Hardly - since it's a case of the exploited (dare I say oppressed), or the powerless, hating the exploiters, or the powerful - entirely reasonably, in my view. Whereas racism, sexism, etc is the other way round.
Is capitalism really such a good system?
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostHardly - since it's a case of the exploited (dare I say oppressed), or the powerless, hating the exploiters, or the powerful - entirely reasonably, in my view. Whereas racism, sexism, etc is the other way round.
How appalling ...
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostSo you would hate any man or woman simply because of their 'class'?Last edited by Guest; 02-07-14, 20:23.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostKunkel's writing style is a bit opaque (is he German?) but it's good to see someone using the term ruling class, and though imv he's right in concluding that Picketty ends up as an apologist for capitalism, he himself leaves the question of agency open - unless, that is, we expected to think that the ruling class will conveniently disband itself. But the London Review ain't of course no call to arms!
David Graeber also makes a trenchant critique of Piketty - he doesn't seem to understand that it doesn't matter how many books he sells, or summits he holds with financial luminaries or members of the policy elite, the sheer fact that in 2014 a left-leaning French intellectual can safely declare that he does not want to overthrow the capitalist system but only to save it from itself is the reason such reforms will never happen. The 1% are not about to expropriate themselves, even if asked nicely. And they have spent the past 30 years creating a lock on media and politics to ensure no one will do so through electoral means.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAnd hating some scoundrel who seems to embody the evils of capitalism, like Fred Goodwin or Ian Duncan Smith, is quite healthy I would have thought.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostFred the Shred has gone - but the problems in the banking industry that he symbolised are still there.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostSo you would hate any man or woman simply because of their 'class'?
How appalling ...
in 2010, one third of UK land was owned by 1200 aristocratic families.
They choose not to do anything to right the awful inequality that this perpetuates. I don't hate them, but I don't like what they do at all.
They have the power to act in a fairer way.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post... And hating some scoundrel who seems to embody the evils of capitalism, like Fred Goodwin or Ian Duncan Smith, is quite healthy I would have thought.
Hating the deed is one thing, hating the individual because he happened to get things badly wrong (along with countless others) or someone because of his politics is quite another.
To describe such hatred as 'quite healthy' seems to me quite bizarre.
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I realise that I'll be shot down for this, but I do wish that this "ruling class" descriptor could be consigned to where it rightfully belongs, not least because it risks hiding something far mor dangerous and fearsome still. This "ruling class", when referred to - does it mean monarchs and their families? presidents and their henchmen? prime ministers and theirs? - or just those people with vast amounts of assets and massivly high incomes who desire to wield power by using it in their own interests and against the interests of others? Apart, perhaps, from cases where members of the first three categories happen also to fit the last, it seems to me that what is meant is the last. The problem with this is that they have no democratic right to "rule" and they are not really a "class"; the reason for the latter of these is that they each have their own sets of interests which might and sometimes do conflict with one another. Were the intents and desires of every person with more than £x billion to his/her name and an annual income in excess of £x00,000 million were to be examined, I rather doubt that much commonality would be found. If they were all in the same boat, then whatever one might call them one would at least know what and whom one was up against but, in truth, the very diversity amongst them suggests too much fragmentation to warrant their being flung together as a "class", not least because not everyone who is in such a position of wealth seeks to use it against the interests of others.
OK, maybe that's something of a side issue to the question posed by the thread. Capitalism was a good system (though not a perfect one - what system would or could be that?); whether it can recover from the parlous and discreditable state into which it has gotten itself over decades is obviously open to question (and it is indeed rightly being so questioned), but it certainly will not unless there is an international concerted and sustained effort to ensure that it does. In the meantime, there seems to be considerably less agreement as to a viable alternative than there is even about how the present system could be reformed for the general social good.
I agree that hating some of the most overtly corrupt practitioners of what might be called denatured capitalism, be they bankers like Goodwin and Diamond or politicians like IDS, reflects adversely upon the hater and is pointless, but that doesn't mean that they should not express their utter contempt for the actions of such people when they believe them to be as they do.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI am of course quite aware of that! but it's also important to bear in mind that the "problems" didn't fall out of the sky but were the results of decisions taken by real people - people like you and me but with a lot more money and no conscience.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostBig landowners are, by almost any definition, a class.
in 2010, one third of UK land was owned by 1200 aristocratic families.
They choose not to do anything to right the awful inequality that this perpetuates. I don't hate them, but I don't like what they do at all.
They have the power to act in a fairer way.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View Posthe happened to get things badly wrong (along with countless others) or
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIndeed they do - and that's why they should. How one gets them to do so remains an open question, however. That land needs all to be put to good use for the benefit of all - and that would mean a variety of good uses, including agricultural one, housing, solar farms, properly managed woodland and many more.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostTo describe such hatred as 'quite healthy' seems to me quite bizarre.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAgreed, but there's a risk of the 'rotten apple' idea taking hold, especially in the media & politicians.
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