• Now that me and Mini Phreek have defended our principles regarding Communism (though not everybody will buy these explanations…), I feel it is time to instead go on the offensive. Yes, in a great counteroffensive not unseen since Stalingrad, the true Communists will rise again.

    First on the list is capitalism and it’s economic system.

    "Capitalism is presently in crisis. Western economies have been in slump since March 2001. Everywhere we see layoffs, closures, cutbacks and shortage, and yet only 1 year ago all the pundits were praising the virtues of the economy. A thinking member of the working class can be left with only one conclusion - the capitalists do not understand their own system.

    Since its very birth capitalism has gone through booms and catastrophic slumps, and yet in not one university economics textbook will you find an explanation for this phenomenon. Every slump is seen to be the result of certain “special” conditions, a failure of the stock exchange, not enough credit, too much debt, inflation, deflation, lack of oil, lack of “confidence”, etc., etc., etc., and the current slump will undoubtedly be blamed on terrorism. None of these excuses get to the root of the problem - the capitalist mode of production.

    The basic contradiction within capitalism is that it produces more goods than can be sold at a profit. This is the famous crisis of overproduction. To use capitalist language, supply outstrips demand. Of course this is a very narrow definition of the word “demand”. There still exists a huge demand for houses for the homeless, or food for the hungry, or medicine for the sick - but for a capitalist, demand only means anything if it is backed up with hard cash. Capitalism gets itself in this mess because it produces for profit and not for need." - YIS

    How do you defend these claims?


  • I understand I am hammering away at Communism that glorifying capitalism…It is just that capitalism is the current working system. now let’s get to that quote of yours.

    ""Capitalism is presently in crisis. Western economies have been in slump since March 2001. Everywhere we see layoffs, closures, cutbacks and shortage, and yet only 1 year ago all the pundits were praising the virtues of the economy. A thinking member of the working class can be left with only one conclusion - the capitalists do not understand their own system.

    Since its very birth capitalism has gone through booms and catastrophic slumps, and yet in not one university economics textbook will you find an explanation for this phenomenon. Every slump is seen to be the result of certain “special” conditions, a failure of the stock exchange, not enough credit, too much debt, inflation, deflation, lack of oil, lack of “confidence”, etc., etc., etc., and the current slump will undoubtedly be blamed on terrorism. None of these excuses get to the root of the problem - the capitalist mode of production.

    The basic contradiction within capitalism is that it produces more goods than can be sold at a profit. This is the famous crisis of overproduction. To use capitalist language, supply outstrips demand. Of course this is a very narrow definition of the word “demand”. There still exists a huge demand for houses for the homeless, or food for the hungry, or medicine for the sick - but for a capitalist, demand only means anything if it is backed up with hard cash. Capitalism gets itself in this mess because it produces for profit and not for need." - YIS "

    "Capitalism is presently in crisis. Western economies have been in slump since March 2001. Everywhere we see layoffs, closures, cutbacks and shortage, and yet only 1 year ago all the pundits were praising the virtues of the economy. A thinking member of the working class can be left with only one conclusion - the capitalists do not understand their own system. "

    ahhh, human imperfection…that’s the problem. IMO, you can make a capitalist system that isn’t corrupt as easily as a communist one. the problem is NO (“N”+“O”) system will even be free from corruption. Do you understand that? Doesn’t matter how your organize it, corruption and special interests always run the show. the best you can do is TRY to govern the part of your life you have control over. I oppose a communistic system, because after one slashes social mobility, and gives the selfish people no incentive to work, it will screw everyone. We can agree that if the world was governed for the greater good, communism would work. I like communism’s theory…i’m sure i would pull my own weight. But you have to be realistic. What are we going to do? Kill all the powerful people on earth? Then won’t the killers gain that sort of power? People will eventually advance themselves through abilities they acquire, people with leadership qualities. Communes are a great idea…the co-exist with a system that won’t go away.

    “Since its very birth capitalism has gone through booms and catastrophic slumps, and yet in not one university economics textbook will you find an explanation for this phenomenon. Every slump is seen to be the result of certain “special” conditions, a failure of the stock exchange, not enough credit, too much debt, inflation, deflation, lack of oil, lack of “confidence”, etc., etc., etc., and the current slump will undoubtedly be blamed on terrorism. None of these excuses get to the root of the problem - the capitalist mode of production.”

    And communism would be any diufferent? Eventually (unless the proper steps are taking) the world will run out of fuel, pollute their world, overpopulate, harvest failures…whatever. The economic system is not the problem, the conditions are.

    “The basic contradiction within capitalism is that it produces more goods than can be sold at a profit. This is the famous crisis of overproduction. To use capitalist language, supply outstrips demand. Of course this is a very narrow definition of the word “demand”. There still exists a huge demand for houses for the homeless, or food for the hungry, or medicine for the sick - but for a capitalist, demand only means anything if it is backed up with hard cash. Capitalism gets itself in this mess because it produces for profit and not for need.” - YIS "

    This i agree with very much, but not totally. I think it’s theory is a little off. In a perfect world, the population won’t change, everyone can have equal everything, and their is no excess to profit off of. Demand is always growing, with population. Technology is always changing.


  • “Capitalism is presently in crisis. Western economies have been in slump since March 2001.”

    not true…stop trying to blame bush for the economic failure. it started during the april of 2000, 11 months before!

    sorry about my previous posts mispellings and tone. i was in a major rush.


  • Economic Crisis had nothing to do with the Government of any country. It had to do with the Internet.


  • yes, especially DELL.

    BTW Yanny, did you see IMC? lately you have posted a lot of pro-palestinian things, and i’m wondeirng if you saw the IMC.


  • good post…


  • Awww… another shot in the dark against communism. Well, I’ll be eager to give a reponse. Just give me a moment to gather my resources.


  • On 2002-04-05 19:12, Yanny wrote:

    There is no such thing as Evil or Good, its all perspective.

    Dangerous thinking. So is killing a baby not evil? Or saving a life not good?


  • @ (1): It’s funny how most of the americans here say “america is the best” and most of the non-americans say “americans are big mouthed whatevers”. I agree with the second (being non-american). Can the US of A please think over this, and maybe sey “we like us, but all others have the same rights as we do?” Then most of the problems would solve itself, like the US would stick to treaties it once signed, accept and support the UN, not claim all resources (which includes everything environmental) for themselves, but share it, and have a view that there are global porblems, which need a global solution, even if that endangers some precious jobs (and would create others, but those others don’t have such a big lobby).

    @(2) If we can get down from our racist point of view against muslims, then most of the problems there would not exist. They were advanced in the Middle Ages, now we are. Does that give us any right to force them into our way of thinking? I think not. For the Israelis… they are pretty much the same, you can’t accuse say Iran not being democratic, but call Israel that.

    @(3) Dangerous, but i hope that their leaders are as smart as Chrushev (sp?), and not drop the big one…

    @(4) 14 … i wouldn’t have thought you were such young :smile:… man, you are doing a good job here, respect!

    @(5) read @(1) :smile:


  • To Yanny

    Who’s fault was it for the internet bubble bursting? Simply put, overproduction. By creating artificially high stock market prices with Internet websites, we have a classic case of over production (supply and demand). As I said before, none of these excuses get to the root of the problem - the capitalist mode of production.


  • To Horten

    Over consumption? Where have we heard that before? Yes, over consumption is a constant plague of the capitalistic society. For example, did you know that America waste more and disposes more garbage than any other country in the world? That’s right, 1.3 billion Chinese can’t even match less than 300 million US citizens. With capitalism we have depletion at an accelerated pace.


  • SUD,

    You brought up a very interesting aspect on the free market. However, would-be monopolists are always emerging as natural products of capitalism (Microsoft, US Standard Oil), threatening to do away with competition from capitalist, not socialist motives. If people have been able to raise their standards of living it has been partly because of the work of labor unions and those who have agitated for minimum wage and maximum work day laws, all denounced as harmful to free competition. Now what happens during economic slumps in a free market, capitalistic system? We have bigger capitalists, with economies of scale, are better able to survive. Capitalism has an inherent tendency to concentrate into monopoly. They also try to get out of these crises by selling goods on foreign markets. However, all the other capitalists are trying to do the same and the world is only so big. Also in the very act of exporting to foreign markets, the capitalists develop the productive forces in these countries (eg. Indonesia, China) which then start producing a surplus for export - exacerbating the problem. The only solution at this point is to take these foreign markets by force – largely a reason for World War I.

    Sometimes it is the capitalists who fear the free operation of the market and call for regulation. When employment is high and people are achieving higher wages, the stock market frets about inflation and creates pressures on government regulatory agencies to “cool off” the economy, creating more widespread unemployment and lower wages.

    Free marketers are currently triumphant; but the record of the unregulated market in post-Communist Russia is not inspiring. Unregulated capitalism could produce misery, demonstrated during the industrial revolution, and the demonstration has been often repeated since. No society can long tolerate the entire, free-market lack of restraints on business, and never does.


  • America’s not so great after all, huh?

    Without America, Germany would have conquered Europe, and Japan would have conquered Asia. During WW1.

    Without the U.S. to (1) Economically prop-up Britian and France (2) reduce effectiveness of and discourage Germany’s submarine blockade (3) send troops to help the allies (4) and provide a moral boost the Allies would have lost. And without the U.S. and Britian to oppose it, Japan would have moved faster/been successful in it’s drive to create a co-prosperity sphere.


  • SUD (again),

    So how are prices established, except by central planning? Again, in a Communist society, it is without money, therefore your point about capitalist prices is pointless.

    “Classical political economy, before Marx, evolved in England, the most developed of the capitalist countries. Adam Smith and David Ricardo, by their investigations of the economic system, laid the foundations of the Labor Theory of Value. Marx continued their work. He rigidly proved and consistently developed this theory. He showed that the value of every commodity is determined by the resources and quantity of socially necessary labor time spent on its production.

    Where the bourgeois economists saw a relation of things (the exchange of one commodity for another), Marx revealed a Relation of Men. The exchange of commodities expresses the tie by which individual producers are bound through the market. Money signifies that this tie is becoming closer and closer, inseparably binding the entire economic life of the individual producers into one whole. Capital signifies a further development of this tie: man’s labor power becomes a commodity. The wage-worker sells labor power to the owner of the land, factories and instruments of labor. The worker uses one part of the labor day to cover the expense of maintaining himself and his family (wages), while the other part of the day the worker toils without remuneration, creating surplus value for the capitalist, the source of profit, the source of the wealth of the capitalist class.

    The doctrine of surplus value is the cornerstone of Marx’s economic theory. Capital, created by the labor of the worker, presses on the worker by ruining the small masters and creating an army of unemployed. In industry, the victory of large-scale production is at once apparent, but we observe the same phenomenon in agriculture as well: the superiority of large-scale capitalist agriculture increases, the application of machinery grows, peasant economy falls into the noose of money-capital, it declines and sinks into ruin, burdened by its backward technique. In agriculture, the decline of small-scale production assumes different forms, but the decline itself is an indisputable fact.

    By destroying small-scale production, capital leads an increase in productivity of labor and to the creation of a monopoly position for the associations of big capitalists. Production itself becomes more and more social-hundreds of thousands and millions of workers become bound together in a systematic economic organism-but the product of the collective labor is appropriated by a handful of capitalists. The anarchy of production grows, as do crises, the furious chase after markets and the insecurity of existence of the mass of the population.

    While increasing the dependence of the workers on capital, the capitalist system creates the great power of united labor. Marx traced the development of capitalism from the first germs of commodity economy, from simple exchange, to its highest forms, to large-scale production. And the experience of all capitalist countries, old and new, is clearly demonstrating the truth of this Marxian doctrine to increasing numbers of workers every year. Capitalism has triumphed all over the world, but this triumph is only the prelude to the triumph of labor over capital.” - Lenin

    You ruled out central planning, but it plays a vital role in the communist system. Marxists propose reorganizing the economy so production is for the fulfillment of human needs and not private greed. The commanding heights of the economy, the top 150 banks and corporations that control 85% of Canadian commerce, must be nationalized and democratically controlled by the workers. The bosses can’t take their factories down to Mexico if the workers are occupying them. When the majority comes together to collectively decide how to plan the economy, in the interests of all, we will be able to eradicate poverty. Even under present day chaotic unplanned capitalism there is enough wealth for each family to be worth over one third of a million dollars if only it was distributed equally. Production for need enables us to destroy the boom slump cycle and lower the working week to create full employment.


  • that anonymous post before was by me grmpf… how comes that every thread “degenerates” into a communism/capitalism thread?


  • yourbuttocks,

    You seem to be implying that America wouldn’t be so great if it had been brought up in a communist system. Rest assured, America would still be great if it were communist, if not even better. :smile:

    Without America, Germany would have conquered Europe, and Japan would have conquered Asia. Are you supposing that if America were communist, it wouldn’t have entered the war even if Pearl Harbor was attacked? Also, would capitalism have been the only way America and her Allies could’ve achieved victory in WWII? Certainly not. Look at the Soviet Union. The USSR deserves much of the credit for the Allies defeat of Nazi Germany, probably more so than Britain and USA combined. Now I find this interesting since USSR was “communist.” Now imagine how much more powerful USSR would be if it was truly Communist and under an able body leader(s) that didn’t kill off all his best generals in bloody purges (Stalin).

    Now off to WW1,

    1. Economically prop up Britain and France? Now the way you say this, we intend to save these countries by flooding it with capita instead of sending manufactured goods, raw materials, and produce which are the cornerstone of the communist economic system?
    2. So how does capitalism directly cause us to reduce the effectiveness of Germany’s submarine blockade? What, are we to use capita to make them not shoot our ships?
    3. Again, how would USA being communist prevent US troops from being sent to help the Allies. In Russia we saw literally 10’s of millions of soldiers willing to die for the Motherland.
    4. Provide a moral boast? Yes, lets fight for the glory of capitalism and not democracy.

  • F_alk,
    That is because Communist is the driving point of society!! Hahahaha j/k :0

    In this topic, mini_phreek sort of started this whole debate on communism, even though his reference was only used to answer Yanny’s questions. I think that a mention to communism wouldn’t be nearly as bad. It’s just that whenever somebody brings up communism, most people are liked “Oooooo Bad.” Then they post some half-hearted attempt at disproving communism, so as a supporter, it is in your position to rebuff and rebuttal. This in turn leads to more attacks on communism (and some pretty Q&A), which results in more counter post and then attacks on capitalism. So the cycle is really endless. :sad: I don’t mind because through conversations like these, you learn a lot not only about the other person’s stance and information, but your own at the same time. So this free exchange of ideas actually leads to higher learning.


    “Only the spirit of attack, born in a brave heart, will bring success to any fighter aircraft, no matter how highly developed it may be.” - Aldolf Galland
    “The create? The create matters not. It is the man who pilots the create that truely counts” -

    [ This Message was edited by: TG Moses VI on 2002-05-19 20:50 ]


  • To you, theres something wrong with killing a baby. To me, theres a lot wrong with it. But, who’s to say it isn’t a good thing in some cultures.


  • To Yanny and Yourbuttocks,

    Since I was on the topic Wattersonism, let’s see how the wholesale murder of people (both young and old) might not seem so evil.

    Scene Opens up in a Office Floor

    Frank (working at his computer): Yawwnn…
    Frank: I’m going to get some coffee, Ted. Want any?
    Ted: No Thanks, Frank.
    Frank (walking toward the coffee machine): Tum te ta ta tum…

    BLAM!!! (A shot from across the room hits Frank across the back)

    Frank: Gakkkk!!
    Women: Aieee!!! They got Frank!
    Ted: Run!!

    As the people leave, we soon see Deer walking out of the elevator from across the room with rifles in their hands.

    Deer1: You got ‘im!
    Deer2: He’s a big one, too!
    Deer3: Nice shot, Bamb.’
    Bambee: Somebody get the camera!

    The scene now shifts to young Calvin who is giving this fictional story to the his whole classroom.

    Calvin: “…Needless to say, Frank’s family was upset when he didn’t come home that night, but everybody understood that the human population had doubled in just two generations to six billion, so some thinning of the herds was necessary to prevent starvation.”


  • US in WWI? Laughable, the US had zero good intentions for either side. The United States was there to make a Profit selling to both sides.

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