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Cake day: June 17th, 2022

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  • I’ve probably complained about this on here before. But my local supermarket put these wide, low newsstands by the doors. It causes a bottleneck by the exit. I assume it’s a loss prevention measure.

    Maybe it works? It didn’t prevent losing me as a customer. I can’t be bothered navigating all the people who don’t look up between the till and the obstacle, walk right up to it, and then struggle to fit through the gap.

    The next place I went to stopped me twice at the self checkout store scanning thing saying that I was ‘randomly’ checked. (Mask on, sunglasses, hood up was almost certainly the issue. Either that or because I only go every three weeks, so my trolley is overflowing more than most people’s.) I said if it happens again I won’t come back.

    Third time, it didn’t happen but the alarm buzzed as I left and two security guys wanted to see my receipt. While they were looking at the longest receipt they’d ever seen and saying they didn’t know how they were going to check everything, I explained that this was the third time I’d been inconvenienced on my way out and if it happened again, I wouldn’t be back. It hasn’t happened since. I suspect that someone was watching me enter with that mask, the glasses, and the hood, and pressing a big red ‘dodgy’ button as I got near the exit.

    Same get up, different store, different day, I was accosted for using my own very wide open hard-to-hide-anything-in bag as a basket because the store’s baskets are rubbish and it’s hard to tell whether I’ll over fill my bag if I use the basket; and if I over fill my bag, I ain’t buying it, as I have a long walk home.

    Someone comes over. Was I going to pay for that? This stuff that I haven’t yet paid for? That’s how it usually works. He clicks the walkie talkie. It crackles. He says, they say they’re going to pay for it. He tells me to make sure I do. Vaguely threatening. I needed what I went in for so I bought it but I haven’t been back. I probably should go back to give them someone to watch while people dressed incognito are stealing from another aisle and getting away with it.

    I suspect this is one of the real reasons behind all the anti-mask stuff—it was getting too hard to surveil us; all that tech they had been sold as security-capable became practically useless overnight.

    Maybe it’s just me but when companies make it harder to spend my money, I simply oblige them. I am a begrudging shopper at the best of times. Most people seem eager, idk.


  • It’s just one temper tantrum after another, lately. US politicians aren’t presenting themselves as the most rational actors. From the article it sounds like labelling the action ‘controversial’ means the current cabinet can’t proceed with the plan. They’d have to wait till after an election? So the US is trying to exploit a technical loophole.

    The Netherlands is hardly the most radical country and still, the US won’t let it marginally cut flights to reduce noise and lower carbon emissions. Hopefully they do what they want to do and tell the US to stick it. They probably won’t. Which means this story can go in the bag marked, ‘unfortunate reasons why democratic socialism won’t work’.


  • redtea@lemmygrad.mltoMemes@lemmy.mlThe scroll of truth
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    11 months ago

    Damn, I don’t know what you’ve started here but the number of presumably white people coming up with all sorts of reasons to argue why black people shouldn’t have reparations is… is it a white settler moment? Then to follow this up with ‘you need to include white people or they’re not going to like it’ is… maybe Malcolm X was onto something about white liberals.








  • So the creators of AI learned nothing from Asimov. First rule, never harm a human. Who tf programmed this to be allowed to dox someone on the basis of incomplete information without any judicial oversight. So much for the liberal rule of law. Even threatening to dox someone is potentially harmful. Did the creators of this not consult lawyers?

    I’m a little skeptical that the screenshot is real, though.





  • By your definition, every community is a tankie because every communist rejects idealism. If these are the only two options, the only option left is to choose a team. But that can’t be right because you imply that some communists aren’t tankies.

    Further, does it count as a definition if other people use the term in different ways?

    If so, how do you know who is a communist and who is a tankie without asking them how they decided to show (critical) support for XYZ?

    By your definition, you must first know whether someone has strong reasons to support XYZ before being able to decide that they really decided because XYZ was on the right team. That would be exhausting and fraught with the problem that nobody is going to say they didn’t do the reading; if they give an argument, how do you determine whether it’s valid or a cover for ‘choosing by reference to team’?

    I’m unsure if it’s possible to define ‘tankie’ by reference to ‘communist’ without also defining the latter and showing how they’re different.


  • Reducing all the nuance of Marxism, socialism, and communism to

    “from each according to his ability to each according to his need”

    is problematic.

    It’s not going to lead to much explanation and it ignores the hundreds of thousands of other words that Marxists have written.

    This is in addition to the problem that “from each according to his ability to each according to his need” is the goal of communism and you’re arguing with someone who (rightly) says communism hasn’t been reached.





  • There are some good arguments for a wealth tax (without distinguishing land from other assets, which would be easily avoided via financial arrangements):

    This is a promising idea. Ultimately, it won’t work.

    Landowners raise rents and business owners keep wages low because they are controlled by imperialists. Land-holding capital is only one piece of the puzzle. As promised, I wrote something longer about this topic, here: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/1052415

    One solution is to tax imperialists, rather than the ‘landowners’ and ‘speculators’, but they won’t allow it unless the alternative is revolution. This is how the US got its New Deal. The organised unions, socialists, and communists and offered an ultimatum: New Deal or what the Russian’s had.

    The US bourgeoisie bent over backwards, increasing taxes to almost 100% above a threshold to stave off a domestic revolution. (In foreign states, they backed paramilitaries, etc, to stave off revolution). Then they spent the best part of a century rolling back those taxes and the welfare services they were spent on.

    You can read about this in:

    • Hayek, for a right-wing liberal perspective, called ‘conservative’ in the US today,
    • Piketty, for a left-wing liberal perspective, called ‘liberal’ in the US today, or
    • Richard D Wolff, for a Marxist perspective, called any number of foul names in the US today – see e.g. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlhFMa4t28A&t=3901s from ~33:00.

    The lesson is, you can argue for higher taxes on the bourgeoisie if you like, you may even get them to agree, but they will connive until you are complacent and then betray you.


  • I’m using the definition of commodity explained in chapters 1–3 of Marx, Capital, vol I.

    Capitalism is commodity-producing society. In this political economy, the means of subsistence – things we need to survive – are produced for their exchange value and their use value. Socially necessary labour time is the only source of this value. This roughly coincides with your definition, that a commodity must be manufactured in some way.

    But the Wikipedia definition is incomplete. At some point in the history of capitalism, humans come to fetishise commodities. At this point, even things that are not produced as commodities, such as land (including their minerals, trees, etc) are treated as if they have value and, from then on, are commodified.

    It is the same process that commodifies women, meta data, etc. These things are not produced as commodities, yet they are treated as having a use value and an exchange value. One of the ways that this occurs is through financial derivatives, such as potato futures. This allows someone to buy and exchange something that does not yet exist: hence the commodification of everything under capitalism, even things that aren’t ‘produced’ or aren’t yet produced.

    This is favourably referred to in the Wikipedia article that you referred to, under ‘commodification of labor’. A direct reading of Marx and an analysis of the implications of his work reveals the additional argument that I provided about the commodofication of land.

    This ‘commodity form’ is the root of the problem that you identified to begin with, about rent/wages. I have prepared something about that, which I will post soon.