• @[email protected]
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    224 months ago

    I think people do not understand where Ayn Rand was coming from. She came from the Soviet Union, a highly collectivist society. Everyone is expected to conform and be all the same economically. Then she got sick of it, emigrated and formed her own Iam14butthisisdeep philosophy. Unfortunately, some rich American asshats saw that her ideas have self-serving utility to justify their ultra-capitalist beliefs and privileges and continue exploitation, and then spread her nonsensical “objectivist” ideas around. Not many people actually believe the philosophy, although we unconsciously apply this especially with middle class NIMBYISM.

    “Oh, poor homeless people. I hope they could be housed. But I will elect a politician who will not build social housing because it will bring down the value of my property.”

    “I support mitigating climate change. But I do not want windfarms nearby. They are eye sores.”

    • @[email protected]
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      4 months ago

      I mean, lots of people with terrible and damaging ideas came from backgrounds that explain their terrible and damaging ideas. She doesn’t get a pass because the USSR was corrupt, nor does she get a pass because western capitalist society is also corrupt.

      • @[email protected]
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        144 months ago

        She came to the West and made it more corrupt with her half-baked ideas by amplifying the excessive use of individualist values.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 months ago

        Where is your objection? She formed her philosophy after experiencing a collectivist dystopia. Her family’s business was nationalised. That is part and parcel of such extreme collectivist socio-economics and thus enamoured by hyperindividualist extreme counterpart.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 months ago

          Her family’s business was nationalised.

          Lol! The US nationalizes stuff all the damn time - Obama essentially nationalized the auto industry after the 2008 crash (right before handing it back to the billionaire parasites after their debt had been shouldered by the US people).

          Yet I don’t see anybody calling the US “collectivist.”

          • @[email protected]
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            14 months ago

            It’s because they handed it back, so everyone can see we are obviously an individualist kleptocracy. The US government should have imminent domained automakers instead of giving them billions of dollars in loans and then forgiving a good chunk of the loan.

            Wealthy investors siphon as much money from the system as they can. Then, when there is the slightest economic turmoil, the government gives them billions or trillions in handouts. Why aren’t they required to reinvest the windfall from their previous years into their own companies when they fail? That math doesn’t add up.

            • @[email protected]
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              14 months ago

              That’s only relevant if you insist on calling the US military “collectivist” - will you be attempting to make such an argument or not?

              If you don’t, your attempt to conflate nationalization with collectivization falls flat on it’s face - so get on with it.

              • @[email protected]
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                14 months ago

                The military can be argued “collectivist”. I’ve never been in the military but many vets say that in the bootcamp they pretty much remove the personality out of you so that you think with the team and follow chain of command. And often, teams are punished based on the mistakes of one person in the group.

                And to you, define “collectivism”.

    • @[email protected]
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      14 months ago

      She came from the Soviet Union, a highly collectivist society.

      The USSR wasn’t a collectivist society - it was a centalized one. There’s a vast difference. Nobody calls the US military “collectivist,” do they now?

      • @[email protected]
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        04 months ago

        Centralised but everyone is expected to value the group over the individual. The property in the Soviet Union belongs to the people albeit managed by the state. Therefore, collectivist.

        Centralisation does not mean either just means individualism or collectivism.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 months ago

          Centralised but

          So you are now claiming that centralization isn’t inherently collectivist?

          The property in the Soviet Union belongs to the people albeit managed by the state.

          So you are now claiming nothing in the Soviet Union was nationalized?

          • @[email protected]
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            14 months ago

            You can be centralised but not collectivist. See the theory of anarcho-capitalism.

            I’m guessing you’re operating from different sensibility of political philosophy. Define collectivism then we can talk.

            • @[email protected]
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              14 months ago

              See the theory of anarcho-capitalism.

              I saw it… and just looking at it made it fall apart like an upside-down house of cards in a whirlwind. Strange… this seems to happen every time anyone looks at (so-called) “anarcho-capitalism” a bit too closely. Have you had better luck with it, perhaps?

              • @[email protected]
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                14 months ago

                Anarcho-capitalism doesn’t work, yes. What’s your point?

                Have you any luck yet trying to answer me how would you define collectivism?

    • Herbal Gamer
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      14 months ago

      she was just mad that her privileges were distributed fairly for once