We have to agree “money bad” before making a plan to move beyond it.
Yes, but that’s not the thing you said that I disagree with:
humanity absolutely has the ability to coordinate action without money at least as well (if not better) than how it is now
Replace “ability” with “potential” and I agree with you, but as written this is misleading. It assumes the planning has concluded, and a new system is ready to be implemented. This is not the case.
there is a plan that I did mention, socialism
Either “socialism” refers specifically to the USSR’s plan, in which case we’ve seen that fall to corruption, or it refers to a more general concept, in which case that’s more of an ideology than a plan. At best it’s a general roadmap, but it’s not policy by a mile.
Socialism is not immune to corruption. No matter what system you use, people will find the loopholes and vulnerabilities and blind spots. You’re just trading billionaires for bureaucrats. Even in a direct democracy, they’ll start podcasts to sway public opinion. They’ll steal from library economies, they’ll loaf in spontaneous mutualism.
You cannot eliminate this element, you can only change its form.
If you’re asking what I think the best way forward is, please just ask that from the beginning. My answer might’ve been that I’ve been working with the PSL and think they have a pretty good idea of a socialist America. Instead we’re bickering over the definition of “ability”.
Otherwise, you’re just arguing for the status quo that everyone hates.
I find it extremely ironic that you worry about scaring people off with practical details, but see no conflict in promoting a party which liberally uses poisoned leftist language. McCarthyism happened, the Cold War happened. Accurate terminology has been turned into boogeyman words.
The average American hears “socialism”, and they think of gulags and breadlines and authoritarianism. I’m not saying that’s an accurate conception, I’m just saying that’s the consequence of a century of anti-left propaganda.
If you’re worried about alienating people, start with your messaging. I fully believe that a socialist party will be substantially more successful if they embrace patriotic, market based, Christian language.
It’s not socialism in the workplace, it’s making every worker a stakeholder. It’s not UBI, it’s an investment in Americans. We’re not sissy bleeding heart libcucks obsessed with handouts, we’re spreading Jesus’ message of feeding the hungry, healing the sick, and embracing immigrants as we were immigrants in Egypt.
If you care about the persuasive content of the message, then care about it. Don’t clutch your pearls when people want their plans to be actual plans because that might scare people off, then push a party using poisoned language.
I don’t oppose the stated goals of the PSL, but you have to realize that, in America at least, socialist vocabulary is more divisive and alienating than sober, pragmatic tactics.
I find it extremely ironic that someone who seems to have such strong opinions on communication is so bad at. You bring up not awful and not unheard of points about using conservative language to draw people to the left. That could’ve been a much more productive discussion.
The biggest reason I never told you what my plan was is because you never asked for it. The initial point I was making was about how money is bad and we don’t need it. Then you attacked my phrasing. You could’ve even briefly corrected my phrasing and then gone on to talk or ask about what the path to get there is. Instead you ranted about what tense I was using and how other economic systems don’t work.
The way you’ve communicated with me makes it seem like your goal is alienating people.
I didn’t know how many more ways I can say the same thing
Even the PSL website outlines solutions which still involve money.
Don’t say things that may lead to swaths of people jumping off metaphorical roofs. Take responsibility for your message, and refine it when problematic. Be precise.
And above all jump down the throat of anyone who doesn’t enunciate a point perfectly, it should be our goal to discourage engagement as much as possible /s
That’s a big stretch for a fucking tense. And when correcting is necessary, it should be done in such a way that actually strengthens the foundation of the point, assuming you agree with the goal. Otherwise what you’re trying to build will never come to fruition.
correcting is necessary, it should be done in such a way that actually strengthens the foundation of the point
Which is what I did when I suggested replacing “ability” with “potential”.
And frankly, I don’t think that point needs to be strengthened right now. I don’t think abandoning money is a valuable goal at this point in time. Once again, money is not the problem, greed and corruption are the problem. Getting rid of money doesn’t solve the problem, it just shuffles and transforms it.
Abandoning money is a goal for the road from socialism to communism, not the road from fascism to socialism. Flooding the dialogue with ill-timed calls to action is more dilutive to building change than critical analysis.
Yes, but that’s not the thing you said that I disagree with:
Replace “ability” with “potential” and I agree with you, but as written this is misleading. It assumes the planning has concluded, and a new system is ready to be implemented. This is not the case.
Either “socialism” refers specifically to the USSR’s plan, in which case we’ve seen that fall to corruption, or it refers to a more general concept, in which case that’s more of an ideology than a plan. At best it’s a general roadmap, but it’s not policy by a mile.
Socialism is not immune to corruption. No matter what system you use, people will find the loopholes and vulnerabilities and blind spots. You’re just trading billionaires for bureaucrats. Even in a direct democracy, they’ll start podcasts to sway public opinion. They’ll steal from library economies, they’ll loaf in spontaneous mutualism.
You cannot eliminate this element, you can only change its form.
If you’re asking what I think the best way forward is, please just ask that from the beginning. My answer might’ve been that I’ve been working with the PSL and think they have a pretty good idea of a socialist America. Instead we’re bickering over the definition of “ability”.
Otherwise, you’re just arguing for the status quo that everyone hates.
I find it extremely ironic that you worry about scaring people off with practical details, but see no conflict in promoting a party which liberally uses poisoned leftist language. McCarthyism happened, the Cold War happened. Accurate terminology has been turned into boogeyman words.
The average American hears “socialism”, and they think of gulags and breadlines and authoritarianism. I’m not saying that’s an accurate conception, I’m just saying that’s the consequence of a century of anti-left propaganda.
If you’re worried about alienating people, start with your messaging. I fully believe that a socialist party will be substantially more successful if they embrace patriotic, market based, Christian language.
It’s not socialism in the workplace, it’s making every worker a stakeholder. It’s not UBI, it’s an investment in Americans. We’re not sissy bleeding heart libcucks obsessed with handouts, we’re spreading Jesus’ message of feeding the hungry, healing the sick, and embracing immigrants as we were immigrants in Egypt.
If you care about the persuasive content of the message, then care about it. Don’t clutch your pearls when people want their plans to be actual plans because that might scare people off, then push a party using poisoned language.
I don’t oppose the stated goals of the PSL, but you have to realize that, in America at least, socialist vocabulary is more divisive and alienating than sober, pragmatic tactics.
I find it extremely ironic that someone who seems to have such strong opinions on communication is so bad at. You bring up not awful and not unheard of points about using conservative language to draw people to the left. That could’ve been a much more productive discussion.
The biggest reason I never told you what my plan was is because you never asked for it. The initial point I was making was about how money is bad and we don’t need it. Then you attacked my phrasing. You could’ve even briefly corrected my phrasing and then gone on to talk or ask about what the path to get there is. Instead you ranted about what tense I was using and how other economic systems don’t work.
The way you’ve communicated with me makes it seem like your goal is alienating people.
I didn’t know how many more ways I can say the same thing Even the PSL website outlines solutions which still involve money.
Don’t say things that may lead to swaths of people jumping off metaphorical roofs. Take responsibility for your message, and refine it when problematic. Be precise.
And above all jump down the throat of anyone who doesn’t enunciate a point perfectly, it should be our goal to discourage engagement as much as possible /s
More like correct those who enunciate point so imperfectly that it becomes a different, harmful point.
That’s a big stretch for a fucking tense. And when correcting is necessary, it should be done in such a way that actually strengthens the foundation of the point, assuming you agree with the goal. Otherwise what you’re trying to build will never come to fruition.
Which is what I did when I suggested replacing “ability” with “potential”.
And frankly, I don’t think that point needs to be strengthened right now. I don’t think abandoning money is a valuable goal at this point in time. Once again, money is not the problem, greed and corruption are the problem. Getting rid of money doesn’t solve the problem, it just shuffles and transforms it.
Abandoning money is a goal for the road from socialism to communism, not the road from fascism to socialism. Flooding the dialogue with ill-timed calls to action is more dilutive to building change than critical analysis.