• GeneralOP
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    1 year ago

    What you are saying is not true. Under socialism, the government is made out of representatives democratically elected by workers who care about the interest of workers. Also, socialism is a system which main goal is to benefit people, so every person in power has that goal. Therefore, news will be more transparent because their point is to show the truth to people instead of just being manipulated information paid off by the wealthy which is the case right now. What you called “both sides” is the same side paying off the two political parties that it owns to write slightly different content.

    A dictatorship of the proletariat would be interested in news that help the people and not that help the bourgeoisie.

    Who “buys and bribes” the press under the government? The government, of course, but in the name of what? A certain class. Under the bourgeoisie, the press serves the bourgeois state regardless of direct ownership, this is what Lenin is attempting to demonstrate. How do you refute this? You don’t, just as Lenin said you cannot. Instead you say that having direct government ownership is worse. Why? Because “government is evil and market relations are good as a rule”. How is this demonstrated? By you asserting it?

    • ShiningWing
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      1 year ago

      Probably not worth bothering with this one, they seem like an ancap lol

      Like, they literally post in a “capitalist questions and discussions” community to make posts praising free market capitalism and complaining about the evils of government intervention (any government intervention)

      • GeneralOP
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        1 year ago

        I want to specialize in converting libs though since we are short on people for the revolution 😅

      • Beat_da_Rich
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        1 year ago

        I’m seriously perplexed what these people think they’ll accomplish by trying to bait here.

      • GeneralOP
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        1 year ago

        Even if they were all evil, the bourgeoisie are much worse as we can see today

    • AchillesUltimate@lemy.lol
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      1 year ago

      It’s a little more complicated to argue that the free market is good for the consumer (though it can be done), but it’s pretty easy to argue that government is self-interested and power-hungry.

      Firstly, history. Nearly every government ever has been populated with people concerned with their own power. Even since the popularization of democracy, governments were still incredibly corrupt and did not operate out of a love for the people. All democracy really does to alleviate a government’s self-interest is make charisma more important during election cycles, which doesn’t do anything to shift the government’s interests.

      The people in the government are the same type of people as CEOs and people who run multi-billion companies. Whether they’re put in power by military force, by elections, or by people willingly giving them money for a good or service in return, they are all people who are 100% acting in their own self-interest collecting as much wealth and power as possible. The only thing that elections do is make it so that sometimes, some government officials have to appear to be good (or appear not as bad as their opponent).

      That’s way easier if the press is under the government’s control though. Now, the government could imprison anyone who doesn’t talk about how nice the president is to puppies for at least an hour. Or, less drastically, they could revoke your press license if you say that the things the president is saying is wrong (and then fine or imprison you if you deliver news without a license).

      In a free press though, even if all the major news sources are owned by the same people (which is a good point and probably to some extent true, though I don’t know to what extent), there’s nothing stopping new people from popping up and delivering what they believe to be honest, unbiased news. That won’t be the only type of person who pops up, and it’ll be exploited a lot, but the possibility of a good news source exists now.

      • cfgaussian
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        1 year ago

        You wrote five whole paragraphs and nowhere have you even once mentioned class or the class character of the governments you are talking about. You talk of governments in the abstract and as if they are all essentially the same. You seem to think that the state is a neutral entity that is above class and that states just represent themselves. But in reality states and their governments always represent the interests of one or another class. In a capitalist society with a bourgeois state there is no need for the state to own the media directly since both the state and the media work on behalf of the interests of capital. The opposite is the case in socialist societies where the state embodies the dictatorship of the proletariat.

        This is basic Marxist theory and since you are on a Marxist-Leninist instance i would encourage you to use the resources available here, the literature links and the various educational posts and comments that others have made to learn at least the basics. This will clear up a lot of the confusion and the idealist/liberal misconceptions you have on this subject.

        • AchillesUltimate@lemy.lol
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          1 year ago

          Governments are a separate organization of people with its own goals and motives. Sometimes those goals align with those of companies (either particular ones or just large companies in general), sometimes they align with the people, and sometimes they align with those of ducks.

          If you assume that every organization must necessarily be part of either the bourgeoisie or proletariat, and you assume that organizations in those classes all share all their interests, then a governments interests necessarily align with those of a class, but this isn’t very enlightening. It’s much more useful to view the government as a self-interested organization whose goals may or may not align with any particular group or individual.

          If government interests don’t inherently perfectly align with those of a particular class, you’ve got to be pretty careful when giving them power. There is no such thing as a dictatorship of the proletariat (at least, not a stable one) because as soon as you have a dictatorship, the government no longer needs the proletariat. If there is any alignment of interests left at all it is only by coincidence.

          Even if you had an extensive democratic system, all that does is incentivise some government officials to sometimes appear like they share interests with some of the people. It doesn’t actually change governments interests.

          • cfgaussian
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            1 year ago

            It’s much more useful to view the government as a self-interested organization whose goals may or may not align with any particular group or individual.

            It may be useful to certain interests for us to view government that way, but it does not correspond to reality. This theory of government as a purely self-interested organization is insufficient and inadequate in explaining the behavior which we observe real states engage in.

            Again i can only recommend that you do some reading on this subject first. Marx and Engels explained the nature of the state:

            "By the mere fact that it is a class and no longer an estate, the bourgeoisie is forced to organise itself no longer locally, but nationally, and to give a general form to its mean average interest. Through the emancipation of private property from the community, the State has become a separate entity, beside and outside civil society; but it is nothing more than the form of organisation which the bourgeois necessarily adopt both for internal and external purposes, for the mutual guarantee of their property and interests. […]

            It is therefore obvious that as soon as the bourgeoisie has accumulated money, the state has to beg from the bourgeoisie and in the end it is actually bought up by the latter. This takes place in a period in which the bourgeoisie is still confronted by another class, and consequently the state can retain some appearance of independence in relation to both of them. Even after the state has been bought up, it still needs money and, therefore, continues to be dependent on the bourgeoisie;" -The German Ideology

            “the executive of the modern state is but a committee for managing the common affairs of the whole bourgeoisie” -The Communist Manifesto

            “The state is, therefore, by no means a power forced on society from without; just as little is it ’the reality of the ethical idea’, ’the image and reality of reason’, as Hegel maintains. Rather, it is a product of society at a certain stage of development; it is the admission that this society has become entangled in an insoluble contradiction with itself, that it has split into irreconcilable antagonisms which it is powerless to dispel. But in order that these antagonisms, these classes with conflicting economic interests, might not consume themselves and society in fruitless struggle, it became necessary to have a power, seemingly standing above society, that would alleviate the conflict and keep it within the bounds of ’order’; and this power, arisen out of society but placing itself above it, and alienating itself more and more from it, is the state.” -The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State

            Lenin sums it up like this:

            “According to Marx, the state is an organ of class rule, an organ for the oppression of one class by another; it is the creation of “order,” which legalizes and perpetuates this oppression by moderating the conflict between classes”

            Lenin elaborates further on this in The State and Revolution

            And here is a more modern discussion of the Marxist understanding of the state using the US as a case study to illustrate the general points.

            • AchillesUltimate@lemy.lol
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              1 year ago

              I’ve read everything in both those links and either I didn’t understand it or it was plainly contradictory and bad.

              First, I never saw any reason that the group of people who make up the new government would serve the people. Not once was there a reason that a dictatorship for the proletariat would actually be for the proletariat. In fact, it seems like the exclusive role of the government is to oppress somebody, and the proletariat’s a really easy target. Even if you and all your friends pick up arms, overthrow the government, and try to set up a state that acts in the interest of the people, your new government is going to be made up of people who act in their own self-interest, and the interests of the government as a whole will reflect that.

              The idea of the state withering away, as I understand it, is based on the idea that the state is an instrument of oppression by one class against another, and when a classless society emerges, the state will lose its purpose and role and then slowly vanish. BUT the very fact that there is an oppressive state (that’s busy oppressing the remnants of capitalism) means that there’s a class divide (rulers and ruled, oppressed and oppressed, that whole shebang). Thanks to the immeasurability of when the capitalists have been defeated (Lenin stated that he couldn’t know by what practical measures the defeat of capitalism will be known) the oppressive state is going to stick around indefinitely, oppressing more and more people.

              In simpler terms, there’s some dictator in charge of the dictatorship of the proletariat (or at least, there are high ranking members in it). During the extinguishing of capitalism, this dictator will have lots of power and authority granted to him by the people. He won’t want to lose it. This man will do everything in his power to maintain total domination for himself forever. He will create imaginary threats, oppress people, frighten them, manipulate narratives, concentrate more power, punish insurrection, whatever it takes. If he doesn’t, someone who will will take his place. This is human nature, the human nature you see in the bourgeois.

              Secondly, the idea that the state is created by one of the two classes to oppress the other is either not true or a self-fulfilling prophecy. Was Genghis Khan a false mediator? The state exists because people in pre-history had really big armies and wanted to control people to obtain wealth and power for themselves. It turned out that people being alive and prosperous was really helpful for that, so states started supporting that, so people often submitted. This isn’t the bourgeois creating a state to adjudicate disputes between them and the proletariat in the former’s favor, it’s just militaristic (or perhaps political or social) conquest.

              I had lots of other problems with both the articles you linked, especially the article from Liberation School, but I don’t really want to write a full paper on the errors of communism.

              Instead, let’s bring it back to the idea of freedom of the press. If the state is a purely oppressive tool used by one class to oppress another, a state-controlled press is bad. It doesn’t matter who you’re oppressing, or who you’re claiming or actually doing it in the name of, it’s bad because the result is truth is thrown out in favor of manipulation.

              In a post-class society (I don’t think that this is possible, but that doesn’t matter right now) you actually would have a free press, because there’s no government or state restricting it, and this would be great. However, something like this wouldn’t come about through state oppression and control of the media. In fact, this dictatorship for the proletariat having power over the news ensures that there’ll always be stories about the new, evil things capitalists are doing that your loving dictator needs more money and authority to squash.

              • cfgaussian
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                1 year ago

                So…your whole argument boils down to “human nature”. Wow, very original, i’m sure none of us has ever heard that before.

                • AchillesUltimate@lemy.lol
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                  1 year ago

                  Not really

                  -no one ever showed me why a dictatorship for the proletariat would be for the proletariat (adjacent to human nature, since there’s the assumption that they wouldn’t be) -a dictatorship for the proletariat would never wither away because its existence ensures the existences of an oppressor and oppressed, on top of never being able to tell when its intended job is completed -humans don’t want to sacrifice control (absolutely human nature, but I want to list it here as well just to list all my arguments) -governments aren’t exclusively the tool of oppression for the use of a separate class -if governments are purely oppressive, granting them control over media is always bad -in a society on the brink of becoming a post-class society, control over the press would be the perfect tool to perpetuate idea that more oppression is needed (again human nature adjacent, since there’s the assumption that governments would want to do that)

                  If my argument were entirely based on my idea of human nature though, what part of human nature am I wrong about?

                  • relay
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                    1 year ago

                    If there is no Bourgeoisie or the government explicitally restricts the Bourgeoisie from controlling the media, who else but the proletariat would control the media?

                    Just because some people want to oppress others to feed their weak egos doesn’t mean that all of humanity wants that. I think most people actually want to live in a society that takes care of them, and in turn will love to help out and serve society. Once it becomes the norm to look out for the collective interest instead of self serving behavior, self serving individuals will either need to learn to adapt, hide or get ostracized by society.

                    Human nature is not static. Human nature is reacting to the conditions they live in.

          • Muad'DibberA
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            1 year ago

            Why do you think economic titans are subservient to their political figureheads?