• zerakith@lemmy.ml
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        12 days ago

        They don’t disappear if capitalism disappears. I agree with you capitalism needs to end in order to deal with them but there are hard issues that we have to deal with even with capitalism gone.

        Even if the causes ceased we would still be left with residual emissions and degraded natural systems to try and deal with and a lower EROI society to do it.

        • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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          12 days ago

          They’re “hard issues” because we don’t have a centrally planned economy, we have to rely on the market to provide solutions.

          Through a combination of marshaling the forces of production to build a renewable infrastructure and strict fossil fuel rationing during the build-up phase I think we could get the crisis under control within 5 years.

          … I’ll admit that’s just vibes, though.

          • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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            12 days ago

            They’re “hard issues” because we don’t have a centrally planned economy, we have to rely on the market to provide solutions

            As humans are very bad a predicting the future, centrally planned economies come with so many added problems that market based solutions are frequently more realistic.

            • bishbosh@lemm.ee
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              12 days ago

              This is a strawman. Centrally planned does not mean immutable, and markets are no more able to predict the future than anyone else. What it does allow is the disregard of the only quantity markets are capable of maximizing, profit.

            • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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              12 days ago

              Every corporation is centrally planned.

              I recommend reading The People’s Republic of Walmart. Businesses have figured out central planning, there’s no reason it can’t be done for nations.

              • Muyal_Hix@lemmy.world
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                11 days ago

                Corporations are run very differently from countries.

                What happens when you don’t like the product that the state is offering?

                What about independent artists and creators?

                Figuring out what things people will like is next to impossible.

                • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                  11 days ago

                  What happens when you don’t like the product that the state is offering?

                  Petition the central planners to offer something else. Central planning can still be democratic.

                  What about independent artists and creators?

                  Well without the need to sell their art they could create whatever they want without fear of it being unmarketable. An artist could just create without needing to sell it to anyone.

                  Figuring out what things people will like is next to impossible.

                  Businesses do this all the time! They do market research to find out what people want, they monitor current events and customer demands and social media. There’s no reason a central planner can’t do the same.

                  • Muyal_Hix@lemmy.world
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                    10 days ago
                    1. Not going to work unless the government has somehow unlimited resources. Otherwise why would they spend money and resources on something they don’t know how popular would it be?

                    2. What reward do those independent creators receive in exchange of doing their art? Do they just work for free?

                    3. And sometimes they succeed and other times they don’t. In a planned economy you’d essentially be stuck with whatever the government monopoly has decided to manufacture and you won’t have any other choice.

      • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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        12 days ago

        The Aral Sea is essentially gone and it was killed by poor Soviet planning. Capitalism was not the driving factor rather ignorance was and ignorance is held equally by all sides.

        Capitalism isn’t the only thing driving environmental collapse. It’s industrialization

        • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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          11 days ago

          Central planners in the Soviet Union didn’t even have computers and they lacked the level of scientific understanding we have today of the environment, of our resources, and of the limits to growth. We’ve all heard about Mao killing the sparrows in China.

          This isn’t a reason to never try central planning again.

          • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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            11 days ago

            They absolutely had computers, I have no idea why you would think the second largest economy that produced tremendous technological advances in its time did not have computers.You know Tetris was created by a Soviet programmer, right?

            Planned economies are doomed at this point gecause we aren’t able to predict distasters and the planned economy cannot respond in an efficient manner when things go wrong. Humans aren’t smart enough and we do not have artificial intelligence capable of doing so.

            • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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              11 days ago

              How old are you? Did you go through COVID? Capitalism doesn’t do disasters well at all. Every cost is minimized. So emergency supplies go unmaintained. If it doesn’t help the stock price annually it doesn’t get done.

            • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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              11 days ago

              They had computers towards the end, of course, but they were extremely primitive. The kinds of disaster predictions you can do on a machine built to run Tetris are nothing compared to what can be done with today’s technology.

              Also, it’s not like markets can actually deal with disasters. Without at least some central planning disaster response and relief is impossible.

              • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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                11 days ago

                Planning for relief disaster and a planned economy are incredibly different things. Planned economies do not handle disasters well at all as they didn’t prepare for that disaster in advance (typically because how can you plan for the one in a hundred million chance that x would happen).

                We largely have stuck with market based economies because they currently are much more responsive to changes.

                While computers have gotten more powerful there is zero evidence to support that we have gotten to the point where they could run a planned economy in any fashion.

                • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                  11 days ago

                  We largely have stuck with market based economies because they currently are much more responsive to changes.

                  No, we still have market based economies because they make a few people very very rich.

                  We needed markets before computers and instant mass communication. Things are different now

                  While computers have gotten more powerful there is zero evidence to support that we have gotten to the point where they could run a planned economy in any fashion.

                  What about the fact that market-based responses to COVID were universally worse than centrally planned responses?

            • Muyal_Hix@lemmy.world
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              11 days ago

              Non market economies are never going to work, because you’ll be essentially creating one giant monopoly and leaving people without the possibility of doing things differently

              What happens when you don’t like the product the state offers?

              What if you discover a way of doing things more efficiently?

              What about independent artists and creators?

              And that’s not getting into how unpredictable people are, products that have been predicted to fail end up becoming very successful, and the opposite also happens

        • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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          11 days ago

          Industrialization to make money is encouraged by capitalism. Why do you think big oil was lying about global warming? It’s not a few bad apples it is a systemic drive to make more money even if it hurts people or the planet.

          • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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            11 days ago

            Industrialization has been done by every nation that is capable of doing it regardless of their economic system or philosophy.

            Thinking this is a capitalist issue ignores the Marxist states that have horrible records on the environment eg China and the USSR. It’s industrialization that is the issue.

            • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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              11 days ago

              There’s a difference between industrialization for people and trade versus industrialization for money and power. One helps everyone, The other only helps capitalists.

              I wouldn’t necessarily look at China and USSR and say they are a good alternative. I prefer a more democratic socialism. My problem with capitalism is specifically the lack of choice of the people. We spend 8 out of 12 hours on average working for a company that we don’t get a vote in.

              • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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                11 days ago

                There’s a difference between industrialization for people and trade versus industrialization for money and power.

                Not as far as the environment is concerned and frankly many will tell you running water and electricity are huge advantages regardless of how you get them.

                • deaf_fish@lemm.ee
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                  11 days ago

                  What? Yes, the environment can tell because there would be less pollution. The motivations are different. Do you think worker controlled industries would use the same tactics to over produce and polute the areas the workers live in? No one would benefit from that.

                  I’m not saying we would reach zero pollution but there would be a lot less pollution.

                  I have no problem with running water and electricity, most reasonable socialist would agree.

      • zerakith@lemmy.ml
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        12 days ago

        To be honest I’m tempted to say that desire to remove humans from the production of society is a fundamentally capitalist one.

        • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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          12 days ago

          While that might be true in some contexts it makes no sense in the context of my comment.

          Im saying that leftist coders inherent personal problems and racism will make their way into the AI much like how it has worked with capitalist AI.

          Humans have many of the same biases and issues regardless of political lean.

          • LwL@lemmy.world
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            11 days ago

            It’s less of a bias of the programmer and moreso a bias of data, particularly when a factor like gender or ethnicity correlates with something without direct causation, such as crime rates correlating with ethnicity largely because of immigrants being poorer on average, and economic standing being a major correlating factor. If your dataset doesn’t include that, any AI will just see “oh, people in group x are way more likely to commit crimes”. This can be prevented but it’s generally more of a risk of overlooking something than intentional data manipulation (not that that isn’t possible).

          • zerakith@lemmy.ml
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            12 days ago

            Yes that’s fair. I guess my comment wasn’t a direct response to yours other than it made me think this desire that all the difficult issues (like bias) just disappear if you remove all the humans from the process* is flawed and any anticapitalist society should really start from that understanding. One that understands that conflict will emerge and pro-social “convivial” systems and structures need to emerge to handle them.

            *You are right to point out that the “AI” we are talking about is statistical models built from humans that includes bias where as the hype is that we have Data from Star Trek and therefore these systems hide the human inputs but don’t remove them.