• VubDapple@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Many people do not grasp the sheer size of the disparity between the truly wealthy and everyone else.

      • Bobmighty@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Billionaires are like everyone else. That’s the reason I don’t look up to any. They’re just as human as I am. No amount of money can ever make them anything else or anything more. They have access to an absurd degree, and they can afford far, FAR more, but they will never escape their base human nature. Almost anyone can be a billionaire. Some current billionaires prove that every moment they open their mouths.

      • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        Most people will take “freedom” as an axiom, but how “freedom” is defined varies a lot. In a society where the commons are pretty much fully enclosed and you are homeless, the petite-bourgeois may very well be free, but you really aren’t.

    • hostops@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      I believe your comments is just a paraphrase of: “They are being stupid”

      In my opinion this is a very toxic way of thinking and does not try to understand the arguments “the other side” presents.

  • juliebean@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    because they prefer to dream of themselves as billionaires in potentia. it’s hard to admit you’ve been duped, especially when society gives you so many targets to punch down on.

    or, as futurama put it, link

  • AliSaket@mander.xyz
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    2 months ago

    Many reasons. One major factor imho is the belief or illusion to be living in a meritocracy. Which would mean, that someone who’s rich has to have earned it and therefore criticism must stem from envy or jealousy. The same belief fuels the ideology of thinking of poor people to just be lazy leeches on society.

    • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.world
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      The idea of meritocracy is such a bullshit lie it’s laughable. We need it so our children don’t live in a world without hope but much like santa claus they should shed the idea around the time of college. There are merit based reward systems. Ladder climbing is real. Only, many of them are corrupted by politics and mismanagement. Even if you succeed in an isolated merit based system it’s only to incentivize more production and you will never reach the level of CEO or what ever.

      What we should teach young adults is that life is a lottery inside a lottery inside a lottery. Success is about increasing your odds by taking as many smart bets as you can. Bets where the reward is great and where you don’t have much at stake if you lose. Betting with other people’s money is the most efficient way of extracting value. The meritocracy isn’t real, so neither is the morals around it. If you want nothing but an easy life this is how you do it. If your can’t in good conscious gamble with other people’s livelihoods we will see you on the ladder.

  • NauticalNoodle@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    temporarily embarrassed billionaires

    Richard Nixon’s head : I promise to cut taxes for the rich and use the poor as a cheap source of teeth for aquarium gravel!

    [audience applauds]

    Philip J. Fry : That’ll show those poor!

    Turanga Leela : You’re not rich!

    Philip J. Fry : But someday I might be rich, and people like me better watch their step

  • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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    Many don’t even do it intentionally, they just don’t grasp concepts like Historical and Dialectical Materialism, which requires reading lengthy books to fully grasp. They may be anti-Capitalist at heart, but without a solid understanding of theory they play into bourgeois hands.

    There’s also the fact that the ideas held by society are a reflection of the Mode of Production.

    • Wojwo@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      Pretty sure they’d take everything you just wrote and say, “that sounds like critical race theory, which Jesus said was bad.”

        • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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          2 months ago

          What de industrialization?

          US is second largest industrial output and it has been rising.

          Unless you mean jobs after NAFTA and code changes… Which is true but manufacturing employment is on the rise post covid reforms

          • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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            The US shifted the vast majority of its production overseas, which is why it’s seen as a “service economy.”

            • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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              US did offshore no doubt but it was not a vast majority. You can check the numbers, there was some decline in employment but US has high tech factories and industrial base is now growing quickly even with job growth since covid.

              The reason it is largely a service economy is due to growth in service sector after industrialization. Once people got all their needs with goods met, they started buying service.

              Think about all the food joints we have now for example. This is fairly recent thing. Sure food out always existed but not like this.

              Also, people have god walkers, people buy insurance etc all this is kinda recent in big picture thing

              • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                I am aware of the process, the US produces the vast majority of its commodities oversees before “finishing” or “assembling” in the US. It’s Imperialism in action, where it hyper-exploits the Global South for super-profits.

                • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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                  Right but we started this here with claim that US de industrialized which I saying is not accurate and it is a common misconception thrown around.

    • Random123@fedia.io
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      It doesnt even require that much reading of such subjects. All it takes is to not be brainwashed by media and politicians.

      Critical thought and self awareness is all it takes

      • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        I’m sorry, but I entirely disagree. Dialectical and Historical Materialism are incredibly far-removed from standard American discourse and takes quite a bit to understand, oversimplifying it is dangerous. If all it took to be a Marxist-Leninist was critical thought and self-awareness, the US would have had a proletarian revolution already.

      • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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        Usually it’s my friend Cowbee here who tells people to read things, but here I will:

        https://redsails.org/masses-elites-and-rebels/

        “Brainwashing” is a reactionary myth (that originally comes from orientalist stories of Chinese hypnosis that were used to explain-away defectors in the Korean war) that is used to position the believer in a position superior to the masses (“sheeple”), and which only knows how to treat the latter condescendingly as blind followers of this or that, which is not how you do mass organizing if you want to succeed.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    People who defend billionaires either have a vested interest, have actually bought that they’re 1000x smarter than normal people, or have some (possibly vague) abstract moral position that overrules the basic idea of fairness. Often it’s more than one.

    Capitalism, as the term is commonly used, is poorly defined enough that you have to specify what it means here. Is it any kind of market? Is it large corporations? Is it every interaction being purely voluntary (somehow)? If you consider a big Soviet firm like Gosbank a “corporation”, all three could also be socialist depending on who you ask.

    Since this is .ml, for the classical Marxist definition that it’s “private ownership of the means of production”, the arguments are mainly against the proposed alternatives, or just that private vs. personal is hard to demarcate, and nobody wants to share a toothbrush.

  • tunetardis@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    I guess the central premise of capitalism is that while every society has its haves and have nots, capitalism is supposed to encourage the haves to invest in the economy rather than hoarding their wealth. In return, they stand to get even wealthier, but a stronger economy ought to generate more employment and generally improve the lives of commoners as well.

    Unfortunately, in a never-ending quest to make wealth-generation more efficient and streamlined, employment is being eliminated through automation, outsourcing, etc. and the system is eating itself out from the inside. I doubt it can persist much longer, but what will replace it remains unclear. I pray that it will be something sensible that ensures everyone has their basic needs met and can still find rewarding pursuits in life. But there are so many ways it could go very wrong, and that includes staying on the current course.

    • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      I guess the central premise of capitalism is that while every society has its haves and have nots, capitalism is supposed to encourage the haves to invest in the economy rather than hoarding their wealth. In return, they stand to get even wealthier, but a stronger economy ought to generate more employment and generally improve the lives of commoners as well.

      Nitpicky, but that’s the premise of Liberalism, not Capitalism. Capitalism emerged not because it was an idea, but an evolution in Mode of Production. Liberalism is the ideological justification.

      Unfortunately, in a never-ending quest to make wealth-generation more efficient and streamlined, employment is being eliminated through automation, outsourcing, etc. and the system is eating itself out from the inside. I doubt it can persist much longer, but what will replace it remains unclear. I pray that it will be something sensible that ensures everyone has their basic needs met and can still find rewarding pursuits in life. But there are so many ways it could go very wrong, and that includes staying on the current course.

      Have you read Marx? He makes the case that due to Capitalism’s tendency to centralize and form monopolist syndicates with internal planning, the next mode of production is Socialism, ie public ownership and planning of the syndicates formed by the market system.

    • Lad@reddthat.com
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      2 months ago

      In Ireland we suffered under British Imperialism and capitalism for hundreds of years and we had our own famine and repressions.

      • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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        Fact that us often ignored in Anglo world… Or when it is brought up… This oppression is different 🤡

        • Lad@reddthat.com
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          If censorship in Soviet Ukraine is your reason for defending capitalism, don’t let it go over your head that such things happened and continue to happen in capitalist countries and colonies too.

        • IHeartBadCode@fedia.io
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          for a reason that you are listening songs from another country or reading books, that was not accepted by censorship

          Man are you going to have a wild time reading the First Act of Supremacy of 1534 from the United Kingdom. Couple of follow up bangers from it like the Act of Supremacy in Ireland of 1560. All that happening distinctly before communism was even invented.

          • pivot_root@lemmy.world
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            Echo chambers suck, I’m sorry. It’s assbackwards when people dismiss real, lived experiences that don’t align with what they optimistically imagine those experiences would be like.

          • Random123@fedia.io
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            2 months ago

            Buddy im not even communist, i am still for capitalism.

            Your criticism is given to you because of how ridiculous you sound when you regurgitate the same old propaganda that you watch on social media.

            Its so obvious that these thoughts were not formed by you

      • mortakhal@feddit.nl
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        2 months ago

        That’s how I see how Zuckerberg sends your grandfather to Siberia for lack of work and unwillingness to work, as it happened with my grandfather :) Don’t you think that you are exaggerating (so far) the level of problems in your country? All these problems of listening to you for the sake of selling goods are trifles compared to what any radical-communist-nazi who dares to power will do

        • Random123@fedia.io
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          Ok if we go off of that example, explain how exactly a so called communist country will exclusively force people to something against their will? What youre describing is closer to authoritarian government…

          Nazis are not communist at all, they are facists. Youve been watching too much bullshit news from people who dont have a elementary clue of political science. This is why you cant even give a good clear answer as to why youre defending billionaires and surveillence capitalism.

    • massive_bereavement@fedia.io
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      Not sure why you’ve got downvoted, but that’s the reason why all Baltic states had such a reaction when the invasion started.

      That said, I would say that most of those states are highly socialistic despite having pretty much allergy to anything red and while preferring a capitalist system that doesn’t mean they want or support billionaires.

      • Random123@fedia.io
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        It could be because they arent even describing communism. These problems are easily found right now.

        The problem here is that people dont even know what communism is and they end up giving these kinds of answers. Makes you think thats probably why they made a new account

        Theres no genuine convo of why communism is bad.

        • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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          It’s more because it’s a bunch of random assertions, falsehoods, misunderstandings, half-truths, and more with no substance to tackle and respond to without starting a lengthy struggle session.

          The USSR absolutely was guided by Communist ideology, and was Socialist, that’s true. It’s also true that it wasn’t perfect. A good article to read is Why do Marxists Fail to Bring the “Worker’s Paradise?” because many people don’t understand Marxism and interpret it through an idealist, anti-Marxist lens. The article is pro-Marxist-Leninist, and anti-ultraleftist, and attempts to highlight the impossibilities of establishing an idealized form of Socialism through fiat, without strong development of the productive forces and centralization.

            • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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              Explain. You cannot achieve democratic control without centralization, because you can’t have inputs with no output.

              • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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                Issue of centralization is regime and politics agnostic. More centralization just results in more corruption.

                I am not sure how to run the society any other way but we know that current systems are corrupted by the ruling elites at our expense.

                Legal system is unwilling to deal with it because the judiciary are just regime lapdogs used against working people when they get out of line.

                • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                  Issue of centralization is regime and politics agnostic. More centralization just results in more corruption.

                  Again, please explain. This doesn’t logically follow.

                  I am not sure how to run the society any other way but we know that current systems are corrupted by the ruling elites at our expense.

                  Capitalism is, Socialism isn’t.

                  Legal system is unwilling to deal with it because the judiciary are just regime lapdogs used against working people when they get out of line.

                  In Capitalism, yes.

                  Have you read Marx?

      • mortakhal@feddit.nl
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        Yes. Food in the shop had a bad quality with a permanent deficit. Big amount of good food in modern country is making by a small business

        • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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          This could be a language barrier thing, but it sounds like you’re talking about a production issue, not a censorship issue.

          • mortakhal@feddit.nl
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            okay, despite the cultural and resource diversity, what prevented then in the Soviet Union from making normal food en masse for people like sushi or even shawarma? Why was there only sausage and chebureks, buns, vodka, beer everywhere? Because there is an order to do so and there is a chain of manufacturers, there was no initiative from below, although the country was supposed to be for the people. Due to the size of the state apparatus for serving the population, any initiative was lost. In the end, everything was done only when the old grandfather wanted to show off in front of the West :) there is nothing made of high quality in the Soviet Union, except for missiles that were sold to other countries to shoot at people :) and everything that served the military industry.

            • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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              I’m going to avoid touching the rest of that and say that a centralized production not making sushi or shawarma is not the same as censoring those things. You can still make them at home, it’s not like fish, rice, and seaweed were beyond the reach of the existing production. Again, it sounds like a production issue.

              • mortakhal@feddit.nl
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                and the main reason for the deficit was preparation for the war, not the desire to make people’s lives in the country better. Nothing prevented the Soviet Union with the Communists at its head from being an ally before the war with the Germans, attacking Poland together and attacking Finland, suppressing protests in Czechoslovakia and Hungary

                • GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml
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                  I’m really struggling to follow some of this. Are you saying the Soviets didn’t need to fight Germany and didn’t need to take as much time as they could manage to prepare to do so?

              • mortakhal@feddit.nl
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                Okay :) but everything was in deficit :) and this is not a production problem :) this is a problem of sick heads in power and a complete lack of empathy for the country’s citizens :) in relations between people, the deficit created corruption, with which Ukraine still has big problems. A habit was created to solve all cases not according to the law. People could not travel abroad without a large number of certificates and the personal permission of the local head of the party. Soviet engineers, having good talents, proposed different concepts of cars that were very modern, but the local leadership said no to any initiative from below. It was easier for them to simply copy Western equipment, or buy Western equipment and pass it off as their own, as Russia is doing now under sanctions. Now, under capitalism, you can protest and at most they will give you something like a fine for hooliganism. Under the Soviet Union and the Communists, there were no protests, or if there were, people were sent to Siberia, and their families were dismissed from their positions, and they had a label in front of state bodies that their family was unreliable. And the journalists did not say anything about it under the pressure of censorship, not even a hint. People learned all the information about the protests only after the collapse of the Soviet Union. And something similar happens in any country that wants to build communism. People become communists in their eyes, often not for the sake of making the world better, but for the sake of getting back at a system in which they are marginalized and losers

    • IHeartBadCode@fedia.io
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      Because my country, Ukraine, was under communists and it was not good time with all genocides, holodomor, repressions, red terrors and other things

      Yes, but none of that is unique to communism, that’s just corrupt government. Anywhere that develops systemic inadequacies and a culture of impunity can instantly become such. That’s just something that is independent of the underlying system of economics. Like many capitalist systems like to point out that bourgeoisie who are after their own interest act as some check on the government who is usually in a power struggle for control. And that power struggle is what ensures no one side wins out.

      But there’s nothing technically stopping the rich from becoming the actors of the government and when we as a society excuse profiteering in office, well then there’s no barrier from the rich just becoming the government. Which that’s just the French ancien régime that ultimately lead to the French Revolution.

      So it’s NOT specific to just communism. It’s just that’s the most recent and easiest one to point out because of how blatant/brazen that system had become with it’s corruption. Even with all of the “nay-saying” that might happen with United States detractors with their usual hum of “Oh well they’re all corrupt!” Even with how passive some are with it, the corruption is nowhere near the level of being out in the open that was with the USSR. Politicians still weasel their way around because they know that there’s still some bottom level of ensuring checks on that corruption that exist. And we have those checks not because we are a capitalist society.

      I think the idea that some economic system promotes some civic purity or prevents some form of government corruption is a bad linking of things that ought not be linked, because a pure capitalist society doesn’t magically inherit some barrier of corruption. That barrier has to be formed independent of the underlying economic system.

      I’m not trying to detract from what happened under the USSR but that has way more to do with how power got consolidated post World War I and everything that lead to the toppling of the Russian Monarchy. The system of communism played a role in that consolidation of power, yes, but literally any tool could have been used if you have someone with the mindset of Vladimir Lenin who wanted to rapidly consolidate power during the Bolshevik revolution. I mean look at the current Myanmar Civil War and some of the ideas of General Min Aung Hlaing, no need for implementation of communist ideology there, he just wants to be in power, doesn’t believe that the current transfer of power is legitimate, and is willing to get a lot of people killed in proving that point.

      I think given the current situation in the United States, the belief that you NEED communism to have totalitarianism is a dangerous linking of things that can actually happen independent of each other. You just need someone to wear down government legitimacy enough to start a civil war, that’s all you need. Everything else is just tools at your disposal to get that goal done.

      So you have to understand the nuance here I’m trying level. I’m not saying it WASN’T COMMUNISM, what I’m saying is that it can be communism, but ultimately you just need someone who wants to consolidate power rapidly and exists in a society that will forgive abuses of power enough, sometimes that’s done by de-legitimizing the current system enough. That’s it, that’s all that’s required. Communism can play a role in that somewhere, but it doesn’t have to.

  • Zink@programming.dev
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    Unfortunately many of us have been taught that being a good person and a good citizen equals being productive and accumulating resources. Things that are quantifiable and external to the actual person and their relationships.

    Being productive and accumulating some resources can be good activities to spend time on, but they are practical necessities and not defining characteristics of existence.

  • hostops@sh.itjust.works
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    About defending capitalism (and not billionaires - who more often than not abuse this system). Some of us lived in other systems. And we understand any other system is way way way way worse.

    There are however a lot of problems with capitalism and should be held on a very short leash. Or else monopoly happens. The most effective actions to keep capitalism at bay: strong anti-trust laws, strong worker protection (this includes a lot of stuff), wealth tax.

    And be aware there are many flavours of calitalism. Most commonly people in USA are the most extreme where you have really “long leash”. And people see such capitalism as failing and want to replace whole system.

    • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      There are however a lot of problems with capitalism and should be held on a very short leash. Or else monopoly happens. The most effective actions to keep capitalism at bay: strong anti-trust laws, strong worker protection (this includes a lot of stuff), wealth tax.

      Capitalism eats the leash, you can’t avoid this.

      • aStonedSanta@lemm.ee
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        As the above commenter mentioned it is possible to stop it eating the leash so to speak. The main problem is keeping all of those protections actually in place. We don’t seem to want to codify worker rights or anything else important to the constitution.

        • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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          Follow the trends. People didn’t stop wanting rights, Capitalism exists in constant decay as it grows, eroding worker rights due to outsized Capitslist power.

          You can only stop Capitalism from eating its leash if you stop time, as long as systems remain in motion they will trend in natural directions, for Capitalism that is centralization.

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        This is simply not true. And whole EU is doing this more or less effectively. But your government has to be very very careful since this sure can happen.

        In recent years we have seen degradation of this leash. But EU commission started keeping up with global monopolies.

        I believe also in USA they are making some antitrust changes after a few decades of sleeping.

          • hostops@sh.itjust.works
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            Read all my statements again. And apply strict mathematic logic.

            Few years of degradation of antitrust laws and some effective reforms in this year alone does not in any way prove your point.

      • ultranaut@lemmy.world
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        Stick a finger up its butt and the leash will get spit back out? I think I read that somewhere, not sure if it works.

  • communism@lemmy.ml
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    1. Because it’s in their personal interests to perpetuate capitalism
    2. Because liberal ideology is hegemonic and it is what most people have been raised to believe
    3. Plenty of other reasons why people hold the political beliefs they hold, surely it’s obvious that there are many ways that someone can arrive at a belief system
    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      I like how these pretty neatly map to the three I gave for defending billionaires, even though they’re worded very differently and probably thought of completely independently. We even ordered them the same way.

      People who defend billionaires either have a vested interest, have actually bought that they’re 1000x smarter than normal people, or have some (possibly vague) abstract moral position that overrules the basic idea of fairness. Often it’s more than one.

      I suppose the 1000x smarter thing isn’t the only propaganda reason given, but I’d say meritocracy is by far more pronounced than inherent property rights or red-baiting in today’s mainstream media. People who go with the latter two tend to learn it through personal connections.

  • kittenzrulz123
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    Liberalism, its propaganda, and its consequences. Also a severe lack of class consciousness and knowledge of political theory.

    • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      I think more important than that, is the reason for liberalism, which is the base, ie the Mode of Production.

  • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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    Because the average person doesn’t have any real time to think deeply about politics. They believe whatever big media tells them. Some also can’t understand how evil someone people can get.

    “Surely the basic logic of how things work must be very consistent in order to have such a large and prosperous country like the USA. I don’t understand it. Probably because I’m missing something not because it’s fundamentally flawed”

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      Because the average person doesn’t have any real time to think deeply about politics.

      Because the economic elites have engineered it that way.

      They flooded the workplace with double the workers (both men and women), thereby depressing wages and forcing both parents to become wage earners to survive. Then, with both parents working outside the house, childcare and chores sucked up all available free time, and even more household costs went towards outside help (daycares, etc.).

      Then they began a tradition of kicking children out of the house when they became adults, thereby putting strain on infrastructure and increasing the demand for housing.

      Then they began a push for higher education, thereby saddling young adults with ridiculous amounts of debt at the point of their lives when they could least afford to shoulder said debt.

      All this makes us extremely time poor and resource poor, such that we cannot afford the head space to consider anything beyond where we put the next step or two that we make. As a society, the common man becomes far too busy just treading water to be concerned about in which direction they should swim.

      As such, most people take massive amounts of cognitive shortcuts, relying far too much on things spoon-fed to them from the very news sources that should be unbiased and impartial, but which are nearly always owned by the Parasite Class, which favour deeply regressive conservative policies that benefit only themselves at the expense of the common person.

      And most people don’t think deeply not because they cannot be bothered to think for themselves, but rather because they have far too much on their plate to afford to do so. They quite literally would mentally burn out if they were to do so.

      • lud@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        It’s impressive that someone engineered the last century of economic history. That’s some Palpatine level engineering!