then a stateless socialist culture will be conquered by opportunistic enemy
states.
Oh sure, that's always a real possibility. Look- a free, democratic society is not going to work unless people want it.
First claim. Contributed effort. Possession ("possession is 9/10th of the law", remember). All of those can be ethically justified, and all of those contribute at least partially to the de-facto property status in our world.
Didn't Lennon-- that is, John Lennon -- say property is 9/10ths of the problem? I disagree with the above, of course. Suppose Mr. Lennon helps write a wildly popular album before the age of 25, so that he can live off the royalties for the rest of his life. I don't really see the effort and sacrifice, which, below you indicate, is a principle that you reject anyway.
Yeah. And having power brakes means less control over your breaking system. And having electric ignition means less control over your engine.
I see these as mistaken analogies, of course (Straw man!). We are -- or at least I am -- talking about control over one's own life; self-determination.
Direct democracy is fine in some circumstances, and problematic in others. Representative democracy has some very, very good things to recommend for it. Just because an individual has less direct control, doesn't mean that the system is bad.
OK. Again, though, why can't we have a representative democracy in the work place? Many market socialists advocate pay in accordance to output (rather than effort). The same institutions and structures are in place, but people vote for their bosses and managers. There's popular referenda for new company rules, etc. You can have everything you want: markets, output in effort, a degree of authoritarian and control (because a special class of people would be empowered to make most decisions), and so on. The only thing that's removed is property ownership- always a nagging problem (and still lacking proper justification).
To paraphrase Churchill, capitalism is the most inefficient system, except for all others. Show me the money -- prove to me that purely socialist system can be efficient and competitive while also being more democratic -- and I will be with you. i would very much like proof by example here, I would like to see how real socialist cultures can prosper and match the efficiency of the capitalist neighbors.
I've offered the Spanish anarchists and Mondragon. South End Press is a small publishing cooperative located in Boston. It's performed quite admirably over the years.
Sacrifice of a measure of fairness in exchange for tremendous gain in efficiency.
Yes, we do! We always run cost-benefit analysis. The question is not if, but what utility function we employ.
Sure, but not in the dollar sesne I'm talking about. If we want to use the Utilitarian calculations of, say, Singer, whom I quoted approvingly in our discussion of animal rights, then the business will most assuredly get shut down. But that moral calculus runs opposes to the dollars and cents(lessness) of market valuations.
Allow me to introduce a complementary moral principle: individuals ought to have control over policy in proportion to their contribution (where pay counts against contribution, and risk counts towards it).
I've already stated my reasons for rejecting such a principle on moral grounds (it's arbitrary). I think contributions would be extremely difficult to measure, perhaps even more so than effort and sacrifice. I'm talking about marginal product of labor.
No contribution can be viewed in isolation. Your output during your eigth our of work depends, in part, on hours 1 through 7. More critical, your contributions depend on what others are doing. Let me try to give a silly example:
Suppose we play basketball against each other for one hour, and you win by a score 25 to 20. Suppose the next day you play Malachi, and win 27 to 25. At the end of the week we decide that Malachi and I will both play against you simultaneously. Suppose the score is 35 to 10. Just because we're sadists, a third person joins our team, and we win 45-0.
Do we reward on the basis of production? Perhaps we can use a waited scale of points, assists, rebounds, and so on. Measuring defense would be difficult, though. Self-interested incentives may create less than optimal outcomes, too. Why should I defend if the money comes from scoring? How do we gauge the contribution of that second or third person?
By the same token, if Becky builds a kitchenette herself, she should have more control over it, even though everyone in her area is affected by the kitchenette's presence equally.
Does she build in in the workplace or her home? And I agree she ought to have nearly full control if it's in her home. The way I choose to comb my hair is pretty much nobody's business, so I have dictatorial control. The car I drive is another matter. My choice to murder someone still another (the victim's life is affected in such a way that she as veto power).
I was just curious about your comment on Rawls. Not worth exploring in great detail here, but I think the dismissal as "crap" is slightly offensive (Rawls, after all, is nearly single-handedly responsible for reinvigorating political philosophy in the 20th century).
if you work harder, you can gain extra value either gby getting raise (if your employer is not rock-dumb), or improving your resume; you can also get experience which will help you get more money when you find a better employer. No matter which way you slice it, extra effort does generally result in a measure of extra reward.
Market relations has me working with the least possible effort for the greatest possible pay; my employer seeks exactly the opposite. I'm tiring so I can't go into detail here.
As for a third way between markets and central planning, it's not neccessary to socialism (though it is the model I'm defending here. Greater detail can be found, again, on the parecon site (if you're looking for methods of allocation, production, consumption, etc). My defense here, though maybe half-hearted, is considerably less committed than actual belief in my heart of hearts. That is to say, I'm undecided, but don't mind defending it on a public forum to gain a better understanding.