SylvesterBr said:
I mean that you can accept any offer you want. You can say that you won't take a job unless you earn $X. You might not get 'bought' i.e. employed, but unlike in socialism etc you can decide if you'll accept a certain wage, and try to get a better wage from a different company.
True, but that doesn't mean the system is fair.
SylvesterBr said:
Wow. You see, you do a certain amount of work, and it results in goods and services produced equivalent to an amount of money.
Say you produce $10 an hour worth of goods. Your hourly wage is not going to be over $10 an hour because the company would be losing money. It won't be $10 because then it wouldn't be making money and thus has no reason to employ you.
After that, the market will determine your wage i.e. how valuable your skills are.
An unskilled labourer is easily replaceable because plenty of people are willing/able to his/her job. Say, an engineer, however, has skills that are far more scare and as a result the employer pays them more because other companies will be competing for his/her skills (with higher wages).
I know this. The problem is the divide between the rich and the poor. People shouldn't have the right to exploit others, which undoubtedly occurs under the capitalist system. The point I'm trying to make is that these managers etc aren't needed. Their only function is to thrive off the work and labour of others. We don't need capitalism to have an equal and fair society. Capitalism divides the populace and creates a dog-eat-dog world of backstabbing and profiteering.
I am not arguing with the mechanics of capitalism, I'm arguing with the fundamental principles it supports. At the end of the day, I think that everybody has a right to a decent life, without being suppressed and forced to compete under capitalism, and you disagree. There is a fundamental ideological divide here, and neither of us can convince the other. the only thing on which we agree on is Anarchism, and it's debatable whether 'Anarcho-capitalism' is truly Anarchism, which I believe it isn't.
SylvesterBr said:
Seriously, this is fucking high school stuff here. "Down with capitalism!! Even though I don't even have a rudimentary understanding of basic economics..."
Don't fucking belittle me you right-wing piece of shit. I have an understanding of basic economics and if I didn't I wouldn't be here talking about this with you.
SylvesterBr said:
1. If he/she wasn't profiting off of your labour then you wouldn't have a fucking job in the first place. If they're not getting thing out of it, what the hell incentives would they have to give you a job?
Exactly. They wouldn't have an incentive and that's mostly why so many people don't have work.
SylvesterBr said:
2. He/She deserves to make a profit because they're providing you with employment. They're providing you with the means of producing wealth and hence make a living.
The means of production shouldn't be owned by individuals. This allows conflict, injustice and class division which is opposed by Anarchism. We don't
need someone to 'provide us with employment'. They simply own the means of production, which they shouldn't, and they're stealing a portion of our output. Owning capital isn't a sufficient reason to justify profit.
SylvesterBr said:
Yeah so you have no clue about anything, do you?
It's unethical you fuckwit.
Jennyfromdabloc said:
and how do you prevent capitalism from emerging under such a system? Would you advocate forcibly preventing corporations and for profit businesses from forming?
In a society where Anarchy was implemented, people would be aware of the dangers of corporatism. Corporations and for-profit businesses would be quickly recognised and physically overthrown by the populace. 'Guilds' i.e joint syndicates would work to suppress any capitalistic notions.
Ending up with less than you started with.
Suppose we have a syndicate farm that is collectively owned and managed by the workers, and that one unfortunate year there is little or no harvest.
There are no capitalists to pay them wages or offer them alternative employment, and there is no government to bail them out or pay them welfare. What do these syndicalists eat?
Their community of syndicates would provide for their needs. Free contracts would be made to allow for events like the one you described.
Under anarcho-capitalism, what is to prevent corporations from gaining too much power and inevitably forming their own privatised army? Wouldn't we eventually revert back to state-capitalism? How are monopolies prevented, if at all?
Also, what do you think about Mutualist Anarchism etc.