Showing posts with label Stalin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stalin. Show all posts

Thursday, September 9, 2021

Thirty Historical Events That Never Happened (or Didn't Happen the Way We Were Taught They Did)

     Many events that we were taught about in history class as children, have been distorted; by the rose-colored glasses through which the American, capitalist, imperialistic public school system chooses to see them, and wishes its servants to see them. This is done in order to elicit national pride, and to do away with the qualms we have about submitting to that system.
     Here is a list of thirty historical events - between 1916 and 2018 - that either never happened, or else happened in a completely different way from how we were told they unfolded.





     Myth #1:

     The evil sorcerer Grigory Rasputin cursed the Romanov family in December 1916.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Rasputin did not curse the family. Rather, he predicted his own death, and said that the Romanovs would die if Rasputin's death was caused by the Romanovs' kinsmen.
     Moreover, Rasputin was not evil, nor a sorcerer, but a monk, a medicine man and healer, a holy man, a horse whisperer, and a person intimately concerned with the struggles of poor and Jewish people in Russia, as well as with the bleeding disease hemophilia, from which Alexei Romanov suffered.
     The extent to which there was a falling-out between Rasputin and the Tsar has been greatly exaggerated. It's entirely possible that the Tsar only sent Rasputin away on a pilgrimage - temporarily, not permanently - due to the immense pressure he felt from his other advisors to do so.

     Source: http://russiapedia.rt.com/prominent-russians/history-and-mythology/grigory-rasputin/

     For more information, read my August 2019 article "Why Some Believe Anastasia Survived, and Other Strange Facts About the Romanovs and Rasputin":




     Myth #2:

     Vladimir Lenin took over Russia for communism, 1917-1924.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Kaiser Wilhelm II, the first cousin of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, financed Lenin's move from Switzerland to St. Petersburg in early 1917. Furthermore, the Soviet Union never achieved full communism, but only significant collectivization of agriculture.




     Myth #3:

     The U.S.S.R. was established in 1917-1918.


     Why It's a Myth:

     The U.S.S.R. was not established until 1922. The entity that took over Russia in 1917-1918 was the R.S.F.S.R. (the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic).



     Myth #4:

     The Winter Palace in St. Petersburg was stormed in 1917.


     Why It's a Myth:

     The "storming of the winter palace" was not a real historical event, but rather a "mass spectacle" which was staged by Russians for propaganda purposes in 1920. Tsar Nicholas II was not removed through an overnight coup wherein huge masses of people stormed the palace; rather, he was forced to abdicate, and then Alexander Kerensky's Provisional Government was elected. The Romanovs were allowed to take many of their belongings with them when they left Tsarskoe Selo (the Tsar's palace); they were not rushed out and forced to flee overnight.





     Myth #5:

     Anastasia and Alexei Romanov were murdered with the rest of their family in July 1917.


     Why It's a Myth:

     The fact that Alexei's corpse, and the corpse of Anastasia or one of her sisters, weren't discovered until 2006, suggests that Anastasia and Alexei may not have been murdered along with the rest of their family in July 1917. The book The Myth of the Basement Massacre explains that all members of the family might not have even been shot in the same room.

     For more information, read my August 2019 article "Why Some Believe Anastasia Survived, and Other Strange Facts About the Romanovs and Rasputin":





     Myth #6:

     Stalinists sabotaged the Spanish republican revolution from 1936 to 1939.


     Why It's a Myth:

     The idea that Stalinists sabotaged the Spanish revolution on purpose, was the opinion of Leon Trotsky and others. But this is not so.
     The Stalinists provided military aid to the Spanish republicans, in exchange for a set of conditions. These included allowing the Soviets to gain influence over military operations in Spain, and the imposition of labor discipline, and the provisions that soldiers may not become drunk (because it would lower their guards when they needed to be ready to fight). Another cause of the Spanish resistance wearing-down was that the republican soldiers had so much democratic power that they could vote their commanding officers out of power. To the Stalinists, who sent them military aid (albeit delayed and insufficient), this was intolerable. Another reason why the Stalinists cannot be blamed for sabotaging the republicans' efforts, is that the Soviets needed to save military equipment for themselves, having tens of millions more people to protect than the Spanish did.

     For more information, read my February 2018 article "Reflection Upon the Use of Forced Labor Camps by Anarchists and Communists":




     Myth #7:

     Josef Stalin capitulated to Nazism in the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in August 1939.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Stalin did not allow the Nazis to gain control of Soviet territory, nor control of its soldiers. Stalin's U.S.S.R. was the last country to attempt a treaty with the Nazis, after nearly every single country in Europe had already capitulated, and handed territory over to Germany. Stalin knew that Hitler would eventually violate the treaty. Making a deal with Hitler allowed the Soviets to buy time, move industries eastward, and trade the Nazis the weapons and materiel they needed to eventually destroy each other. Stalin's regime could be described as a dictatorship, and perhaps even as anti-Semitic (especially in the last three years of Stalin's reign), but those facts alone do not mean that it was fascist; certainly not Nazi.

     For more information, read my April 2019 article "Stalin Killed Fewer People Than Hitler Did, and How Stalin Tricked Hitler with the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact":



     Myth #8:

     The Nazis and Soviets held a joint military parade in Brest-Litovsk in September 1939.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Brest and Litovsk are not now - and were not then - a single city called "Brest-Litovsk". Rather, they are two cities; the then German city of Brest, and the Soviet Russian city of Litovsk. The military "parade" was not a single joint military parade, but two different parades; one held in Brest, the other in Litovsk. The militaries did meet, but there was uneasy tension between them. Also, they did not collaborate, nor help train one another. The Soviet training of the German air force ended in 1933, the same year Hitler took power. The cities of Brest and Litovsk are now located in the country of Belarus.



     Myth #9:

     The Soviet Union invaded Poland in September 1939.


     Why It's a Myth:

     The Soviet Union's takeover of eastern Poland, in late September 1939, followed the Nazis' takeover of western Poland by a full two weeks. The Soviet Union arguably "invaded" eastern Poland in order to protect it from becoming occupied by the Nazis, and because the Nazis had recognized eastern Poland as within the Soviet sphere of influence in the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. Later, the Soviets salted the earth in eastern Poland as they retreated, but this was done in order to make the land less valuable to the Nazis, not as an act of war against the Polish people.

     For more information, read my April 2019 article "Stalin Killed Fewer People Than Hitler Did, and How Stalin Tricked Hitler with the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact":




     Myth #10:

     Poles were targeted for genocide in the Katyn Forest Massacre in March 1940.


     Why It's a Myth:

     The twenty-two thousand Poles killed in the Katyn Forest Massacre were not targeted due to their ethnicity; they were targeted specifically because they were military officers, who had been given opportunities to give up information about the locations of enemy Nazi troops, and refused to collaborate with the Soviets against the Nazis. Less than a thousand of those killed were civilian noncombatants.

     For more information, read my April 2019 article "Stalin Killed Fewer People Than Hitler Did, and How Stalin Tricked Hitler with the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact":




     Myth #11:

     The Japanese shot first in the Pearl Harbor attack on December 7th, 1941.


     Why It's a Myth:

     A Japanese submarine snuck into Pearl Harbor on the morning of December 7th, 1941. When that submarine was discovered, a U.S. naval officer fired the first shot in the Pacific theater, killing the Japanese submariner inside. The wreckage of that sub was discovered decades later, and reported in the New York Times.




     Myth #12:

     Japan attacked the United States at Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Hawai'i was not one of the United States during the attack on Pearl Harbor; it was a territory of the United States, and was considered as "belonging" to the United States at the time. Hawai'i did not become a state until eighteen years later in 1959.

     Source: Daniel Immerwahr's "How to Hide an Empire"





     Myth #13:

     Pearl Harbor was the only Japanese attack on American targets during World War II, December 7th, 1941.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Japan also attacked Wake Island, Guam, and the Philippines on that day.

     Source: Daniel Immerwahr's "How to Hide an Empire"





     Myth #14:

     The Pearl Harbor attack of December 7th, 1941 was the only successful attack on U.S. military forces during World War II.


     Why It's a Myth:

     On April 8th, 1942, German U-Boats successfully sank three American ships, with torpedoes, off the coast of St. Simons Island, near Georgia. These ships included the oil tanker Oklahoma, and the Esso Baton Rouge. Twenty-three American crewmen were killed in these attacks.






     Myth #15:

     The Soviets raised their flag over Berlin during the capture of Berlin in early 1945.


     Why It's a Myth:

     The Soviets did assist in the capture of Berlin, but the famous photo of Soviet troops raising their flag, high above the city of Berlin, was staged for propaganda purposes.





     Myth #16:

     Japan refused to surrender to all Allied Forces in August 1945.


     Why It's a Myth:

     The reason Japan refused to surrender, during its first opportunity to do so, was that the U.S.S.R. was not a signatory of the Allied Forces' invitation to surrender. The Soviet Union did not declare war on Japan until August 11th, 1945; two days after the American bombing of Nagasaki.






     Myth #17:

     Mao Tse Tung took over China for communism on October 1st, 1949.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Mao's "revolution" was backed by Western financial interests; he was funded by the "C.I.A. at Yale" (i.e., segments of Yale University which were involved with the Office of Strategic Services, which later morphed into the C.I.A.). This occurred after the U.S. backed the nationalist forces of Chiang Kai-Shek, which Mao deposed. Additionally, there is debate over whether China ever achieved full communism, and debate over how in-control of China's revolutionary forces Mao was.

     Source: http://www.jstor.org/stable/44326232





     Myth #18:

     Capitalists formed the resistance to the Soviet invasion of Hungary in October 1956.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Hungarian socialist workers, whom were opposed to the Soviet system, formed the resistance to the Soviet invasion; not capitalists.





     Myth #19:

     John F. Kennedy was assassinated by a single bullet, fired by a single assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, on November 22nd, 1963.


     Why It's a Myth:

     John F. Kennedy was shot by at least two bullets that day. Oswald claimed that he was a "patsy" (that is, a pawn or "fall-guy") between his arrest and his own murder. Some theories assert that it took an entire team, of as many as eight people, to carry out the assassination. Also, the single-bullet theory (or "magic bullet theory") is impossible; for one, magic isn't real, and two, a bullet cannot take a turn in mid-air between penetrating the body of Texas Governor John Connally and entering J.F.K.'s body.





     Myth #20:

     "Tank Man" stopped a line of Chinese tanks with the intent of preventing them from continuing to oppress the Chinese people at Tiananmen Square in Beijing on June 5th, 1989.


     Why It's a Myth:

     "Tank Man" stood in front of a row of tanks because he wanted the tanks to stay in Tiananmen Square; not to prevent them from continuing to oppress the Chinese people.

     For more information, read my June 2019 article "Eight Things You Might Not Know About the Tiananmen Square Massacre", at the following link:





     Myth #21:

     Iraqi soldiers threw hundreds of babies out of incubators, and stole the incubators, in 1990, during Iraq's attack on Kuwait.

     Why It's a Myth:

     This claim was made by 15-year-old Nayirah al-Sabah, in what came to be known as the "Nayirah testimony", delivered to the U.S. Congressional Human Rights Caucus on October 10th, 1990. In 1992, she was revealed to be the daughter of U.S. Ambassador to Kuwait, Saud al-Sabah. Premature babies did die during Iraq's attack on Kuwait, but Nayirah's claim that "hundreds" of babies were thrown out of incubators, which were stolen, could not be verified.





     Myth #22:

     The attacks of September 11th, 2001 were committed by Muslim members of the al-Qaeda terrorist group.


     Why It's a Myth:

     For one, al-Qaeda is a database of U.S.-backed Afghan militants, which America has kept as a bulwark against the Soviets since the late 1970s. Second, the first bombing of the World Trade Center (in 1993) was reportedly spearheaded by Ramzi Yousef, who had apparently been plied into committing the attacks with alcohol and strippers, hardly the behavior of a devout Muslim; therefore, the narrative about "radicalized Muslims committing 9/11" is dubious. Third, numerous evidence exists which supports the presence of Israeli footprints during and after 9/11, such as the "dancing Israelis" seen celebrating the attacks, and the numerous American Zionists who were in power beneath George W. Bush when the attacks occurred.





     Myth #23:

     The attacks of September 11th, 2001 were the first successful attacks on a U.S. military target since Pearl Harbor.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Although the Pentagon was targeted on 9/11, it was not the first successful attack on a U.S. military target since Pearl Harbor in 1941. As explained above, twenty-three U.S. sailors were killed by German U-Boats off the coast of the state of Georgia in 1942. Also, the U.S.S. Cole was bombed on October 12th, 2000, in an attack for which al Qaeda supposedly claimed responsibility. Other U.S. navy ships have been targeted as well, including the U.S.S. Stark incident in 1987 (carried out by Iraq), and the U.S.S. Liberty incident in 1967 (carried out by the State of Israel). The attacks of 9/11 could be described as the first successful attacks on a U.S. military target on U.S. soil since Pearl Harbor, but not as the first successful attacks on a U.S. military target in general since Pearl Harbor.




     Myth #24:

     The attacks of September 11th, 2001 were the only attacks against U.S. military targets committed by a foreign country since the end of World War II. / Muslims or Afghanistan "declared war on the United States" on 9/11.


     Why It's a Myth:

     There is no evidence that any particular national government planned or carried out the 9/11 attacks (unless you count the State of Israel). In 2001, the Afghani Taliban hardly had the resources to carry out such an attack, and there is no concrete evidence that Afghanistan was harboring Osama bin Laden (despite its claims that it wished to turn bin Laden over to the United States). It's possible that the U.K., Saudi Arabia, Israel, and/or Pakistan had advanced knowledge of the attacks - or even participated in committing them - but they could have not done so without knowledge by, and help from, the United States. The 9/11 attacks were thus not an act of war, because no single foreign national government committed the attack without U.S. complicity (or at least foreknowledge).




     Myth #25:

     The Afghan Taliban sheltered Osama bin Laden in late 2001.


     Why It's a Myth:

     On October 3rd, 2001, the Chicago Tribune published an article titled "Taliban maintains refusal to turn over bin Laden".

     On October 14th, 2001, The Guardian published an article titled "Bush rejects Taliban offer to hand bin Laden over".

     Well, which is it? Did the Taliban offer to turn bin Laden over to American authorities, or didn't they? If both articles above are correct, then if this did happen, then it must have happened between October 3rd and 14th.
     The Guardian article says that Haji Abdul Kabir, "the third most powerful figure" in the Taliban in Afghanistan, said that the Taliban "would be ready to hand him over to a third country" if they found evidence that bin Laden was behind the 9/11 attacks.

     It's possible that bin Laden was in Afghanistan in late 2001, as American authorities claimed. But the fact that bin Laden was reportedly killed in Pakistan (in a town called Abbottabad) in 2011, suggests the possibility that bin Laden was never in Afghanistan to begin with.
     The fact that opium production dropped the year before 9/11, and skyrocketed back up again after the U.S. invaded Afghanistan, suggests that opium poppies (as well as lithium deposits, and perhaps also the country's underage male sex trade) were the real reasons behind America's invasion of Afghanistan, rather than getting bin Laden.
     Moreover, bin Laden's father had business ties to the Bush family. It's probably more likely that bin Laden was an intelligence asset of the United States, than Afghanistan.



     Myth #26:

     The World Trade Center collapsed on September 11th, 2001 because its steel was melted by jet fuel.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Burning jet fuel is hot enough to melt steel beams in a manner that weakens them, but not hot enough to cause them to collapse on its own. Witnesses reported seeing construction crews enter the World Trade Center in the several weeks leading up to the attack. Physical evidence has confirmed that electric charges were placed on many of the steel beams near a 45-degree angle, allowing the top portions of the beams to slide off of the bottom portions. Numerous videos show that the towers fell nearly at free-fall speed, which is commensurate with what happens during a controlled demolition. Towers 1 and 2 may have been destroyed in a controlled demolition because Building 7 was indisputably demolished intentionally. We know this because World Trade Center owner Larry Silverstein admitted that he told firefighters, "pull it" after World Trade Center Building 7 underwent significant fire damage.



     Myth #27:

     The Pentagon was hit by a plane on September 11th, 2001.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Only five frames of film show an object hitting the Pentagon. None of those five frames show an object large enough to be a plane. All other video tapes were confiscated by the government from local convenience stores and gas stations. Numerous theories suggest that a missile hit the Pentagon rather than a plane. No airplane wreckage was ever recovered from the Pentagon. The hole in the Pentagon was too small and too neat to have been caused by an airplane with wings. For a plane to have hit the Pentagon, it would have had to fly over a highway, where it would have been seen by hundreds of people.



     Myth #28:

     Saddam Hussein's Iraq had W.M.D.s (Weapons of Mass Destruction) in 2003.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Despite the persistent claims of some supporters of the second Iraq War - years after that war ended - that Saddam Hussein allowed W.M.D.s to be smuggled out of Iraq, and into neighboring countries, before the U.S. was able to invade, no weapons of mass destruction were ever found in Iraq. Granted, Hussein gassed Kurds with mustard gas and nerve agents in Halabja in 1985, but that was the same year that America ceased arming Iran exclusively, and began arming both sides of the Iraqi-Iranian War (which lasted from 1981 to 1989). It's possible that the U.S. not only supplied Hussein with the gas, but in fact wanted him to commit those attacks against the Kurds in northern Iraq (whom were allied with Iran at the time). U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell famously held up a vial of anthrax to urge the world to support the war, but that vial was only a model vial, and did not contain real anthrax, much less anthrax from Iraq. Moreover, the documents which indicated that Hussein sought to purchase "yellowcake" uranium from Niger, were later shown to have been forgeries, obtained through officials in Italy, France, and the U.K..





     Myth #29:

     Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro burned trucks loaded with aid on a bridge connecting Colombia and Venezuela in March 2019.


     Why It's a Myth:

     In March 2019, a top member of the opposition to Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro told The New York Times that Maduro's forces had intentionally set fire to a convoy full of humanitarian aid (consisting of food and medicine), on the Francisco de Paula Santander Bridge between Colombia and Venezuela. Critics of Maduro claimed that Maduro ordered the convoy to be set on fire. Shortly thereafter, The New York Times retracted this story, after video footage and eyewitness accounts emerged, which showed that the convoy caught fire when it was hit with a Molotov cocktail. That makeshift bomb was thrown by a member of the opposition to Maduro, not by one of Maduro's supporters.




     Myth #30:

     A "migrant caravan", with Muslim jihadists hidden in its midst, sought to invade the United States in 2018.


     Why It's a Myth:

     Then-president Donald Trump claimed that "unidentified Middle Easterners" were among the Central American caravan of migrants which Fox News repeated was traveling through Mexico to the United States between March and October of 2018. Most of these migrants - about 80% - were from Honduras. No evidence exists to support the claim that "Middle Easterners", nor "jihadists", were taking refuge among the caravan. President Trump exaggerated the fact that many people in the caravan were "military-age males", leading people to believe that militant Muslims constituted a significant segment of the caravan's members. Trump likely did this in order to increase diplomatic tension between the U.S. and its close Central American neighbors, to pressure Mexico into supporting the continued construction of a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, and to justify the use of U.S. military forces against the caravan and against countries appearing to assist it.







Written and published on September 9th, 2021

Sunday, November 3, 2019

Critique of the Idea That We Have a Free Market, and That Government is Socialism


Table of Contents

1. Redistribution of Grades is Not “Socialism in Education”
2. Fascism is Not a Form of Socialism
3. The Definition of Socialism Does Not Necessarily Imply a Government or State
4. Rigged Markets: Not All Free Market Proponents Support Capitalism
5. Free-Market Anti-Capitalism, Georgism, and Mutualism Are All Valid Critiques of Anarcho-Capitalist and Political Libertarian Thought
6. Mixed Economies and China
7
. Achieving Socialism Without the State
8
. Unequal Distribution of Wealth, and Corporate Taxation
9. Minimum Wage Laws Are Bad, But Enslaving Children to Mammon is Worse
10. Stalin Didn't Kill Sixty Million People, You're Thinking of Hitler
11. Conclusion





Content

1. Redistribution of Grades is Not “Socialism in Education”
     Defenders of capitalism often cite the fact that school classes often grade on a curve, as an example of socialism, because it's a “redistribution of grades”. I wouldn't call this socialism, however; because what's being redistributed is grades, not resources. Socialism aims to redistribute resources. Second, it's certainly not full socialism because it doesn't involve all of society, it only involves select classrooms, or one aspect of society (education).
     Additionally, limitations on how many people are allowed to fail, are motivated by the fact that there's supposed to be a fair and mutually beneficial relationship and negotiation between students and teachers. If teachers are free to fail everyone who doesn't learn enough, then teachers are also free to refuse to teach them, to justify flunking them and making them come back (and pay) again next year.
     Too many students failing, is not necessarily a sign of low achievement; it could be a sign of unskilled or uncaring teaching staff, or unreasonable grading standards. Just like when an employee is fired, it's not always his performance; it's that firing a trainee halfway through his training period is a way to get cheap labor that maximizes short-term profits (but also turnover).
     Also, nobody is demanding more socialized grading in American schools. But there are people who describe free federal lunches for students as “socialism”. That is what I'm concerned about; that the desire to fully rid the educational system of “socialism” could lead to more reports about public school students being denied school lunches because their parents forgot to put enough money on their lunch cards.
     Federal school lunches may be unconstitutional and fiscally improper (and they are), but a society that only feeds hungry children if they have the ability to pay, is a morally depraved society. Children can't learn well at school if they aren't properly fed and don't know where their next meal is coming from. People need enough shelter and sleep, and work and food security, to be able to contribute enough at work.
     Europe is arguably more “socialist” than America, but America's education arguably does more “grade redistribution” than the Europeans do. That's because Americans give their students a “handout” by asking them multiple-choice questions (in which the answer is already written somewhere on the page), while the Europeans actually teach the kid until he remembers the answer without it being laid out in front of him like he's an idiot. I wouldn't call that socialism. I wouldn't call it fair either; especially not to European students, who work harder to learn the material, as they should.


2. Fascism is Not a Form of Socialism
     I walked in ten minutes late to see on the screen “Examples of socialism: socialism, communism, and fascism”. I don't agree with the notion that fascism is an example of socialism, or a variety of socialism, simply because the Nazis called themselves National Socialists. The Nazis were not true socialists, and there have been other fascist regimes besides the Nazis, which had varying degrees of both ultra-nationalism, and nationalism in the name of collectivism.
     One could argue that fascism and Nazism are collectivist, but not socialist, and I would argue that that is true. Like communism and socialism, Nazism and fascism are collectivist because they put “the nation” (and the people in charge of it) ahead of the interests of individuals and free markets. Fascists are certainly not Marxist, anyway, because the Nazis banned Marxism in 1933.
     Granted, there are varieties of socialism besides Marxism, and earlier visions of German collectivism did influence the Nazis, but the Nazis were in favor of German capitalist industry, and the “privatization” it did was actually a government takeover of business. That government takeover of business, however, was not socialistic, because 1) although German capitalists were taken over, they were also rewarded with business protections and privileges; and 2) those privileges included privileges from competition against the Jews, who were being murdered, which means that Nazism certainly wasn't full socialism because it didn't include all of society.
     True socialism would not involve murdering 20% of society, but rather, re-educating people to abolish intrinsically exploitative industries so that nobody can be employed in those industries ever again.
     The only thing “socialist” or “Marxist” about the Nazis and fascists, are that they all promoted the idea of economic parasitism. The idea that the least productive people should be liquidated, was used by Marx (and, later, Mao) against capitalists, but Nazi propagandists used the idea against Jews too, to dehumanize them. Many conservatives call socialists and welfare recipients “parasites” today, which I think is shameful.
     It's a shame that Marx, Lenin, and Mao used language like this, considering how dehumanizing it is. But they did it to back up their argument that sole owners and traders tend to take advantage of shortages, exploit natural resources, and exploit the local need for work, to gain profit off of workers, who often have to work hard to support themselves even before becoming employed. And that was certainly a valid point.
     The communists' concern is that if a society produces too much (i.e., more than it needs), and sells it to the outside world, then foreign markets will expect and demand that much production the next year, and the next, and thereby grow dependent on a country (like Ukraine and its farms) to produce an excess from which outside markets can profit. It's kind of like how having a lot of natural resources which could be exploited, is called a “resource curse”. So capitalists can behave parasitically too, even without conscripting the government to steal taxpayers' money and give it to them.

3. The Definition of Socialism Does Not Necessarily Imply a Government or State
     I feel that defenders of capitalism often define socialism incorrectly, and take liberties with their definition of socialism while explaining it. Most importantly, they tend to assume that socialism is a form of government (and government management of resources), rather than solely an economic system (like capitalism, free market systems, or mutualism).
     Socialism does not necessarily have to involve the management of resources by government; we could have equal control of resource management be performed by communities, communes, cooperatives, charities, non-profits, and consumer organizations; anything that's non-profit and not subsidized by the government. That's how we can achieve a more real, and permanent, “privatization” (i.e., separation of resource management from government) without succumbing to either for-profit privatization, or privatization in the form of selling government assets to the lowest (or highest) bidder. The bid should go to the bidder whom is most likely to be able to function as an adequate caretaker of the assets they acquire.
     Socialism is the worker ownership, or societal management, of the means of production. To me, that means it is an economic system, not necessarily a political one. Defenders of capitalism say that socialism requires a government, but social anarchist Emma Goldman and anarcho-syndicalist Rudolf Rocker would tell you that socialism doesn't require a government (and their lives and writing attest to that).
     In fact, Marx and Engels never promoted “the state” as we know it today. When pressed, they always clarified that they intended communities – not the state (especially not this current bourgeois capitalist state, and the 192 others, which have been common over the last 250 years) – to make most of the decisions in society.
     This, in my opinion, means that socialism compatible with capitalism, as long as there is no state to perform redistribution or force people to use one economic system or another. Communities should have the full right to interact with other communities on the principles of local autonomy, as long as they do not physically obstruct the flow of commerce, labor, capital, and travel/locomotion. This is possible through making the now rigged market system into an actually free one (with no subsidies, business privileges, or protections), and then increasing the percentage of assets which are cooperatively owned (and also, increasing the number of companies which are cooperatively owned).
It is not necessary to create a government or state, in order to consult all of society in decisions about how to manage resources. If communities and cities and counties are allowed to freely associate, they will find freer and more equal ways of managing interstate trade for mutual benefit, than the federal government (and their fiefdom, the hundred million people who live near the Bos-Wash corridor) has thus far given us.


     To read more about my views on why socialism is not a political theory, please read the following article: http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2019/08/socialism-is-compatible-with-capitalism.html

4. Rigged Markets: Not All Free Market Proponents Support Capitalism


     The following is a link to my article about which government programs create which form of public assistance for business. http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2016/04/government-is-source-of-corporate.html
     It was inspired by Andy Craig, who ran for Wisconsin Secretary of State as a Libertarian. Andy's idea was to run to abolish the position, which was then occupied by progressive hero Robert M. LaFollette's grandson Doug. Andy had a “nuclear option” plan to stop the creation of new corporations, by abolishing the position of state secretary of state, in order to prevent the state government from extending new grants of Limited Liability Corporation designation.
     I have since taken that idea and ran with it. I now oppose the complete abolition of all forms of taxpayer-funded privileges for business, which in my opinion include subsidies, bailouts, intellectual property protections, physical property protections from the military and police, F.D.I.C. insurance, trade protections and promotions, and other favors.
     Government contracts could be another one too. After all - even though it's not taxpayer money, and the government's just guaranteeing a line of credit - that line of credit is backed up by easy-credit loans and low interest rates set up by the Federal Reserve, with the F.D.I.C. to insure investments with public money if anything goes wrong.
     Defenders of capitalism sometimes say that “If we had rigged markets, then we would know, because if markets were rigged, then they would not allow people to form companies and become billionaires in just twenty years”. But think about it: most of those billionaires in the top 10 made their money with the help of government contracts, in addition to their own innovation and hard work. Microsoft and Amazon have been competing for a $10 billion Pentagon contract. Facebook was started with the help of a C.I.A.-funded startup called In-Q-Tel, when the C.I.A. was looking for a way to get millions of people to voluntarily surrender personal information like their photos and locations. So it isn't just inheritance (and protection of inherited assets) that makes many of the top billionaires' “earnings” questionable, it's exclusive government contracts too (or nearly exclusive, with the bare minimum amount of competition required to create the illusion of real robust competition; i.e., oligarchy and oligopoly).
     For those reasons and others, I believe that the markets are much less fair, and much more rigged, than defenders of capitalism tend to suspect and admit that they are. While defenders of capitalism do admit that there could and should be much more competition, and also freedom of opportunity – and probably believe that the markets are “free enough” compared to other countries – promoting more competition than necessary is a chief problem that I feel defenders of capitalism often overlook.
     If we promote more competition necessary – especially if the rewards of that competition are permanent, and government protected (think “minimal government, to protect life, liberty, and property”) - then too much competition and property, could undermine freedom of opportunity to acquire assets and property, leading to an overall decrease in freedom. At least for everyone “who's just now coming into the system” (i.e., the younger half of humanity now finding itself in about ten different slavery systems).
     My concern about libertarian minarchism (minimal government advocates), and pragmatic Libertarian Party politics, is that political Libertarians and defenders of capitalism tend to argue that a “minimal government” is necessary to protect “life, liberty, and property”. They also usually say that such a “minimal government” would likely include “military, courts, and police”. However, that that is only true of “minarchists”. “Anarcho-capitalism” is feasible, but only if people who participate in it are free to participate in socialistic economic activity as well.


     The first “market-anarchist”, Gustave de Molinari, asked more than 150 years ago why defense and security are so often monopolized, instead of subject to market forces like other commodities are. Not only defense, but also justice, would have to become “free markets” in a free economy. That's why “free enough” simply isn't enough; total freedom and statelessness is possible.
     However, it would require, often, trusting foreign nationals to do things like manufacture domestic defense and surveillance equipment. In a more peaceful world, that will be possible; but to some degree it has already begun (to varying degrees of success for various countries). Of course, the risks which unsuccessful strategies regarding to whom to award the contracts to manufacture such equipment, risks such things as foreign spying scandals, and arms races (which have both occurred). Therefore, it seems that more trust of foreigners is needed before fully free markets (so free that there are no defense contracts) can flourish.
     In the opinions of myself, and radical libertarians who study Agorism and private law (theorists such as Robert P. Murphy, Samuel E. Konkin III, Wally Conger, and others), the anarchists and minarchists should not be debating, because the debate has already been settled, and the minimum amount of government possible is zero.
     “Capitalism”, to me, connotes not free markets, but an institutional or governmental preference for the interests of private owners of capital, over the interests of labor (that is, workers). Just like "socialism" could be described as an official preference for the interests of labor over capital.
     I believe that we could have enough social ownership, and enough private ownership, to claim rightfully that we've achieved both capitalism and socialism, yet neither; because while both systems would be allowed to exist, neither system would be given preferential treatment, nor the ability to use the state and its violence to force people to participate in one system or the other. We should have "a free market in economic systems", and a free market in who provides us with security and justice.
     That's why I subscribe to a stateless economic theory which some call “free-market anti-capitalism”.



5. Free-Market Anti-Capitalism, Georgism, and Mutualism Are All Valid Critiques of Anarcho-Capitalist and Political Libertarian Thought


     I would like to make my readers aware of several economic systems and schools of thought, from which I think libertarian and free market theories could benefit. They are “free-market anti-capitalism”, Georgism and Geo-Libertarianism, and Mutualism and market socialism.

Free-Market Anti-Capitalism
     “Free-market anti-capitalism” is a phrase associated with Roderick T. Long. Long and others have been criticizing mainstream American libertarian thought, with individualist-anarchist and libertarian-socialist critiques. Gary E. Chartier and Charles W. Johnson are left-libertarian theorists whom are associated with the phrases “bleeding-heart libertarians” and “markets, not capitalism”. “Left-wing market-anarchism” is an associated school of thought.
     Wally Conger is an “Agorist” (a radical anti-state, pro-free-market theory), and explained in his book Agorist Class Theory that free-marketers and Marxists have a lot more of their goals in common than they realize; they just have very different plans about how to get there.
     Kevin Carson, a Mutualist theorist, has attempted to reconcile the Labor Theory of Value with the subjective theory, by offering a “subjective labor theory of value” wherein the value of a good is influenced both by the subjective valuation of the producer's own labor, and also the subjective preferences of the buyer. Carson has also explained that Marxists, Mutualists, and supporters of free enterprise all value open-source collaboration, as well as the freedom to do any task, and many tasks, without those tasks being considered to require licensing, professionalization, nor rigid regulation.
     I believe that the “Progressive-Libertarian Alliance” of Ron and Rand Paul, Ralph Nader, Bernie Sanders, and Dennis Kucinich will lead the way to common ground on economic issues in politics, while Georgist and Mutualist developments of anarchism and libertarianism will lead the way to common ground on economic issues in a stateless society.
     These are just some of the people who have found common ground between libertarians and socialists. I've spent the last 5 to 10 years writing about where this common ground is, and urging my fellow libertarians to learn more about Henry George and Pierre-Joseph Proudhon.


Georgism
     Henry George was a 19th century American economist who developed the idea of “the Single Tax”, now known as Land Value Taxation.
     Some libertarians and capitalists admit that pollution - including of other people's air - is a property rights violation. I agree, and so did Murray Rothbard. But Henry George took it a step further; by prioritizing people's needs for land, over the concerns about the squabbles between representatives of labor and of capital.
     This means that Georgism (and also Mutualism) are situated between socialism and capitalism. These two economic systems play very important roles in how capitalism and socialism might be reconciled with one another. These economic systems would form a basis through which negotiation could be made between the socialism of workers' interests and the capitalism of private owners' interest.
     I wrote the following article about reconciling the ideas of Henry George with the ideas expressed in modern American political libertarianism (with specific regard to the land needs in Lake County, Illinois): http://www.lclp.org/articles/geolibertarianism/
     I explain in the article that Libertarian Party co-founder David Nolan was a Geo-Libertarian (a Libertarian who subscribes to the economic and land reform ideas of Henry George), and Milton Friedman said George's tax ideas were “the least bad tax [ever] proposed”.
     I think that Reagan economic adviser Art Laffer would be pleased by the fact that George's proposals completely avoid taxing both production and earned income. Georgist slogans include “tax land, not man”, “tax land, not buildings”, and “tax bads, not goods”.
     I myself explain it as “tax destruction (and waste, especially of land), not production”. The waste and destruction of land is a serious problem – and so is the misuse, disuse, abuse, and blight of land, and allowing it to fall into disrepair – because we don't want land to be rendered unuseable in case the owner dies and someone wants to buy the land. The more land area that is destroyed, rendered unuseable, and fenced-off and protected with the help of taxpayer funding, the less land is available for families to build homes on, and that means less property ownership and less production on that land.
     I think the Lockean proviso shows that that is true; the idea that a person must homestead land and make it habitable to earn it, but also leave enough land, and in as good quality, for other people, given the number of people and the demand and need for land in the area. The Lockean proviso, with its high standards, is thus very different from many mainstream capitalists' ideas about how easy it is to acquire and “earn” land (sometimes even justifying conquest and winning lands in war, and then transferring lands which were legally stolen through those means and through ceasing to honor treaties with native tribes, etc.).
     Milton Friedman said that a deregulated economic environment will lead to economic prosperity and high productivity, but only if the lowest-income people are assisted by some sort of basic income -type program, to prevent the poor from falling through the cracks. Not as a welfare system, but instead of a welfare system. And with personal spending replacing bureaucratic micromanagement, saving costs in the process.
     Some libertarians are looking into U.B.I. and citizens' dividend programs as ways to achieve a “capitalism, but with a robust social safety net” sort of arrangement. One such type of citizens' dividend program is a dividend funded by the taxation of oil companies' profits, and/or by imposing fees on their extraction of natural resources from the ground.
     I cannot help but notice that, of the four best-known places which have tried this system – Alaska, Norway, Libya, and Venezuela – two were mostly white and didn't get bombed for it, while the other two are mostly non-white and had their countries destroyed as a result. That could just be a coincidence. But there's nothing wrong with trying to tie your country's economic future to the success of its businesses and to protections against rapid exploitation of its natural resources.




Mutualism
     Aside from the “free-market anti-capitalism” and “Geo-Libertarianism” critiques, I think libertarianism could be improved through emphasizing that the voluntary exchange we want must be mutually beneficial. That means all economic transactions must be reciprocal, and should not take place if unaware or unconsenting people are directly affected by it (especially if negatively).
     Mutualist theorists include Kevin Carson (living today), Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (19th century France) and Josiah Warren (19th century Ohio). Warren's reforms centered on money and free enterprise, while Proudhon's centered on free credit, and an anarchist critique of private property ownership.
      Another proposal like Mutualism is market socialism, in which most ownership would be done collectively, but the allocation and distribution would still be done through free trading in markets by individuals. I imagine that Mutualism would feature balanced individual vs. collective roles in both ownership and allocation.

Geo-Mutualism
     I think it is important to teach about other economic systems which have been proposed, besides socialism and capitalism, to help students understand that this is not as much of a binary choice as we have been led to assume it is.
     The following link leads to a poster I designed about Georgism and Mutualism. I believe that price competition, and taking full advantage of automation, will lead to low prices (and eventually to “free stuff through free markets”. Look up anarchist theorists such as Jock Coats and Will Schnack to learn more about how Georgism and Mutualism unite (as Geo-Mutualism).




6. Mixed Economies and China

     Defenders of capitalism tend to seem confused as to which economic system China currently has. I cannot fault them for this, however; I am not sure which system it has myself. Perhaps dirigism best describes it; essentially, government-directed economic fascism, featuring heavy state ownership of enterprises.
     Capitalists seem to perceive, often, that China's economy boomed in the early 1980s because it adopted capitalism, or some degree of it. But I disagree; I think it was the mixture of socialism and capitalism which helped China, and helped it much more than it would have benefited China to switch to a strictly capitalist system. It was the mixing of increased private ownership and increased family business ownership, into the system of largely state-owned cooperatives, which created a sustainable, and sufficiently free and fair, balance, between several diverse sectors of the economy. It was a balance between state ownership, and other forms of ownership, which helped China's productivity increase. That's because encouraging a wide range of forms of ownership, helps societal cohesion by allowing sufficient freedom within society, through those forms of ownership, that allow different families and communities to have shares in society. But then, of course, I am describing only my own interpretation of what Deng Xiaopeng's and the Company Law's intentions could have been; and certainly not the current Chinese government.
     I would characterize China as a mixed economy; similar to, but not exactly the same as, other mixed economies like “democratic socialism”, “the Nordic model”, “Rhine capitalism”, and German "ordoliberalism”, etc..
     China's system is similar to Germany's, especially considering that they have similar laws regarding what percentage of members of a corporate board should be made up of workers. However, I would describe that as not a socialist law, but a mutualist one. That's because it doesn't outright award workers the property of the people employing them. Instead, it aims to balance and align the needs of workers with the needs of owners, affecting earnings going forward, such that no contracts are overturned, no ex-post-facto laws are created, and workers can earn income and stock value quickly through hard (but fair) work. If we make sure that, going forward, we do not award charters, contracts, or special privileges to companies whom are likely to exploit workers and natural resources, then we can ensure free and fair markets, with voluntary and mutually beneficial exchange, without violating ex-post-facto laws, and without needing to abandon having a system of property rights altogether.
     Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson said during one of his campaigns, that it helps in business to “tie people to profits”, such that workers earn more when profits are up. That's not socialism, that's just good business practices.
     Besides, what economic system does Germany currently have? Nevermind that; if Germany has ten times as high a percentage of people learning the skilled trades than America does, who cares what system they have? Young Americans are dying for an easy, debt-free way to access education in the way of the skilled trades (and also I.T., while H.V.A.C. and agriculture will need millions of workers soon). In my opinion, there is no reason why what Germany and China are currently doing about large employers should not be emulated.
     Germany's economy, by the way, is influenced by the traditions of mixed economies like “Rhine capitalism” and “ordoliberalism” (German for “new liberalism”), which feature capitalist market economies with robust social safety nets.






7. Achieving Socialism Without the State
     Contrary to what the current Chinese regime may argue, state ownership is certainly not the only way to achieve socialism.
     As I explained, socialism is an economic system which doesn't necessarily imply either statism or anarchism. Many socialists want to achieve socialism without political action, by having workers own businesses and turn them into cooperatives, rather than having the state own them. However, only about one tenth of one percent of American businesses are currently cooperatives. Granted, the number of non-profits and the like, added to that, would make the number of non-for-profit enterprises higher. But that does not ensure cooperative ownership or cooperative management.
     What we need to talk about is E.L.M.F.s (Egalitarian Labor-Managed Firms) and W.S.D.E.s (Workers Self-Directed Enterprise). These would be worker-owned companies that set up stock ownership plans (like E.S.O.P.s; Employee Stock Ownership Plans). Bernie Sanders and Kristin Gillibrand have supported laws which would require large companies to establish such stock ownership plans. However, a true anarchist could not rightfully support political means to achieve the same.
     The idea behind employee stock ownership plans is called “funds socialism”. Examples of “funds socialism” include the following: 1) the Meidner Plan in Sweden, calling for the establishment of "wage-earner funds"; 2) the American Solidarity Fund, proposed by the People's Policy Project; 3) the Norwegian G.P.F.G. (Government Pension Fund Global); 4) the U.K. Labour Party's proposed "Inclusive Ownership Funds"; and 5) the NSW Generation Fund in New South Wales, Australia.
     But again, these are all laws and legal proposals, rather than plans regarding how anarchists should seek to achieve the maximum number of cooperativized businesses, without relying on violence or the assistance or the state. If truly voluntary socialism is actually possible, then only peaceful actions are permissible in order to achieve this; like persuasion, argumentation, conversation, and instruction. Additionally, market pressures (like boycotts) when fairly applied against owners and sellers (but that only works if refusal to purchase can actually be achieved, both logistically and legally).
     Basically, in a free society, the workers would have to convince managers and bosses and C.E.O.s that they deserve better pay (and benefits, conditions, etc.), instead of going through legal and political avenues to secure those conditions for themselves. Bosses who refuse to reward their workers sufficiently when it is fiscally responsible to do so, are only making it more likely that their workers will resort to political action and violence to achieve their goals, and less likely that their workers will appreciate capitalism and the supposed benefits it offers.
     As John F. Kennedy said, “Those who make political reform impossible, make violent revolution inevitable.”




8. Unequal Distribution of Wealth, and Corporate Taxation

     In my opinion, it is completely unjustifiable that one person can have as much money as 300 million or even a billion people.
     Primarily because it would be impossible to make frequent and efficient enough use of all that wealth, to justify owning it. And additionally, due to the high economic power and leverage which ownership affords a person. This is dangerous because it allows a person to acquire currency while doing little actual work and risking little (if any) capital in the process; through lending and renting their property out to (usually propertyless) people who have none of their own.
     That may seem “equal enough” or "fair enough", or seem like “the result of different levels of effort by different people”, but it is not fair because it suppresses economic opportunity and competition. Land owned by one person, cannot be developed by another, without consent and payment. Similarly, an invention owned by one person (through a patent), cannot be developed by another, without consent and payment.
     We cannot compete against those who monopolize their land and their inventions, because it is literally illegal to compete against an entity protected by a monopoly privilege granted by the state. And that is the nature of land title registration and the granting of patents. The “minimum government” crowd may consider physical and intellectual property protections as necessary to create a free society which is sufficiently ordered, secure, and fair; but the need to protect dead property and intangible ideas, often distracts from the need to protect actual people's physical human bodies.
     Defenders of capitalism tend admit that it is morally wrong to redistribute wealth, especially earned income, and I agree with them, as there are ways to achieve socialism and more cooperative ownership without political action. However, defenders of capitalism are nearly always against the taxation of corporations, which receive special protections, and insulation from lawsuits and market competition, through Limited Liability Corporation status protections issued by the state. Thus, corporations are a creation of the state.
     I don't object to the existence of “companies” or “corporations”, if that means enterprises which are funded voluntarily by whomever wants to, and enterprises in which employees can be held accountable for their actions. But I take issue with leaving corporations untaxed, because corporations are creations of the state (at least corporations with L.L.C. status are). I consider corporate income “unearned income” which is gained with the assistance of the state (and the legitimized violence upon which it relies to enforce its order and acquire its revenues). It's not that I want to see corporations taxed; it's that I want to see corporations not created by the state in the first place, so that we don't have to tax them (because they wouldn't exist).


     If businesses don't want to follow regulations and pay taxes, then they shouldn't lobby for privileges and accept subsidies and bailouts. I would like to see less companies accepting subsidies, but I would also to see the federal government stop tempting the states and businesses into accepting them (because there are strings attached that allow the federal government to control how they spend it, which tend to undermine the liberties of the states and the localities).
     I would like to see more supporters of free enterprise, distance themselves from capitalism, and fully oppose all forms of business assistance. It's one thing to say “don't accept subsidies if you don't want to be regulated”, but it's another thing to say “we need to abolish all subsidies and artificial business privileges, or there won't be any truly private companies in this country anymore.”
     I feel like capitalism and minarchism, with their “minimum regulation” idea, tends to excuse and even invite government involvement. If the state didn't exist, regulation of companies' activities would still happen; it would just occur through self-responsibility, voluntary association, and mutually beneficial negotiation and decision-making.
     “Regulation of business”, in a stateless society, could easily be performed by each business's employees and clients, negotiating as directly with one another as possible (without the state to guide or direct them), while retaining the full right to boycott. The Taft-Hartley Act (with its prohibition on boycotts spanning multiple industries), and the facts of subsidies and redistribution, now make full boycott – and, thus, “ethical consumerism” and “voting with our wallets” - impossible.
That's why the system is much more rigged than defenders of capitalism suspect it is.


     Redistribution of earned income is wrong, and should not be done. But the redistribution of opportunity to compete – from the rich to the poor – should also be a concern. The poor pay little taxes, but it's because they have little opportunity in the first place to acquire enough skills and education to be a viable competitor in the market. And again, it's literally illegal and impossible to compete against – or boycott - monopolists and entrenched business interests (including companies which hold patents and trademarks).
     It is impossible to calculate the value which the working poor lose, from having their money taken away to fund agencies that profit off of turning work from a right into a licensed privilege, and from being unable to adequately compete in some of the most highly oligopolized industries.




9. Minimum Wage Laws Are Bad, But Enslaving Children to Mammon is Worse

     I don't support minimum wage increases. But I also disagree with the idea that a high minimum wage “deprives teenagers of their first jobs”. I understand that high minimum wages tend to result in low teen employment levels, but that is not the fault of teenagers. I know that because teenagers can't vote and have no political power, and therefore couldn't possibly cause such a state of affairs to arise.
     Here's the thing: nobody said to pay teenagers less than older workers. Some teens are more skilled than some adults. There is no reason to assume that, just because someone is younger, they haven't justified or earned that kind of pay yet.
     Teens don't get paid less because they deserve less or don't work as hard as older people; they get paid less because they're younger, and have had fewer opportunities than older people to acquire skills and work experience and money.
     As a result, teens are coerced into a state of dependence upon the old, and the entrenched business interests, and the existing set of jobs, in order to survive. Which gives the old free rein to prey on the young, insisting that they must help the old, because they (with their stronger bodies) are the only ones capable of helping the helpless old decrepit people who have all the money and property. Society already looks at young people as a cheap source of labor and a free source of favors.
     Saying high minimum wages “deprive teenagers of their first jobs” is just saying that high minimum wages “prevent child labor”. I thought we wanted to prevent child labor! Maybe we can prevent child labor by simply paying workers enough money to give their children gifts of cash. That way, we will not hear about phenomena such as teenage girls being tempted into whoring themselves out to fifty-year-old men on yachts, nor teenagers whoring themselves out for employment by corrupt and polluting companies, or by police departments or the military, which will expect them to shoot at innocent people.
     Which is more important: The need to protect the right to compete in the market? Or the need to protect workers' "freedom of opportunity" to sell themselves our and sign away their rights to compete?
     Which is more important: The need to protect children's innocence, or the need to make sure they have a stable flow of money into their pockets? It does matter if that flow of money comes through Jeffrey Epstein's penis. Actually existing capitalism has given our children U.S. Dollars covered with toxic ink and stripper sweat and cocaine, which we should be ashamed that we're encouraging our children to handle, and it has given us the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.
     Every parent should understand that Epstein's handler, Ghislaine Maxwell, was able to persuade teenage girls into becoming masseuses (and then prostitutes and sex slaves) by promising nothing more than a little extra money to spend on themselves and on their families at the holidays. To some degree, we cannot blame desperate parents for allowing their children to fall into the hands of people like that, but to some degree we can blame them for exploiting their children. But I contend that the real problem is the artificial, manufactured need for currency and money, which is achieved by inserting currency between the buyer and everything they need to survive and feed their families.

     Additionally, some teenagers (i.e., teen parents as old as 19) have more dependent minors to support than some adult workers do (i.e., single workers without children). So why should a person be paid more for having more skills, when a less skilled person might have more mouths to feed? Of course effort and skills should affect pay, but so should a person's level of need. At one job I had, I needed a lot less money as a temporary janitor with no dependents, than a unionized janitor with a family, needed. I did not need $30,000 per year, and I did not have the skills to justify earning that much. The fact that unionized employees sometimes get sick, does not justify forcibly unionizing all people who might temporarily replace them.
     We shouldn't have minimum wage laws, nor should we endorse the Labor Theory of Value. But nor should we allow children to be pressured into signing employment contracts before they're capable of fully understanding all the consequences. Some of those employment contracts include anti-competition clauses, which could limit teenage workers' freedom to compete until years after their employment with that company ends. Consumers and workers must be sufficiently informed, and never defrauded nor swindled, in order for markets to be fully free. And a truly voluntary market can only be participated in by people who are old and mature enough to be able to give fully informed consent to do the work they do, and they need to not be pushed into it by adults.

     On the matter of wages in general: I disagree with the frequent claim, made by defenders of capitalism, that bosses don't make profits by stealing from their employees. I believe that many bosses make money by coercing and depriving employees into parting with their opportunities to compete, and into parting with a huge degree of self-determination and autonomy while on the job. Wage theft is a real thing, of which companies have actually been found guilty, and forced to provide compensation.
     I explain a few forms of wage theft in Section 5 of the following article, why I believe that bosses' collection of wages on state-secured “private” property, is a form of monopoly privilege, and therefore an unfair violation of free market principles:



10. Stalin Didn't Kill Sixty Million People, You're Thinking of Hitler

     Stalin tends to get a bad rap in the capitalist, C.I.A.-influenced American mainstream media and academia. However, he helped defeat the Nazi menace, and he understood that people need enough shelter and sleep, and enough food security and job security, to be able to contribute and produce adequately while on the job. And, since a well-rested worker is a productive worker, that arguably makes Stalin more capitalistic than the capitalists.
     I, personally, would rather be driving next to a truck driver who's worked 40 hours a week and slept for 56; instead of a driver who's worked 56 and slept for 40. People have the right to work hard and work long hours, but as a security guard, I can tell you that the more hours I work during the week, the higher the chance that I'll fall asleep while on duty.
     At some point, working harder doesn't pay off any more than it does to take a little time off to rest and recuperate. And of course, people should have to be healthy enough to work, instead of expected to work for their health needs, and instead of coerced into keeping a bad job because of the health insurance it offers.
     A wise man once said the following: “It is difficult for me to imagine what 'personal liberty' is enjoyed by an unemployed hungry person. True freedom can only be where there is no exploitation and oppression of one person by another; where there is not unemployment, and where a person is not living in fear of losing his job, his home and his bread. Only in such a society, personal and any other freedom can exist for real and not on paper.” That man's name was Joseph Stalin. Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang has been saying similar things in his campaign. But whomever says it – Yang, Stalin, or anyone else – I think it's correct.

     Furthermore, capitalists tend to blame Stalin for a lot more deaths than the number for which he was actually responsible. I think that is one of the key factors contributing to socialism's bad reputation, and also a key factor causing people to suspect that Hitler killed less than Stalin (when my research shows that the opposite is true).
     Stalin's actions in the Ukraine were somewhat justified. First, because he waited three years before doing anything to address food shortages, and thus cannot be accused of using too much political action to solve problems. Second, what Stalin did was punish people who resisted collectivization. Kulak farmers made the food shortages worse; by slaughtering their livestock, and refusing to turn food over to the authorities. They chose, instead, to attempt to profit off of the desperation of starving people in their own country, by selling to foreign buyers, during a time when most of those foreign buying nations were aligned against the U.S.S.R.. Stalin tried to relieve the suffering of the famine; by collectivizing farms, confiscating grain, and redistributing it. Only a well fed Russian people, and a well fed army, could have survived the rapid agricultural and industrial expansion that the U.S.S.R. was undergoing, or could have created a defense against the Nazi menace which was coming (and which they all knew would eventually come, unless it underwent revolution). The alternative to refraining from punishing farmers, was to allow them to sell food to foreign countries, feeding the enemies of the U.S.S.R. in the process.
     The idea that Stalin killed more than Hitler, is an extremely destructive (and untrue) idea. I believe that people who regret America's alliance with the U.S.S.R. during World War II – especially those who admit that America should have allied with the Nazis to defeat “the true enemy” communism” - are Nazi sympathizers. That idea is also invalid because America did try to work with the Nazis at the beginning of World War II; Americans were trading with the Nazis at a higher volume than the U.S.S.R. was in 1940, and America allowed Nazis to march in Grafton, Wisconsin, and Madison Square Garden, before America joined the Allies.

     Please see the following links to learn more about my views on Josef Stalin:
     I think it's important that "libertarian capitalists" and "libertarian socialists" have conversations such as the debate between libertarian capitalism and free-market anti-capitalism. I also think that more public debates on these topics would really benefit liberty lovers' education to understand socialism, whether for the purposes of criticizing it or not.
     That's why I will be participating in a “Voluntaryism vs. Libertarian Socialism” debate – on Saturday, November 9th, 2019, in West Lafayette, Indiana – with Marcus Pulis (of Aquarian Anarchy). Follow Aquarian Anarchy and JoeKopsick4Congress on YouTube for updates about that debate.






Written on September 2nd and November 3rd, 2019
Published on November 3rd, 2019

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