• SabinStargem@lemmings.world
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    3 hours ago

    I think that the fundamental flaw of our economies, is that they weren’t created with rules in the first place. We just took the vague notions of trade and coinage, then began to add the rules after the fact. What if we did a hard reboot, but with an economic Constitution to guide the economic system?

    For such a system, I believe we would want three things at the most basic level:

    1: Transparent and simple rules. Ordinary people should be able to easily identify and troubleshoot the excessively wealthy.

    2: Universal but boring benefits that guarantees survival for everyone, with a basic income. Money is for buying upgrades to lifestyle, not survival. Jobs are for affording to buy more expensive luxuries, like vacations to a foreign land, attending the theatre regularly, and so forth.

    3: Absolute floors and ceilings on income, assets, and wealth. Beyond a specific point, wealth is taken as tax.

    • BrainInABox@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      Understand that reality doesn’t run on computer code; you can’t hard reboot history, and you can’t just hard code in universal rules that people are compelled to follow. Coming up with good rules for a hypothetical society is the easy part, it’s the political problems that come with trying to implement them that is hard.

    • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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      3 hours ago

      Your approach is called “Utopianism,” and was tried in the past already by people like the Owenites. The problem is that you can’t change a system by simply convincing people to adopt a better one, systems evolve and change over time based on material conditions.

  • PieMePlenty@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I think its just nature and nature is brutal.

    We are animals, we need to destroy the environment to survive (ex cut down trees for shelter, kill living things to eat). We have the urge to reproduce, so there is more of us which leads to more destruction. If a person is threatened, they will be prepared to kill another for their survival. This is pretty much true for most living beings.

    I wouldn’t call us a virus, but it was probably our intelligence that will bring us to our downfall. Maybe an anthropologist can comment on what the tipping point was.

    • BrainInABox@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      This is just a thought terminating cliche that capitalists have developed now that the problems with the system are undeniable. It’s the classic retort of the scum bag, after they’ve realized “I didn’t do it” won’t fly, to say “well, everyone does it!"

  • thelefthandpath@lemm.ee
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    5 hours ago

    Well, economic system is flawed because mutated ape is flawed. It’s all flawed everything is flawed.

    • BrainInABox@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      This is just a thought terminating cliche that capitalists have developed now that the problems with the system are undeniable. It’s the classic retort of the scum bag, after they’ve realized “I didn’t do it” won’t fly, to say “well, everyone does it!”

    • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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      5 hours ago

      That’s not a particularly useful statement, that’s more nihilism. That kind of rhetoric leads to conclusions like “if everything is flawed, why fix it?” Instead of “how are systems flawed, and how can we overcome them?”

      • thelefthandpath@lemm.ee
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        4 hours ago

        I definitely never claim to be an optimist. But I didn’t argue that either. I was just commenting on the inherent fallibility of anything created by humans, since we seem to have an annoying habit of thinking that whatever human-created systems we like are somehow endowed with divine purpose and will never fail us. The great invisible hand of the market, and all that.

      • sunflowercowboy@feddit.org
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        4 hours ago

        Not really nihilistic if it is solely acknowledging the truth. That kind of conclusion is yours and not his. You’re giving up on fixing things.

        Either you are to believe man capable enough at fixing things or not even capable of processing a basic factoid.

        However both can’t be true, if you have to tell someone how to think - then your goal is not the absolute conclusion.

        I feel people will wake up to it, not from the sirens but by the heat and smoke. Much too late, but folks learn from mistakes mainly.

        It just saddens me they have co-opted the message of a great thinker into a simple guide of indentured servitude. While at the same time dismissing the cleansing needed and done.

        • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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          4 hours ago

          I don’t really understand what you’re trying to say, here. Proper analysis of problems is a requirement for understanding how to solve them, but they were saying that all systems are flawed in a manner that depicts all of them as equally flawed, which is bad logic.

          • sunflowercowboy@feddit.org
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            3 hours ago

            Never was it said equally. Only flawed, is it not true all is flawed?

            Yes their should be more deliberation and you could have done so. However instead you focused on his act of communication, people want change but when times change people cower.

            Let folks speak up and talk with them, rather than critiquing their very act. You are essentially creating an internal dilemma with someone you ultimately agree with in cause.

            It is counteproductive, however simple communications get simple points across. Easy to get but easy to misconstrue. So it is important to contextualize it, which you again could have done, but instead acted upon his manner of action.

            Be what you want from others.

            • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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              2 hours ago

              What was the point of your original comment, then? Your point is just “flaws exist,” which isn’t exactly breaking news.

              • sunflowercowboy@feddit.org
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                2 hours ago

                You are chastising them for being equally frustrated.

                On a sense of scale we are on an isolated platform on the internet. You are commenting at the wind of another passing voice.

                This isn’t really the place to further your beliefs as everyone basically agrees. Talk and engage with your own thoughts. Not just disapproval, per your own talk of nihilism.

                I agree with you however. Sadly people will not actually take action until the world is amidst another war. Then it will be too late.

                I hate that MAGA and right wing nut jobs have co-opted the bible and christ. Deeply ironic when one is old health guidelines and the other is literally just a dude who gives out free healthcare.

  • Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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    15 hours ago

    The “Humans are the Virus” line is one of the sneakiest moves you’ll run into the New Age -> Alt Right pipeline

  • njm1314@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I always felt capitalism was just humans at their most pure and Evil. At their worst. In their most unfettered state.

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

      It’s more of a natural development from the rise of industry, that doesn’t mean it’s eternal, but it does mean we can learn how to move beyond it and into Socialism.

        • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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          8 hours ago

          Sure, it was also a developing country in a world that hadn’t created cheap renewables. They also invested in research for nuclear power as well.

          • horse_battery_staple@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            See Chernobyl as to why the politburo system and the need for the committee to have an opinion on everything was so flawed. Also look at Kruschev and his attempt to pivot agriculture to corn.

            Socialism absolutely works, we use it all the time. But the Soviet system was not a good implementation of Socialism. The workers did not own the means of production nor did they have much power.

            • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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              4 hours ago

              Chernobyl was a cascading series of errors, not a fundamental flaw with Socialism. Kruschev’s reforms were largely bad, yes, but that too isn’t a problem with Socialism itself.

              I don’t know what you mean by “we use Socialism all the time.” Who? Socialism is a descriptor for an entire system, not portions of it. Unless you think we are both Chinese, Cuban, Vietnamese, etc, then “we” don’t use Socialism.

              The Soviet System was absolutely a good implementation of Socialism. It was not perfect, but it was real and came with real victories. The Working Class did own the means of production, and held all of the power, I don’t understand what you are trying to say here.

  • BonfireOvDreams@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Embrace the paradox, humans are arguably the greatest rights violators in all forms of violence, but they are also the only beings capable of granting rights through moral agency. The paradox is also true of anthropocentric climate change, it’s creator, but also it’s only possible resolver. The environment only has instrumental value to conscious beings so it would miss the mark to assume the absence of humans is in anyone’s (including animals) best interest.

    Guess we should just try to get through each others thick skulls instead of being edgy :/

    • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Cats are a really close second. I don’t think there have been too many humans that have driven entire species to extinction. There have been a few cats that were allowed to exterminate multiple entire species. Don’t get me wrong. I love the furry little psychopaths, but they are furry little psychopaths.

  • the_q@lemm.ee
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    13 hours ago

    A lot of folks in the replies don’t like imagining they might be problematic… Sorry folks; we’re all to blame.

    • BrainInABox@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      This is just a thought terminating cliche that capitalists have developed now that the problems with the system are undeniable. It’s the classic retort of the scum bag, after they’ve realized “I didn’t do it” won’t fly, to say “well, everyone does it!"

      • the_q@lemm.ee
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        2 hours ago

        No. I’m not minimizing the role capitalism has, I’m reminding people that as long as they participate in any capacity in capitalism that they are causing harm. Look at the replies to my post. They verify what I said. People will go to great lengths to separate themselves from fault.

    • Fidel_Cashflow@lemmy.ml
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      13 hours ago

      a single flight on a private jet smashes any amount of carbon I could output in my entire lifetime. it is not all of us equally, it is a handful of ultrawealthy people destroying the planet.

      • SwingingTheLamp@midwest.social
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        4 hours ago

        That’s off by several orders of magnitude! The number I found from Nature is an estimated average of 3.6 tons of CO2 emitted per private jet flight in 2023. By contrast, a person in the United States averages about 16 tons per year. That’s still nuts to think that one private jet flight has roughly the same CO2 output as about three months of living for the average person, but I for one, have a lifetime that’s a bit longer than 3 months.

        • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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          6 hours ago

          Taxes just become prices for being evil when targeted this way, they don’t solve the fundamental reason for the existence of the issue. Solve the problem, don’t band-aid it.

          • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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            5 hours ago

            Use the taxes to subsidise green alternatives. Carbon taxes on fuel get spent on building bike lanes for example.

            • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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              5 hours ago

              That can be a somewhat nice supplement, but not a solution. The solution is, of course, Socialism, and strong central planning in infrastructure such as green energy and public transit.

      • the_q@lemm.ee
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        11 hours ago

        Yet here you are using a device created by both stripping the earth of resources and exploiting already suffering humans to argue that you’re not a significant part of the problem… Yes the ultra wealthy are worse, but that doesn’t mean we aren’t bad.

        • Bloomcole@lemmy.ml
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          7 hours ago

          Who makes the decisions to do this?
          And who forced us to use phones and computers by making everything digital/online? Are we to be blamed bcs we have a car that could’ve been electric ages ago? That car we need to go to a job producing more stuff for the benefit of stock holders?
          Is it us that need to grow the economy for those same people bcs that’s the system we live in? Did we ask for planned obsolescense?
          Is it a coincidence big oil coined the phrase ‘carbon footprints’ ? You’re shifting blame as intended, everyone knows who the biggest polluters are and why.

          • the_q@lemm.ee
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            3 hours ago

            You’re right. You have no choice in any of this… Victims and villains.

        • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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          8 hours ago

          Nah, this is just defeatism. If people want to exist in society, they have to play by the rules of society, so it’s better to change society.

          • the_q@lemm.ee
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            3 hours ago

            Those kids covered in cobalt are just trying to exist in a society.

            • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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              3 hours ago

              This kind of “you choose to use deeply exploitative systems that have no real alternatives” rhetoric is wrong. If there are no real alternatives within the system, then it is important to push to change the system, not blame those who exist within it. Blame the Capitalists for engaging in horrible labor practices, and those complacent. Don’t blame the people engaging with what’s available.

    • racoon@lemmy.ml
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      8 hours ago

      millions of Africans live and eat close to our human nature and in balance with their surroundings

    • Juice@midwest.social
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      1 day ago

      Capitalism is a system of class oppression where one class of humans that produces nothing exploits the other who produces everything. This also occurred under feudalism, which utilized religion to mediate all social relations and maintain social order, the subject of religion being God. The subject of capitalism is profit.

      The struggle between classes will remain after the defeat of capitalism, but we must make sure to develop a society in which the many continue to struggle for the benefit of all over the domination of the few who struggle only for their own benefit. The rule of the few dehumanizes the many to varying degrees to justify their own dominance, and through that dominance influences the many to accept the imposed condition of their own diminished humanity. Through the dehumanization of others however, the ruling class makes its self less human.

      So even though it is humans carrying out this oppression, it is necessary to diminish the humanity of others in order to rule, and their rule sets the standard for what is and is not human.

      When we fail to see nature as a unity of opposing forces, then we fail to recognize that every object is defined not in itself but by the things that relate to it, and we can’t understand some vital truths. Namely, that every social thing is defined not just by it’s own existence but also by the existence of its opposite.

      Which is to say, that while it appears that humanity is the problem, this belief is a condition of our own oppression. Humanity of the many is not the “virus,” it is on fact the cure for the virus of class oppression and dehumanization. But to accomplish this, the masses must reassert our own humanity, unflinchingly in the face of violence that seeks to make us low and break our spirit.

      As Paolo Friere said, “it is the historic mission of the oppressed to restore the humanity of the oppressor.”

    • CapriciousDay@lemmy.ml
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      1 day ago

      All capitalists are humans but not all humans are capitalists so it’s a bit of an overgeneralisation.

  • ThatWeirdGuy1001@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    So y’all just gonna ignore all of human history showing that it’s not a modern thing?

    Humans have been dog shit from the beginning. Always at war, multiple genocides, constant ethnic cleansings, torture en masse, all of these things have been prevalent in all of recorded history.

    As bad as capitalism is it’s just another example of humanities inability to just be fucking decent to each other.

    • BrainInABox@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      This is just a thought terminating cliche that capitalists have developed now that the problems with the system are undeniable. It’s the classic retort of the scum bag, after they’ve realized “I didn’t do it” won’t fly, to say “well, everyone does it!"

    • Bloomcole@lemmy.ml
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      6 hours ago

      Yes ‘humans’ do this but I still think it doesn’t have to be this way and a majority is not bad.
      It is unfortunately easier to do something bad than good.
      It’s the sociopaths/psychopaths or simply greedy aggressive people who don’t think twice about being ruthless and not playing by the rules that acquire power. The rest simply is put in a position to follow orders.
      None of the people fighting wars want this, the people far away from the front who send them there do.

  • Actionschnils@feddit.org
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    1 day ago

    Easy answers are never right. So capitalism is not >the< problem. For example: Look at the the history of the Soviet Union. Its way more complex

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

      In trying to denounce an “easy answer,” you came to worse conclusions. The Soviet model was far better than Capitalism is now for the post-Soviet states, and Socialism was far better than Tsarism as well.

        • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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          5 hours ago

          Statistically, most people living in post-soviet states disagree with you, and this number gets higher when it polls specifically people old enough to have actually lived in Socialism. We can talk about specifics if you want, but just saying “you’re wrong” doesn’t really give me anything to respond to.

          • nevemsenki@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            The people old enough to remember communism executed Caucescu in Romania and ousted both the Rákosi and the Kádár system in Hungary, the former through a violent uprising that required the USSR Red Army to intervene and start executing people. Sounds like people loved them, doesn’t it?

            I’d go into detail through personal details how shit the system was on the ground, or through data how both systems were so badly ran that people starved to death (Rákosi) or that we’ve accumulated a debt spiral that Hungary didn’t fully repay until the 2000s (Kádár), but we both know you already decided they were superior anyway, so I won’t bother.

    • PotatoLibre@feddit.it
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      1 day ago

      It’s inevitable to think capitalism is wrong, but it’s easier to fix than Communism or any other system.

      I stopped to shout against capitalism simply cause we do not have a better solution yet. Also when capitalism gets wrong, it’s mostly because a lack of regulations. A balanced system, like socialdemocracies in Scandinavia are a good example.

      Unfortunately it seems we are going towards autocracies everywhere, and that’s not capitalism’s fault but just human greediness. So in other word, we’re the problem, otherwise Socialism would reign all over the world.

      • rapchee@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        communism is supposed to be the democratization of workplaces, on top of democratic politics.
        why do you think that capitalism, that repeatedly navigates around the safety rails (for multiple centuries now) is easier to fix?

      • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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        16 hours ago

        Capitalism erases its own foundations, Imperialist countries like the Nordics you use as good examples depend on hyper-exploitation of the Global South. The answer is Socialism, which is an inevitable process because over time Capitalism erases the foundations it stands on and no system is static, it always moves towards the next stages or it dies. Look at businesses, they never maintain static sizes, they either grow or die, or stay small enough to be irrelevant, in aggregate.

        There’s frankly so many false assumptions here that it would take many well-developed comments to answer them all.

          • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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            7 hours ago

            Most Socialists would not consider Venezuela to be Socialist, it has a sort of quasi-socialism but really is Capitalist, sort of like the Nordic Countries if they weren’t Imperialist. When Socialists refer to Socialism, they refer to AES, generally, such as the PRC, Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, and the former USSR.

            The reason your comment is hard to properly address is because there are numerous questionable claims. How does one “fix Capitalism?” The answer you gave was using Imperialism to fund safety nets, that “works” for a small group of people at the expense of a much larger group. When you say “when Capitalism goes wrong, it’s due to a lack of regulations,” you don’t analyze who controls whether or not regulations are erased, ie the bourgeoisie, ergo all Capitalism is subject to the same failure.

            Your solution is to blame everything on greed as though no solution can exist, this type of nihilism gets in the way of actually solving any problems, and you speak as though you have authority despite showing no apparant understanding of what Socialists want, or what their critique of Capitalism truly is. I’d take a step back and read some more, or ask questions like you started doing.

            • PotatoLibre@feddit.it
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              5 hours ago

              It feels to me you’re supposing a lot of stuff on top of the few words I wrote, and you started polarising the discussion.

              I grown up in a communist family and I felt like for many years of my life, despite living in a democratic land. I’m quite far away from the capiralistic supporter you may think I am.

              Let me understand. Do you think Russia, NK, Cambodia, Kuba, PRC, Vietnam and so on are/were good place to live in? Do you live in one of those places?

              • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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                5 hours ago

                I responded to what you wrote, nothing more.

                The very fact that you contrast Communism with Democracy, when Communism is democratic, is why it’s hard to take anything you’re saying seriously. Either you’re trying to critique Communism but haven’t actually done the critiquing so it just appears to be nonsense, or you legitimately don’t know that Communism is democratic. Neither give me much to work with.

                To answer your question:

                1. The Russian Federation is Capitalist, and thus irrelevant

                2. The USSR was Socialist, and was better to live in than post-Soviet or pre-Soviet Russia.

                3. The DPRK is Socialist, and is under an incredibly brutal trade embargo, and has had to recover from US attempts at genocide via destroying 80% of buildings and killing millions.

                4. Cambodia was never really Socialist, its Quasi-Socialism under Pol Pot is divorced from any actual Marxist analysis and Pol Pot was supported by the US.

                5. Cuba is, like the DPRK, under a brutal trade embargo and under constant pressure from thr United States. Despite that, key metrics like Life Expectancy are higher than neighboring Capitalist countries that aren’t closed off from the rest of the world.

                6. The PRC is Socialist, and out of all of these countries is the one I would most like to live in. I am very bullish on the PRC continuing to make great strides in quality of life, and will soon become the de facto world power.

                7. Vietnam is pretty cool, from my understanding. Socialism has been tremendously beneficial to the Vietnamese, and overthrowing French Colonialism was a massive step forward.

                I live in the US Empire, and I understand that I live in the most Imperialist country on the planet. I want the Empire to fall, and to work towards more even development and industrialization along cooperative lines.

  • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    Well, the largest expeditor of the problem, but still done by and for an infection.

    We still made huge impact to the ecosystems in the past too, it’s just that we now no longer destroy only local ecosystems.

      • Thebigguy@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        Yeah probably if we took the immediate means of production and just tried to socialise them. Idk if doing what Lenin did back in the day would work now (just copying capitalist production and socialising it.)

      • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        Yes, we consume & change the environment for millennia on a scale and rate (especially rate!) that could be considered an infection as it is absolutely unsustainable, and it permanently changes environments.

        We’ve ended great forests, drained entire bogs, even species millennia ago, under all systems so far.

        We never had the mentality of ‘don’t leave a mark’ and and always had the concept of ‘trash’.

        We’ve also never had a predator to keep us in check, in fact it is only other humans that keep our numbers in check.

        The quantity of humans alone is bound to require so much natural resources that we have a global impact regardless of how we use the current tech we would use (this means enormous areas and natural species subjugated to sustain our needs).

        And the same argument about quantity also marks the unmistakable sign of an (unsustainable) infestation - that usually leads to the death of the host.
        We needed some 4 million years to get to a billion, and only two centuries to get from a billon to 9 billion.

        • astutemural@midwest.social
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          22 hours ago

          Infections do not have have the ability to choose to not damage their host. People do have that choice, and many make it.

          You are, I think, making a mistake that many people do, in thinking humans should have zero impact on the environment. This is nonsense. Does any other animal have zero impact on the environment? Beavers and wild boars can change entire watersheds! An ecologically aware future is not one where humanity has disappeared, merely one where we have consciously limited our effects on it. Ask a virus to do that.

          • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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            21 hours ago

            People have the ability to choose to not damage “the host”?

            So we do it willingly?
            “Many” when talking for a species is meaningless.

            Some brain cancers might heighten some of the brains abilities … yet I don’t think that matters.

            Also which humans don’t negatively affect kilometres of Earth’s surfaces and species for 100s of thousands of years?

            Beavers, or any species really, can and do affect experientially all they can. They do that until they are in equilibrium with the ecosystem. Invasive species are perhaps a more clear example of this process.

            The relative speed of the process and how fast the environment responds is crucial in the infestation definition.

            In any population the initial growth is basically limited only by the resource availability. So any species at some point, especially at the beginning, behaves (and it’s evolutionary beneficial to do so) like an infestation, the limits come from the environment, and in complex environment that means other species. That’s how ecosystem grow from single species to complex interaction between 1000s of species in more or less stable equilibrium.

        • Dogyote@slrpnk.net
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          22 hours ago

          I find it difficult to disagree with your points for the most part, although I feel many are not entirely accurate, but your main point remains. So my next question is, isn’t what we’re doing as a species more or less natural? That’s not an excuse for what we’re doing, but calling humanity an infection has too many negative connotations that are unfair. All animals behave this way, boom and bust cycles occur everywhere without human intervention. We’re just the first to know what’s happening.

          Anyway, what’s the solution if there is simply an infestation? I think that meme was made for you.

          • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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            17 hours ago

            So my next question is, isn’t what we’re doing as a species more or less natural?

            It is, imho, and “infestations” are indeed a normal part of ecosystems.
            Only few species had global impact tho (and none in the timeframe of a geological second), we arent the first.

            infection has too many negative connotations that are unfair.

            I would say that we embody (literally) all of those negative connotations actually, ofc with some weirdness, like how many billions of chickens now live bcs of us.

            I do struggle to find positives in our interaction an consequences to the planets ecosystems.

            What gives us the audacity to justify the loss of biodiversity on such a grand scale?

            • Dogyote@slrpnk.net
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              18 hours ago

              What gives us the audacity to justify the loss is biodiversity on such a grand scale?

              Nothing, and it’s disgusting

        • gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de
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          1 day ago

          While i agree with you overall, i’d like to point out a few things.

          First of all, “growth” is not a purely human concept. If you believe in the theory of evolution (which I advise you to do), all life strives for (evolutionary) growth sooner or later. That is why saying “humans are exceptionally bad because they spread like crazy” is in itself a false thought - all life does that.

          The question is: Is humanity’s rule over the planet justified? In other words, do we have a large enough advantage to all life on Earth that we can reasonably occupy almost all inhabitable land area? What is the advantage that we bring to life?

          As i said earlier, all lives ultimately strives towards evolutionary growth. Humans can aid that cause by making life multiplanetary. Don’t get me wrong, i’m not at all a Musk fanboy. But i believe in this single point: Similar to how birds can carry plants seeds to far-away islands, humans can carry all life to other planets and provide it with an essential opportunity for growth. That is why i see it as “humanity has also some very big advantages to life on Earth in general” besides “humanity causes the largest mass-extinction in a long time”. Both are true.

          • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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            1 day ago

            Lol, never said anything to the contrary, my dear friend!

            Everything what I compared humans to has a precedence in the wild (we arent that unique), which ended in a catastrophe of sorts (and a rebound an eon later).

            Are you suggesting infestation can be a non-life phenomenon? I am def intrigued! (Even in sci-fo terms!)
            Ofc it’s part of the natural selection!

            The question is: Is humanity’s rule over the planet justified? In other words, do we have a large enough advantage to all life on Earth that we can reasonably occupy almost all inhabitable land area? What is the advantage that we bring to life?

            As said, an infestation, I never argued if justified or not (whatever even means to be “justified” to lower biodiversity like humans do).

            However we are in the midst of a mass eviction event.

            Similar to how birds can carry plants seeds to far-away islands, humans can carry all life to other planets and provide it with an essential opportunity for growth.

            Yes, exactly, and this can also be an infestation when the “invasive species” (human term) spreads and kills the existing local species bcs the ecosystem isn’t balanced. This usually negatively effects biodiversity.

            Like rats killed entire species when were introduced to New Zealand and similar secluded islands.

  • BlueFootedBooby@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    Humans invented and seem to naturally gravitate to capitalism, it’s not some cosmic evil imposed on them. They’re still a virus.

    • Dogyote@slrpnk.net
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      1 day ago

      Humans invented and seem to naturally gravitate to capitalism

      Do we naturally gravitate towards capitalism? I’d say we gravitate towards communism on family to tribal scales. Seems like capitalism or its precursor takes hold after one group conquers another and exploitation begins.

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

        Closer, Capitalism is just another development in class society that arose alongside industrialization. Tribal communism is different from post-Socialist communism, in that tribes are small units and Communism would be one massive unit. Just like tribal communism, feudalism, and socialism, capitalism arises alongside material development and will fade with it as well, through revolution.

    • Pilferjinx@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      It would be nice if communism was an emergent behavior of humanity. It’s got to be forced from the top down with a vanguard.

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        17 hours ago

        Vanguards don’t force anything, they drive the spearpoint. In Russia, China, Cuba, etc the vanguards have all gained legitimacy through mass support of the working masses. You have it backwards.

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          15 hours ago

          We need a real path to communism. That means we need to completely control the population. It can be a mix of manufactured support and oppressive support, it doesn’t matter too much. Any deviation from the path needs severe punishment.

          • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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            8 hours ago

            I have no idea what you’re trying to say here. Why does any of this “complete control” need to exist? Genuinely, what do you even think Communism is?

            • Pilferjinx@lemmy.world
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              2 hours ago

              A stateless and classless society can’t come about without major conditioning. We are on a very short timeline and we can pussyfoot around with half measures.

              • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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                2 hours ago

                What do you mean when you say we are on a “short timeline” for reaching statelessness and classless society? Such a society can only be achieved gradually through a long period of Socialism. Revolution is necessary, but afterwards we must build towards it.

                • Pilferjinx@lemmy.world
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                  45 minutes ago

                  Our capitalistic tendencies is our killing our planet. I’d estimate we have about 200 years to change or risk real extinction. I’m firmly in the anarchist camp but we don’t have the time to gradually fit a form we’re not naturally attributed to.

      • Dogyote@slrpnk.net
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        1 day ago

        I think it is, but the top is enforcing capitalism and reacts to anything that smells like communism.