venture capital. This is the reason why saying that 1% of the population own 36% of the wealth is valid. In fact the figure of 36% vastly underestimates the real situation. In reality this 1% of people own practically all the wealth that is free for use in the generation of more wealth. The rest is spread so thinly amoung the other 96% of the population, that no critical mass of capital can be accumulated, indeed, most of the wealth that comes into their hands must be handed over to the 1% in the form of rents and mortgages. The vast majority of Irish citizens exist merely as money gatherers for this 1%. As I said above, this 1% have no idea what to do with this money except send it abroad to buy foreign land and buildings. The foreign multi-nationals pay money to Irish workers, then the Irish workers pay over that money to the Irish Landlords. Nothing much else happens. A native Irish industrial base remains a vague aspiration. Indeed, it is an aspiration that is often scoffed off as a figment of Eamonn DeValera's imagination.

Related Link: http://admin2.7.forumer.com/index.php
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