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31 points
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Any current real-life examples of “communism good”?

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43 points
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It’s been democratically instituted many times. And every time America marches in and “liberates” them.

It’s difficult to provide good examples when they’re all actively destroyed.

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26 points

Cuba. Cuba has the most educated population in North America, more doctors per capita then almost any other nation. The only reason they’re struggling is because America’s embargo. They want stuff too.

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5 points
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There is a Brazilian right-winger moron that said this golden statement: “there is only three things that works in Cuba: Security, Education and Healthcare”.

For him that’s a bad thing btw.

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17 points
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Mostly this, although Vietnam is doing quite well, especially considering their circumstances.

Cuba is also really interesting…not thriving, to be sure, but you have to end the US blockade before you blame them for their own hardships. And in spite of everything, they have democracy like we’ve never seen in the west.

Edit: also what beejboytyson said about Cuba.

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17 points

The US dropped more napalm, and bombs, and agent orange on vietnam (a comparatively small country) than it did during all of WW2. Lots of its people are still suffering from this atrocity.

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-4 points

Yeah but all forms of government are constantly attacked. You’re like a multicellular organism crying foul because bacteria and other pathogens are trying to invade it.

One of the reasons capitalism wins is it produces enough wealth to win wars. Consistently. The same wealth that leads to ever-lower levels of poverty also wins wars.

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7 points
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Imperialism, the highest stage of capitalism causes wars.

WWI was an inter-imperialist war. WWII was two wars: on the Western front it was an inter-imperialist war and on the Eastern front it was largely a war to crush socialism. Most of the wars since then have been imperialist wars of aggression against imperialized states, many of them by the United States, the global imperialist hegemon that has over 750 overseas military bases.

The same wealth that leads to ever-lower levels of poverty

Where have you been during the last 40 years of neoliberalism and neocolonialism?
And explain this: United Nations, 2019: Helping 800 Million People Escape Poverty Was Greatest Such Effort in History, Says Secretary-General, on Seventieth Anniversary of China’s Founding

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6 points

I have bad news for you about the rate of poverty…

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-17 points
22 points

Our current attempt at democracy—the methods we’re using to elect our leaders—are fundamentally irrational.

They are rational, and they work as intended, it’s just that they’re not popular democracies, they’re bourgeois democracies, designed by & for the capitalist class and against the working class. They’re not meant to represent us.

Take the US, which has has been ruled by the bourgeoisie since the 1776 bourgeois revolution. The wealthy, white, male land-owning, largely slave-owning Founding Fathers intentionally constructed a bourgeois state with “checks and balances” against the “tyranny of the majority.” It was never meant to represent the majority—the working class—and it never has, despite eventually allowing women and non-whites (who aren’t disenfranchised by the carceral system) to vote. BBC: [Princeton] Study: US is an oligarchy, not a democracy

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11 points

Ah yes my favorite authoritative source on the mathematics of democracy: a YouTube video.

Fuck off

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2 points

The title of that video is wildly misleading click bait. We should just switch to approval voting and be done with it.

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-18 points

You could’ve just typed “No”.

All the other things you’ve typed is nonsense anyways.

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12 points

How so?

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21 points

Here you go, and before you say China is not really communist. That’s true that China is in a socialist stage of development led by the Communist party. However, it’s very clear that it is developing very differently from capitalist countries.

The real (inflation-adjusted) incomes of the poorest half of the Chinese population increased by more than four hundred percent from 1978 to 2015, while real incomes of the poorest half of the US population actually declined during the same time period. https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w23119/w23119.pdf

From 1978 to 2000, the number of people in China living on under $1/day fell by 300 million, reversing a global trend of rising poverty that had lasted half a century (i.e. if China were excluded, the world’s total poverty population would have risen) https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/China’s-Economic-Growth-and-Poverty-Reduction-Angang-Linlin/c883fc7496aa1b920b05dc2546b880f54b9c77a4

From 2010 to 2019 (the most recent period for which uninterrupted data is available), the income of the poorest 20% in China increased even as a share of total income. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SI.DST.FRST.20?end=2019&locations=CN&start=2008

By the end of 2020, extreme poverty, defined as living on under a threshold of around $2 per day, had been eliminated in China. According to the World Bank, the Chinese government had spent $700 billion on poverty alleviation since 2014. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/31/world/asia/china-poverty-xi-jinping.html

Then there are the massive poverty alleviation programs in China that have no comparison in the US https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2022/04/01/lifting-800-million-people-out-of-poverty-new-report-looks-at-lessons-from-china-s-experience

90% of families in the country own their home giving China one of the highest home ownership rates in the world. What’s more is that 80% of these homes are owned outright, without mortgages or any other leans. https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadeshepard/2016/03/30/how-people-in-china-afford-their-outrageously-expensive-homes

If we take just one country, China, out of the global poverty equation, then even under the $1.90 poverty standard we find that the extreme poverty headcount is the exact same as it was in 1981.

https://www.currentaffairs.org/2019/07/5-myths-about-global-poverty

China also massively invests in infrastructure. They used more concrete in 3 years than US in all of 20th century https://www.forbes.com/sites/niallmccarthy/2014/12/05/china-used-more-concrete-in-3-years-than-the-u-s-used-in-the-entire-20th-century-infographic/

China also built 27,000km of high speed rail in a decade https://www.railjournal.com/passenger/high-speed/ten-years-27000km-china-celebrates-a-decade-of-high-speed/

Such massive infrastructure projects directly improve the standard of living for the people of the country.

Social mobility happens to be really high as well https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/11/18/world/asia/china-social-mobility.html

Furthermore, people in China see their country working in their interest and hence view it as being far more democratic than people do living under the dictatorship of capital

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20 points

Meanwhile, if you want a historical example then look no further than USSR.

Russia went from a backwards agrarian society where people travelled by horse and carriage to being the first in space in the span of 40 years. Russia showed incredible growth after the revolution that surpassed the rest of the world:

USSR provided free education to all citizens resulting in literacy rising from 33% to 99.9%:

USSR doubled life expectancy in just 20 years. A newborn child in 1926-27 had a life expectancy of 44.4 years, up from 32.3 years thirty years before. In 1958-59 the life expectancy for newborns went up to 68.6 years. the Semashko system of the USSR increased lifespan by 50% in 20 years. By the 1960’s, lifespans in the USSR were comparable to those in the USA:

Quality of nutrition improved after the Soviet revolution, and the last time USSR had a famine was in 1940s. CIA data suggests they ate just as much as Americans after WW2 peroid while having better nutrition:

USSR moved from 58.5-hour work weeks to 41.6 hour work weeks (-0.36 h/yr) between 1913 and 1960:

USSR averaged 22 days of paid leave in 1986 while USA averaged 7.6 in 1996:

In 1987, people in the USSR could retire with pension at 55 (female) and 60 (male) while receiving 50% of their wages at a at minimum. Meanwhile, in USA the average retirement age was 62-67 and the average (not median) retiree household in the USA could expect $48k/yr which comes out to 65% of the 74k average (not median) household income in 2016:

GDP took off after socialism was established and then collapsed with the reintroduction of capitalism:

The Soviet Union had the highest physician/patient ratio in the world. USSR had 42 doctors per 10,000 population compared to 24 in Denmark and Sweden, and 19 in US:

So, how do people who lived under communism feel now that they got a taste of capitalism?

The Free market paradise goes East chapters in Blackshirts and Reds details some more results of the transition to capitalism.

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10 points

*crickets*, as usual.

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4 points

From your first source

Figure 1 shows that China had very low inequality levels in the late 1970s, but it is now approaching the US, where income concentration remains the highest among the countries shown

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6 points

sure, and that’s happening while the standard of living for the poor people continues to rise dramatically with each and every year

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3 points

Do you live in china?

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5 points

sadly no

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-6 points

It’s hard for me to look at % increases or “X out of poverty” or “This person makes 1+ what they did before!”. I get fed the same stuff about how great America is doing because of our “numbers”. Without being there it’s hard to grasp if what you’re saying is anything better, worse, or just par for the course of a developing nation with such a high output with manufacturing.

90% of families in the country own their home giving China one of the highest home ownership rates in the world. What’s more is that 80% of these homes are owned outright, without mortgages or any other leans. https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadeshepard/2016/03/30/how-people-in-china-afford-their-outrageously-expensive-homes

Seeing this statement and reading the link, they have absolutely nothing to do with each other and you make it seem like it’s a “quote” from the article (I’m guessing it’s from the 93 page research paper I’m reading through). They would’ve just been better off publishing whatever data they talked about researchers definitely having, the whole thing read like an Elon Musk press conference…

“To sustain poverty reduction gains, China will focus more on achieving endogenous development in areas that have been lifted out of poverty and introduce vigorous measures to support rural revitalization. Our goal is to achieve common prosperity and high-quality development including through the rural revitalization strategy with a focus in five key areas: industry development, human capital, culture, ecological environment and local governance.”

It’s interesting and kinda disconcerting reading through the policies and how no real figures are presented for what the policy should be, such as the “common prosperity” they hope to achieve be 2030 (link page 15)

China has set a new goal of achieving significant progress toward common prosperity by 2035.1 While no particular income target or poverty threshold is attached to this goal, it can help keep the policy focus on the vulnerable population over the coming decade.

It makes me wonder if setting an elusive “goal” of a policy is better to get members on board and then slap them with the real numbers after they have already signed on and can’t openly complain about (bad for corrupt sectors of government though). There’s also just not enough information as stated in the paper to actually understand what is going on,

Finally, this review of China’s poverty reduction experience leaves a number of questions open for further research…

  • the interplay between poverty reduction and growth deserves further analysis to understand the extent that poverty reduction measures may, in turn, help less-developed areas grow faster
  • a deeper analysis of China’s use of policy experimentation at the local level combined with high-powered performance incentives may contribute to our understanding of models of decentralization and public service delivery
  • an evaluation of China’s targeted poverty alleviation experience in recent years would benefit from further analysis of individual policy interventions and their interactions to better understand not just the effectiveness but also the efficiency and sustainability of the program.
  • An analysis of the costs and benefits of policy intervention would also be warranted in a broader sense, helping to systematically account (suan da zhang in the Chinese term) for factors such as the impact of infrastructure investments on poverty reduction or the merits of the hukou system and man- aged urbanization policies. In all these areas, active exchanges between researchers within and outside of China, and between academics and policy makers, should be encouraged, and the data needed for high-quality empirical work should be made more widely available. These actions will help ensure that China’s poverty reduction achievements get the attention and understanding that they deserve.

Just now seeing and trying to wrap my head around the Hukou system. I’m not here arguing good/bad communism, I just like the information and think that many forms of government can work out with protections in place (regulations, corruption detection, etc). I just wanted to point out your article mention and link didn’t really fit together with how you presented it. I did enjoy the reading and will continue today, but I take it all with a grain of salt. I don’t really 100% trust any source these days, which in this technological era should really be the default for everyone. Definitely let it sink in and contemplate the realities of others, but you only have your own reality to work within for any type of effective action.

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6 points

you put a lot of work into that word salad

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3 points
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Dawg, it is a direct quote from the Forbes article. Read it again I guess?

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12 points

If you ever been to a commune where people share food, resources, bills. They go under the radar.

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5 points
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Fell for this one before, Mr. Manson.

There was a reality TV show about communes and stuff. Granted it’s reality TV but aside from the bad ones media doesn’t cover them very much. Long story short, it really didn’t do a good job of saying communism-good.

I think the best examples might be like Cuba having universal health care or something but ny experience was with a michael moore doc so it’s kinda sketch to begin.

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14 points

Communes have almost nothing to do with communism. When you are living in a capitalist world and beholden to a capitalist economy, you are not suddenly experiencing communism just because you live on a collective farm. A commune is not “doing communism,” not because they are doing something wrong or anything, but because it simply doesn’t work like that. In a simple definition of communism, the workers own the means of production. The people living on a commune within capitalism still do not own the means of production, they still exist almost entirely at the whims of the broader capitalist economic structure.

Also, it’s just ridiculous to expect a tiny microcosm of any system to represent how sound that system is if it were to be scaled up. Especially when that microcosm is inside of another structure that will actively stamp it out of existence if it threatens to grow. Trying to build a commune within a capitalist country is like trying to build a town at the bottom of the ocean. Everything beyond the limits of your project is hostile to its existence simply as a matter of the surrounding natural forces. But just because it’s extremely hard to build a town at the bottom of the ocean, and when it was tried it ended in failure, doesn’t mean that towns in general are destined to fail. In an appropriate environment they can and do thrive.

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1 point
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Removed by mod
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9 points

Open source software is like communism. Held in commons, free to use, contribute to, and benefit from.

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-6 points

And not in any way implemented by the government.

I’m a conservative, and I have zero problem with communism when it’s performed spontaneously by people.

It’s when the government starts doing it that it bothers me.

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9 points
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This is so fractally confused. When “people” do it, that becomes a new government.

Without a government to enforce public ownership of the means of production, there can’t be communism,
just as without a government enforcing private ownership of the means of production, there can’t be capitalism.

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2 points
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And not in any way implemented by the government.

Have you ever heard of GPL?

To be fair publisherploitation(AKA copyright) in general is enforced by goverment.

It’s when the government starts doing it that it bothers me.

What is difference between paying membership fee in non-profit and paying taxes? What if difference between voting on members meeting and on referendum? What is difference between board elections and goverment elections? What is difference between paying members to not starve to death while achieving goal of non-profit and funding healthcare for citizens to not die while living?

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1 point
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Deleted by creator
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4 points

Large-scale, actual communism with no authoritarianism? Not that I’m aware of. It’s hard to implement true communism effectively on a large scale because most people have to care enough about others to willingly contribute for it to work.

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10 points

Authoritarianism is a meaningless term that people with lack of capacity for rational thought regurgitate. Every single government holds authority by virtue of having the monopoly on legal violence. The only question is whose interest the authority is exercised in.

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-5 points

That’s just bullshit. Authoritarianism has a clear-cut definition that goes beyond “the government has authority on legal violence” and you know it.

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4 points

What do you count as “Authoritatianism?”

Why do you think Communism requires people to care about others to function, and why would they not work otherwise?

I think you have some serious misunderstandings about what Communism entails.

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-1 points

Authoritarianism is the opposite of libertarianism, roughly speaking. It’s a sliding scale, but those would be the two opposites in play.

For example, a more authoritarian approach to road safety would be: “Manufacturers are not allowed to make cars that go over 50 mph”

A more libertarian approach to road safety would be: “We’re publishing the average fatality rate of this road. You can choose to engage with it as you deem appropriate”

Our actual approach with licenses and speed limits and some regulations on car safety and soft but escalating consequences for breaking the road rules is somewhere in between.

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-2 points

Also they have to not want to trade. If someone starts trading, then the communism is over.

Turns out when people are free to make economic arrangements as they please, capitalism happens.

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7 points
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Also they have to not want to trade. If someone starts trading, then the communism is over.

Trading is not capitalism.
Markets are not capitalism.
Money is not capitalism.
Those things have existed for millenia before capitalism came to exist, around 600 years ago, eventually, over the span of several hundred years, replacing previous socio-politico-economic systems, feudalism in particular.

The first sentence from Wikipedia: Capitalism

Capitalism is an economic system based on the private ownership of the means of production and their operation for profit.

The first sentence from Wikipedia: Socialism

Socialism is an economic and political philosophy encompassing diverse economic and social systems characterised by social ownership of the means of production, as opposed to private ownership.

Notice that both definitionally concern who owns the means of production.

Communism:

Communism is a mode of production characterized by common ownership of the means of production and the absence of social classes. The term is also used to refer to the movement whose ultimate goal is the establishment of this mode of production.

Communism is a movement toward socialism, with the ultimate goal of the erasing social class hierarchies.

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-13 points

Which is why it’s a utopian movement. They do their best to enslave your thoughts and control your actions, and when that fails (and it always does) they slaughter anyone and everyone that won’t play along.

No person is perfect, so when you demand perfection, you’re going to have to get rid of anyone but those who are perfect at playing perfect.

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10 points
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It must be so liberating to just be able to spew bullshit unconnected to anything in the material world and have zero shame about it

This is exactly how brainwashed liberals are.

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10 points
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8 points

They do their best to enslave your thoughts and control your actions

Do they do this with their 5G Manchurian Candidate radio waves?

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6 points
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Which is why it’s a utopian movement.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Marxism-Leninism is fundamentally opposed to utopianism, and idealism in general.

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3 points

Can you find a legitimate example of “communism bad?”

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-3 points

^ this is a bad faith engagement

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6 points

“[citation needed]” is bad faith now? I guess Wikipedia should pack it in, then.

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-1 points
Removed by mod
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0 points
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5 points

While it accomplishes lot of basics right, like housing, food and education generally, further it goes, it starts carving into personal freedom and makes everything worse.

Can you explain what you mean by this, and why you believe it despite direct evidence to the contrary, such as in Cuba?

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0 points

The country in which 86% of the population live in poverty? But at least there’s doctors and literacy so that’s great. Classic communism win.

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0 points
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-2 points

USSR Angola Cuba China DPRK Ethiopia Mongolia Vietnam GDR. I cant understand how people can look at a country that dramatically improved its peoples standard of living brought democracy and freedom, and not see it as a good thing.

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9 points

America Bombs North Korea and Vietnam to smithereens

Communism bad?!

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8 points
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Hey that’s not accurate. France bombed them too.

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5 points

Those were freedom bombs, duh.

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7 points
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USSR Angola Cuba China

Ok, I guess you could argue the point that these countries

DPRK

What the absolute fuck are you talking about.

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9 points

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6 points

What the absolute fuck are you talking about.

On this subject more than any other the western brain is completely destroyed by propaganda.

The crazy shit you will and have believed about Korea without any evidence is stunning and can only be explained by racism.

You actually believed when they said the whole country had to get the same haircut?

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6 points

The DPRK is by no means perfect, but it’s also not some hermit kingdom where the peasants push trains to make them move.

If you have 20 minutes, I recommend you watch We Went to North Korea to Get a Haircut, it’s humanizing and helps dispel a lot of modern myths about the DPRK. Again, it’s by no means perfect, but the West has absolutely mythologized its existence to lunacy.

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1 point

whats wrong with the DPRK? I have family that has been there and they thought it was a fine place certainly doing a lot better than the median capitalist country.

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0 points

check their post history.

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5 points

You could probs add Burkina Faso to that list too.

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-1 points
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10 points

u can listen to the propaganda or u can look at reality.

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-1 points
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7 points

having a market does not make a country capitalist. And yeah there is corruption as there is in every 3rd world country (and most 1st world countries just in different less noticeable ways), they are certainly doing more about it than most capitalist countries, and all indicators of standard of living are far better than is the vast majority of capitalist countries so i wouldnt call it a shit show, i mean its hard to recover from having just about every fucking building in ur country destroyed and ur forests and farms poisoned and millions murdered and even more displaced only 50 years ago especially when the country that did all that continues to actively try to fuck u over. They are doing well great even.

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4 points

It is not capitalist. There has been corruption and those corrupt official have been executed, as they should.

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-2 points

Just like Capitalism you aren’t going to find any examples of the system in the world today

When people actually lived in communes it was cool though

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11 points

Just like Capitalism you aren’t going to find any examples of the system in the world today

About to have my brain turned into soup by asking this question:

Are you implying that there are no examples of capitalism in the world today?

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3 points

I’m genuinely curious about this, as well.

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0 points
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Yeah, what country rewards jobs based on hours worked rather than assets owned?

What people refer to as “late-stage capitalism” is no different than the system capitalism was supposed to replace

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-4 points
9 points

Colonialism and indigenous eviction masquerading as “socialist”.

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-4 points

I would argue that the Colonialism and indigenous eviction evils can be separated from the socialist successes.

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6 points

How it started: The kibbutzim were founded by members of the Bilu movement who emigrated to Palestine.

How it’s going: Gaza toll could exceed 186,000, Lancet study says

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-3 points

Yes, some kibbutz founders were part of Zionist settlement land grabs. And there is no way I’m going to defend current Israeli actions.

But this doesn’t really relate to the kibbutz being a good example of communism.

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