Francesca R
Girl
Well yes, and assorted versions of: "If I owe the bank a thousand dollars, it's my problem, but if I owe them two hundred million, it's theirs"
This would be a bit easier if people spent less time insisting certain things are "not socialism" because socialist is presumably a dirty word and we can't embrace that.
More to the point, an obvious false demarcation is made when one rattles off a list of things they think a state should do via compulsion which are absolutely fine because they're "not socialism", only to halt at the end of their preferred list and declare that any further state encroachment into society's affairs is obviously off-limits because for some weird reason everything from there on suddenly is socialist.
If socialism was placed on the banned words list then folks would have to use another descriptor and maybe have to be a bit more articulate about why one thing is justified and another is not
I'm fine with calling state-provided military defence of a border socialism. Also streets, police, prisons, mandatory income redistribution via tax and transfer, universal health insurance . . . . as well as nationalised cinemas, government run chocolate shops and state farms.
Then one could have a rational debate about which of these are good ideas and which are bad.
"Because that one is socialism and that one is not" isn't a proper reason if it appeals in circular motion to a fairly arbitrary demarcation.
Robert Nozick was at least fairly consistent about this in Anarchy State and Utopia (Warning--the review is ten years old!) IIRC, and did not attempt to wave a "not socialism" magic wand at police/military in order to justify their state funded existence (which he supports). However he did have to make up some weird other intellectual work-around along the lines of people who want private armies are a nuisance so they owe compensation to everyone else which can be legitimately raised as tax. Or something.
This would be a bit easier if people spent less time insisting certain things are "not socialism" because socialist is presumably a dirty word and we can't embrace that.
More to the point, an obvious false demarcation is made when one rattles off a list of things they think a state should do via compulsion which are absolutely fine because they're "not socialism", only to halt at the end of their preferred list and declare that any further state encroachment into society's affairs is obviously off-limits because for some weird reason everything from there on suddenly is socialist.
If socialism was placed on the banned words list then folks would have to use another descriptor and maybe have to be a bit more articulate about why one thing is justified and another is not
. . . . But I did just describe the police in these terms and I don't think the attribution was faulty in any senseCollectivizing the means of production under state control and dictating the production goals.
The term isn't "needed" to declare good from bad, because it rather fails to do this.
It's useful to describe a mode of production is all. The police service supplies (produces output of) protection of citizens. It does this whether they choose it or not. The state owns the means of production (the resource that generates the output). Not qualitatively different from any socialist endeavour. May have differing merit from many others though.
And it is qualitatively different from self-policing or some kind of voluntary opt-in policing market
Everything government does aims to provide a service of some sort. If socialism is just means "government" why not just call it the latter and avoid confusion. Originally the term Socialism was more specific and dealt with social and\or government ownership of capital goods. To me this seems different enough to warrant a specific term.
Hmmm, well, "Capitalism," makes sense in that the control and orientation of the economic ideology revolves around capital investments. Socialism, however isn't as specific and seems to wander astray when you apply the same logic and call it social/public control and orientation of the economy. Socialism, as I'm most familiar with it seems much more of an economic orientation recognizing worker administration and control of production and would seem to be more appropriate to call it something like "Laborism" (which is defined as: "the dominance of the working classes").
Capitalism, socialism... these don't mean what they do in a global, information age, interconnected 2021 that they did in Napoleonic Europe when the terms took on the meanings they have.