Capitalism
Capitalism
Capitalism
Don’t they mean $70 per week subscription, because.. why not!
No, $70 is just for a three hour block. Stop being poor.
Because you own neither the towel, nor the land! It is provided for you, so the least you can do is pay for it! Because... Well... Wait, I'll get to it eventually... Hmm...
Feudalism come back like crabgrass, because people who figure out how to benefit from it are far more motivated than those of us who just want to live. Pro tip: Rebrand it as Freedom!
And that's why I only leave the house to find food
Food costs quadruple
Housing costs double before you get home
Why It's So Hard To Imagine Life After Capitalism by Second Thought
The only critique I have is that there should have also been an iPad with a minimum 25% tip.
Don’t forget the convenience charge, then there’s a booking fee, as well as payment processing fee to top it off
We're not living in capitalism, we're living in the mutant child version of it, corpo-kleptocracy.
Whatever vision of Capitalism you're dreaming of, if it ever existed it would only be a temporary state. You cannot prevent end stage capitalism with reforms, only delay it.
Looks like we don't get another delay.
Ackktuaally real capitalism has never been tried those were vanguard states
No. This is exactly what capitalism does. Make no excuse for it.
There is no "better" capitalism. The whole point of capitalism is unlimited, unchecked growth. Even if you contain it for a time and it's not so bad, it will work slowly (at first) to erode all safeguards. It will always become this.
Capitalism, like communism, looks good on paper. But humans suck, so any system will eventually be corrupted by those who seek power at the expense of others.
But yeah, the US was never truly capitalistic.
There's a difference though. To the extent that a communist society fails in it's goals, it's because of people's failure to achieve them.
The problems with capitalism are inevitable consequences of the system. Competition is theoretically supposed to keep things in check, but that just doesn't really pass the smell test for real life. We essentially never have markets that work like the mythical economic model of many sellers and many buyers so that nobody can be a price setter. Plus, competitions are meant to be won. Companies aren't working to keep each other in the race. The goal is to drive out your competition and become a monopoly. Maybe there are brief periods where things stay competitive, but even small differences in success can compounded to further solidify your advantage, in turn making it easier to keep doing that. And that's just if everything started our fairly, which it obviously didn't.
Then there is the divide between capital and labor. In order for there to be wage workers, there must be a population of people who don't own what they need to keep themselves alive. Otherwise there wouldn't be capitalists, there would just be people using their own property to produce their own goods. And once we've established that this is a necessary part of capitalism, we have to acknowledge that workers wanting to be paid the most possible and to buy things for the cheapest possible is in direct opposition to the capitalist's need to pay workers as little as possible and sell their goods for as much as possible. This isn't some anomalously evil behavior, it's the kind of optimization required to be the winner in the market competition. So even if you had a benevolent capitalist who decided to pay more and sell for less, they would just lose to someone else who is actually playing to win. And thus in the long term, the system filters out this altruistic behavior as a natural consequence of it's mechanisms.
Furthermore, this need to divide capital from labor is in tension with the possibility that people could just take the stuff you're hoarding. Because if they have nothing, you have an abundance, and you're just one person, then it'd be the rational thing to do to take the stuff without having to work for you. Thus, in order for this divide between capital and labor to be maintained, there must be a concept of property rights that is enforced with some kind of organized violence, either by the state or by private security.
The other symptoms of capitalism naturally flow from these core principles.
These are all bad things done to us by bad people. But the problem isn't that the specific people in power happen to be bad and ruin what would otherwise be a good system. The bad people being in power is the inevitable end result of the system.
Capitalism would work if everyone played fair and all members of society were able to make informed decisions. Unfortunately businesses are always allowed to lie and cheat their way to success because they hold the power through capital.
Comminism would work if everyone played fair and all members of society were able to make informed decisions. Unfortunately the communist party is always allowed to lie and cheat their way to success because they hold the power through purity tests.
Most systems would work a lot better if they didn't require all participation to be in good faith.
"These gentlemen think that when they have changed the names of things they have changed the things themselves."
I had to call Kaiser the other day to get a doctors note for work. Two second call where the guy asked me what I needed. I told him I needed a doctors note for stomach issues. No follow up questions. No medical advice. No attempt to find out what was going on or anything. Made up a doctors note for me and sent it to my inbox.
Two weeks later I get a $185 bill for "visiting their facilities".
When I feel a little sick in the morning, I text my boss from the bed, turn off the alarms and sleep all day. Finland.
Imagine a guy with lots of money taking a job and getting a doctors note daily just to fuck with the place, and when they fire him he successfully sues them so they have to keep him on even though he never actually clocks in for any reason.
Ah man, that'd be funny.
We have to stop depending on clumbsy corporate everything, local systems should be making all this inflation much slower.
b-b-but allowing each sector of the economy to coalesce into one giant corporation's ownership is... (pulls MBA notes out of ass)... the MoSt EfFiCiEnT UsE oF cApItAl!!
I'm reading a book by Philip K. Dick ("Ubik"), where everything in the fictional future is coin operated: doors, toasters, showers, everything.
Feels like he either predicted this world we live in, or caused it.
Amazing book, btw. Like one long fever dream.
I'm like 3/4 of the way through it and yes. I'm surprised at all the turns it's taken already and just how floaty the characters are. Probably a lot of parallels with how I understand the author's life got in the 60s. ☮
Rent: $1,500
Electric: $150
Internet: $100
Gas: $160
Food: $400
Phone: $60
Insurance: $166(per month over 6 months)
Total: $84 a day.
you know what i've come to suspicion lately?
actually, rent prices might be so high because there's fewer houses/apartments than people looking for one, and that drives prices up (low supply, high demand), but the reason that supply is so low is because investors are predicting that the population number will fall in the future (due to low birth rate), so people's demand for houses/apartments will be lower as well. so if they construct now, it might not pay out for them later on. that is why they're waiting, and not constructing, and if people do the same, instead of buying houses now, buying them later (e.g. living with your parents), rent and housing prices might significantly go down.
Hundred bucks a week for food? For 1 person?
Depends a bit, but yes? My weekly groceries is like $150+ (closer to $170 or so most weeks) for two of us, and that's living in a pretty shit-ass cheap state.
That's only $14 a day, I think that's fair.
Posting this meme costs $10
This comment cost me $15
Reading this comment costs $2 per read
Anyone that responds to this comment will be billed $20
Thinking about this post later in the day will cost $1.95 per thought
I copy/pasted your comment. Now I can read it for free at my leisure.
I just read the copy & pasted version instead of the original! Big Comment isn't getting my money! 🏴☠️🏴☠️🏴☠️
The environmental impact: priceless
This comment?
🌾 Riceless 🍚
After you finish reading this comment, you will forget you were ever gay.
I will be reminded, don't worry.
Wouldn't be so bad if I had lots of 70 dollars to give.
Spend!
No wage, only spend!
Hoard!
No spend, only hoard.
Why we have it so 1 peoples has all moneys and lots peoples has no money? Why again? How's that good for peoples?
Amazon will undercut that guy and let you exist for $63.
Only until Amazon runs them out of business, then it's up to $75 with a 10% increase each year
Nah... they'll keep the $63 plan, but also offer you a $75 ad-free plan that reduces the ads to 20 hours a day.
You could also opt into the subscription model for $12.95 per month. $15.95 without ads (there are totally ads but, like, maybe a few less).
Stay there! You won't find such a cheap place ever again!
A breath of fresh air is about 2200 USD so that's actually cheap
Oh you don't mean the bottle?
https://us.houseofhazelwood.com/products/a-breath-of-fresh-air
If it is per actual air, it's about 2 cents per breath, cheap as hell
More accurately would be “I just made 1.50 of you specifically doing that right there.”
Repost! > https://lemmy.world/post/14316627