this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2025
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So you want to change the name of ideology, that postulates free market relations as important part of human freedoms? Fine, it can be Classic Liberalism if you want.
i dont see why even communism would mean there are no free markets: in the most basic definitiv communism is (economically) a system in which the working people control the means of production. this could e.g. be achieved if all companies were work coops - thus workers controlled the companies and therefore the means of production if we dont change anything else there will still be a free market
Uh-huh. How do we define means of production? Can I come to your home and take your PC? I mean that's means of productions alright. So it shouldn't be privatized, and thus, traded.
(are we seriously discussing communism supporting free market? are we seriously considering communism as a sane ideology? what next, try nazism, because real nazism was never tried?)
The means of production are the tools, machinery, factories, land, etc., required to make goods. In ye olden times artisans/tradesmen/farmers would own their own tools (i.e., means to produce goods). However, since the industrial revolution, the craftsman have been put out of business. They cannot compete with machine production. So this is where we need to make the distinction between personal and private property.
Personal property are things you own for your individual use. Your house, clothes, toothbrush, etc. Private property is means of production used to make a profit for the person who invested (i.e., capitalist). Communism seeks to put the workers in charge of the workforce (i.e., workplace democracy). It also aims to abolish class, private property, the need for money/wages, and ultimately the state itself.
This is a poor comparison. The communists want to erase hierarchies of class, race, gender, etc., whereas the Nazis wanted to reinforce them. Need I remind you that the communist killed millions of Nazis in WW2?
Communists killed millions without any wars.
PCs are needed to create lots of different goods. Where do we put them? The classification is vague.
Today, 4 billion people live on less than $10 a day. How many billions around the globe suffer and die unnecessarily in capitalist countries? Why are the deaths of communism seen as a failure of the system as a whole whereas the exploitation of the land, labor, and resources of billions is seen as merely a problem with regulation? Capitalism has shown that it does not respect the environment, human rights, or even human life.
Yes, there were abuses and missteps in communist countries. But we have to place this history within the context of an economic system that was resisted by the U.S. because it threatened profits. The diplomatic isolation, trade embargos, and political assassinations that socialist countries attempted to withstand necessitated a strong centralized government. Of course, this provides fertile ground for corruption and abuse, but the goal of communism is to eradicate the state entirely! Whereas the goal of capitalism is a never-ending increase of profit at the expense of everything else.
Yeah, I lived in Ukraine. You should also mention that $10 could buy you different stuff in different regions of this planet.
There is no intent to let people suffer and die. There are all the liberties for every human in capitalist country to do anything they want to in order to live a happy wealthy live. Not everyone end up being successful.
It should never be equated to state-driven genocide.
Bullshit. This is just state-driven propaganda, a new religion that replaces an old one, which, as we know, is opium of the people.
Nobody gives up power willingly. Especially absolute power the authoritarian communist countries provide.
I don't know enough about communism to say whether I support it or not, so just being clear that I'm a largely impartial observer here-
I have to ask, if you are actually trying to make your argument in good faith, are you really unable to think of reasonable answers to your own question? Like right off the top of my own head, even in our present society we have different sets of regulations for freelancers than we do for places with employees. A democratized workplace is irrelevant for a business with one worker.
That said, as a free software advocate, the topic of intellectual "property" must be addressed. Since I do think proprietary software is a moral wrong, I would support a world in which open-source is codified into law.
But the problem here is that it sounds like you're trying to make the, "they're coming for your toothbrush!" fearmongering in a way that almost sounds plausible, but it really isn't if you just apply a little common sense.
No one is coming for your toothbrush, and no one is coming for your little gaming pc.
Software development can be a place with employees, it's not limited to freelance. So I don't really get your point.
Government, and thus, laws, aren't supposed to be the moral guide. This is not a church. As much as I dislike proprietary software, it's their right to do so.
And it's completely on users that we tolerate that, instead of voting with our money by donating to FOSS. But then again, if you compare how much money you can get from selling proprietary software and from donations on FOSS, it's clear that FOSS isn't doing great, cause they haven't find a way to attract the same volume of money.
Okay, so just so we're clear, you are not a good faith actor, then? I'll go ahead and directly break down why you're full of shit in that case.
In your previous comment you said, "Can I come to your home and take your PC?", which implies a single person, doing their own thing - a freelancer. Now you're moving the goalpost. But okay, whatever. We're talking about a case where you're a part of a group of people, providing a product or service together? Then what gives you the right to be a dictator? All members of the group should have an equal stake and ownership of the properties being utilized for whatever is being made, and management of the group should be run in a way that is democratized.
But even in your new scenario, how is the outlandish idea of someone coming to your house to take your pc even in the realm of realistic possibility? If we're talking about a group of people making software, then realistically all members probably have their own computers, and are using those to make their contributions. In this case the thing at stake is the software product. There's already precedent for situations like this - it is possible to make an entire software compilation available to the public under one common license, and at the same time make it the case that all code and content contributions are under ownership of each individual making their contributions. Of course this is a case of permissive or copyleft license systems being applied on top of the wider framework of private intellectual property law. I'll address that more in your next points.
But let's go even more unrealistic. Let's say for some weird reason that you are the only one who could afford a PC to work with, in a landscape where private property has been abolished. If we're talking about a case where you're a freelancer, no one else has a stake in your PC. Even if you're using it as a "means of production", it's arguable the hardware should still be considered "personal property," since it blurs a line between something you're using for work-related activities as well as personal activities, in addition to the fact that no other workers have any kind of stake in it.
But then on the case of groups, then things start to change. As previously mentioned, no, you shouldn't get exclusive rights to software you didn't create yourself, as a start. As for the hardware - we already live in a landscape where there are regulatory hurdles you have to jump through in order to start a business. In a system with no private property, you would likely be expected to enter your PC and any other relevant hardware into some kind of property trust before you could even legally start to hire (or otherwise cooperate/collaborate with) other people. In that case, you have already voluntarily made the agreement that what was your PC is no longer just yours anymore. In such a case you would still have a partial ownership of your PC, but every other member of your team - likely under the umbrella of the organization that you would have had to have founded - would also have equal ownership.
And in this highly highly specific case, in which you were either too poor or too negligent as a founder to bother getting a real office to run your organization out of; if people are coming into your house and taking "your" PC, it implies that it's YOU who has criminally done something to break the social contract that YOU agreed to. In which case, every other stakeholder would be well within their rights to get the disputes settled in the courts of law that would exist in this hypothetical scenario.
So people should be allowed to steal, assault others, and kill? Please try to make less sense.
It sounds like you're operating with a complete misunderstanding of what free software is, and why it exists. FOSS is not just another kind of product. It's not a brand, and it's not a commodity. It is a fundamental rewiring of the social and legal relationships between people, within the digital landscape. The foundational premise of free software is that when someone provides software to you that does not respect your rights to use, study, copy, modify, and share that software, then what they are doing is establishing an unequal - and thus unjust - power relationship over you. You can see this in practice when an app uses drm to lock you out of features, as well as when companies embed surveillance into virtually all the software we use these days - inevitably becoming direct supporters of oppressive regimes.
So yes, proprietary software is inherently unjust, and it should be supplanted, and abolished.
Moreover, free software and free culture, in my view, is the premier blueprint alternative to private property in tangible form. You should read Lawrence Lessig's Free Culture, because it shows the history of the public domain - our original informational and cultural commons - how Disney built their empire on the foundation of that public domain, and then turned around to use lobbying to effectively kill it.
When you look at the full picture of how a commons often reciprocally allows wealth and abundance for many, and how ventures of private property inevitably drain, restrict, and ultimately kills that wealth and abundance for everyone except those few parasites, it starts to become clear that private property is, in fact, theft.
Your argument here is based on the loaded assumption of private property as something that's default and justified, which I already pointed out is wrong. But to address your point about the profitabilty of FOSS, that's just plain wrong. Sure, many choose to simply give free software away, and try relying on donations. That model only really works when a piece of software becomes widely depended on, critically so, and their struggles for funding gets enough public attention - like the case of GPG.
But that doesn't mean that's the only model. Everyone struggles for basic survival in our capitalistic hellscape, but that said, in the case of games for instance, ID used to have a decent model - separate engine and content, open-source the engine after some years. Continue selling the game anyway. Dwarf Fortress did something similar - they started life donation-based, then later built some quality of life improvements and sold the game on Steam - and made tens of millions.
Or the classic example, Red Hat. Their products are completely open-source. They sell it anyway. Some people opt for the free versions, and plenty of people still pay for the official ones - because the continuing support is worth it.
You're also conflating monetary hoarding, with success of actual use. Sure, Microsoft is one of the richest companies in the world, but Linux is so ubiquitous on servers that it's fair to say Linux runs the fucking internet. Windows might still dominate the desktop space (a position that is eroding now more than ever btw), and yet Linux's ubiquity even goes so far as to power Android, which prevented Windows from ever dominating the mobile space (granted Android has problems of it's own).
This needs to be situated in context too. The existing legal landscape loves private property. Its loves oligarchy. It wants to give every advantage to billionaires. And despite all of that, free software and free culture are probably two of the most successful and enduring lowkey anticapitalist movements in human history. They take private property law, and turn it against itself, creating a whole new commons that can't be taken away. It is the Brazilian jiu-jitsu of anticapitalism. And it is the story of the Tortoise vs the Hare.
If you support FOSS, then you are already against private property - you just don't realize it yet.
Means of production already has a definition you could have looked up instead of making yourself look like a clown.
"In economics and political theory, "means of production" refers to the physical and non-human inputs used for producing goods and services. These include land, tools, machinery, and infrastructure."
Also, while it's bad when people accumulate means and tools of production in private property, there is nothing preventing individuals from owning the tools they need to produce. And one could even argue that a PC is not a tool for production, it's more a tool like a toothbrush, and as far as I am aware no communist project worldwide socialized toothbrushes so far, correct me if I am wrong.
Finally, nazism has been tried, and one could argue that a similar form of fascist government is currently in place in the USA, so I am not really sure what you want to tell us here.
Private property (as opposed to personal property) is property owned by individuals or entities that generate profits from others' labor, and is abolished under communism. So, no, you can't take someone's personal PC (or any personal property). I'm not that deep into communist theory or thought, so not sure if "free markets" can exist under communism (I know money and states don't exist), but I know there are theoretical socialist societies where free markets exist (market socialism, anarcho-syndicalism, etc).
please explain to me how if every current company was a workercoop free markets were endangered