Subject: Yeah, you seeing why I didn't join in with the conversation lower down the thread? =]
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Posted on: 2022-08-31 10:17:08 UTC

One of the key failings of capitalism is in forgetting that money, as we know it and in all its various forms, is a subjective and arbitrary unit measure of worth and not something of worth itself. Another is in the fundamental abstraction of finance and its dogma of constant quarterly growth from what trade actually is, which is to say, the movement of goods and services from one party to another; the fast-fashion textile industry, for instance, forces Bangladeshi workers into hideous conditions for slave wages to create clothes in such vast quantities that they end up dumped in a landfill having never been worn. The total uncoupling of supply from demand is what has directly led to the climate crisis we now face, as well as literally every other kind of crisis. It is the direct, one-to-one conversion of resources into waste.

Does this make even the slightest bit of sense from a human perspective? Of course not! But from a capitalist perspective, and I feel it vital to differentiate the two, production is just a number, and if the number is bigger that means the business is better. Capitalist ideology demands that this be so, you see, because if the business was not in fact better, then how would it be producing more things? It does not matter if the production is waste. The Number Went Up. The Line Went Up. Capitalism has therefore succeeded. I use the garment industry as an example but it applies to every single industry, and yet there are still shortages whenever actual human need gets in the way of what The Line That Goes Up has decided the world needs.

Capitalism is the delegation of social responsibility and morality to an algorithm. Bezos and his ilk know this. This is why the present plan for people like him and Musk and the others is to be the Cool Billionaire, doing space stuff and electric cars and so forth. I consider it analogous to a deadbeat dad who spoils his kids every visitation to make them hate their mum while never paying a lick of child support. One need only look at the Gates Foundation forcing Oxford University medical researchers to patent their CoVid-19 vaccine through AstraZeneca rather than make it open-source, as was initially the plan. No, philanthropy as exemplified by capitalism is a myth. The owner-class is incapable of actual philanthropy; to truly love their fellow human being would require them to improve their material conditions at their own serious expense, i.e. giving away a portion of their wealth which would genuinely impact how they live their lives. For context, if Bezos gave 99% of his net worth away today, he would still be a billionaire. But all this is moot, because all this is anathema to capitalist ideology. If you give money away, you are losing at capitalism because your line is going up less; thus "philanthropy" and charity for the owner-class is more about diversifying their portfolio of interests rather than benefiting humanity as a whole. Returning to the Gates Foundation example, the Oxford CoVid-19 vaccine researchers were part of Oxford University, which receives large amounts of money from the Gates Foundation. The Foundation itself also invests the money it has -- and wouldn't you know it, it has a considerable stake in pharmaceuticals company AstraZeneca! A vaccine against a deadly plague that was intended to be free and open-source was instead forced behind a paywall by pressure from the Gates Foundation, who threatened to withdraw their funding from Oxford University if the vaccine against an incredibly deadly pandemic virus was not made the property of a pharma company in which the Foundation had invested heavily. This is what the owner-class considers philanthropy. And this is the foundation of Bill Gates, who is constantly held up as a philanthropist.

It is therefore my considered opinion that billionaires should be forcibly divested of everything they have and that the stolen wealth be returned to society. The billionaires in question -- of which there are approaching three thousand around the world -- may complain that such a thing is unfair. They are wrong. Not only is it fair, it is merciful. The downtrodden and dispossessed will rise up and depose the capitalist ideologues that have desecrated our planet in the name of nothing more than avarice. The victims of settler colonialism, of capitalism, of the autocracy of the owner-class capitalist in the little fiefdom called their business: they bay for these people to be driven from their gated compounds and subjected to the justice of the mob. For all that I disagree, I still empathise with that position. Their palaces are built on foundations of innumerable corpses, and justice must be done in the memory of all the dead whose bodies greased the wheels of alleged progress. I only want redress from the owner-class and its loathsome inhabitants; they may thank their lucky stars that I and others like me do not want vengeance.

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Well if you weren't seeing why before, you probably are now. =]

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