Message from @sɪᴅɪsɴᴏᴛʜᴇʀᴇ

Discord ID: 531950553580830730


2019-01-07 21:28:08 UTC  

It’s either workers or state owned means of production

2019-01-07 21:28:11 UTC  

Not only workers

2019-01-07 21:28:33 UTC  

However if the economy is has strong state intervention, it is indirectly controlled by the state

2019-01-07 21:28:38 UTC  

Enough so , to be called socialist

2019-01-07 21:29:31 UTC  

Ok, we have different definitions, that's fine. I don't remember what the original point was.

2019-01-07 21:29:39 UTC  

I don't want the US to become venezuela, no one does

2019-01-07 21:29:40 UTC  

If venezeula is socialist or not

2019-01-07 21:29:56 UTC  

ok and we have different definitions of socialism so it's going to stay unanswered in this discussion

2019-01-07 21:29:57 UTC  

that's fine

2019-01-07 21:29:59 UTC  

At best you can call it an unfree cronyism

2019-01-07 21:30:02 UTC  

alright

2019-01-07 21:30:11 UTC  

Btw no one can have different definitions there is only one. Just saying

2019-01-07 21:31:19 UTC  

that's pretty reductive. Socialism is a broad concept. Is there only one definition to nature, to government? Concepts are broad dude, our language doesn't allow for absolutism in definitions

2019-01-07 21:31:30 UTC  

only a sith deals in absolutes lol, my favorite ironic phrase

2019-01-07 21:38:14 UTC  

Well that would be the definition

2019-01-07 21:38:21 UTC  

Accepted by many

2019-01-07 21:38:32 UTC  

The state or worker control of the means of production

2019-01-07 21:39:40 UTC  

when I google socialism I get "a political and economic theory of social organization that advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole." And I accept your definition as *one* definition of socialism, but the part of your definition that talks about a state controlled means of production is not necessarily regulated by the community is it?

2019-01-07 21:40:17 UTC  

so I take issue with the inclusion of totalitarian state run economies I guess, because they are not "socialized" by the community, but rather by the state who may not have the interests of the public at heart

2019-01-07 21:40:30 UTC  

but it goes to my point that socialism has been used in many different ways

2019-01-07 21:41:35 UTC  

That sounds like communism to me

2019-01-07 21:41:36 UTC  

At the start

2019-01-07 21:41:38 UTC  

So I think there's a distinction between a state run economy and socialism, although there's obvious overlap

2019-01-07 21:41:45 UTC  

that's just what I get when I google socialism

2019-01-07 21:41:56 UTC  

A state run economy would be socialist

2019-01-07 21:42:05 UTC  

every definition I can find specifies that the *people* need to be involved somehow

2019-01-07 21:42:13 UTC  

it would be if the people ran the state

2019-01-07 21:42:16 UTC  

you see the difference?

2019-01-07 21:42:20 UTC  

The people run the state

2019-01-07 21:42:32 UTC  

how do you distinct between people and well, people?

2019-01-07 21:42:51 UTC  

haha, between people in charge and otherwise?

2019-01-07 21:42:56 UTC  

A controlled economy is not inherently socialist

2019-01-07 21:43:00 UTC  

you look at whether they have elections

2019-01-07 21:43:05 UTC  

thank you obama lol

2019-01-07 21:43:12 UTC  

A planned economy IS socialist

2019-01-07 21:43:14 UTC  

and whether the elections are fair

2019-01-07 21:43:16 UTC  

no sir

2019-01-07 21:43:18 UTC  

yes

2019-01-07 21:43:20 UTC  

not at all

2019-01-07 21:43:27 UTC  

any planned economy is strictly socialist

2019-01-07 21:43:28 UTC  

Chungus