jeffowski, (edited )
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar
ErikUden,
@ErikUden@mastodon.de avatar

Class consciousness means realizing that you're always three likely but unlucky events away from living on the streets but never three lucky events away from being a billionaire.

@jeffowski

jaycee,
@jaycee@toot.community avatar

@jeffowski to Braverman that’s a lifestyle choice! We are governed by cruel fascists!

gavinisdie,
@gavinisdie@masto.ai avatar

@jeffowski im surprised attacks against government and corporations aren't more common

amiserabilist,
@amiserabilist@med-mastodon.com avatar
TheCrossCulturalNerd,

@jeffowski One would think this wouldn't hold up in court, especially since there were some serious extenuating circumstances. But then if he can't pay for a lawyer...

Heartbreaking.

TheCrossCulturalNerd,

: We take a detour to deal with a Forsworn incursion in the Rift and find far more than Reachmen. (Sorry this is late!)

https://youtu.be/aQwjC6x48kI

justinerickson,

@jeffowski I don’t buy this for multiple reasons. First and foremost, workman’s comp is exactly for this scenario and if this really happened, he has every ground to win a case and will get back on his feet. If he was self employed… he only has himself to blame for not considering this risk.

Second of all, I want to know what state this took place in because in my state, the landlord can’t evict anyone because of missed rent within 3 months, and usually it takes 6.

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@justinerickson — you have to have money to get a lawyer. It takes money to keep a case going. One of the main tactics is to draw proceedings out and rack up lawyers bills. Even if the company has workman’s comp, many of those companies will fight you tooth and nail for any compensation and they interfere with medical care recommendations by doctors or REQUIRE you to go to THEIR doctor for evaluation and treatment. Your comment demonstrated a major naivety of the situation.

justinerickson,

@jeffowski
Your response tells me it is futile and unproductive to continue to engage you. You want to believe what you want to believe and I’m sure you feel the same about me. Good luck blaming billionaires for some random incident that they have nothing to do with. You think some random guy that doesn’t work for Elon Musk or any billionaire is some victim of billionaires. That seems to be rather futile emotional response to me.

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@justinerickson -- I've been through your pinned posts. You are a disgusting and vile person.
You are either an incel or someone in a sad marriage that equates Hamas with Democrats, how women are supposed to make their husbands unhappy, and you dally with the "birds aren't real" bullshit. You're not at all the audience I care about and you're the EXACT person we fucking hate. So you go ahead and believe your bullshit and stop any progress or change because you benefit from the status quo.

justinerickson,

@jeffowski

wow. You are full of bigoted hatred and blind arrogance. No wonder you are so lost.

You should try using your brain before your emotions.

Cognitive dissonance is a hell of a drug and worthy of a mute.

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@justinerickson -- Cognitive Dissonance is posting Alpha Male bullshit and complaining that you can't get laid or your wife hates you.
I'm not the one posting that, you are. It informs EVERYONE that you have major white privilege with a major dose of white fragility along with it.
The reason you don't believe anything anyone is saying about the world is because it means you'll have to re-evaluate all of your beliefs and that's hard when those beliefs support your way of life while others suffer.

Buster,
@Buster@mastodon.scot avatar

@jeffowski yet a certain MP would say it was his choice. This country is a joke. Poor man

sellathechemist,
@sellathechemist@mastodon.social avatar

@jeffowski That can't be right. The Home Secretary in His Majesty's Government reckons it's a life-style choice.

HappyHeathen,

@jeffowski There's a landlord who needs to be dispossessed by conflagration and that no one's done it speaks volumes about Amerikins.

housepanther,

@jeffowski I'm one or two paychecks away from it myself. One catastrophe away.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jeffowski Good post, not related to billionairs, but otherwise a good post I wish more people understood.

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@freemo — the existence and allowance of billionaires fall hand in hand with homelessness and hunger.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jeffowski Incorrect, though it is a common perspective and I understand that you believe thqt to be the case.

That isnt to say that billionairs do no wrong, they do, right along with people at any income level.

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@freemo — it is a much greater moral failing of a billionaire not using that power to feed and house people than a worker going paycheck to paycheck not volunteering.

Voltaire: "Everyone is guilty of all the good they did not do."

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jeffowski

On average richer people donate a much larger percentage of their ownings to help the poor that middle-class well off people, but a pretty big margin.

So yes, and they do donate more, statistically speaking. The problem is not wholly theirs to bear however.

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@freemo — I think someone famous once said that with great power comes great responsibility.
Being a billionaire would grant the vast majority of the population an unimaginable power to change lives with money alone.
Again, it’s always a white Northern European guy that is defending the status quo because they are insulated from the problems incurred by their morally bankrupt views and philosophy.
.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jeffowski

> Again, it’s always a white Northern European guy that is defending the status quo because they are insulated from the problems incurred by their morally bankrupt views and philosophy.

Oh, who is that? I am not white (im native american), and I'm not norther European or even European... Thanks for that racist remark though, really shows your true colors.

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@freemo — the attitude of the colonizer from a native person? Just shows you have affluence truly corrupts.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jeffowski

Well I guess thats one way to respond to you finding out your comment was racist nonsense.. just double down on it.

Welcome to the mute list.

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@freemo — you defend billionaires. Go suck off Elon Musk.

justinerickson,

@jeffowski @freemo the church of Jeff doesn’t understand why envy is a sin.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@justinerickson

Usually when someone starts spewing racist garbage in response to an otherwise polite difference of opinions its a pretty good indication that "understanding" is really one of their strong suits.

@jeffowski

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@freemo @justinerickson — you live in the Netherlands where they accept the highest wealth disparity on the planet of any nation. You argue points of the very regular Germans, Dutch, Danish collective that fight against whatever message is being expressed. Can’t help it if they fit a very specific stereotype and keep representing as such. See my feed. I talk about this phenomenon regularly.

Selena,

@jeffowski
Just a reminder to not let trolls get under your skin:
https://youtu.be/3zrnIBZFqD0?si=dBTJeiVYY1dZeueA

Gbudd,

@freemo @jeffowski

It looks kind of flat to me (see graph 11 in https://www.philanthropyroundtable.org/almanac/statistics-on-u-s-generosity/ ), perhaps the numbers would be different if the data were more granular at higher income levels but 2-3% seems to be the number above ~ 50k/yr in the us.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@Gbudd

sadly I dont have anything more recent on hand, but attached is the actual data normalized properly for AGI and only looking at individuals, not corporations. AS you can see super wealthy contribute more than double, in terms of % of income, than the well-to-do middle class.

@jeffowski

Gbudd,

@freemo @jeffowski

Thanks, good to know. The graph I had didn’t go that high.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@Gbudd

Yea no worries.

@jeffowski

Annaspanner,

@Gbudd @freemo @jeffowski As it should be! They’re sitting on BILLIONS of dollars! They should be giving away 90% of it, not 10%! Smh

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar
Annaspanner,

@Gbudd @freemo @jeffowski Exactly this. The lucky middle class (me) mostly have no idea what it’s like to be properly poor. The stress that comes with that - with not knowing when the next crisis is coming that could make you homeless again? I can’t imagine it. Universal basic income now, no billionaires now.

Rhaedas,
Rhaedas avatar

@freemo $10m and up is a huge range though. Wonder how distributed a further breakdown would show that single average number to be. That seems to be the IRS's cutoff of income bracketing as well, so probably no way to expand it more.

The question is why there is a gap and then apparent climb in percentage, and I imagine it's a combination of cost of living needs vs. donating as well the definite advantage of giving away a maximum tax deductible amount when one has it to give to reduce tax burden overall.

@jeffowski @Gbudd

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@Rhaedas

The trend does continue higher up the range last I looked at this a few years back.

We can only speculate ont he reason. but cost of living makes little sense since the lower bracket is quite well-to-do. Doiing it for tax purposes would in almost all cases cost you more than you get back, so that makes little sense in most cases too.

For anyone who has friend circles who are rich, as I do, it seems obvious why,. rich people are generally creators and doers, they see problems, like poverty, and they want to fix it. Its quite common for them to be involved in the process well beyond the money

@jeffowski @Gbudd

paulschoe,
@paulschoe@mastodon.world avatar

Dat blijkt in Nederland niet uit collectes. Collectanten halen in wijken met een lagere welstand veelal aanzienlijk meer op per huishouden dan in welvarender wijken.

@freemo @jeffowski

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@paulschoe @jeffowski

You are refering to door--to-door collections, not overall donations. Also I wasnt talking specifically of the Netherlands but rather world-wide statistics. I dont know the numbers specific tot he Netherlands.

AdrianRiskin,

@freemo @jeffowski Everything they have is stolen. What difference does it make if they give some of it back to their victims?

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@AdrianRiskin

Also not true.. i am sensing some pretty fundemental misunderstanding of how wealth works. It sounds like you probably beleive the common fallacy that wealth is a zero sum game. That someone can only have wealth by taking it from someone else.

@jeffowski

AdrianRiskin,

@freemo @jeffowski Nope. I understand wealth perfectly well. Wealth is capital, that is productive property to some people are denied access, private property. Capital earns money through the forcible appropriation of other people's labor. Which is why property is theft, as is wealth.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@AdrianRiskin

You say you understand it, then your explanation proves you dont. Since you dont seem willing to learn ill just leave it there. Thanks for the conversation, best of luck to you.

@jeffowski

AdrianRiskin,

@freemo @jeffowski

You can't have billionaires without capitalism. Billionaires imply capitalism.

You can't have capitalism without enclosure of the commons. Capitalism implies enclosure.

You can't have enclosure without homelessness. Enclosure implies homelessness.

Therefore billionaires imply homelessness.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@AdrianRiskin

Wrong on literally all accounts…

You can’t have billionaires without capitalism. Billionaires imply capitalism.

you can have billionaires without capitalism, you only need money to have billionaires and simply having money is not enough to qualify as a capitalism.

Stalin was estimated to be worth 7.5 trillion in todays money, and that was a communistic society.

You can’t have capitalism without enclosure of the commons. Capitalism implies enclosure.

There is also no requirement for one to engage in closure of the commons for capitalism. No capitalism doesnt imply closure. One can have closure of the commons both with and without capitalism. Although generally some degree of this is a good thing anyway, so the fact that it is common both in capitalism and non-capitalism is a good thing.

You can’t have enclosure without homelessness. Enclosure implies homelessness.

You absolutely can. It is entierly possible to have some closure of the commons and still eliminate homelessness. Its also entirely possible to have no closure of the commons and still have homelessness. Having common ground doesnt necessarily mean you have the means to build a home (the resources or ability).

@jeffowski

AdrianRiskin,

@freemo @jeffowski Soviet Russia was a capitalist society. There are no billionaires without capitalism.

Without enclosure there's no reliable labor force to exploit, so no capitalism. This is why there has never in history been a capitalist economy without enclosure. The fact that there can be enclosure without capitalism is a non sequitur. You're confusing my claim with its converse.

If there's no homelessness then the commons aren't enclosed. Again the argument is historical. There has never been an economy with enclosed commons that failed to have homelessness.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@AdrianRiskin

> Soviet Russia was a capitalist society. There are no billionaires without capitalism.

Again, wrong. You only need money, not capitalism, for billionairs.

> Without enclosure there's no reliable labor force to exploit, so no capitalism. This is why there has never in history been a capitalist economy without enclosure. The fact that there can be enclosure without capitalism is a non sequitur. You're confusing my claim with its converse.

Either you really dont understand what enclosure of the commons means or you dont understand what capitalism means.

For starters there has never been any form of government that didnt have some degree of enclosure of the commons, capitalism or otherwise.

Second even if you didnt have a closer of the common, you'd still need a labour force. In fact the idea that you wouldnt seems highly ignorant of even the most basic considerations, as if access to land were the only reason people work.

@jeffowski

AdrianRiskin,

@freemo @jeffowski Great. Why don't you tell me what you think capitalism is. Tell me in a way that shows that Soviet Russia was not capitalist

Why don't you tell me what enclosure of the commons is, then. Also, the fact that non-capitalists may enclose the commons is irrelevant. I'm only claiming that capitalists must enclose Capitalism implies enclosure. The fact that the converse is occasionally true is irrelevant.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@AdrianRiskin

I shouldnt need to tell you, these terms are well defined. So it isnt something I or you get to have an opinion on.

Capitalism is where both the means and distribution of production can be privately owned, and free-markets are enforced.

There is of course some room for interpritation of what “free market” means, but generally its accepted as either unregulated, or regulated to ensure all players have equal opportunity in negotiating trade.

Since soviet russia had the means of production as state-owned it is not by definition a capitalism.

I’m only claiming that capitalists must enclose Capitalism implies enclosure. The fact that the converse is occasionally true is irrelevant.

Still not true by the definition of capitalism. It is enclosed in all societies to some degree whether capitalist or not because it is a good thing for society, something we generally all agree on. But no there is nothing inherent about capitalism that would require it. Land ownership is not a requirement of capitalism by definition.

@jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

Since 1980, Bowley's Law is broken, and wealth inequality increases.

This is because business owners have been creating less value, and simply taking more as rentiers. It is a business trend of cost cutting, rather than serving the market better. It starves the flow of circulating currency, and often takes the form of reducing labor costs. Lower wages. More dividends.

Massive hoards undermine the entire economic system if they don't ever get spent.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

Wealth inequality is not an issue, what is an issue is the quality of life of those with nothing. This difference is huge.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski One doesn't get to be a ten-millionaire without being a capitalist business manager. But one doesn't get to be a hundred millionaire without also being a feudalist rentier as well. And that line is easily crossed, simply by deciding to take business revenues as the owner share, rather than paying it out as the labor share.

Once one decides that the employees should struggle and stress, what does it matter how much is doled out to them in charity?

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

One doesn’t get to be a ten-millionaire without being a capitalist business manager.

No only is this not true, we have plenty of counter examples. The dictators that have run many of the worlds most oppressive non-capitalist countries have been far richer than event he richest billionairs.

Stalin was massively rich, Kim Jong as well. Neither of whom did so through capitalism.

It is quite clear capitalism is not needed, nor the most effective way to get insanely rich.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski Whether that business revenue is more rightly paid out to the owners or the laborers is a matter for moral debate, but as far as the current laws go, the owners and managers seem to be doing the bare minimum for compliance, if that. Naturally, this fosters resentment among the workers that have no other meaningful recourse, especially with union busting and anti-welfare rhetoric.

As it is, the bottom end of the middle class is crumbling into poverty.

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski Approaching from a math-based macroeconomic analysis, there would be zero negative effects from simply murdering all rentiers and seizing their property for distribution. And all those billionaires out there are mostly rentier, if they even have any capitalist left in them.

So if they donate a greater percentage of their income than others, it still falls short of the ideal, which is to give up 100% of all economic rents.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

> Approaching from a math-based macroeconomic analysis, there would be zero negative effects from simply murdering all rentiers and seizing their property for distribution. And all those billionaires out there are mostly rentier, if they even have any capitalist left in them.

Yea thats absolute nonsense. The fallout from that would be quite noticable.

> So if they donate a greater percentage of their income than others, it still falls short of the ideal, which is to give up 100% of all economic rents.

Well I'm glad your not in charge with that sort of horrificly incorrect assumptions.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski Morally, yes, that would be horrid. And there would likely be some violent upheaval in the redistribution. But as far as the economics go, in the long run, the market would not miss them even a tiny bit. They extract value; they do not add it. For the rentiers, it really is a zero-sum game.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

YEa thats just wrong sorry. The market would be greatly impacted as well, as would the economy.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski I have no problem with capitalist business managers. Take the value you add to the market and be well. But the instant they cross over to rent-seeker and start taking more than they personally add, fuck 'em.

Rent-seeking is a curse on this planet, and that is what the anecdotal OP was illustrating. Fuck that landlord, and every other landlord that takes more in rent than the value they provide to tenants. (That's not zero--landlording can be good business.)

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

And i have no issue with landlords so long as they are operating within a free-market. If as you say they are pulling out more money than they provide in value then the markets arent free, thats not the landlors fault.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski So you see no problem with sent-seeking behavior?

Rentiers distort the pricing signals that free markets rely upon. The more rentiers you have, and the longer they operate without counterbalances, the less that the observable prices can be trusted to clear the market.

What is a good clearing target for housing markets? Probably 5% vacancies and no homelessness.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

There are plenty of issues with landlords and the pricing around renting. Those issues are not the fault of the landlords, but rather the fault of markets that are not free.

As you say if the "pricing signals" can be distorted and the market along with it. Then you dont have a free market.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

mayonesa,

@freemo @log @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

Taxes alone trash the idea of a free market, but the regulatory environment is a huge mess too.

Then add in suicidal ideas like rent control and you get a real mess.

Reduce costs to landlords and you reduce costs to renters.

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski If we don't have a free market, it doesn't do anyone any good to live in a hypothetical as though we did.

You, and other non-fictional persons, live in the world that exists. And the landlords that exist chose to price their units to extract market value that other people have created. They have responsibility proportional to the number of units they own.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

If we don’t have a free market, it doesn’t do anyone any good to live in a hypothetical as though we did.

Yup thats what I said, free markets are essential for a functioning society. If you dont have them you wont have a functioning society.

You, and other non-fictional persons, live in the world that exists. And the landlords that exist chose to price their units to extract market value that other people have created. They have responsibility proportional to the number of units they own.

No, they extract value from the resources they have created (the money to be able to build, maintain, upgrade and improve the building, and the land). In a free market there is balance and the value they create by doign so is the value they create.

If your hypothesis is true and landlords are taking more money than the value they provide then you need to fix the market so it is a free market. Expecting people to just pretend the market isnt brokent and charge less than the market value is absurdist and as you point out, not in line with reality.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski We may test my hypothesis by eliminating rent-seekers (it might not be necessary to kill them), and then seeing whether the result is improved or not.

I think you may be treating the term "free market" as a "no true Scotsman". I don't need to create one, as I don't need it to exist to make my hypotheses line up with reality. You want it? You create it.

The world that is could start fighting rent-seekers instead of paying them.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

If the rent seekers provided so little value you would have gotten rid of them already... but feel free to prove me wrong... go ahead, get rid of them, ill wait, bet you cant cause their vital ::watches as you do it::

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski Two economists were walking down the street. They see a $100 note lying on the pavement. Both step over it and continue on their way.

One says, "If that were a real $100 note..."

The other finishes, "...someone would have picked it up already!"

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski Rent-seekers are economic parasites. If an animal had intestinal parasites, I would give it a dewormer and not cry for the worms.

The parasitic lifestyle is very attractive. One gets to live without doing a lot of inconvenient work. And a lot of people do try to get away with doing as little work as possible. Toil has little meaning without leisure, after all.

The rentier has as much meaning to me as a mosquito, or a guinea worm. Useless.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

Yes you made clear your bias and hate already.. your wrong IMO of course, but no need to repeat your bias.

If you think being a landlord is free money with no work then clearly you dont understand what it takes to be a landlord.

I have a few properties. The reason I refuse to rent out any of them is because the money made is far too little for the amount of work it would take. Makes more sense for me to just let them sit empty until I or someone I know needs it.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski I suspected. Now you have confirmed.

I know what is required to make a housing unit fit for rental. What you are saying is that you value your own time too highly for any mere tenant to be able to afford the wage rate it would require to sully your hands with the labor.

Land property speculation is even less worthy in my estimation than landlording.

Sell your empty units, please. At least contract a property management company to rent on your behalf.

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski If you're intent on being a bloated tick on the corpus of the productive economy, at least own up to it. You're a parasite upon those who do actually productive labor, and they therefore resent you for it. And that is partly because some wish they could be in your place. There's no point in running a public relations campaign. Suck your blood, and then drop off before you explode, and lay some eggs.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

Ha... ive done more good for this economy than you could ever hope for.. I have taken in homeless people on abotu a dozen occasions, in some cases paid for their college, given them room and board for years. I feed the homless every weekend I can, I have generated huge quantities of wealth, much of which i have given away for free (either as money or as resources)...

I will take what i have done to this keyboard warrior nonsense any day of the week.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

jeffowski,
@jeffowski@mastodon.world avatar

@freemo @log @AdrianRiskin -- You make charitable actions to help the homeless as you state, but you keep upholding the systems that make the homeless because you still benefit from those systems.
I don't know how to show you how morally bankrupt that really is. You find ways to placate you conscience but you won't change the real issues for fear of losing your wealth. Greedy.
It's funny that I wasn't the only one to see it, just the first.

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski Parasitism plus altruism does not equal symbiosis. They are orthogonal. Lauds for the good you have done. Curses for the bad. Same as for everyone else.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

Whatever you gotta tell yourself man.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

You sit there calling names and blaming everyone that isnt you or your group... meanwhile im the only one out there donating my time, money, knowledge, and resources to actually make things better day after day...

Yea im gonna sleep good tonight.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski Is the money you spend the fruit of your own labor? What do you do to generate value in the economy. What do you bring to market?

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

Thats a lot of words to agree with me :)

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

mayonesa,

@log @freemo @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

"And then what?"

And then nothing gets maintained until someone owns it again.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@mayonesa

Its even worse than that.. building dont get built to begin with. Lets face it if your average worker was responsible enough to manage getting a building built they probably wouldnt need a landlord to begin with.

@log @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

log,
@log@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

@freemo @mayonesa @AdrianRiskin @jeffowski Do not conflate "being responsible" with "having money". Most of the people who rent do so because their wages are too low or too inconstant to build a home to code before saving up a fund over their entire working career.

If the tenants couldn't afford the housing unit, the landlords couldn't make a profit.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

Having low or inconsistent wages is itself the result of irresponsibility in some sense.. Though to be clear i dont mean it the way it sounds. In the sense that many of these people were just raised with poor ideas and poor oppertunities to learn how to be responsible. It isnt willful all the time.

But it usually stems from this anti-capital sillyness. They stub their noses at successful people and laugh at their advice (like not spending money on frivolous things)... Those same people if they had devoted their free time to aquiring marketable skills they wouldnt be low-income to begin with. And to be fair i know it sounds like im blaming them, I'm not... because school and access to education costs money they dont have, so I get those difficulties (and generally encourage social programs to remedy it).. but the thing is, its not the land lord to blame, its usually some combination of either lack of opportunity for them to acquire skills, or a lack of willingness to pursue it. Usually some combination of the two.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@log

There are plenty of issues regarding wealth and equal oppertunities. Companies are under no obligation to pay out its extras to its employees. But doing so to some extent is often int he best interest of the company.

@AdrianRiskin @jeffowski

jlou,

@freemo @jeffowski
3 defining aspects of capitalism

  1. Private ownership
  2. Employer-employee relationships
  3. Markets

This is just a general definition based on how people use the term informed by historical criticisms.

What is seen as capitalism will still depend on the particular analysis of capitalism. An analysis focused on workplace democracy would not see the Soviet Union as non-capitalist because it did not have universal workers' self-management

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jlou

I prefer to stick with the accepted definition than to try to make up our own.

Employer-employee relationship is not remotely unique to capitalism, and markets in general can exist in non-capitalist countries, it is not wholly unique to capitalism. what defines capitalism is free market, not simply having a market. Even private ownership is only capitalism when it is private ownership of the means of production. Being able to own a pocket watch doesnt make something capitalist.

@jeffowski

jlou,

@freemo @jeffowski I meant ownership of the means of production.

Employer-employee relationship is definitely a defining element of capitalism. Many critics of capitalism such as the classical laborists centered their criticism on wage labor (employer-employee relationship). Many of the modern critiques of capitalism center on workplace authoritarianism and the distribution of a firm's whole product.

Would you consider an economy where all firms were democratic worker coops capitalism?

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jlou

Employer-employee relationships is the norm in both capitalist and non-capitalist society. You still have jobs in non-capitalist economies and if you have a job there is an employee employer relationship. It just so happens sometimes the employer is the government or a co-op.

@jeffowski

jlou,

@freemo @jeffowski Nah a democratic worker coop is joint self-employment not employer-employee relationship

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jlou

Thats not in line with any of the normal language used. Someone owning the companyt hey work for along side other people doesnt stop that entity from being an employer.

All the companies I run have a stock-options program where my employees are part owners int he company. Despite the fact that they are owners there is still the same employee-employer relationship.

@jeffowski

jlou,

@freemo @jeffowski Stock options are different from the kind of control rights one gets in a worker coop because they are attached to the functional role of working in the firm. You can still get stock options in a worker coop as non-voting preferred shares

The classical laborists were critiquing was having an alien legal party appropriate the positive and negative product that workers are de facto responsible for. I don't think the language we use is relevant to the theory

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jlou

Would you consider an economy where all firms were democratic worker coops capitalism?

It may be, it may not. As long as people have the options to privately own means of production, then its capitalism. If no one exercised that right and everyone choose to only operate as co-ops as long as they have the option then it is still capitalism.

@jeffowski

jlou,

@freemo @jeffowski There is a misunderstanding of how the property and contract system works here. Capital ownership does not determine firmhood. The employer gets those rights in the employer-employee contract. Capital only increases bargaining power to get favorable market contracts.

Workplace democracy is actually compatible with private ownership of the means of production. A worker coop can rent capital.

In such an economy, the employment contract is abolished

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jlou

Exactly, co-op based systems are still entierly allowed within capitalist system, but there is still an employee-employer relationship even if you are part of a co-op.

@jeffowski

jlou,

@freemo @jeffowski If the employed and employing legal party is the same, it is reasonable to think of that as joint self-employment.

I will use the terminology the way you do.

In an economic democracy, workers' inalienable right to workplace democracy and to appropriate the positive and negative fruits of their labor is recognized. A right is inalienable when it cannot be given up even with consent. In an economic democracy, there is no legal mechanism for creating a non-democratic firm

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@jlou

> If the employed and employing legal party is the same, it is reasonable to think of that as joint self-employment

Its not the same in a co-op.. The employed is you, as an individual. The employee is a large collection of people of whom you are only a small voice. Sure if you are the sole owner and employed you could make that argument. But in a co-op the collective is hardlyt he same as the individual. So you still have a employeer (the whole governing body) and the employed (you) in a relationship you may or may not like.

@jeffowski

jlou,

@freemo @jeffowski The terminology isn't that important.

In the democratic worker coop economy, I mentioned there is no way to create a non-democratic non-coop firm. Would you consider such a system capitalism where it isn't possible to have someone work in a company without getting control rights over management?

mayonesa,

@freemo @jlou @jeffowski

Even in the most anarchic or Communist system, employer-employee relationships exist.

freemo,
@freemo@qoto.org avatar

@mayonesa

Yup, thats my point. it is hardly unique to capitalism.

@jlou @jeffowski

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