jlou

joined 2 years ago
[–] jlou@mastodon.social 2 points 1 year ago

A moneyless society that scales up to billions of people is unlikely to be possible

Postcapitalist alternatives that use currency to facilitate trade between actors without social ties seem much more plausible
@asklemmy

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 2 points 1 year ago

This would be joint self-employment as in a worker coop

@asklemmy

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 2 points 1 year ago

I made a post in this community of a moral argument for mandating employee-owned companies. It isn't based on a gut feeling. It is based on the theory of inalienable rights. Here is a link to that post:

https://lemmy.world/post/17963706

@general

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 0 points 1 year ago

Can you give an example in the case where investors hold non-voting preferred shares?

I'm not sure how cross posting works from Mastodon to Lemmy. I thought I had to do that to get boosted by the group

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 26 points 1 year ago (3 children)

The employer-employee contract

It violates the theory of inalienable rights that implied the abolition of constitutional autocracy, coverture marriage, and voluntary self-sale contracts.

Inalienable means something that can't be transferred even with consent. In case of labor, the workers are jointly de facto responsible for production, so by the usual norm that legal and de facto responsibility should match, they should get the legal responsibility i.e. the fruits of their labor

@asklemmy

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Why do investors defeat the whole purpose? @general

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 1 points 1 year ago

I agree that employment is voluntary in the legal sense. Voluntary transaction occur if both parties perceive that they will benefit from the arrangement. The problem is that responsibility can't be transferred.

You know that there is no de facto transfer of de facto responsibility happening in the employment contract. If you thought that a transfer of de facto responsibility occurs in employment, you would think that the employer is solely legally responsible for crimes committed

@politics

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Employment is a voluntary transaction, but there has to be some corresponding factual transfer to actually fulfill the contract. No such de facto transfer of de facto responsibility occurs to match the assignment of legal responsibility in the employment contract. The contract is not ever fulfilled nor is it, in principle, fulfillable. The only arrangement where legal and de facto responsibility match is a worker coop. Labor is nontransferable at a factual level. You accepted as much

@politics

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 1 points 1 year ago

100% land value tax would solve this @asklemmy

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 2 points 1 year ago (4 children)

The tenet that legal and de facto responsibility match, when applied to property theoretic questions, is the tenet that people have an inalienable right to appropriate the positive and negative fruits of their labor. The latter is the principled basis of property rights. Since employment violates the former principle, it also violates the latter. Employment contracts violate property rights' principled basis.

Labor isn't transferable.

The foundations of capitalism need destroying

@politics

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 1 points 1 year ago (6 children)

Thank you for making my argument for me. Now, what morally relevantly changes when workers cooperate to produce a widget on behalf of the employer instead of committing crimes for the employer? Do they become non-conscious non-responsible robots? No.

Legal responsibility matching de facto responsibility implies that all firms should be mandated to be worker coops, and rules out employer-employee contracts. In worker coops, the workers are jointly legally responsible for the results

@politics

[–] jlou@mastodon.social 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Not quite. Voting rights over firm governance are non-transferable/inalienable. The employer-employee contract is abolished, and everyone is always individually or jointly self-employed.

Incorporating social objectives should be done at the level of associations of worker coops

@general

 
1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by jlou@mastodon.social to c/socialism@beehaw.org
 

Property is only Another Name for Monopoly

https://academic.oup.com/jla/article/9/1/51/3572441

This article presents a new critique of capitalist private property as a form of monopoly. While I disagree with some of the authors' other views, the common ownership mechanism discussed in the article is quite interesting from an anti-authoritarian anti-capitalist perspective. I would be curious to hear the thoughts of other anti-capitalists on the mechanism described

@socialism

 

Anarchists should rethink common vs private property
https://www.ellerman.org/rethinking-common-vs-private-property/
@anarchism

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