>[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>>what are you trying to prove with your insults Doug? are you implying
the
>>impossibility of a socialist agenda? who is fantasizing here?

>Ok, so you don't have any idea what changes are necessary in the
>actual structures of production and consumption. All that's required
>is loyalty to Marx and a critical attitude. That's pretty much what I
>suspected, but it's good to see my suspicions confirmed.

BS. We discussed what changes were necesary in the "actual structures of
production", if you had paid enough attention to the subject matter of the
posts insteaed of insulting people. One of them being, as it was
mentioned, is the abolution of the distinction between town and country
side. This distinction exists in every advanced capitalist country, and it
has been taking place in every developing country that is in the process
of capitalist modernization.On the one hand we have uneven urbanization
and industrilization in the cities, on the other we have commercialized
forms of agriculture in the country side: two forms of inequalities and
class conflicts existing side by side and refinforcing each other. why to
abolish this distinction as part of the agenda (since there is a rationale
for it) 1) first as MArx said in primitive accumulation chapter of Capital
that capitalism first started in the country side, tranforming the
property relations and generating the surplus necessary to build
capitalism in the cities, so country had to be modernized first with new
instruments and techniques of production. 2) although this transformation
was progressive, it also impoverished the agricultural folk, either by
forcing them to work under new capitalist landlords or forcing them to
migrate to cities as wage laborers. If you also look at the actually
existing socialisms, Doug, you will see an attempt to
abolish this country/city duality towards a more equitable
redistribution of wealth.If you also look at the actually existing
socialisms, you will see an attempt to abolish this country/city duality
towards a more equitable redistribution of wealth.  Land reforms in
Russia, China, Cuba all attemped to achieve abolition of property in land.
Since traditional agricultural economy was also largely untransformed in
those countries due to historical reasons, land reforms played an
important role in applying rents of land to public purposes through a
progressive income tax (which Marx talks in the Manifesto) and "abolution
of right of inheritance".  I am not saying land reforms were compeletely
sucessfull; I am saying they were historically progessive compared to
previous times (capitalism). For example, in Russia, between 1917-1921,
various decrees were implemented by the soviet government to abolish the
specaial priviliges of aristocrats, tsarist officials and capitalists ( at
a time when there were still monarchies in Europe). in 1929, the
revolutionary cadre accomplished  the elimination of estates of nobles
(structurally) and their various "honorofic and political priviliges and
their landed properties.the class of capitalists too with its private
ownership and control of various industrial and commercial enterprises met
its demise in this period" (SKOCPOL, _States and Revolutions_, P.227).

Socialism should be judged vis a vis historical circumstances by means
of assesing the resources available to actors. We should learn from
history and the experiences of actually existing socialisms.I know this is
of zero interest to you, Doug.

Regarding population-- the part of your post which does not direclty
concern me-- but I will answer. 0 population rate in Europe nothing to
do with the sustainability of environment there. Over-population pressures
are created by capitalism, not by people, among the several reasons being
HISTORY OF COLONIALISM, POVERTY, PLUNDERING OF NON-WHITES AND THEIR
RESOURCES, DECLINING LIVING STANDARTS  IN THE THIRD WORLD, GLOBAL
INEQUALITIES, INCREASING ECONOMIC INSECURITY. IN THOSE COUNTRIES
FACING EXTEREME POVERTY, CHILDREN ARE SEEN AS AN ASSET-- A SOURCE OF
INCOME AND CHEAP LABOR. THINK ABOUT CHILD SLAVERY, THINK ABOUT CHILD
SEX..

Another point worth mentioning: Strawman of over-population is one's of
the ways of obscuring capitalism's inequalities and racism.. I am
working in an underclass black neigh, and I generally walk there. Black
people are structurally marginalized in that area of Albany, living below
the poverty line. They are isolated into a small area; children playing
outside etc.. so what happens is that they seem to be over-populated--
small houses not having enough capacity to carry people and unevenly built
to marginalize african american people. This is racism, DUDE racism!

okey, my blood pressure is gradually increasing. I wish you a suny day
on Wall Street!

Mine

>Oh, and solving the population problem? When people are happier they'll

>have fewer babies. Population growth is virtually 0 in Western Europe,
>but Western Europe is only a bit more ecologically sustainable than the

>U.S.  But is a growth rate of 0 low enough? Could we feed and house 6
>billion people if we all spent our time searching for
"Jack-in-the-Pulpits
>or fishing for pickerel"? That kind of rural leisure is available to
>someone living in a rich country; in a poor country, you'd be more
likely
>tilling the soil or grinding corn from dawn til dusk. These apocalpytic

>imaginings aren't serious politics, they're just lurid fantasies.

>Doug





--

Mine Aysen Doyran
PhD Student
Department of Political Science
SUNY at Albany
Nelson A. Rockefeller College
135 Western Ave.; Milne 102
Albany, NY 12222



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