this post was submitted on 01 Apr 2026
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No, I am arguing with what you keep actually saying, and the problem is that what you say keeps collapsing into the same incoherent moral haze every time it is pressed. I asked you repeatedly how your politics handles production, infrastructure, energy, housing, agriculture, and mass society, and every time you dodged into abstractions about morality, self-determination, and personal responsibility. That is not me inventing your position. That is me taking your words seriously enough to notice that they do not amount to a politics.
This is a fake opposition. There is no individual self-determination in the abstract, floating above material life. Individuals determine themselves through social conditions, through housing, food, healthcare, education, mobility, energy, and freedom from domination by capital. You keep invoking “self-determination” as if it means anything outside the structures that make life livable. It does not. A person without material security is not more free because you used nicer moral language while leaving them at the mercy of markets, landlords, bosses, and scarcity.
Then your problem is not “development” as such. Your problem is development under class rule, private accumulation, and weak or captured institutions. Which is exactly the structural point you have been refusing the whole time. If development is suspect because of who controls it, who profits from it, and how its costs are distributed, then congratulations, you are back in the terrain of systems, ownership, planning, and power. The second your argument gets specific, it stops being a defense of pure personal morality and becomes a structural critique you have spent this entire exchange pretending not to need.
That is such a vague moral formula it explains almost nothing. Every serious politics agrees flourishing at others’ expense is bad. The question is how you prevent it materially. Through what institutions, what property relations, what forms of power, what mechanisms of coordination. You never answer that because you do not have an answer. You just restate the moral sentiment and hope it substitutes for political thought.
This is a stupid comparison because it actually proves my point, not yours. Slavery’s abolition did not magically destroy white supremacy, true. But without structural change, slavery would still exist openly as law. The fact that ideology persists after institutional change does not mean institutional change is meaningless. It means politics has to transform both structures and social consciousness. You keep treating “private morality matters too” as if anyone denied it. Nobody did. The argument is that private morality without structural transformation is impotent, and your own example demonstrates exactly that.
No, my politics are about consciously organizing social life rather than leaving it to capital and then sermonizing at individuals about their consumption habits. “State for state’s sake” is just another slogan you throw out because you do not know how to talk about institutions except as sinister abstractions. The state is not holy. It is an instrument of class rule and social coordination. The whole question is which class rules, for what purposes, and under what material constraints. You flatten all of that into “big system bad” because that is easier than thinking.
This is a complete straw man. I did not say destruction and misery are acceptable. I said that all large-scale development involves material transformation and contradiction, and that the political question is who controls that process, for whose benefit, and whether its harms are reduced, planned, and overcome rather than driven blindly by profit. You keep translating “development has contradictions” into “you celebrate destruction” because you cannot answer the actual argument. It is a child’s tactic. Replace complexity with accusation and hope nobody notices.
Again, you are arguing with a fantasy because it is easier than reading. I did not say billionaires should be preserved for anthropological curiosity. I said the existence of private wealth inside a contradictory transitional system is not analytically identical to private wealth as the sovereign principle of the system itself. If you cannot distinguish between a contradiction inside a political project and the essence of a political project, then you are not doing analysis. You are doing moral absolutism for people who think every contradiction is proof of total collapse.
Wrong. I hold individual responsibility in its proper place. Individuals matter, but individuals do not abolish structural compulsion by wishing harder. And my morality is not ambiguous at all. I am saying very clearly that politics has to be judged by whether it materially expands human flourishing, reduces domination, socializes the conditions of life, and rationally repairs the relationship between society and nature. You are the one hiding behind ambiguity, because “people should be better” sounds noble right up until anyone asks what that means at the level of billions of people and complex social reproduction.
No, that is you projecting your own nonsense back onto me. I have defended collective human development this entire time. You are the one who keeps treating human development as presumptively guilty, mass society as morally contaminated, and political transformation as suspect unless filtered through private virtue. I am not attacking people for questioning systems. I am attacking your inability to question systems in any way that rises above sanctimonious lifestyle ethics.
This is not the reassuring correction you think it is. You have just admitted the plausibility of civilizational breakdown and mass death while still refusing to ground your politics in large-scale structural transformation. That is exactly what makes your whole position so useless. You recognize catastrophe and then prescribe moral restraint at the level of individuals as if that is commensurate with the scale of the problem. It is laughably inadequate.
Then once again you have conceded the central point. If humans are intelligent, capable, and cooperative, then large-scale conscious reorganization of society is possible. Which means politics, systems, institutions, and planning matter. “Morality beyond humanity” is not an answer by itself. It is a phrase. The real question is how that morality is embodied in production, law, infrastructure, and power. You never get there. You stop at the sermon.
Nobody said China is a mythically pure collective project without contradiction, coercion, compromise, unevenness, or class struggle. This is another cheap caricature because you cannot engage with the actual claim, which is that different systems have different logics, different capacities, different constraints, and different ways of disciplining capital. You keep trying to turn every argument into “oh so you think this place is morally pure,” because moral purity is the only frame you seem capable of understanding.