Guys I'm a marxist too but I won't buy that china is a good example of socialism as long as I keep hearing about 45 hr workweeks and surveillance measures.
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Guys I'm a marxist too but I won't buy that china is a good example of socialism as long as I keep hearing about 45 hr workweeks and surveillance measures.
Loving how all these socialists complain about how we have "free-market capitalism" despite the fact that the entire economy, the price of goods, services, and wages all teeter on the decisions of a handful of government employees.
My new favorite Twitter thread.
As Harry Magdoff and Fred Magdoff explained in “Approaching Socialism,” “The shortcomings of the Soviet economy, which became evident not long after recovery from the Second World War, were not a result of the failure of central planning, but of the way planning was conducted. Central planning in peacetime does not need control by the central authorities over every detail of production. Not only are commandism and the absence of democracy not necessary ingredients of central planning, they are counterproductive to good planning.” Ironically, it was the class character of the Soviet system and rampant corruption that led to its demise.
John Bellamy Foster, Planned Degrowth: Ecosocialism and Sustainable Human Development—An Introduction
The Inflation Reduction Act recently passed by Congress is a totalitarian piece of legislation that brings America further ...
Minoru Yamasaki, the famed architect who designed the World Trade Center with its iconic Twin Towers, found out how hard it can be to design society.
But what a time to study architecture! This was the high modernism era: Walter Gropius, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Le Corbusier were rethinking everything. Breakthroughs in glass, steel, and concrete created new possibilities.
Le Corbusier, or Corbu as he was known, was a major influence for Yamasaki. Corbu was perhaps the most extreme of the high modernists. He had unyielding faith in the power of rationalism and efficiency to improve every facet of society. He believed homes should be “machines for living.” The master planner could create literal utopias by exerting his expert will from the top down.
The Housing Act’s provision of government-backed mortgage insurance meant suburban housing was cheap and getting cheaper. So were cars. President Eisenhower’s interstate highway project, which (arguably) began with the paving of I-70, connected St. Louis with the blossoming suburbs of St. Charles just across the river. Despite the decision in Brown v. Board, white families were taking that same FHA money that funded Pruitt-Igoe and buying homes in the suburbs, and many jobs went with them.
This fundamentally changed the city. De facto segregation soared; the city shrank and suburbs swelled. If St. Louis’ leaders realized their assumption of continued economic growth and population growth was wrong, they kept it to themselves.
It quickly got worse from there.
Planners expected the working poor to live in the complex. Instead, many unemployed families took the apartments, which meant—because families receiving welfare paid the lowest rents—the rent revenue wasn’t enough to sustain the building.
Also, under Missouri’s welfare laws at the time, you could receive welfare only as a single parent. This left many mothers and fathers with the grim options of staying together without the state benefits, or separating in order to receive benefits. Many fathers left their families to search for work wherever they could find it. They often didn’t return. Soon Pruitt-Igoe was mostly populated with large, single-parent families. The lack of fathers in the building (and social workers ran regular checks to ensure dad really wasn’t living there) had dangerous ripple effects for Pruitt-Igoe children. Crime quickly became common, and children joined gangs, vandalizing and damaging the buildings. Maintenance workers had trouble keeping up and occupancy dropped rapidly.
The day President Lyndon Johnson gave his famous “Great Society” speech in 1964, residency in the complex hovered around 25%.
And what of Yamasaki’s innovative skip-stop elevators? His wide hallways? Did they foster a sense of community as he intended? Amity Shlaes paints a bleak picture:
[The] elevators… were muggers’ traps. Poor maintenance meant the elevators often jammed, leaving gangs’ victims in with them for long extra minutes. The gangs lurked in the halls and made tenants “run the gantlet” to get to their doors.
Young men threw bricks and rocks at windows and street lamps; the activity was a regular sport. There were no good playgrounds. Because there were no toilets on the ground floor, children had accidents there, and the elevators gradually became public toilets. The community area was a sorry joke; its only function ultimately was as a place for collecting Housing Authority rents. No one seemed able to stop the decay.
ST. LOUIS QUICKLY realized that Pruitt-Igoe was a problem. But it was unclear who, if anyone, could fix it. The federal government, the St. Louis Housing Authority, the state, and the City of St. Louis itself all shared responsibility for the complex. When a problem belongs to everyone, it belongs to no one.
Within five years of its launch, Yamasaki was regularly apologizing for his role in the project. Though the final design of the complex differed from his original vision, he came to question the core assumption behind the project: that people’s lives could be effectively engineered through urban design. He expressed regret for his “deplorable mistakes” with Pruitt-Igoe. By the late 1950s, he was giving eloquent speeches about the “tragedy of housing thousands in exactly look alike cells,” which “certainly does not foster our ideals of human dignity and individualism.”
To the Detroit Free Press, he put it more simply: “Social ills can’t be cured by nice buildings.”
By the early 1970s, the 33 concrete tombstones lining St. Louis’ skyline were a cautionary tale for utopian housing schemes. It was a den of crime and misery, rather than anything anyone could call home. When the decision came to demolish the complex, occupancy was only 10 percent.
Higher education is increasingly going in the wrong direction. In order to continue the cause of human flourishing, colleges need to do a better job of teaching students about the progress humans have made.
America's standing as the world's largest economy, with a reputation as a hub of innovation and as a land of opportunity, owes much to its system of free-market capitalism. Economic freedom has lifted more than one billion people out of poverty worldwide. And yet, there continues to be skepticism about capitalism in the U.S., where people blame economic freedom for everything from COVID-19 to the fire in the Gulf of Mexico.
Trust in capitalism has especially diminished among young people, to the point where capitalism and socialism are equally popular. While the reasons for such skepticism are varied, Harvard Economist Edward Glaeser has hypothesized that the young are reacting negatively to policies that favor entrenched interests (crony capitalism) and that they favor "hyper-redistribution" rather than true socialism. Others have argued that students are being influenced by left-wing professors who dominate American college campuses.
We wanted more than a hypothesis. So in order to gain insight into young people's views, we surveyed 1,000 college students at 71 four-year college and universities across the country. And what we found was surprising.
Our survey did find that socialism was viewed more favorably than capitalism among U.S. college students. 24 percent of respondents had a positive view of capitalism, compared to the 32 percent who had a positive view of socialism.
There were understandably large differences in views of capitalism and socialism among students with different political ideologies. Politically conservative students were much more likely to have a positive view of capitalism and a negative view of socialism, in comparison to politically liberal students.
But how students conceptualize capitalism and socialism may influence their attitudes. In defining capitalism, 55 percent of respondents said that it is "an economic system in which property is privately owned, exchange is voluntary, and production and pricing of goods/services are determined by market forces"—a definition of free-market capitalism. The other 45 percent of respondents defined capitalism as "an economic system in which corporations utilize grants, special tax breaks, political connections, and special rules that favor them over competitors to earn profits"—a definition of crony capitalism. This distinction matters: 42 percent of students using a free-market definition, compared to two percent using a crony capitalism definition, have a positive view of capitalism.
We found similarly interesting responses when we asked students to choose the appropriate definition of socialism. In defining socialism, 42 percent of respondents said that it is "an economic system in which the types, quantities produced, and prices of goods and services are planned by the government, and property is owned by 'society'"—a central planning definition. The other 58 percent defined it as "an economic system in which individuals and companies make decisions on the types, quantities produced, and prices charged for most goods and services, but the government plays a very active role in assuring prices are fair and in ensuring an equitable distribution of resources between rich and poor"—a redistribution definition of socialism. Among students defining socialism as redistribution, 45 percent had a positive view, in comparison to 14 percent for those who defined it as central planning.
There is clearly confusion about what capitalism and socialism entail. Students professing support for socialism are not really in favor of what is traditionally viewed as socialism (central planning), but rather "hyper-redistribution." Moreover, students reacting negatively to capitalism may not be rejecting the free market, but rather rejecting cronyism.
Unfortunately, the confusion over the definitions of capitalism and socialism also seems to coincide with a lack of understanding of their implications. Although students are right in being skeptical of crony capitalism, their belief in "hyper-redistribution" seems to ignore the fact that less wealth for redistribution will be created when people are not able to enjoy the fruits of their labor. Further, the types of government involvement they might favor—subsidies for green energy, for example, or special benefits in the name of social justice—contribute to the crony capitalism they oppose.
Our research also found that university education is influencing students' views on capitalism and socialism. Although 56 percent of students responding to our survey said that their view of capitalism has not been changed by college classes and activities, 36 percent said college has given them a more negative view of capitalism and only eight percent said it has given them a more positive view of capitalism. On the other hand, while 59 percent of respondents said that college classes and activities have not changed their view of socialism, 27 percent reported that college has given them a more positive view of socialism.
Many students are not receiving an accurate view of the state of the world from their college experience, which could be undermining their ability to see how free markets have supported human flourishing. Only 49 percent of students surveyed say that based on what they have learned in college, the world has been getting better over the last 50 years, in terms of extreme poverty, life expectancy, hunger, and literacy. This comes at a time when all of these factors have improved dramatically.
Higher education is increasingly going in the wrong direction. In order to continue the cause of human flourishing, colleges need to do a better job of teaching students about the progress humans have made—and the important role free-market capitalism has played in that progress.