And that is wrong. It should not be his personal fortune that is at risk. And there should not be a reward proportional to the total investment for what is just an administrative decision.generals3 said:In this case the reward is indeed not for effort but rather risk and blocking of wealth you can no longer use for something else.
People getting money for risking their health ? sure. People getting money for risking their wealth, treating "risking wealth" as some kind of service ? We should not have such a thing.
Well, no. In pretty much all the Warshaw pact the party officials had a pretty modest lifestyre. Sure, maybe they had access to a car or could go on a hunt or had a hollyday home, maybe other privileges like getting preferential treatment or not having to bother with shortages, but overall, living conditions were far more equal than everywhere in capitalism. And yes, we have statistics backing that up. And while Kim Jong Un indeed liveslike a billionaire that makes it still not more unequal than e.g. Dubai. And he is kind of an outlier. You won't find that in Cold-War Poland or Chechoslovakia or USSR or Cuba or Jugoslavia etc. Not even in Romania. The party elites had privileges everywhere but nothing that compaires even remotely to capitalis rich persons.Is this meant to be ironic? I don't think North Korea is even remotely equal, while Kim Jong Un lives like a depraved billionaire millions are malnourished and there is a risk of famine. This idea communist societies were more equal is a myth caused by the destruction of the upper middle class. There was less wealth dispersion but there have always been rich elites and a vast majority of poor/lower middle class citizens. All that happened was the impoverishment of the higher middle class and the transfer of wealth from rich capitalists to rich party associates/leaders.
I don't want it back. I was pretty clear about how it is inferior/less efficient in making investment desicions. I have lives through it and it was bad.Specter Von Baren said:Are you honestly arguing for a system that has historically been proven to not work and never have worked any time it's been tried? How many time do we have to see communism and planned economies flounder and choke to death in their own blood before people will get the message through their thick skulls that it doesn't work? How can one argue that a system that destroyed the fourth largest lake in the world is somehow logical or rational?
First we need the technology to replace the few good things of capitalism. Only then we should ditch it.