chlamor wrote:Evidently you've bailed.
Pretty sloppy stuff you're peddling.
How you cannot see your position as a reformist position of the Slavemaster should disturb any onlooker. It's okay. It's not an uncommon malaise.
The only thing I'm tempted to give up on, Chlamor, is the vain hope I have had that that you might engage your own capacity for critical thought, instead of merely regurgitating stale Marxist dogma. It is by now quite obvious that you have developed an almost religious conviction, or faith, regarding the Marxist analysis, which renders you somewhat incapable of any independent enquiry into the nature of it's basic precepts.
It's akin to arguing with a religious fundamentalist, who's only respose to any challenge to their faith consists of referring it's detractors to the 'Holy Book', or the words of it's high priests, treating the fact that a challenge has even been made as evidence that the challenger is Godless (hence inferior) heretic.
You have singularly demonstrated that you cannot even comprehend the argument put forth by Gesell, let alone engage it. Posting up irrelevent pictures somewhat belies this fact.
chlamor wrote:Eliminating the class struggle by destroying the classes themselves; making the economic struggle of individuals impossible and unnecessary by abolishing commodity production and the competition connected with it; briefly, putting an end to the struggle for existence between individuals, classes and whole societies, it renders unnecessary all those social organs which have developed as the weapons of that struggle during the many centuries it has been proceeding.
Again, what you appear unable to comprehend are the inevitable, logical consequences of making the fundamentally structural change to 'money' that Gesell proposes. What such a change 'renders unnecessary', impossible, even. Such a systemic change completely removes from the system the capability for such evils as Marx riles against from even being perpetrated - all without the need to go around 'enforcing' Marxist dogma in whatever way it is that you propose.
chlamor wrote:Without falling into utopian fantasies about the social and international organisation of the future...
Which is precisely what you are doing, but go on...
chlamor wrote:..we can already now foretell the abolition of the most important of the organs of chronic struggle inside society, namely, the state, as a political organisation opposed to society and safeguarding mainly the interests of its ruling section. In exactly the same way we can already now foresee the international character of the impending economic revolution. The contemporary development of international exchange of products necessitates the participation of all civilised societies in this revolution.
Ahhh, yes. Here we are at the point where the true nature of the Marxist proposition becomes clear.
"Everybody must do as we say, for if you don't, you must surely be 'uncivilised'! The logic of our doctrine is so obviously correct, any resistance to it's imposition could only be due to your inferiority or some moral flaw in your character! Speak against us and you are an enemy of the Revolution! Off to the Gulag you go!!!"
You'll have to forgive my reticence regarding your proposed imposition of flawed Marxist dogma on the entire planet - not just because it's a 'utopian fantasy', nor simply because it is so fundamentally flawed, due to it's inability to examine the cause of the problem.
Nay - it's because I (like the vast majority of people) would prefer not to replace one set of jackboots telling me what to do with another of a different colour, whatever their ideology and no matter how much they try to tell me it's 'for my own good'.
chlamor wrote:"...abolishing commodity production and the competition connected with it." The phrase has passed out of usage (probably because it was hard to explain), but many have thought about it since.
Well - I'm thinking about it now...
So... erm... care to actually explain exactly what - in your own words, rather than a C+P of Marx - you mean by 'abolishing commodities'?chlamor wrote:Abolish commodities, money, capital, buying, selling, property and with them, the state that maintains and enforces all of it.
Yep.
I find it somewhat amusing how you can go to such lengths to explain the 'origin' of money (while steadfastly refusing to examine it's nature - refusing to acknowledge that such an examination is even warranted!) and then advocate it's 'abolition' with a vague wave of the totalitarian hand.

