• l0tusc0bra
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    2 months ago

    All that I’ve observed in the past 5 years has ruled out any possibility of the west at large altering it’s political/economic orthodoxy to remain competitive in a multipolar world. Even the radlibs blame externalities for capitalism’s fatal flaws with their talk of Trump et al “infiltrating” the government the turn it fascist, but they have zero interest in actually sitting down, getting outside their comfort zone, and talking game on how to beat them for good AKA socialism. I s2g the number of times they’ve demanded that I serve them up a whole political program on a silver platter when I critique the system they supposedly hate…

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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      2 months ago

      It’s worth noting that the whole idea that capitalist markets are more efficient than state planning was born out of the fact that the west had higher economic growth than the Soviet bloc during the Cold War. However, key context there is that the US effectively sat the war out and developed its industry while the rest of the world burned. That’s where the economic advantage in the west actually came from. Now that the west doesn’t have a head start, we’re seeing how the market model is failing to keep up.

      • KrasnaiaZvezda
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        2 months ago

        That’s where the economic advantage in the west actually came from.

        Don’t forget the massive exploitation of the Global South for cheap resources and labour that allowed them to advance themselves at the cost of massively empoverishing the vast majority of the chain of production they relied on. Or in other words, they stole everyones futures for advancing only themselves.

        • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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          2 months ago

          Absolutely, but much of that was made possible by US coming out as a superpower from WW2. Without that, western colonialism would’ve crumbled a long time ago.

      • l0tusc0bra
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        2 months ago

        even the mfing WEF admitted that capitalism confuses growth with actual value. That tri-continental report on how the capitalist era is comprised of hegemonies, which piggyback off the financialization and decay of the former hegemon, has led to me to think that maybe future historians will view the US as the last hegemony of it’s kind.