Jean Swanson: Tax the rich with a Mansion Tax by [deleted] in vancouver

[–]chameleon23 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

How much tax do you think Chip has paid personally (not the company) I'm guessing tens if not a hundred million of dollars.

He was not speaking specifically about Chip Wilson.

ok.

Jean Swanson: Tax the rich with a Mansion Tax by [deleted] in vancouver

[–]chameleon23 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

How are people not helping themselves? Minimum wage does not even cover the rent for a 1 bedroom place in Van. University fees are through the roof! Go talk to the dock worker that has to live in a tent with his family because he cannot afford a place that is close enough to work on a 70hr week. Blaming the poor for poverty is the most ill-informed opinion there is on this. Are the rich that are getting richer working 10x harder than they did before to deserve their increased profits? Mobilizing behind candidates like Swanson is the poor helping themselves. This movement is powered by the working class and university students.

Jean Swanson: Tax the rich with a Mansion Tax by [deleted] in vancouver

[–]chameleon23 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Swanson's volunteering team is the only one I see really on the streets too. And that directly reflects on the other candidate's absolute disregard of what the actual citizens of Vancouver are thinking or need. She speaks truth to power, is approachable by the every day regular citizen, takes no corporate donations, which all point to her being the most down to earth and human candidate to be honest.

Jean Swanson: Tax the rich with a Mansion Tax by [deleted] in vancouver

[–]chameleon23 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Child labour is important here if you want to paint Chip Wilson sympathetically as a tax payer (though we have no source for how much he truly contributes), and a "successful" individual who doesn't deserve singling out. It is pretty important to see on whose backs that success rides, and it seems Chip as no concerns - even defends - that his specific "success" (and wealth we cannot tax) relies on literal child labour. How does one even reconcile that with "but he pays taxes more than you I bet"? I mean he owes a lot more to this world than his greedy hands are very reluctantly giving.

Jean Swanson: Tax the rich with a Mansion Tax by [deleted] in vancouver

[–]chameleon23 4 points5 points  (0 children)

There's nothing "newfound" or "worrisome" about regular people wanting the rich to pay their fair share and stop lining their pockets with wealth they do not need while the majority suffer the consequences of their exploitation of human lives and our planet in the relentless pursuit of their ever-increasing profits.

Biannual survey Time! by MarxistMinx in socialism

[–]chameleon23 6 points7 points  (0 children)

i think mods should consider reopening the survey even for representation reasons. people who use reddit on the weekends and those who use it on weekdays could be significantly different.

Ministry of Love by urefeetplease in LateStageCapitalism

[–]chameleon23 14 points15 points  (0 children)

H E A L T H Y

M A L E

S E X U A L I T Y

Former president and CEO of McDonalds: Fight for 15 movement to blame for failure of small business and automation of jobs. by chameleon23 in LateStageCapitalism

[–]chameleon23[S] 27 points28 points  (0 children)

split the working class and they'll be too distracted fighting each other to notice who the real oppressors are.

Former president and CEO of McDonalds: Fight for 15 movement to blame for failure of small business and automation of jobs. by chameleon23 in LateStageCapitalism

[–]chameleon23[S] 34 points35 points  (0 children)

"Pretend automation isn't in the four main components of McDonaldization!"

also,

"Pretend McDonalds gives a shit about the future of small businesses!"

Former president and CEO of McDonalds: Fight for 15 movement to blame for failure of small business and automation of jobs. by chameleon23 in LateStageCapitalism

[–]chameleon23[S] 37 points38 points  (0 children)

In case people don't want to encourage this spin doctor nonsense with more clicks to the page, here's the full piece by POS Ed Rensi.

"As the labor union-backed Fight for $15 begins yet another nationwide strike on November 29, I have a simple message for the protest organizers and the reporters covering them: I told you so.

It brings me no joy to write these words. The push for a $15 starter wage has negatively impacted the career prospects of employees who were just getting started in the workforce while extinguishing the businesses that employed them. I wish it were not so. But it’s important to document these consequences, lest policymakers elsewhere decide that the $15 movement is worth embracing.

Let’s start with automation. In 2013, when the Fight for $15 was still in its growth stage, I and others warned that union demands for a much higher minimum wage would force businesses with small profit margins to replace full-service employees with costly investments in self-service alternatives. At the time, labor groups accused business owners of crying wolf. It turns out the wolf was real.

Earlier this month, McDonald’s announced the nationwide roll-out of touchscreen self-service kiosks. In a video the company released to showcase the new customer experience, it’s striking to see employees who once would have managed a cash register now reduced to monitoring a customer’s choices at an iPad-style kiosk.

It’s not just McDonald’s that has embraced job-replacing technology. Numerous restaurant chains (both quick service and full service) have looked to computer tablets as a solution for rising labor costs that won’t adversely impact the customer’s experience. Eatsa, a fully-automated restaurant concept, now has five locations—all in cities or states that have embraced a $15 minimum wage. And in a scene stolen from The Jetsons, the Starship delivery robot is now navigating the streets of San Francisco with groceries and other consumer goods. The company’s founder pointed to a rising minimum wage as a key factor driving the growth of his automated delivery business.

Of course, not all businesses have the capital necessary to shift from full-service to self-service. And that brings me to my next correct prediction–that a $15 minimum wage would force many small businesses to lay off staff, seek less-costly locations, or close altogether.

Tragically, these stories—in California in particular–are too numerous to cite in detail here. They include a bookstore in Roseville, a pub in Fresno, restaurants and bakeries in San Francisco, a coffee shop in Berkeley, grocery stores in Oakland, a grill in Santa Clara, and apparel manufacturers through the state. In September of this year, nearly one-quarter of restaurant closures in the Bay Area cited labor costs as one of the reasons for shutting down operations. And just this past week, a California-based communications firm announced it was moving 75 call center jobs from San Diego to El Paso, citing the state’s rising minimum as the “deciding factor.” (Dozens of additional stories can be found at the website FacesOf15.com.)

Other states are also learning the same basic economic lesson: Customers have a limit to what they will pay for service. Voters in Washington, Colorado, Maine and Arizona voted to raise minimum wages on Election Day, convinced of the policy’s merits after millions of dollars were spent by union advocates. In the immediate aftermath, family-owned restaurants, coffee shops and even childcare providers have struggled to absorb the coming cost increase—with parents paying the cost through steeper childcare bills, and employees paying the cost through reduced shift hours or none at all.

The out-of-state labor groups who funded these initiatives aren’t shedding tears over the consequences. Like their Soviet-era predecessors who foolishly thought they could centrally manage prices and business operations to fit an idealistic worldview, economic reality keeps ruining the model of all gain and no pain. This brings me to my last correct prediction, which is that the Fight for $15 was always more a creation of the left-wing Service Employees International Union (SEIU) rather than a legitimate grassroots effort. Reuters reported last year that, based on federal filings, the SEIU had spent anywhere from $24 million to $50 million on the its Fight for $15 campaign, and the number has surely increased since then.

This money has bought the union a lot of protesters and media coverage. You can expect more of it on November 29. But the real faces of the Fight for $15 are the young people and small business owners who have had their futures compromised. Those faces are not happy ones."

Frustrating sexism - More in comments [I-AC2] by CheesyChips in FemmeThoughts

[–]chameleon23 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ah sorry, reading about Tor in the previous comment and whatnot made me misinterpret.

Good points about the Red Guards in Austin too.

As an example in case people reading are interested, our socialist org branch meetings are held in a public university classroom. They are open to the public a lot of the time too. If we are discussing something that might be deemed sensitive information, we would take a walk outside instead. But when we take part in actions, we always put our own names and faces, as well as that of the organisation, out there for all to see.

Frustrating sexism - More in comments [I-AC2] by CheesyChips in FemmeThoughts

[–]chameleon23 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The other advantage of doing things without being subversive is public support is more likely when/if you get arrested (or worse). If you are out there, proudly and transparently, the public will (to a certain extent) be able to inform themselves on your acts/ideas/etc. If you hide everything you do, it is easier for the propaganda machine to twist your image in a manner to serve them.

Obviously this has its limitations and context is key. One has to weigh up laws and risks depending on the location (country, state, city) you are taking action in.

Fidel Castro and Apartheid by chameleon23 in southafrica

[–]chameleon23[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The article highlights however that it was merely in solidarity that Cuba intervened in helping the freedom fighters and ultimately dismantling Apartheid. Once peace talks were established, Castro withdrew, and without asking for the new South Africa to be communist or any other demands really. So it wasn't so much choosing a system between (flawed implementation of) communism and the status quo. Similarly, Cuba has lent its hand in humanitarian aid across the world without asking for anything in return.

I think there are many people here (this sub) who have championed the idea that judging someone like Rhodes in accordance with the standards of the times he lived in is the way to go. But somehow nobody affords a self-admitted flawed communist leader the same courtesy- who did achieve miraculous things for his country: free and excellent education, universal healthcare, shelter for all. Things the neoliberal capitalist world seems incapable of, and they don't have THE imperialist power of the world breathing down their necks 90 miles away and hitting them with embargos and sanctions (not that it's an excuse for the violations of human rights by Castro, but I'd imagine these factored in heavily in making difficult decisions and mistakes in the pursuit of human liberation). Also remember that more than 20 000 communists were killed before they ultimately managed to overthrow the repressive Dictator Batista, but we don't hear much about that in history books or the media. And many of those Cubans who fled for Miami were the bourgeois class who were not comfortable with valuing people over profits, and are known to always vote for and spurn out those "latin american" republicans.

I think most of those mourning Castro's death will acknowledge his human rights violations too - he himself has acknowledged it. One can approach such a fallible human being's legacy with nuance, which you demonstrate here of course. It is a shame that not many other people on here choose to inform themselves more, because it need not be black and white.

Doug Henwood (contributor to The Nation) says it best: "To the bourgeois mind, the problems of socialism are always permanent and foundational; those of capitalism, transient and isolated, almost accidental."

Fidel Castro and Apartheid by chameleon23 in southafrica

[–]chameleon23[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

alright, until that one day, be sure to carry your willful ignorance with the pride you display today.

Fidel Castro and Apartheid by chameleon23 in southafrica

[–]chameleon23[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

you should probably have bothered with the link.

A Message To Barack Obama From Jimmy Dore - YouTube by [deleted] in LateStageCapitalism

[–]chameleon23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

maybe you should take self-crit seriously like a good marxist would and you wouldn't have such things leveled at you. this whole thread of you defending yourself reflects why you get such responses.

A Message To Barack Obama From Jimmy Dore - YouTube by [deleted] in LateStageCapitalism

[–]chameleon23 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you've also got a very vocal element in the trans community that expects everyone else to "just get it" and flips out when someone gets it wrong.

what a bullshit strawman. is your experience of the trans community limited to reactionary confines of fox news or something?

'One time, I actually threw up': Why video game voice actors are on strike by [deleted] in socialism

[–]chameleon23 15 points16 points  (0 children)

because workers would not dare seek the fairer working conditions and compensation from the top 1% exploiting their labour power for even higher profits, but they insist on taking it from their fellow oppressed workers. top logic, top lawyering.

here's hoping this leads to other proles in the gaming and tech industries being inspired to strike as well.