So you are saying that success is a measure of life quality. By implying that the struggle to be succesful is what brings happiness you are saying that life quality can only be achieved through it. Something that I think most people can disprove for you. I am not arguing that accomplishing something doesn't bring happiness and satisfaction, but I am arguing that success can be more then just getting a better paid job or a job with higher prestige.spartan231490 said:I'm not saying that being successful is any valid measure of life quality, I'm saying that the struggle is what makes life worth living. The whole "pursuit of happiness" part is exactly what I'm talking about.
The communist system also makes the majority of people join the workforce with little say what to produce. The same commodities must be produced with the same methods, and therefore the same number of workers must help. The world needs it's factory workers, and it's janitors. tehy still exist in communism, but they get screwed cuz they're payed the same for a much crappier job. Communism still makes the workers interchangeable assets, but instead of a company, it's the government.
At least in capitalism you can strive to go somewhere, and if you do your job better than someone else, you get more money, a tangible proof of your success and a reason for pride. In communism, you don't even have that luxury. Let me put it to you this way. If every person is payed the same, regardless of what they do, that sends the message that all of those people is worth exactly the same thing. This devalues the individual, because he has exactly the same value as any other.
Perhaps communism's greatest downfall is that it eliminates the individual drive to succeed and grow because it eliminates the most tangible reward of your efforts, and sends the message that the one who works hard and is the best at what he does, is no more valuable than the person who sleeps through half his shift, and who doesn't even really do his job. Without this drive to better yourself, the civilization would stagnate, leading to lives becoming nothing more than a dull, monotonous, pointless existence.
In short, it isn't the money that makes a life better, it is the drive, and feeling of success and pride(self-value) that makes life better. Without the drive to be better, we lose what it means to be human, and replace it with our only value being a part of humanity.
Besides, you are building a strawman of communism that simply wouldn't work anywhere ever. The ideal communism as defined by Marx calls for the workers to own the means of production (as opposed to having a specific class of people that owns the means of production). This means that you are not told what to produce by your boss, the collective decides what to produce and do it. There are plenty of examples around the world where collective decision making has been shown to work, so this is hardly something impossible.
Furthermore, there would still be such a thing as success in communism. But instead of measuring it with how far up the corporate lader you can go it would be measured in other things. A good worker with a knack for organizing could become the foreman for example. A good healthcare worker might progress from nurse to doctor. This is before we even go into the territory of redefining what success and achievement is. Arguably, there are far more values in life then just career and wealth (I for one derive far more satisfaction from my job as a nurse because I get to help people then I do from a better paying job in logistics).
You make the mistake of assuming that equality somehow would take away individual worth. Which is exactly what it doesn't. What equality does is that it doesn't force people to value themselves and others on a relative scale of success where wealth and prestige are the main attributes. I am sorry, but I simply can't see how the captialistic system with its' "disposable asset" attitude towards the workforce could be promoting individual worth more then a system custom-tailored to promoting the worth of the individual no matter who they are or what they do.