- 01 Apr 2019 16:20
#14996930
Yes, it has. It got cause and effect backwards, as Jevons showed.
No. You are again just factually incorrect. The wages of labor are its product. Sometimes that is enough to sustain the worker, sometimes it isn’t; sometimes it is more than enough. But none of those has anything to do with “socially necessary” things or the “sustainability” of labor. Market wages are determined by the Law of Rent, and have nothing to do with what the worker needs in order to live and work another day.
See? Just like capitalists, socialists refuse to know the difference between owning something you have contributed – capital -- and owning something of which you only deprive others, and demand that they pay you merely for your PERMISSION to use, like land.
Wrong again. Wages are determined by what labor produces on marginal land (see the Law of Rent). The employer has no way to get any more than that from the worker, who can just leave and take up some marginal land of his own, and the worker no reason to accept any less. This was demonstrated conclusively by Ricardo more than 200 years ago and is not seriously disputed by any competent economist.
Huh?? You have not even offered an argument about value, which is what something would trade for. Jevons refuted the LTV in 1871 when he showed that the LTV is a delusion that has cause and effect reversed: labor does not cause value in its product; rather, producers devote labor to producing a product until the marginal labor cost is equal to the marginal exchange value of that product.
Which unfortunately does not refer to anything in the real world. What they “require” has nothing to do with what is produced by private effort, which could be any amount more or less than that.
Right: I am stating indisputable empirical facts of objective physical reality that disprove your false and evil beliefs, and I am not altering or evading them to help you preserve those beliefs.
Right: I support private ownership of and control over what is privately produced until such time as it is bought by a public authority at market value.
Wrong again. Like property in land, “intellectual property” is a privilege by definition -- a legal entitlement to benefit from the abrogation of others’ rights without making just compensation -- and is a component of the capitalist power structure because unlike private ownership of factories and other products of labor, it deprives people of access to economic opportunity they would otherwise enjoy.
Supply side arguments are typically rationalizations for subsidizing rent seeking, which does not increase supply, not arguments for letting producers keep the value of their products, which does.
Wrong again. The problem of excessive (and unjust) inequality of wealth, income and condition under capitalism is that purchasing power is not distributed by a market process at all, but by a political one: government issue and enforcement of privileges such as land titles, bank licenses and IP monopolies. If people had their rights to liberty, and did not have to pay privilege owners full market value just for PERMISSION to have a job and a home, to go shopping, to access public services and infrastructure, to participate in the economy and culture, etc., they would almost all be able to earn AND KEEP not only enough to support themselves and their families but far more than that in a market-based private production economy.
But it only allocates resources efficiently and relieves scarcity if it does, because socialism ALSO distributes purchasing power by a political process rather than a market one. The difference is that when socialists steal producer goods, it reduces the amount of those goods available for production, while when capitalists steal land, the amount of land available for production stays exactly the same. That is why capitalism systematically outperforms socialism.
False. I just understand why socialism is even worse than capitalism (see above), and why socialists’ ignorance, stupidity and dishonesty has been an even bigger barrier to achievement of liberty, justice and prosperity for workers than capitalists’ ignorance, stupidity and dishonesty.
I do what I can. Meanwhile, I think it will be valuable to deprive the capitalist power structure of the easy target of socialism, so they have to face the real challenge: liberty, justice, and truth. Socialism is a distraction that helps capitalists pretend there is no other alternative to capitalism. Just as you falsely accuse me of advocating capitalism in order to avoid addressing the facts I identify, capitalists falsely accuse me of advocating socialism for the same purpose.
Get a better dictionary. It means something supplied to a common effort, project or fund. In this case, that common effort is production of goods and services to increase the supply available for consumption and relieve scarcity.
Which has been proved false, remember.
Wrong again. Unlike the landowner, who has forcibly appropriated what others would otherwise have been at liberty to use, there is no reason to believe a factory owner has stolen anything from anyone. He simply contributes the factory (which but for his contribution would not have existed) to the production process, offering the workers access to opportunity they would not otherwise have. Unlike the landowner, the factory owner has no legal power to take from anyone anything they would otherwise have.
“Social necessity” has nothing to do with it. Capital goods and labor are similar in that those who contribute them provide something that, unlike land, would not otherwise have been available to the production process.
That is objectively false. Capital goods must first be produced, and if not maintained and protected, will deteriorate and become useless. It just takes longer for a machine to rust than for a worker to starve.
Your claims are OBJECTIVELY FALSE. OBJECTIVELY.
Your claims continue to be objectively false. Unlike land, capital must first be PRODUCED by its initial owner, and will decay over time unless maintained and protected. It is LAND that can just sit around.
NO. Your claims continue to be objectively false. Capital goods yield no rent because unlike land they would not otherwise be available for use, and because unlike land their supply will be increased until any excess return is competed away.
Your claims are OBJECTIVELY FALSE. OBJECTIVELY.
That is again just another bald falsehood from you. It is LAND that has no production or maintenance cost, not capital goods. It is LAND that is eternal and will still be available for use into the indefinite future, not capital goods.
Your claims are OBJECTIVELY FALSE. OBJECTIVELY.
Wrong again. If capital goods are not used productively enough to repay their cost of production and maintenance, plus a premium for the risk the owner takes in deferring his consumption to produce, maintain and allocate them, they will not be replaced, and future production will have to do without them, and society will suffer the consequent decrease in supply and aggravated scarcity of goods and services.
It is indisputably personal, and the owner of capital goods indisputably offers workers access to economic opportunity they would not otherwise have. The fact that he depends on workers for his livelihood is utterly irrelevant to the economic opportunity he provides to them which they would not otherwise have, just as the fact that a baker is reliant on his customers for his livelihood is irrelevant to the fact that he provides them with the opportunity to eat bread that they would not otherwise have.
No, it is about the fact that the capital owner offers them an opportunity to earn wages that they would not otherwise have, while the privilege owner DEPRIVES them of opportunity to earn wages that they WOULD otherwise have. It is the LANDOWNER who imposes necessity on the worker, whose liberty to support himself the landowner forcibly removes, and it is the CAPITAL owner who RESCUES the worker from destitution by providing him with the opportunity to earn wages. Socialism consists in blaming the factory owner for what the landowner does to the worker; capitalism consists in blaming the worker for it. But both are stupid, evil, vicious, despicable lies.
No it doesn’t. The landowner benefits more from capital than either the worker or the capital owner -- even Marx came to understand that, though far too late in life to correct his false beliefs (it’s in Volume III of “Capital,” which Marx did not finish before he died) -- but that does not alter the fact that the capital owner provides the worker with economic opportunity he would not otherwise have. Real economic opportunity is about nothing but having access to better economic options: the privilege owner DEPRIVES the worker of access to economic options he would otherwise have, the capital owner PROVIDES the worker with access to economic options he would NOT otherwise have. It’s that simple, no matter how much you try to evade it.
The capital owner (employer) has no power to expropriate anything from anyone, only the privilege owner does. If the worker’s wages are unjustly low, it is only because the LANDOWNER has forcibly stripped him of his liberty to pursue other options, and thus of his bargaining power. Your bone-headed Marxist “exploitation” nonsense is logically equivalent to claiming that in cities where Uber is not permitted to compete with licensed taxis, and taxi fares are consequently high and taxi licenses cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, the high cost of taxi fare is exploitation of riders by the cab DRIVERS, rather than by the government that privileges the license owners and the license owners who pocket the monopoly rents. This is PROVED by the fact that most employers/capital owners, far from extracting any “surplus labor value” from their workers, instead go bankrupt. Unlike landowners and taxi license owners, capital goods owners have to COMPETE, and their returns are competed away. Only the most skilful, diligent and productive (and lucky) manage to make any significant profits over and above their own wages without the help of monopoly privilege.
You are dishonestly trying to evade again by changing the subject. It would be just as absurd, fallacious and disingenuous to claim that giving bikes to children does not provide them with opportunity because some of the kids who get bikes will be hit by cars. Such disingenuous “arguments” are just outrageous and despicable. Sorry, but getting an opportunity to work does not mean all risk is somehow removed from that opportunity and the work is somehow made perfectly safe.
No, that is another bald fabrication on your part. Land rent proves it is not all the same.
Of course: that’s why the factory owners were willing to pay the landowners a premium for permission to use those locations. Duh.
No, that is just another bald falsehood. Equities are ownership shares of enterprises, which are created to make profits in various ways that usually involve owning assets, including any combination of capital goods, privileges and production systems.
Nonsense. The capital owner has no power to exploit workers, only to offer them access to opportunity, like a cab driver offering to take a passenger to his destination. Socialists see the passenger paying the cab driver an exorbitant fare, and conclude that it is the DRIVER doing the exploiting, and not the license owner or the government. It is just blank refusal to see any but the most superficial aspects of economic relationships.
No, it is identifying the relevant facts.
<sigh> Do you imagine that unemployment continues to exist because employers/capital owners don’t have any work for the unemployed to do that is productive enough to pay a living wage? Or can you find a willingness to know the fact that some workers are not productive enough to both support themselves AND pay landowners full market value just for PERMISSION to work?
Yes, of course there is: the state of nature, in which our hunter-gatherer ancestors existed for millions of years.
What an absurd and disingenuous load of garbage. Do you really think the fact that the baker depends on his customers for his livelihood means there is no default situation in which he does not bake bread, and his prospective customers consequently don’t have an opportunity to buy it??? REALLY?? Give your head a shake.
They have stolen your intellectual integrity, as amply proved by your posts in this thread, and if you have lived under socialism (which you obviously haven’t), you would know that they also stole some portion of the fruits of your labor.
A few employers are certainly dishonest and steal from workers; but the mere fact that you worked for someone does not mean they stole anything from you. Why did you agree to work for them if you thought they were stealing from you?
No it’s not. See every single socialist economy in history where government has imposed socialism by force.
Why do you feel you have to make $#!+ up about what I have plainly written?
Again, that is a fabrication on your part.
BWAHAHAHAHAAAAA!! I guess that must be why they almost never bother to own any such goods, except for their own consumption or as part of a corporation that makes almost all its profits by dint of privilege, and merely needs to deploy some capital goods in order to do it.
<sigh> I guess that must explain why almost all employers/capital goods owners who don’t also own rent collection privileges go bankrupt...
Who deprived them of access to the means of life and living in the first place, stripping them of their options and bargaining power so that they had to offer their labor to employers/capital goods owners on unfavorable terms, hmmmmmmmmm? Who?
Blank out.
No, that is just you makin’ $#!+ up again. I have said no such thing.
Everyone has access to ownership of capital goods... if they can just pay landowners for permission to produce them.
You are makin’ $#!+ up again.
No, it’s not relevant, because it does not relate to any fact I have identified.
Your views are nothing but subjective beliefs unsupported by fact.
A table is a product of labor. Naturally growing trees are not. I’m not sure which part of that you are having so much trouble understanding.
Agriculture implies a product of human labor, in contrast to the produce of the hunter-gatherer which is removed from nature by labor, even if it is just the labor of plucking fruit to eat it from the hand.
I have stated that capitalist private property in privilege is invalid.
No, I am the one who makes that distinction very clearly and precisely, as all readers of this thread including you know very well; socialists like you are the ones who pretend they are the same, and that there is no difference between the capital goods owner offering workers access to economic opportunity they would not otherwise have and the landowner DEPRIVING them of access to economic opportunity they WOULD otherwise have. See my comprehensive and conclusive demolition of your “arguments” above.
False. It would mean 20%-40% of GDP (depending on the country) going to producers – almost all of it to working people -- in return for their contributions to production rather than to landowners in return for nothing. It would mean dramatically lower prices for almost everything, especially housing, and a far more internationally competitive economy. It would mean many public services and infrastructure projects that are currently “unaffordable” because their value has to be given away to landowners in return for nothing would become affordable. The potential benefits are immense.
They couldn’t, because nothing – no PRIVILEGE -- would stop others from competing with them.
Workers’ interests do not align with society’s interests for the exact same reason corporations’ interests do not align with society’s interests: workers and corporations benefit if their products are in short supply, but society benefits if they are abundant.
That is an absurd and disingenuous mischaracterization of my views. Propertarians say, “property, right or wrong,” and often only grudgingly concede that chattel slavery is not rightful – some even claim it is! I advocate restricting property to the products of labor, and abolishing all property in privilege.
Again, that is a bald falsehood on your part. I am very clear on the role of labor. YOU merely deny that the owner of capital goods is making any contribution to production.
Whether it is for sale or consumption by the producer is irrelevant to the fact that production is the source of rightful property because it relieves scarcity. It does not deprive anyone else of anything they would otherwise have. Privilege, by contrast, such as landowning, INFLICTS scarcity on others, depriving them of what they WOULD otherwise have.
Labor EARNS property in its product. Whether that product is then devoted to production or not, it is still rightly owned by its producer (or anyone who has bought it from its producer in consensual exchange).
Nope. Wrong. Commodities have no brand value. Each person’ labor, by contrast, is unique. If you had ever been an employer/capital goods owner, you would know that. Indeed, I’m surprised that you claim to have held a job at some time, yet are nevertheless unaware of it.
They aren’t “serving capital” (whatever that might mean), they are dealing consensually with someone who is offering them opportunity they would not otherwise have, same as buying a loaf of bread from a baker.
They are receiving the full market value of their labor from their employer. They just have to pay a landowner full market value for permission to earn it, and then pay taxes to fund the desirable public services and infrastructure they just paid landowners for access to.
False. I am very serious, and it is based on the facts of objective physical reality that I have identified, and that prove you wrong.
It IDENTIFIES its nature.
You are again trying to pretend there is no difference between collecting rent by legally depriving others of opportunity they would otherwise have, without contributing anything to production, and earning a return by CONTRIBUTING to production, providing others with access to economic opportunity they would NOT otherwise have. You HAVE to contrive some way to prevent yourself from knowing the fact of that difference because you have already realized that it proves your beliefs are false and evil.
No, again that’s just objectively false. Interest is a return proportional to amount and time that is paid for temporary use of another’s purchasing power. Rent is a return obtained by legally depriving others of access to economic opportunity that would otherwise be accessible. In neither case is the return obtained “just because [the asset] exists.” Interest compensates for risk and time preference; rent is only obtained if someone gets permission to access the opportunity.
No it doesn’t. It has nothing to do with “production of commodities” or “exploiting labor power,” or any other such silly Marxist trash.
You have it backwards: what would be the incentive for workers to use capital in production if it didn’t contribute more than its return? What would be the point? If the capital goods owner isn’t contributing anything in return for his profits, why do the workers even agree to work for him? Why not just do without the capital and keep the full value of their labor?
Which is correct. They are. Which is why the rich pursue them so avidly, but have no interest in capital goods except for their own consumption (cars, jets, mansions and what-not).
The “rights” in question are privileges, not property in capital goods, which on average yields little or no return.
Because that is what “value” MEANS. No labor at all went into creating land, but its value is nevertheless astronomical.
Reliance of the rich on privilege -- land titles, bank licenses, IP monopolies, broadcast spectrum allocations, oil and mineral rights, etc. -- for their unearned incomes, wealth and power is still the reality today. If anything, privilege is even more dominant now than it was centuries ago. Certainly land rent has risen as a fraction of the economy, as the astronomical cost of a vacant building lot proves.
They can't create $#!+ without the contribution by the owner of capital goods, and their underpayment is the result of the privileged depriving them of their rights to liberty and thus their bargaining power, not the capital goods owner offering them access to opportunity they would not otherwise have.
Huh?? Technology IS capital goods. We can only USE technology BY INVESTING in capital goods. Hello?
ckaihatsu wrote:It has *not* been 'proven false'
Yes, it has. It got cause and effect backwards, as Jevons showed.
Labor needs to sustain itself for decades, generations, centuries, and millenia into the future otherwise it won't exist to do the socially necessary things that society needs from it. This continued sustainability requires a certain material cost, usually known as 'wages'.
No. You are again just factually incorrect. The wages of labor are its product. Sometimes that is enough to sustain the worker, sometimes it isn’t; sometimes it is more than enough. But none of those has anything to do with “socially necessary” things or the “sustainability” of labor. Market wages are determined by the Law of Rent, and have nothing to do with what the worker needs in order to live and work another day.
But the ownership class
See? Just like capitalists, socialists refuse to know the difference between owning something you have contributed – capital -- and owning something of which you only deprive others, and demand that they pay you merely for your PERMISSION to use, like land.
does not simply hand-down the full labor value, in wages, of what that labor-power, and its products, are sold for on the market. Instead it keeps the 'surplus labor value', beyond the straightforward costs of what labor requires to reproduce itself, going-forward.
Wrong again. Wages are determined by what labor produces on marginal land (see the Law of Rent). The employer has no way to get any more than that from the worker, who can just leave and take up some marginal land of his own, and the worker no reason to accept any less. This was demonstrated conclusively by Ricardo more than 200 years ago and is not seriously disputed by any competent economist.
So the labor theory of value has *not* been refuted.
Huh?? You have not even offered an argument about value, which is what something would trade for. Jevons refuted the LTV in 1871 when he showed that the LTV is a delusion that has cause and effect reversed: labor does not cause value in its product; rather, producers devote labor to producing a product until the marginal labor cost is equal to the marginal exchange value of that product.
'Social production' denotes the meaning of 'What the people of a society require for their consumption for their organic and social sustainability.'
Which unfortunately does not refer to anything in the real world. What they “require” has nothing to do with what is produced by private effort, which could be any amount more or less than that.
You're making an empirical description here with no critique
Right: I am stating indisputable empirical facts of objective physical reality that disprove your false and evil beliefs, and I am not altering or evading them to help you preserve those beliefs.
-- you seem to politically *support* private-property rights and the private-property bourgeois rights to private control over (mass industrial) production.
Right: I support private ownership of and control over what is privately produced until such time as it is bought by a public authority at market value.
A "privilege" -- ? No, it's better-described as a component of bourgeois ruling-class superstructural *hegemony*, or a service to a certain kind of property owner, that of 'intellectual property'.
Wrong again. Like property in land, “intellectual property” is a privilege by definition -- a legal entitlement to benefit from the abrogation of others’ rights without making just compensation -- and is a component of the capitalist power structure because unlike private ownership of factories and other products of labor, it deprives people of access to economic opportunity they would otherwise enjoy.
Well who still believes in 'trickle-down' / supply-side arguments, aside from those elites who actually benefit from it?
Supply side arguments are typically rationalizations for subsidizing rent seeking, which does not increase supply, not arguments for letting producers keep the value of their products, which does.
The problem of income inequality isn't with 'supply' issues, because capitalist commodity production actually tends towards *overproduction* -- the problem is in how markets *distribute* the products of commodity production, which is to-those-who-can-afford-them, and not to those who may happen to have real organic and social *unmet needs* for such products.
Wrong again. The problem of excessive (and unjust) inequality of wealth, income and condition under capitalism is that purchasing power is not distributed by a market process at all, but by a political one: government issue and enforcement of privileges such as land titles, bank licenses and IP monopolies. If people had their rights to liberty, and did not have to pay privilege owners full market value just for PERMISSION to have a job and a home, to go shopping, to access public services and infrastructure, to participate in the economy and culture, etc., they would almost all be able to earn AND KEEP not only enough to support themselves and their families but far more than that in a market-based private production economy.
This is merely *social convention* -- the world's economy doesn't *have* to work on this concept and practice of 'exchange values', including capital / producer goods.
But it only allocates resources efficiently and relieves scarcity if it does, because socialism ALSO distributes purchasing power by a political process rather than a market one. The difference is that when socialists steal producer goods, it reduces the amount of those goods available for production, while when capitalists steal land, the amount of land available for production stays exactly the same. That is why capitalism systematically outperforms socialism.
You're sounding as bad as any capitalist apologist
False. I just understand why socialism is even worse than capitalism (see above), and why socialists’ ignorance, stupidity and dishonesty has been an even bigger barrier to achievement of liberty, justice and prosperity for workers than capitalists’ ignorance, stupidity and dishonesty.
and you're not even holding up your own stated politics of '[speaking] truth to power'.
I do what I can. Meanwhile, I think it will be valuable to deprive the capitalist power structure of the easy target of socialism, so they have to face the real challenge: liberty, justice, and truth. Socialism is a distraction that helps capitalists pretend there is no other alternative to capitalism. Just as you falsely accuse me of advocating capitalism in order to avoid addressing the facts I identify, capitalists falsely accuse me of advocating socialism for the same purpose.
The term 'contribution' connotes some kind of charity, and that's the meaning of the term that I was critiquing.
Get a better dictionary. It means something supplied to a common effort, project or fund. In this case, that common effort is production of goods and services to increase the supply available for consumption and relieve scarcity.
Also, due to the labor theory of value,
Which has been proved false, remember.
the producers are not even so much providing any *material* means, as much as they're displaying their collections of stolen labor value that they have.
Wrong again. Unlike the landowner, who has forcibly appropriated what others would otherwise have been at liberty to use, there is no reason to believe a factory owner has stolen anything from anyone. He simply contributes the factory (which but for his contribution would not have existed) to the production process, offering the workers access to opportunity they would not otherwise have. Unlike the landowner, the factory owner has no legal power to take from anyone anything they would otherwise have.
Nope -- this is where your conception / politics is *flawed* -- capital and labor cannot be considered as rough *equivalents* just because they're both involved in the de-facto capitalistic productive process, at times to supply to social necessity.
“Social necessity” has nothing to do with it. Capital goods and labor are similar in that those who contribute them provide something that, unlike land, would not otherwise have been available to the production process.
Labor is different because it has *organic* and social requirements for material *consumption* (food, shelter, etc.), whereas capital does not.
That is objectively false. Capital goods must first be produced, and if not maintained and protected, will deteriorate and become useless. It just takes longer for a machine to rust than for a worker to starve.
Your claims are OBJECTIVELY FALSE. OBJECTIVELY.
Capital can just sit around
Your claims continue to be objectively false. Unlike land, capital must first be PRODUCED by its initial owner, and will decay over time unless maintained and protected. It is LAND that can just sit around.
and receive rent
NO. Your claims continue to be objectively false. Capital goods yield no rent because unlike land they would not otherwise be available for use, and because unlike land their supply will be increased until any excess return is competed away.
Your claims are OBJECTIVELY FALSE. OBJECTIVELY.
and interest payments for its sheer existence, with negligible costs, if any, involved.
That is again just another bald falsehood from you. It is LAND that has no production or maintenance cost, not capital goods. It is LAND that is eternal and will still be available for use into the indefinite future, not capital goods.
Your claims are OBJECTIVELY FALSE. OBJECTIVELY.
In this way we can call workers 'wage slaves' because they *must* receive wages, for their life and living, and social reproduction going-forward, whereas capital *has no* such requirements.
Wrong again. If capital goods are not used productively enough to repay their cost of production and maintenance, plus a premium for the risk the owner takes in deferring his consumption to produce, maintain and allocate them, they will not be replaced, and future production will have to do without them, and society will suffer the consequent decrease in supply and aggravated scarcity of goods and services.
Economic 'opportunity', as though the capital owner doesn't *depend* on labor-power for the sake of production and profits -- ? You're merely spinning the situation around to make it sound somehow *personal*, when it's *not*.
It is indisputably personal, and the owner of capital goods indisputably offers workers access to economic opportunity they would not otherwise have. The fact that he depends on workers for his livelihood is utterly irrelevant to the economic opportunity he provides to them which they would not otherwise have, just as the fact that a baker is reliant on his customers for his livelihood is irrelevant to the fact that he provides them with the opportunity to eat bread that they would not otherwise have.
People are employed by the billions worldwide as a basic component of capitalism's functioning. This isn't so much about 'opportunity' as it is about *necessity*, since workers require wages as a resource to their adequate life and living.
No, it is about the fact that the capital owner offers them an opportunity to earn wages that they would not otherwise have, while the privilege owner DEPRIVES them of opportunity to earn wages that they WOULD otherwise have. It is the LANDOWNER who imposes necessity on the worker, whose liberty to support himself the landowner forcibly removes, and it is the CAPITAL owner who RESCUES the worker from destitution by providing him with the opportunity to earn wages. Socialism consists in blaming the factory owner for what the landowner does to the worker; capitalism consists in blaming the worker for it. But both are stupid, evil, vicious, despicable lies.
Real economic opportunity has to do with who gets to benefit from capital, and why.
No it doesn’t. The landowner benefits more from capital than either the worker or the capital owner -- even Marx came to understand that, though far too late in life to correct his false beliefs (it’s in Volume III of “Capital,” which Marx did not finish before he died) -- but that does not alter the fact that the capital owner provides the worker with economic opportunity he would not otherwise have. Real economic opportunity is about nothing but having access to better economic options: the privilege owner DEPRIVES the worker of access to economic options he would otherwise have, the capital owner PROVIDES the worker with access to economic options he would NOT otherwise have. It’s that simple, no matter how much you try to evade it.
Expolitation is the systematic expropriation of surplus labor value, into private hands, for every hour of work performed (sold) to the employers / bosses.
The capital owner (employer) has no power to expropriate anything from anyone, only the privilege owner does. If the worker’s wages are unjustly low, it is only because the LANDOWNER has forcibly stripped him of his liberty to pursue other options, and thus of his bargaining power. Your bone-headed Marxist “exploitation” nonsense is logically equivalent to claiming that in cities where Uber is not permitted to compete with licensed taxis, and taxi fares are consequently high and taxi licenses cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, the high cost of taxi fare is exploitation of riders by the cab DRIVERS, rather than by the government that privileges the license owners and the license owners who pocket the monopoly rents. This is PROVED by the fact that most employers/capital owners, far from extracting any “surplus labor value” from their workers, instead go bankrupt. Unlike landowners and taxi license owners, capital goods owners have to COMPETE, and their returns are competed away. Only the most skilful, diligent and productive (and lucky) manage to make any significant profits over and above their own wages without the help of monopoly privilege.
Tell that to the workers who have lost their lives on-the-job.
You are dishonestly trying to evade again by changing the subject. It would be just as absurd, fallacious and disingenuous to claim that giving bikes to children does not provide them with opportunity because some of the kids who get bikes will be hit by cars. Such disingenuous “arguments” are just outrageous and despicable. Sorry, but getting an opportunity to work does not mean all risk is somehow removed from that opportunity and the work is somehow made perfectly safe.
You're trying to make it sound as though all land is the same --
No, that is another bald fabrication on your part. Land rent proves it is not all the same.
but I think the land that has factories on it has better industrial productive capacities.
Of course: that’s why the factory owners were willing to pay the landowners a premium for permission to use those locations. Duh.
Private ownership of capital goods is the same as 'equities',
No, that is just another bald falsehood. Equities are ownership shares of enterprises, which are created to make profits in various ways that usually involve owning assets, including any combination of capital goods, privileges and production systems.
and can realize profit-making from the process of industrial production, including the systematic exploitation of workers' labor power.
Nonsense. The capital owner has no power to exploit workers, only to offer them access to opportunity, like a cab driver offering to take a passenger to his destination. Socialists see the passenger paying the cab driver an exorbitant fare, and conclude that it is the DRIVER doing the exploiting, and not the license owner or the government. It is just blank refusal to see any but the most superficial aspects of economic relationships.
'Offering people access to economic opportunity' is still *spinning* the concept in favor of *ownership* interests,
No, it is identifying the relevant facts.
because unemployment still continues to exist, exacerbating income inequality, and revealing the class divide.
<sigh> Do you imagine that unemployment continues to exist because employers/capital owners don’t have any work for the unemployed to do that is productive enough to pay a living wage? Or can you find a willingness to know the fact that some workers are not productive enough to both support themselves AND pay landowners full market value just for PERMISSION to work?
Again, there's no 'tabula rasa' / blank-slate default situation (of an implied *lack* of 'economic opportunity' for worker employment)
Yes, of course there is: the state of nature, in which our hunter-gatherer ancestors existed for millions of years.
since capital *depends* on labor and its exploitation for the functioning of its capitalist system.
What an absurd and disingenuous load of garbage. Do you really think the fact that the baker depends on his customers for his livelihood means there is no default situation in which he does not bake bread, and his prospective customers consequently don’t have an opportunity to buy it??? REALLY?? Give your head a shake.
No socialist has stolen anything from me,
They have stolen your intellectual integrity, as amply proved by your posts in this thread, and if you have lived under socialism (which you obviously haven’t), you would know that they also stole some portion of the fruits of your labor.
unlike my past employers --
A few employers are certainly dishonest and steal from workers; but the mere fact that you worked for someone does not mean they stole anything from you. Why did you agree to work for them if you thought they were stealing from you?
you're implying *criminality* here, which is an untrue stereotyping of socialist politics.
No it’s not. See every single socialist economy in history where government has imposed socialism by force.
Yes, the economy *does* expand over decades and generations -- you're deluded to think otherwise.
Why do you feel you have to make $#!+ up about what I have plainly written?
You're *definitely* an apologist for capitalism --
Again, that is a fabrication on your part.
yes, ownership of capital goods is what the ruling class' interests are,
BWAHAHAHAHAAAAA!! I guess that must be why they almost never bother to own any such goods, except for their own consumption or as part of a corporation that makes almost all its profits by dint of privilege, and merely needs to deploy some capital goods in order to do it.
and is what gives them economic privilege over those who *don't* have capital,
<sigh> I guess that must explain why almost all employers/capital goods owners who don’t also own rent collection privileges go bankrupt...
and who must sell their / our own labor to bosses for a wage, for access to the means of life and living.
Who deprived them of access to the means of life and living in the first place, stripping them of their options and bargaining power so that they had to offer their labor to employers/capital goods owners on unfavorable terms, hmmmmmmmmm? Who?
Blank out.
Here's the *point* -- you're dogmatically and erroneously attached to this idea that the sum total of the world economy's exchange-values (asset valuations) somehow neatly lines-up to the world's sum total of people / population, and that it never *expands*.
No, that is just you makin’ $#!+ up again. I have said no such thing.
By being incorrect you're positing a false material situation for the sake of your dog-eat-dog concept, probably for the sake of guilt-tripping those on the bottom who have never *had* access to any useful ownership of capital.
Everyone has access to ownership of capital goods... if they can just pay landowners for permission to produce them.
You're not acknowledging that the world economy *expands*, sometimes in line with world population growth, sometimes *lagging behind* world population growth (effectively a *shrinking* of the world economy, per capita), and sometimes *outpacing* world population growth, meaning that more value is put into circulation, per-capita.
You are makin’ $#!+ up again.
I happen to have an illustration that's relevant here, an economic critique of Marx's 'labor vouchers' formulation, for the same reason:
No, it’s not relevant, because it does not relate to any fact I have identified.
I don't have any subjective 'beliefs' about any of this stuff.
Your views are nothing but subjective beliefs unsupported by fact.
How, then, can you explain the existence of a common *table* -- ? Tables don't grow in nature, they have to be designed and fashioned from *wood* from *trees*, which *do* grow from nature, and require human labor-power for their manufacture.
A table is a product of labor. Naturally growing trees are not. I’m not sure which part of that you are having so much trouble understanding.
Ditto for any other human-used goods or services. Even taking anything 'finished' from nature, like agricultural goods, requires human labor for the sake of *removing* it from nature and *transporting* it to the end-user / consumer.
Agriculture implies a product of human labor, in contrast to the produce of the hunter-gatherer which is removed from nature by labor, even if it is just the labor of plucking fruit to eat it from the hand.
Well since you're upholding bourgeois private property rights,
I have stated that capitalist private property in privilege is invalid.
this is what happens as a result -- you're unable to distinguish the private ownership of land from the private ownership of production goods (factories).
No, I am the one who makes that distinction very clearly and precisely, as all readers of this thread including you know very well; socialists like you are the ones who pretend they are the same, and that there is no difference between the capital goods owner offering workers access to economic opportunity they would not otherwise have and the landowner DEPRIVING them of access to economic opportunity they WOULD otherwise have. See my comprehensive and conclusive demolition of your “arguments” above.
Your critique of land-only implies that people could still privately own *factories*, but on de-privatized land, which would result in a paradigm that's hardly different from what we have today, *with* private ownership of land.
False. It would mean 20%-40% of GDP (depending on the country) going to producers – almost all of it to working people -- in return for their contributions to production rather than to landowners in return for nothing. It would mean dramatically lower prices for almost everything, especially housing, and a far more internationally competitive economy. It would mean many public services and infrastructure projects that are currently “unaffordable” because their value has to be given away to landowners in return for nothing would become affordable. The potential benefits are immense.
Those who could afford to buy equities / factories would, and would seek to *monopolize* each particular industry that they produce for, using the exploitation of labor.
They couldn’t, because nothing – no PRIVILEGE -- would stop others from competing with them.
This is why the *revolutionary* position makes sense, because it calls for the *overthrow* of *all* private property ownership, so that the *workers* control what's produced for societal consumption, and what's not.
Workers’ interests do not align with society’s interests for the exact same reason corporations’ interests do not align with society’s interests: workers and corporations benefit if their products are in short supply, but society benefits if they are abundant.
The problem with your propertarian politics
That is an absurd and disingenuous mischaracterization of my views. Propertarians say, “property, right or wrong,” and often only grudgingly concede that chattel slavery is not rightful – some even claim it is! I advocate restricting property to the products of labor, and abolishing all property in privilege.
is that you're ignoring the *role of labor* --
Again, that is a bald falsehood on your part. I am very clear on the role of labor. YOU merely deny that the owner of capital goods is making any contribution to production.
natural resources don't *extract themselves* for human usage, it takes human *labor* to do that, thereby *commodifying* whatever natural resources are being extracted from nature, for sale to others.
Whether it is for sale or consumption by the producer is irrelevant to the fact that production is the source of rightful property because it relieves scarcity. It does not deprive anyone else of anything they would otherwise have. Privilege, by contrast, such as landowning, INFLICTS scarcity on others, depriving them of what they WOULD otherwise have.
Labor itself doesn't *require* property, mostly because it doesn't already *own* the means of production that it has to work on, as laborers.
Labor EARNS property in its product. Whether that product is then devoted to production or not, it is still rightly owned by its producer (or anyone who has bought it from its producer in consensual exchange).
Labor is treated as a *commodity*, like any other,
Nope. Wrong. Commodities have no brand value. Each person’ labor, by contrast, is unique. If you had ever been an employer/capital goods owner, you would know that. Indeed, I’m surprised that you claim to have held a job at some time, yet are nevertheless unaware of it.
even though it's *real people* that have to serve the interests of capital for the sake of their / our own life and living,
They aren’t “serving capital” (whatever that might mean), they are dealing consensually with someone who is offering them opportunity they would not otherwise have, same as buying a loaf of bread from a baker.
from a wage (without receiving the full market value of their labor that they've sold to the employer).
They are receiving the full market value of their labor from their employer. They just have to pay a landowner full market value for permission to earn it, and then pay taxes to fund the desirable public services and infrastructure they just paid landowners for access to.
You're just making an unserious facile promise here, based on *nothing*.
False. I am very serious, and it is based on the facts of objective physical reality that I have identified, and that prove you wrong.
Just because you frame the ownership of assets as being 'rent collection privileges' doesn't *change* its nature --
It IDENTIFIES its nature.
it's still ownership of rentier capital,
You are again trying to pretend there is no difference between collecting rent by legally depriving others of opportunity they would otherwise have, without contributing anything to production, and earning a return by CONTRIBUTING to production, providing others with access to economic opportunity they would NOT otherwise have. You HAVE to contrive some way to prevent yourself from knowing the fact of that difference because you have already realized that it proves your beliefs are false and evil.
which means that, economically, it receives interest and/or rent payments just because it exists.
No, again that’s just objectively false. Interest is a return proportional to amount and time that is paid for temporary use of another’s purchasing power. Rent is a return obtained by legally depriving others of access to economic opportunity that would otherwise be accessible. In neither case is the return obtained “just because [the asset] exists.” Interest compensates for risk and time preference; rent is only obtained if someone gets permission to access the opportunity.
'Equities' more-regularly refers to ownership of a share of capital that's actively used in the production of commodities, for capital gains, by exploiting labor-power.
No it doesn’t. It has nothing to do with “production of commodities” or “exploiting labor power,” or any other such silly Marxist trash.
*Of course* capital receives more than it puts-in, otherwise there'd be no economic *incentive* for its involvement -- the gain in value is derived from the economic exploitation of labor ('surplus labor value'), for profits.
You have it backwards: what would be the incentive for workers to use capital in production if it didn’t contribute more than its return? What would be the point? If the capital goods owner isn’t contributing anything in return for his profits, why do the workers even agree to work for him? Why not just do without the capital and keep the full value of their labor?
You're trying to make it sound like rentier-type profits are the result of aristocratic-type 'privileges',
Which is correct. They are. Which is why the rich pursue them so avidly, but have no interest in capital goods except for their own consumption (cars, jets, mansions and what-not).
when in this day and age it's sheerly *economic*, with the political superstructure / paradigm existing to *enforce* those bourgeois, capital-based 'rights', with, and up-to *military* force and destruction.
The “rights” in question are privileges, not property in capital goods, which on average yields little or no return.
But market-based 'pricing' is *ignoring* the regular, systematic input of the material *labor* that created the good or service in the first place.
Because that is what “value” MEANS. No labor at all went into creating land, but its value is nevertheless astronomical.
So you're simply anti-aristocratic, which was from a historical reality *centuries* ago.
Reliance of the rich on privilege -- land titles, bank licenses, IP monopolies, broadcast spectrum allocations, oil and mineral rights, etc. -- for their unearned incomes, wealth and power is still the reality today. If anything, privilege is even more dominant now than it was centuries ago. Certainly land rent has risen as a fraction of the economy, as the astronomical cost of a vacant building lot proves.
The world has since moved to *industrial* production, with the world's commodified workers having a large role in how the machines are run, but without adequate *compensation* for the mass industrial production that they create.
They can't create $#!+ without the contribution by the owner of capital goods, and their underpayment is the result of the privileged depriving them of their rights to liberty and thus their bargaining power, not the capital goods owner offering them access to opportunity they would not otherwise have.
Capital goods play a lesser and lesser role in the capitalist production process the more that technology develops and is relied-upon for the material production of commodities (see the 'Business' diagram, above).
Huh?? Technology IS capital goods. We can only USE technology BY INVESTING in capital goods. Hello?