Showing posts with label economic system. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economic system. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Socialism and Capitalism Are Compatible Because They Are Economic Systems, Not Political Systems

     Socialism - just like capitalism - is an economic system, not a political system.
     Sure, there's a popular perception out there, that socialism and capitalism each imply a certain political system to go along with them. Most people believe that socialism requires a centrally planned economy, while capitalism requires a "minimal government" to regulate fraud in the market and protect people's property. But that is not necessarily so.
     In this essay, I will explain why socialism does not require centralism, nor strict controls, and why it can be achieved without political action; and I will also explain why the fact that socialism and capitalism are economic systems - rather than political systems - means that they are incompatible. I will also explain under what conditions they are compatible, and the ramifications of synthesizing them both with and without the guidance of the state.

     Nearly every economic system which has been proposed - socialism, capitalism, and others - have both anarchist and statist variations. For example, some socialist and communist turn out totalitarian and quasi-fascistic (usually because they adopt central economic planning, and then resort to political repression, privacy invasion, and social controls to enforce the laws which that economic planning requires).
     But when governments operate in the favor of capitalists - that is, the owners of land, loans, capital, and enterprises - capitalism resorts to political repression, privacy invasion, and social controls, every bit as often as corrupt socialist governments do. Oligarchy is the statist variant of capitalism, while anarcho-capitalism, Agorism, and market-anarchism are some of the anarchist variants of capitalism.
     While some socialist regimes do end up "totalitarian communist", socialism has anarchist variants just like capitalists do. These include anarcho-syndicalism - including its "autonomist" tendency - as well as anarcho-communism, libertarian Marxism, libertarian socialism, and others. Those schools of socialist thought value maximizing local autonomy and worker autonomy; and promoting mass individual and collective ownership of the tools and machines which masses of propertyless people depend on in order to survive.

     Libertarian socialists, anarcho-communists, therefore, support not central planning (which free-marketers despise), but decentralized, polycentric planning. This should be enough to satisfy free-marketers' economic and financial concerns about socialism, because polycentric economic planning of society is much less economically risky than centralized economic planning is. Decentralized planning of the economy helps the people organize production (including its ecological impacts) in a manner which is suitable for the area and environment which they live in, know well, and depend on directly for survival.
     Decentralized planning would require much less political repression in order to enforce, because it would adopt the original principle behind the federalist form of government, which valued deferring as many matters as possible to the most local level of government competent enough to handle them. This principle expresses itself in the form of several political ideas; namely localism, subsidiarism, dual federalism and triple federalism, "polyarchy", and others.
    Lenin explained that his goal was to have social planning of economic production; any "government" which would exist after the abolition of the current state should be created by and subject to the will of the regional governments, just like the original idea behind the American system. Additionally, such a government would not primarily be for social control, but for the planning of economic production by the whole of society in communication with one another. Lenin wanted for the Soviet Union the same sort of delineation between central and regional duties which the Americans originally had; he just had different ideas about which issues which level of government ought to regulate.

     Communism is the political system which most socialists - especially Marxists - believe that socialism implies. Many capitalists are aware of this fact too. But what most capitalists, and some socialists, don't know, is that socialism doesn't always lead to communism, socialism does not always lead to a totalitarian regime, and communism is not totalitarian.
   Socialism doesn't always lead to communism; sometimes it leads to fascism. I would warn capitalist critics of socialism that they cannot claim "socialism always leads to communism" without accidentally admitting that socialism doesn't lead to fascism. And the idea that socialism leads to fascism tends to be an important part of the capitalist critique of socialism.
     Moreover, communism is not totalitarian, because Marx originally envisioned the end goal of socialism and communism to be "pure communism" or "free communism". Thus, communism is not only compatible with freedom; it has freedom - and the full abolition of the state - as its main goals. Pure communism, or free communism, aims for the eventual full abolition of the state, and along with it, the borders which the states establishes and protects, and the money which the state creates and issues. Additionally, the abolition of the class repression and social hierarchy,  which are created by the citizen/"illegal" distinction and the rich/poor distinction which those border and monetary systems create.
     The goal of free communism is to create a stateless, borderless, moneyless society, which would have no need for the state, nor its borders, nor its currency, nor anything else it creates and establishes.
     That is not very far-off from the goals of radical libertarians, market-anarchists, and "anarcho-capitalists", who support abolishing the state and its monopoly on the issuance of currency. That's why anarcho-communism and anarcho-capitalism are compatible. But only if the state and its economic interventions are fully abolished, and permanently; and "ancoms" and "ancaps" can compete for resources and legitimacy in a truly free, stateless, "free market" for alternative proposals to reorganize the economy.
     Communist and capitalist compromise is not without barriers and stumbling blocks, though; free communism would feature no government protection of private property whatsoever, and the only way a capitalist can get on board with that idea is if he is an anarcho-capitalist. This is to say that he must oppose not only state action to help protect property, but also the use of violence by anyone in order to protect property. In a free society, we would change each other's behavior through peaceful conversation and instruction, not through violent repression.

     Socialists and communists of all kinds, just as well as most supporters of free enterprise, oppose fascism and Nazism. That matters because fascism is intrinsically much more likely than socialism and capitalism to require statist intervention, violent enforcement, and central economic planning, in order to exist. It's not that "anarcho-fascist" systems haven't been proposed, however; "National-Anarchism" advocates non-violent "voluntary segregation" in order to avoid the need for statism, imperialism, and centralism, which they staunchly oppose.
     But the vast majority of people with racial supremacist and fascist ideologies, do support the state, do appeal to the state for legitimacy, and do resort to enlisting the help of violent government enforcement arms to protect their often dubious property claims. On the other hand, that is not to say that they won't resort to violence, or even violent revolution, in order to get what they want; the Spanish fascists' overthrowing of the legitimately elected social-anarchist government in the 1930s proves that.
     Fascism requires a strict hierarchy and high centralization of power in order to enforce its economic policy. The fascist economic policy is "dirigism", which etymologically refers to the government's direction of the economy. Under Nazism, for example, just like social and political issues, economic issues were subverted to the Fuhrerprinzip; the idea that the whole society should be organized so as to prioritize the needs of the Fuhrer (that is, the leader or "father" of the country). The need for military hierarchy under Hitler was used to justify the government's economic needs, and social repression was used to make it easier to enforce them.
     At the turn of the twentieth century, socialists such as Charles Maurras and Georges Sorel - as well as "war socialists" in the Russian Duma who supported World War I but rejected wholly dissolving the monarchy's power - began to articulate visions of socialism which required such strict enforcement of "labor discipline" (essentially, strict controls on workers and their production) that it bordered on fascism. This was typically justified by the supposed need for more strictly enforced and organized production during a wartime economy, in which resources must be prioritized so as to support the military's capability of defending itself. Not the "Fuhrer", mind you, but the country's defense capabilities. That tends to be what causes honest, reform-minded, progressive socialism to veer off-course and turn fascistic.
     The point being - to reiterate - socialism doesn't always lead to communism, because socialism sometimes leads to fascism. It doesn't always, but socialism - and fascist regimes parading as socialists - can turn fascist. Hitler was a fascist parading as a socialist. Mussolini was socialist as a youth, but became a fascist later in life. With the Molotov-Ribbentrop treaty, Stalin made himself look like a fascist by tricking Hitler into thinking he was going to give him everything he wanted. Franklin D. Roosevelt worked with Stalin, and imprisoned over a hundred thousand Japanese-American citizens who did nothing wrong, and at the end of his presidency wrote a letter decrying the selling out of the American people to foreign banking and business interests (which he helped facilitate).
     Socialism and fascism do go together sometimes. But that means that socialism doesn't always lead to communism. Because socialism can lead to fascism too.

     To be perfectly honest, in my opinion, it's entirely possible that the American presidential office could come to be occupied by a socialist or socialist-influenced candidate, and it could go off-course and end up fascist.
     I think that because I know that Bernie Sanders has voted for numerous military involvements in Africa and the Middle East - in at least nine countries - over his last 25 years in office. I am reluctant to support him for president - as "less bad" than Trump as that would be - because of those votes, and because I'm worried that he would dismantle American imperialism much more slowly than it needs to be dismantled.
     Based on what I've observed, instead of justifying the need for socialism on the need for military spending (as the "war socialists" did), "democratic socialists" like Sanders tend to excuse "a little" violent imperialist conquest, in order to placate the military-industrial complex lobbyists. I suspect that some self-described progressives and democratic socialists view this as necessary because they know that those lobbyists influence politicians so much, that the people can't strike a deal for a decent social safety net, unless the military and countless businesses are subsidized and supported (and rescued from bankruptcy time and time again) by taxpayers; such that there's a "balance" between warfare and welfare.
     The idea that these people are "democratic socialists" should bring shame to real socialists who value peace, and it does. Real socialists, who value freedom, support peace in all cases; they only support war against fascists and ultra-nationalists. Real "free communists" would never justify social control - nor political repression, nor the use of violence (except in self-defense) - in order to achieve either socialist economic goals or sufficient support of the need for collective defense. Thus, a self-described "communist" who supports any form of military spending, aggression, money, borders, or class distinctions, is an "impure" communist by the standards of Orthodox Marxists.

     The people of the Paris Commune took up arms, and bore them in public. Modern Libertarians and Marxists alike criticize Ronald Reagan for repressing the Black Panthers for insisting on being armed in public. The divide between libertarians and the far-left thus seems to be shrinking.
     Many radical Marxists now realize that the right to be armed in public is valuable, because they know that it is necessary for the most vulnerable people in our society to defend themselves, when the tools of social and racial oppression against them are deadly. There were even murmurs of "Tenth Amendment solutions" - that is, states' rights, Jeffersonian nullification, and "devolving" federal duties to the states - in some Democratic circles in early 2017. Andrew Yang is running for president as a Democrat, yet has a noticeable libertarian following.
     Some communists and socialists are coming around to libertarian ideas; while others are not. The opposite is true as well; many American libertarians are realizing that capitalism isn't working, and are turning to ideas like "free market anti-capitalism" and "markets, not capitalism" for answers and solutions. Once convinced that totally free markets imply statelessness while capitalism too often relies on subsidies from the state, many of these libertarians turn to quasi-socialist economic theories like Georgism and Mutualism for additional answers. From there, it's a short leap to stateless forms of socialism and communism.
     The reason why I am one of these libertarians - that is, one whom is interested in socialism, and not afraid of communism - is because I know socialism and capitalism do not always have to result in some certain political system, with certain modes of oppression. They are economic systems, which can be mixed, especially in an environment which is free of the state, and free of its repressive social and economic agenda (which further its aims of control and centralization of power).
     Additionally, I know that classical liberals were grouped together with leftists in the late 19th century French parliament, and that the original "libertarians" were the late 19th century and early 20th century European social anarchists.
     Democrats, socialists, and communists do not need to be rejected and maligned by libertarians, nor threatened to be thrown out of a helicopter. Democracy is not harmful if it is consensus-based, and has a concern for the minorities' rights and the right to opt-out and dissent. Any and all democrats, socialists, and communists who care about these things, and local needs - as well as individual human rights; such as our needs for social freedom and to defend ourselves, and our needs as workers to own the machines on which we depend on for survival -  should be considered potential friends of libertarians.
     That's because those leftists value what libertarians care about most: diminishing the ability of the centralized state to use violent enforcement to control our society and our economy without the consultation of the local population. They might have slightly different reasons for doing that at times, but Agorist Wally Conger explains in his book Agorist Class Theory that radical libertarians basically want to achieve the same goals as Marx did, but through different means and methods.
     This might help explain why Ron Paul was called a "communist" by some Republicans (mostly for his non-interventionist foreign policy); it's because libertarians and socialists are that strongly opposed to fascism, that to a Republican, they are difficult to distinguish (especially on issues related to the use of the state and military, and their violence, to give preferential treatment to one economic system or another, especially when that system is fascism).
     For all these reasons, and more, anarcho-communists and anarcho-capitalists should not be at each other's throats, claiming that each other's economic system always leads to fascism, while denying what they themselves did to allow that to happen by setting a bad example. To the contrary; ancoms and ancaps should be working together to build a new and better economy, based on the freedom-minded ideals which they determine, through negotiation, that they have in common.

     There is a way to reconcile capitalism and socialism, after all, without it leading to fascism. The way to do that is to refuse to rely on the state to moderate, arbitrate, or supervise such negotiations.

     The time for more communication across economic schools of thought is now. I encourage my readers to read about, and study, alternative economic proposals and systems, especially the anarchist and libertarian varieties. Especially - for the purposes of this essay - Mutualism, market socialism, Georgism, Geo-Libertarianism, panarchy, and anarchism of the "autonomist" and "platformist" varieties. Additionally, economic theories which reject the need for left-vs.-right systemization, such as gift economies, "post-scarcity economics" and "post-scarcity economics" and related topics.
     The dispute between minarchists (advocates of minimum government) and anarchists, is unnecessary; the minimum amount of government is zero. Just think about how much taxpayer money the government would save, if it did nothing at all.



Written on August 28th, 2019

Originally published on August 28th, 2019
under the title "Socialism is Compatible with Capitalism
Because They Are Economic Systems, Not Political Systems"

Thursday, August 9, 2018

Encyclopedia of Economic Systems and Key Terms in Political Theory

     In celebration of this, my 400th article published to the Aquarian Agrarian blog (in its eight-year history), I have decided to start an encyclopedic dictionary of important political and economic systems and terms.
     I have begun below with the fifty words I felt most important to include first, but I plan to augment this list with readers' suggestions (perhaps stopping at 100). Feel free to comment below with ideas about which terms I should add, and do not hesitate to debate the definitions I have used.
     While the definitions you see here may not match those in the Oxford English Dictionary or Merriam-Webster's, I have provided my own definitions, which are based on and influenced by others' definitions. I have done this in order to provide more precise meanings for the terms contained herein; and I have also included more policy-specific connotations and explanations of each term (as well as associated schools, tendencies, theorists, and philosophers).
     You will not find biographies of the individual people, mentioned under the “see also” terms, in this article. Nor will you find definitions for every single one of the “see also” political terms within this article; you may wish to consult other sources for definitions of terms not defined here.
     I have tried to make the first “see also” terms reflect the most closely associated labels to the term being defined. The last “see also” terms listed, on the other hand, reflect either the least closely associated labels, or an “opposite” with which it is commonly paired, because it is actually somewhat similar to that “opposite”. I did not include any diametric opposites, nor significantly different terms, under “see also”.

     It would be difficult to understand the definitions of some of the terms contained below – especially “socialism” - without first understanding the classical economic definitions of “the means of production” and “the factors of production”.



Means of Production

     The resources and facilities which are used to produce goods. Includes large tools and machine parts and machines, factories and plants, and farms and the soil. Those who lend and rent-out MOP are capitalists and bourgeois; those who borrow and rent MOP are in the proletarian class. Distinct from the factors of production. See also: capital goods.


Factors of Production

     The three classical economic factors of production; land, labor, and capital. Distinct from, but includes, the means of production.



Encyclopedia of Terms


Anarchism


     The absence of an “archon” that is, the absence and abolition of dictatorship, rulership, control, aggression, and hierarchy; and often also exploitation, and exclusionary, exclusive private property ownership. See also: anarchy, anideotism (anti-propertarianism), statelessness.



Anarcho-Communism


     A stateless system in which land is managed in common and owned by no one, in which there are no states, borders, classes, nor money. See also: anarchism, Marxism, pure communism, social anarchism, anarcho-syndicalism.



Anarcho-Syndicalism


     A stateless system which focuses on abolishing private property in the means of production, abolishing the the wage system, and establishing democratic self-management of workers in as many workplaces as possible. See also: autonomism, operaismo.


Anarchy Without Adjectives

     The belief that all schools and tendencies of anarchism should work together against states. See also: Paul Emile de Puydt, Rudolf Rocker, Voltairine deCleyre, Kurt and John Zube, Karl Hess, synthesis anarchism, syncretic anarchism, panarchy / panarchism, polyarchism, personarchy, integral anarchism, and the Alliance of the Libertarian Left.


Autarky

     A closed economic system in which a country tries to be economically and productively independent and self-reliant. Distinct from autarchism. See also: protectionism, corporatism, ultra- nationalism, fascism, dirigism, tyranny, oligarchy.


Authoritarianism

     A political system in which control and order is enforced through obedience of authority figures, usually in a highly structured, hierarchical, and complex chain of command. See also: tyranny, fascism, corporatism, totalitarianism.


Autonomism

     A form of worker organization which focuses on abolishing the the wage system, and establishing democratic self-management of workers in as many workplaces as possible, but which also strongly protects the rights and independence of individuals in the workplace. See also: Industrial Workers of the World (I.W.W.), workerism / operaismo, libertarian socialism, anarcho-syndicalism, anarcho-communism.


Capitalism

     An economic system in which the means of production are owned and operated by private owners, usually on a for-profit basis. Entails the collection of rent, interest, and profit by private owners; and supports minimal restraint upon  private transactions. See also: classical liberalism, corporatism, free market system, libertarianism.


Classical Liberalism 

     A political system in which the powers and authorities of government are limited and diffused, and in which duly delegated powers are shared, and check and balance one another. See also: democratic republic, libertarianism, fusionism.


Collectivism


     The belief that the community, or groups of people, or multiple people, always matter more than the needs or values of any one particular person (or fraction of the community or group). See also: communitarianism, communism, socialism.


Communism

     An economic system in which land (and usually also the means of production) are seen as primarily belonging to “the commons”; to nature and/or to the community. Marx called his book “The Communist Manifesto”, and his philosophy Communism, only at the urging of the Communist League, which commissioned him to write the book. See also: Marxism, libertarian communism, Bookchinism, pure communism.


Conservatism

     The belief that socio-cultural norms and traditions; funds and resources; and/or progress, should be saved and conserved. Can include right-wing traditionalist religious “social conservatives”, but also liberal conservatives and progressive conservatives. See also: nationalism, right-wing populism, free market system.


Corporatism

     A political and economic system in which production, distribution, and/or ownership is mostly performed by corporations. Usually also involves the control of policy and law enforcement by corporations, and promotes a conception of the people into a corporate “body politic” which is synonymous, and at one, with government and state, as well as community, collective, and/or nation. Usually involves the subjugation of competition and cooperation, especially when they interfere with the state, and/or with the dominance of well-established, state-approved firms. Includes left-wing variants such as social corporatism, and right- wing variants such as “crony corporatism” / “crony capitalism”. See also: corporativism, corporative federalism, fascism, and the social contract.


Democracy

     Decision-making, and management of society, by the majority of the people. Includes first-past-the-post simple majority democracy, democratic-republicanism, supermajoritarian democracy, social democracy, progressive democracy, participatory democracy, and many other varieties. See also: neoliberalism, cooperative federalism.

Democratic Centralism

     A system in which a central government controls resources on the basis of majority rule. Lenin imagined that centralization of resources and centralization of decision-making would lead to decentralization of resources and a more equitable allocation thereof. See also: Leninism, Marxism, Soviet communism, council communism, cooperative federalism, democratic republic, mutualism.


Democratic Socialism

     Democratic decision-making and management which pursues socialist aims, often including the centralization of resources which are dominated by monopolies, whether natural or artificial. These usually include banks, farmlands, oil fields and energy plants, and railroads. See also: democratic confederalism, democratic federalism, cooperative federalism, social democracy.


Dirigism

     An economic system in which production and/or distribution are mostly directed by the government or state. See also: command and control economy, fascism, protectionism.


Fascism

     A political system which combines ultra-nationalism with racial and/or religious prejudice, and usually also theocracy (“clerical fascism”). Stems from the ancient Roman belief that government and national identity are necessary to bind people together – in the “fasces” (an axe bound together with a bundle of wooden rods, a symbol of power and order) in order to prevent conflict between warring factions of society. Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini described fascism as “the merger of state and corporate power”. Features a strong autocratic figurehead, strict regimentation and control, and usually also expansionist or imperialist ambitions. In a general sense, can also refer to any or all of the imperialist, ultra- nationalist Axis Powers of WWII, including Spanish dictator Francisco Franco, whose philosophy was known as “Falangism”. “Soft fascist” refers to anyone whose views lean towards separatism, hierarchy, discrimination, or special treatment on the basis of national origin, race, ethnicity, religion, culture, or social views. See also: corporatism, corporativisim, dirigism, tyranny, totalitarianism.


Federalism

     A system in which governmental jurisdictions besides the central government retain duly-delegated spheres of policy influence in the areas they control. Types of federalism include dual federalism, triple federalism, cooperative federalism, and corporative federalism. Might refer to more, or less, central control, depending on the context in which it is used. See also: classical liberalism, corporativism, mutualism.


Fusionism

     A political philosophy which combines traditionalism and social conservatism with right-leaning economic and political values. May include, or overlap with, mixtures of libertarian and conservative thought such as paleoconservatism, paleoliberterianism, libertarian-conservatism, right-libertarianism, right-Rothbardianism, Misesian “free-market capitalism”, and/or mercantilism. See also: Frank Meyer, and the “libertarian Southern Strategy”.


Free Market System

     An economic system which focuses on individuals' subjective evaluation of goods and services as a basis for voluntary exchange and trade in markets. Also emphasizes entrepreneurship, the acquisition of property through just means and meritocracy, and the ownership of personal possessions. Sometimes called “free-market capitalism”. See also: libertarianism, mutualism, conservatism, capitalism.


Georgism

     A system which features both a market system and the holding of land in common; the philosophy of social reformer and economist Henry George. George proposed Land Value Taxation, formerly referred to as “the Single Tax”. This would involve taxing only land (in its broad economic definition), rather than taxing labor and capital. George believed that land should be owned either by no one, or by the entire community. Aside from charging private owners rent, payable to the community, George favored entirely free markets otherwise. See also: geolibertarianism, geo-anarchism, green anarchism, Geo-Mutualism, Mutualism, and market socialism.


Individualism

     The belief in the freedom of individuals. Often used in contrast to collectivism, which most individuals see as antagonistic towards individualism, and irreconcilable. May be used in a political, economic, or social sense. See also: individualist anarchism, libertarianism, autarchism.


Left-Wing Nationalism

     An anti-capitalist, pro-socialist form of nationalism which rejects the bourgeois, cronyist, and oligarchical tendencies of right-wing nationalism. See also: Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the Jacobins, Thomas Hobbes, the social contract, social-nationalism, corporatism.


Leninism

     Russian Communist Party Secretary Vladimir I. Ulyanov's (Lenin's) development of Marxist theory. Lenin wanted a centralized, federated network of soviet-socialist (or council-communist) republics. Also referred to as Marxism-Leninism, or M-L for short, Leninism is characterized by single party rule. See also: Bolshevism, Vanguardism, democratic centralism, council communism, Soviet communism, the one-party state, and Stalinism.


Libertarianism

     A political philosophy which focuses on free choice; freedom of, to, and from association; free will; and the natural liberties and negative rights of individuals.


Libertarian Socialism


     A category of socialism which rejects the state, and the use of force. Libertarian socialism aims to achieve the management of the means of production by the whole of society, but unlike authoritarian socialists, they aim to do so through non-authoritarian means, and on a free and voluntary basis. Libertarian socialists reject vertical hierarchy in favor of horizontality and egalitarianism, and value making capitalist practices unnecessary, and developing alternatives to them, instead of using force or the state to ban them. Libertarian socialists support minimal government (however defined); and decentralization, localism, and subsidiarism; as well as participatory democratic frameworks to manage resources. Like social anarchists, libertarian socialists support non-political direct action, such as mutual aid, but unlike social anarchists, libertarian socialists support supplementing that non-political action with gradual political reforms. See also: libertarian Marxism, libertarian communism / Bookchinism, left-Marxism, Luxemburgism, Wilhelm and Karl Liebknecht, and left-Marxism.


Maoism

     Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong's (Mao Tse Tung's) development of Marxism- Leninism, which focuses on the role of peasants in the revolution more than other variants of Marxism do. Also called Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, or M-L-M for short. See also: Leninism, Marxism-Leninism, Communism with Chinese Characteristics.


Market Anarchism

     The political and economic belief that the laws of supply and demand should not be interfered with by governments, and that freedom to enter into direct competition against the state is the ultimate illustration of freedom, anarchism, and voluntary exchange. See also: Gustave de Molinari, Agorism, free market system, anarchism, anarchy without adjectives, libertarianism, capitalism.


Marxism

     The school of socialist thought founded by Karl Marx; most notably endorsing the abolition of the bourgeois state, through the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat, which would wither away amid international cooperation to achieve free society, thus giving way to stateless anarcho-communism.


Mercantilism

     An economic policy designed to maximize a nation's exports, and to maximize its accumulation of precious metals and other forms of hard currency. May involve “limited” or “minimal” supports for domestic firms and industries. See also: conservatism, nationalism, fusionism, protectionism, classical liberalism.


Mutualism

     An economic system in which most resources are owned collectively or cooperatively, but in which most allocation and distribution is done through markets and voluntary exchange. Mutualism deems “economic rent” and “unearned income” - like surplus profit, rent, and interest – as unjustifiable, exploitative, and bordering on fraudulent; because all transactions must be mutually beneficial as well as voluntary, and must adhere to the principle “cost the limit of price”. See also: Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Josiah Warren, Benjamin Tucker, market socialism, Dengism, Titoism, Geo- Mutualism, Ricardian socialism, free-market anti-capitalism.


National Socialism


     A political and economic development of nationalism which rejects the Marxist conception of socialism, and instead re-frames the nation as synonymous with society and with the collective, thus re- framing racist ultra-nationalism as a form of socialism. Involved shutting large numbers of members of society out of what were supposed to be “societal” or “collective decisions”. Also involved government creating an illusion of private property ownership through government-directed privatization and selling-off of resources, but with jackbooted goons paying routine, intimidating visits to “private” properties. See also: Nazism, Hitlerism, and the N.S.D.A.P. (Nazionalsocialistiche Deutsche Arbiterpartei; National Socialist German Workers' Party).


Nationalism

     The sentiment that peoples should express themselves as nations, usually in a territorial context with borders; and that peoples should aim to be politically and economically independent, and if necessary, restrict the movement of people and resources in order to protect the nation. Usually involves nationalization, which is the assumption of the control of productive firms by some national, federal, or central government authority. See also: nativism, National-Anarchism, nation-state, ultra-nationalism, conservatism, fascism, fusionism.


Neoconservatism

     A political philosophy which supports hegemony and global conquest through a militant imperialist foreign policy, but which ironically pursues internationalism under the guise of nationalism, by advocating military presence in most or all foreign countries. Usually supports a dirigist, soft-fascist, or quasi-autarkic economic system, but may be less staunchly right-wing on issues related to social mores and the size and scope of government. See also: Irving Kristol, conservatism, fusionism, neo-liberalism, corporatism, fascism.


Neo-Liberalism

     A system in which a liberal capitalist government has established a robust social safety net or welfare state, in order to supplement capitalist production, to relieve economic stress, to moderate the excesses of the market or capitalist system, and to provide a basic level and standard for subsistence. Usually involves high degrees of both economic equality and economic opportunity, but may also feature market-fetishism, and/or social mores which are not as enthusiastically inclusive as those advanced by modern social liberals. Neoliberal European nations are sometimes inaccurately described as practicing “European socialism”. See also: ordoliberalism, the Nordic Model, Rhine Capitalism, neoconservatism.


Populism

     Any movement which appeals to marginalized, overlooked, and “common” people, who feel they have been disregarded by the political, economic, and social elite. Includes left-wing variants such as social democracy and democratic socialism, and right- wing variants such as fusionism and libertarian-conservatism.


Progressivism

     A social, economic, and political philosophy which supports decision- making by majority rule, and which places a strong focus on progress. This progress can be social, technological, or pertain to achieving freedom and protecting positive rights (or all or any combination of the above), but the most popular associated position is the belief in economic progress through the progressive taxation of income (in which those earning the most income pay the highest percentages of that income in taxes). See also: democratic socialism, social democracy, left-wing populism, social liberalism.


Protectionism

     The practice whereby a country extends privileges and protections to favored domestic industries, in order to attempt to give the nation as a whole an edge in those industries in the world markets. Can include subsidization, tax credits, bailouts, discounts on utilities, tariffs and barriers against foreign production, extension of L.L.C. status, creating favorable professional regulations that allow existing firms to shut out their competitors, and furnishment of easy credit and low interest rates to encourage investment. See also: mercantilism, corporatism, crony capitalism, fascism, dirigism.


Republicanism

     A political system in which the public limits the power of government through a constitution or compact establishing the rule of law. Includes right-wing variants like conservative republicanism, as well as left-leaning variants like democratic-republicanism and social republicanism. See also: constitution, rule of law, limited government, libertarianism, social contract.


Right-Wing Nationalism
     The dominant form of nationalism; the bourgeois Westphalian nation- state. Often features political and economic isolationism and autarky, oligarchy and crony capitalism, and exploitation of workers and/or the environment for profit. See also: nationalism, ultra-nationalism, corporatism.



Social Anarchism

     The belief in social tolerance, equality, equity, diversity, and multiculturalism; paired with the belief that the abolition of government or the state will help achieve these ends. See also: anarchism, socialism, social liberalism.


Social Democracy

     The achievement of a socialist system through democratic decision- making and other democratic means. In the 19th century, those described as “social democrats” were mostly Marx-influenced socialists who were criticized by other Marxists as “revisionists” for being open to gradualism and reformism (that is, working with the bourgeois state slowly on its own terms), and for believing that a revolution can be bypassed by voting a socialist or pro-worker government into control of a bourgeois nation-state's government.


Social Liberalism

     The belief in social tolerance, equality, equity, and usually also diversity and multiculturalism; sometimes paired with the belief that limiting government will help achieve these ends. More or less synonymous with modern liberalism. See also: social anarchism, neo-liberalism.


Social Nationalism 

     A variant of socialism which – although it staunchly opposses industrial capitalism when done by anyone – is also highly nationalistic or nativist, and which may also subscribe to racial supremacy. See also:national syndicalism, left-wing nationalism, social patriotism, patriotic socialism, social chauvinism, Strasserism, national communism, National Bolshevism, the East German Stasi, and national socialism (Nazism).


Social Republic

     A political system in which the rule of law is established through a constitution or compact limiting the powers of governments, but which focuses on including as much of society as possible in the drafting of a “social contract” or “social compact”. See also: republicanism, left-wing nationalism, social nationalism, corporatism.


Socialism

     The societal management of the means of production, and/or the factors of production. An economic system in which the means of production are managed and operated for the benefit of the society as a whole, for communities and collectives (or “the community” or “the collective”), and/or for workers. In a general sense, can refer to any left-leaning or socialist-inspired system; or to any system in which production, distribution, purchase, possession, and/or management are primarily done by workers, cooperatives, groups, or collectives. Include authoritarian "right-wing socialist" variants such as Stalinism, as well as libertarian "left-wing socialist" variants such as anarcho-communism and Bookchinism. See also: social democracy, democratic socialism, libertarian socialism, communism.


Stalinism

     Josef Stalin's development of the Marxist-Leninist ideology. Involves authoritarian enforcement, establishing strict military and labor disciplines, mass surveillance and the encouragement of spying on one's neighbors, little recognition of human rights and the rights of historically marginalized peoples (race, ethnicity, religion, sex, sexual orientation, political opinion, etc.), and a focus on industrialization. Much more open to war and imperialism than most other Marxist tendencies. Also called Marxism-Leninism- Stalinism, and derisively referred to as State Monopoly Capitalism and “collapsed communism”. See also: Vanguardism, Bolshevism, Socialism in One Country, and “world communism” and the Comintern (the communist Third International).


Totalitarianism

     A political system in which all political, economic, and social affairs and interactions are strictly controlled, by a strong (usually central) government, which often employs harsh punishments and invasive surveillance, monitoring, and tracking techniques – as well as thorough record keeping, and the requirement that permits and licenses be issued for any and all types of activities - to enforce its order and acquire and retain control. Mussolini described totalitarianism as "All within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state". See also: fascism, national socialism (Nazism), imperialism / colonialism, tyranny.


Ultra-Nationalism


     The belief that one's nation of birth makes one intrinsically superior to people who were born elsewhere, or to those who pledge fealty to a different sovereign. Usually involves autarkic and nativist measures like the enthusiastic imposition of barriers to free movement and free flow of goods from outside of the nation, often whether the need is pressing or not. See also: nativism, nation- state.



Originally Written on August 7th, 9th, and 10th, 2018
Originally Published on August 10th, 2018

Edited and Expanded on August 13th, 21st, and 23rd,
and September 5th, 2018

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