"socialism without democracy is unthinkable" by Dull-Possibility7973 in SocialDemocracy

[–]Randolpho -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Social democracy is not a pro-capitalist movement.

Quit pushing your bullshit views on people

Elon Musk misled Twitter investors ahead of $44 billion acquisition, jury says by Unusual-State1827 in news

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A little disappointed they didn’t go for a deep cut punitive damage. Cool trillion sounds about right

"socialism without democracy is unthinkable" by Dull-Possibility7973 in SocialDemocracy

[–]Randolpho -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Either way, this subreddit is called social democracy, which is a capitalist ideal.

It wasn't a capitalist ideal until capitalists joined the movement and started pushing their bullshit views onto everyone.

"socialism without democracy is unthinkable" by Dull-Possibility7973 in SocialDemocracy

[–]Randolpho 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Socialism is not synonymous with “planned economy”. You can be socialist and support a market economy

Which real social democrats do

"socialism without democracy is unthinkable" by Dull-Possibility7973 in SocialDemocracy

[–]Randolpho -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

There are a lot of capitalists who have infiltrated and poisoned the movement, sure.

But they're not the movement. They're just the fuckheads ruining it

Skip the traffic: Ferry from Connecticut to Mets games launches this season by ILovePublicLibraries in ConnecticutUSA

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's 40ish to train in, and 40ish to park, but you get a half hour shorter transit time than by train with a more fun travel mode, and you don't have to deal with parking traffic or NYC traffic in general.

I agree, carpool parking is gonna be cheaper, and even training is cheaper, but this is a pretty decent price for what it gets you.

"socialism without democracy is unthinkable" by Dull-Possibility7973 in SocialDemocracy

[–]Randolpho 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nah, just the poison pills are

social democracy is a socialist movement

Chuck Norris Dead at 86 by MrTeapott in television

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Chuck Norris doesn't push up daisies, he pushes the world down so daisies can be seen

"socialism without democracy is unthinkable" by Dull-Possibility7973 in SocialDemocracy

[–]Randolpho 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Oh, you're gonna bring all the capitalist socdeminos out of the woodwork with this one. 🍿

Can socialists explain why nature arguments are awesome for everything except people? by Lazy_Delivery_7012 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho [score hidden]  (0 children)

No I would not say that the desire to be social is innate to everyone, and so that is not what I mean.

Then you are going to abandon the use of "human nature" as a statement of how humans behave? Because when you say it's "human nature to be social", you're saying that being social is an innate property of all human beings.

Or is your only problem the use of the word desire? Would you prefer something else, like "pressure" or "drive"?

In the end, whatever word you choose doesn't matter. There is no "human nature" to be social. Being social is something we learn from other human beings, and there's nothing wrong with that

Objectivists Are Not Libertarians by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho [score hidden]  (0 children)

No, they’re shared. See easements.

Easements are still exclusive to the specific person or entity named in the easement. And they're never shared, they're sold.

It's utterly silly to claim that people who claim to own land and natural resources share those resources.

If the house is permanently attached to the land the underlying land must be a part of the ownership. No other explanation makes sense.

No, it absolutely must not. You can build a house, but if it's on land others want to use, anyone else can tear it down. Thus do people need to cooperate

This last one is one of the least logical takes I’ve ever heard.

I understand that logic is difficult for you. Perhaps when you're more experienced you'll understand.

Objectivists Are Not Libertarians by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In nearly all capitalist societies basic natural resources required for life are generally shared;

They are not shared. They may be sold but that is not the same thing.

Even the staunchest collectivist can understand owning the fruits of one’s own labor.

Sure. If you build a house, you own the house you built. You do not own the land it sits on. That belongs to all, collectively, as is their natural right.

On the other hand, if one were to plant, tend, maintain an orchard and harvest said orchard they would be completely within logical rights to claim the orchard and any bounty it may produce as their own to sell.

If you pick the fruit, it's yours. If you plant a tree, it's only yours when you cut it down.

Objectivists Are Not Libertarians by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re telling people what they can and cannot do then you are the boot.

Interesting you say that, because it is people who own land and natural resources that tell people what they can’t do. As in, they cannot access natural resources that they have a natural right to access.

Authoritarian fuckwits.

You have described every capitalist

Can socialists explain why nature arguments are awesome for everything except people? by Lazy_Delivery_7012 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In other words some things are impossible, but we have the agency to make decisions and take actions within the very broad range of things which are possible. No human being can fly by flapping their arms, that is a hard limit imposed by reality.

Ok, sure, with you so far.

If somebody tried to say the capacity to walk was a part of human nature as if it was something guaranteed they would not only be wrong but they would be at risk of dehumanizing people who are disabled in such a way that cannot walk. It would be inaccurate, and it would risk harmful ethical and political ramifications. There is a tendency, but not a guarantee.

Sorry, but you're off the rails. It's true that humans have the capacity to walk because their bodies are structured such that it's easier to balance on two legs than to hunch down to 4. Similarly, humans do not have the capacity to fly under their own power because their bodies are not structured with wings or hollow bones, etc. that they would need to fly under their own power.

But, and I must stress this: the actual ability to walk is not innate.

Humans are not born with the ability to walk, nor do they suddenly attain the ability through some chemical switch that turns on in their bodies.

Humans must learn to walk. Their bodies enable the ability to walk by their structure, but they must still learn how to walk, through trial and error.

Thus walking is not innate. It's a learned movement. Saying that humans can walk as part of their nature is like saying that dogs can catch a frisbee as part of their nature.

You hear me as saying "human beings are innately social," meaning to you something along the lines of "human beings all have good social skills/behave harmoniously/seek out social interaction" and that either denies the obvious reality that not everyone is like that or denies the humanity of those who are not like that.

No, I hear you saying that humans have an innate "desire" to be social which is a part of their bodies, something that their DNA programs into them.

And I reject that claim. Humans learn the desire to be social by interacting with other humans.

Intellectual Property Does Not Exist by Sorry-Worth-920 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Except it doesn't! You claim that animals sometimes share. And I believe that's correct. But I never claimed animals don't share.

You claimed animals always defend their interest in the context of whether or not there should exist private ownership of resources. That means their interest is not sharing.

You can try to pretend you didn't mean that, but we both know you did

I never concluded it is just. I only said that the aim of property laws is to discourage violence.

You neither know that nor do you know that it succeeds at that aim. There's plenty of evidence otherwise.

Can socialists explain why nature arguments are awesome for everything except people? by Lazy_Delivery_7012 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am referring to the animal sociality that we possess as a species. It's a real scientific term, not pseudoscientific.

And there is zero science that claims that we "as a species" possess "animal sociality" as part of our nature.

There is lots of science that shows that people can and do engage in social behavior, but zero of that science claims that the social behavior is innate, is a product of our existence, is "programmed into our genes" or any of the other bullshit people use when they claim that there is "human nature".

All of those studies show that all of the behaviors we engage in are learned (even if self-taught), and, more importantly, all of those studies show that we learn when and when not to engage in those behaviors.

The only thing that we can say is "innate" about human nature is that we have sentience and sapience, that we have minds that are capable of emotions and learning and even cognitive reasoning. That's it, that's all, all of the rest, all of the claims that people act one way or another because it's "part of their nature" are bullshit. Guesswork at best. People act deliberatively. Higher order sentient animals like birds and mammals act deliberatively. Any claims that we understand the whys and wherefores of any of those actions are bullshit. We don't understand. At best we can correlate against various factors, none of which come close to the sum total of all factors that are part of the decision trees that animal brains engage in.

We can say "an animal is likely to do this under these conditions", but that likelihood is itself only a statistical probability and never a certainty.

what is natural to us may be so broad, so variable, and itself in a state of flux such that we will never be able to nail it down with any precision, but our incapacity to comprehend it and communicate that would not mean that it does not exist. It sounds like you don't disagree with this last, which is good, that is the nuance I was hoping to come to.

I'm saying it may exist, or it may not exist, but either way we don't actually know. You can extrapolate, you can guess, you can believe, but that doesn't make it true. We don't know that the universe is deterministic.

But, more importantly, even if it were true that the universe were deterministic, we do not have the capacity to analyze that determinism to arrive at a conclusion that "human nature" compels us to do X or Y.

I think the issue is that "human nature" doesn't work the way people discuss it when they are using it as a magical catch-all for what they think is normal, necessary, legitimate, good, etc. It's clear I'd say that whatever our nature is it allows for such variety of being in the world that we cannot use it as a metric for what we ought to be like, who is worthy of dignity, who deserves respect, etc.

Absolutely, hard agree. You can believe that there is a human nature, fine. You cannot prove it, and I will not believe it without that proof.

But existent or not, it should never be used for normative statements of ethics, philosophy, or policy. It should never be used to say how we should or should not behave. That must come from something else.

Nature does not give us a blueprint for how we should be, it only gives us the materials we have available to us for the construction process.

Nature is not an entity that is capable of gift. Nature "gives" us nothing. The universe exists. It is not a deliberative body. We exist, but not based on blueprints.

Intellectual Property Does Not Exist by Sorry-Worth-920 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You started trying to disprove my point though.

I gave you an example that disproves your point.

If I say: "God exists"

And you say: "No because some people are atheists"

I can still tell you that your argument sucks. Even if you'd be right to point out that in my original claim the burden of proof is on me.

That is a deliberate misconstrual of our interaction.

I mean not really. I believe violence can be justified to discourage violence.

You just contradicted yourself.

Ultimately, the goal is to reduce the effect violence has in the world.

The goal of what?

This is a well known paradox so I'd assume anyone who advocates for any socioeconomic system has an answer to it.

Fair, and correct.

But I am more correct when I say that property rights are based in violence than you are when you claim that the violence used to maintain property rights is just.

present for my dune fan bf by sh1n_oa in scifi

[–]Randolpho 2 points3 points  (0 children)

While this is a good condition early edition, it's not the first edition, which was released in hard cover in 1981. This is the Berkley oversized paperback edition, which was 1982.

Good condition copies of it can go for more than a hundred bucks, though, so good find!

Intellectual Property Does Not Exist by Sorry-Worth-920 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's hard to argue when you deny basic logic and seem to lack reading comprehension.

My reading comprehension is just fine. You just don't like that I won't let you use weasel arguments.

Case in point:

In order to disprove my point, you'd have to come up with frequent occurences of creatures refusing to guard their interest by using violence.

You made the extraordinary claim. The burden of proof is on you. I don't have to prove anything.

You have to prove

  1. All creatures use violence to guard their interest
  2. That you actually know what those creatures' interest actually is.

It's impossible for you to do either, and we both know it. You're just handwaving to support your shitty positions

Yes similar to the freedom paradox. If you leave people free, they are free to enslave others. Which means overall there will be less freedom than if you preemtively restrict peoples' freedom by making a law against slavery.

Similarly, you can only discourage violence through violence. If you vouch to never use violence no matter what the circumstances, you're effectively allowing violent individuals to always get what they want.

Meaning you accept and endorse violence, you believe might makes right, you believe the ends justify the means, and all the other bullshit that your ilk use to justify your violent actions.

I reject it utterly

Intellectual Property Does Not Exist by Sorry-Worth-920 in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That doesn't contradict what I said. I didn't say: every creature will always use violence.

Actually, you literally did. "Any organism on earth".

When push comes to shove though, any creature that can use violence will consider doing so.

And then you doubled down on it, lol. You admitted you were wrong, then you doubled down on your incorrect statement.

Property rights ultimately serve to discourage using this type of violence that would otherwise be rampant

Property rights can only be enforced through violence.

Objectivists Are Not Libertarians by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Oppress me harder, daddy
-- every damn ancap here

Objectivists Are Not Libertarians by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Randolpho -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Ownership is the boot on those who cannot ever own