this post was submitted on 01 Apr 2026
129 points (99.2% liked)

Communism

2723 readers
94 users here now

Welcome to the communist Lemmy community! This is a community for all Marxist.

founded 6 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] QinShiHuangsShlong@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 week ago (1 children)

“They weren’t in it for the sake of the environment itself.”

No shit. They were trying to understand the material relationship between human society and nature, not writing a nature-worship catechism. Humans are part of nature. Human survival, reproduction, and development all depend on managing that relationship rationally. Treating that as some kind of moral failure is not ecological sophistication. It is just anti-human edge lord posturing.

“Every society that has tried to overhaul itself... has just repeated the industrial revolution’s rape of the land at a speed run.”

This is just a slogan replacing analysis. The fact that industrialization has ecological costs does not make every system identical. Under capitalism, extraction and destruction are driven by competitive accumulation. Expand, cut costs, externalize damage, grow or die. That is the core logic. Under socialism, destructive development can happen, but it is not the same structural compulsion. A system that can subordinate investment to planning is not the same as one where investment is subordinated to profit by definition. Pretending otherwise is either idiocy or dishonesty.

“You’ve had a century and are still trying to formulate ‘plans’ that sound great on paper but are often ignored locally because the existence of the state will always override the consequences to the environment.”

And under capitalism, ecological destruction is not a failure of implementation. It is usually the implementation. If poisoning a river, flattening a forest, or gutting a mountain is profitable, that is rational behavior inside the system. So spare me the false equivalence. A contradiction between national planning and local execution is not the same thing as a system structurally rewarding destruction as normal business practice.

“Nobody gets to billionaire status clean.”

Correct. So what? That is not an argument, it is a truism. The actual question is whether billionaires rule the state or the state rules them. In the West, billionaires are not some accidental byproduct. They are the ruling class. In China, private wealth exists inside a system where the commanding heights remain under state direction and where capital can be cut down, reorganized, and redirected. Is that contradiction resolved? No. Is it identical to liberal capitalism? Also no. You keep treating the existence of contradiction as proof that all distinctions vanish. That is baby-brain politics.

“Why tolerate them? Unless your fines are bankrupting them, billionaires can pay fines like it’s a subscription service.”

This would hit harder if you were comparing like with like. In capitalist states, fines are often just a cost of doing business because the state is structurally dependent on capital and too weak or too compromised to discipline it meaningfully. In China, capital has faced forced restructurings, canceled IPOs, sector-wide crackdowns, anti-monopoly campaigns, and direct political steering. That does not make the contradiction disappear. It does mean this is not the same thing as Bezos paying a token penalty and carrying on as usual.

“These actions are not taken for the sake of the environment, but because the human and economic growth demands it.”

Again, no shit. That is how politics works in the real world. Decarbonization does not stop counting because people also need breathable air, stable power, mass transit, and livable cities. You are basically arguing that ecological measures are fake unless they are done out of pure spiritual devotion to untouched nature, with no human interest involved. That is not a serious political standard. It is moral theater.

“Where are all the materials for this coming from? What’s the impact of building all that?”

From the material world, obviously. Like every form of production in human history. This is not some devastating revelation. The real question is whether renewable buildout, electrified transit, and grid expansion reduce total ecological damage relative to fossil dependence and capitalist sprawl. The real question is whether extraction can be planned, constrained, cleaned up, and subordinated to long-term social need instead of private accumulation. You dodge that because “everything uses materials” sounds profound to people who stopped thinking halfway through the sentence.

“Fines, restructuring, and public re-education happens all the time in the west.”

Not in the same way, not at the same scale, and not under the same political logic. Western states regulate capital without challenging its supremacy. That is the difference you keep trying to blur. Liberal states discipline capital at the margins while depending on it fundamentally. A socialist state can confront capital as a subordinate and contradictory element inside a broader political project. You do not have to pretend that project is complete. You do have to stop flattening everything into one big undifferentiated blob because nuance would ruin your performance.

“Human flourishing has always come at the expense of nature.”

Human flourishing under class society and capitalism has come at catastrophic expense to nature because production is organized irrationally and destructively. That does not mean human flourishing as such is the problem. Unless your argument is literally that billions of people should stay poor, underdeveloped, immobile, underfed, and energy-starved so you can preserve your moral purity. And if that is your argument, then say it clearly instead of hiding behind vague eco-misanthropic sludge.

“Solar panels, batteries, the rail, and the grid are all materials... if your system is tearing apart the planet for rare earth elements... while tolerating and analyzing how your system creates billionaires and wealth inequality, you’re just the opposite side of the consumer coin.”

No, that is you collapsing all distinction into a smug little nihilism because it saves you from having to think politically. Yes, there are contradictions in green industrialization. Yes, extraction has costs. Yes, socialist projects operating inside a capitalist world market inherit ugly pressures and hybrid forms. None of that proves equivalence. It proves the opposite. It shows how difficult it is to build out the material basis for decarbonization inside a global system still shaped by imperial accumulation and commodity production.

“The west demands, China supplies, and neither would be where they are without the other.”

Correct. The world market is integrated. Congratulations on discovering interdependence. That still does not prove all systems are the same. It proves that socialist and postcolonial states develop inside a world still dominated by capital, which imposes distortions, compromises, and contradictions. You keep stating features of the existing world economy as if they magically erase the distinction between a system trying to discipline capital and one structurally ruled by it.

What you are actually arguing, stripped of all the green grandstanding, is this: humans use resources, development transforms nature, therefore every large-scale social project is ecologically guilty, therefore nothing is qualitatively better than anything else. That is not deep ecology. It is flattened nihilism with a green paint job. It is politically useless, analytically empty, and mostly serves as an excuse to sneer at anyone trying to solve real problems at scale.

Serious politics starts from the reality that billions of people need food, housing, transit, sanitation, electricity, healthcare, and industry, and that these have to be provided without cooking the planet. Capitalism cannot solve that because production is governed by profit, not need. That is the whole fucking issue. A socialist project can fail, deform, compromise, and contradict itself. But it at least exists on terrain where rational ecological planning is possible. Capitalism exists on terrain where ecocide is profitable.

So stop acting like “materials come from somewhere” is a killer argument. Everybody older than twelve already knows that. The real question is who governs the metabolism between society and nature: capital, or conscious planning. You keep dodging that because once you answer it, your smug both-sides routine falls to pieces.

And beneath all the fake nuance, your argument keeps drifting into ecofascist bullshit. The constant move is to treat human development itself as the problem, flatten billions of people’s material needs into “the species” as an abstract plague, and posture as morally superior to any project that tries to raise living standards at scale. That politics always ends in the same place: contempt for mass humanity, especially poor and developing populations, in the name of some purified relationship with nature. So stop dressing up misanthropy as ecological seriousness. It is not profound. You are just an infantile kaczynski acolyte. If you truly believe all of this stuff why are you using technology go live in the woods.