A few of you scoffed at my mention of Greece. I concede that this was not the best example I could have offered, but at the moment my mind was on the tertiary consequences of a socialist worldview. True, the money grab was about bailouts and was not directly a consequence of socialism. But I argue that it would not have even been on the table as an option were it not for the socialist worldviews of the various players.
If anything, Greece is an extreme example of the vices of neoliberalism/capitalism. You have a country that's caught between a rock and a hard place -- decades worth of corruption at all levels leads to completely insufficient taxation levels, leading to debts it can't afford. It can't just do the sensible thing and just hold its nose and devalue its currency, because its monetary policy is controlled by the European Central Bank. But if it cannot pay its debts by devaluing its currency, then it's forced to seek loans from its Euro partner states -- whereupon Germany, the regional hegemon, forces it to cut all sorts of public spending, devastating its economy even further in the name of "austerity" and "responsibility" while millions of people suffer. Yet it's unwilling to just cut itself out of the Eurozone, re-adopt the drachma -- meaning that it's forced to govern with a German gun to its head.
Greece is really a prime example of why sovereign states should not give up control of their monetary policy. Its example to me just demonstrates that either the European Union needs to take the plunge and become itself a sovereign democratic state, or to yield back monetary policy to the Eurozone states and abandon the euro.
Yes, I realize the subject is Trek, and I apologize for the diversion. But I think general conversation on these topics is applicable and relevant here, because so much of the Trek universe seems to be built from these foundations.
I agree that it's appropriate to talk about these real-world issues, because it informs how we conceive of the Trekverse.
Here is my problem with socialism. It starts with the rejection of the idea that individuals can be sovereign institutions of cooperation. Socialism sees the individual as merely a mechanical cog in the engine of social evolution.
If anything, I became attracted to socialism because I have a similar complaint about capitalism. In my view, it is inherent to the capitalist system that
those who labor are viewed as just another piece of overhead cost to be kept at its lowest, no different from equipment costs or maintenance costs. ("What Tabarrok means is not that there
is nothing special about labor, but that there
should be nothing special about it. Just as DeBeers can increase the price of diamonds by buying up excess supply, the capitalist class ought to be able to keep the price of labor down by flooding the market with the desperate unemployed.")
Meanwhile, it is inherent to the wage system that in a profitable firm, the value created by those who labor always exceeds to value by which they are compensated -- a redistribution of wealth from the productive workers to the unproductive capitalists, forced upon them by the ability of capital to dictate terms to people who have only their labor to sell.
Joseph Schwartz and Jason Schulman put it best:
Towards Freedom: Democratic Socialist Theory and Practice said:
We cannot accept capitalism’s conception of economic relations as "free and private," because contracts are not made among economic equals and because they give rise to social structures which undemocratically confer power upon some over others. Such relationships are undemocratic in that the citizens involved have not freely deliberated upon the structure of those institutions and how social roles should be distributed within them....
... [T]he asymmetry of power in this alleged “free exchange” is that while the capitalist class owns the means of production, the working class only has their labor power to sell. This asymmetry means that while capitalists pay labor a “living wage,” the value of this wage (the value of labor power) is always less than the value of the commodities produced by the workers’ labor—if capital could not make a profit it would not employ labor. Workers’ needs under capitalism are always subordinate to the bottom line.
The capitalist system, in my view, reduces the working class to cogs in a machine. It is because I reject that view, because I think there is and ought to be something special about the value of labor, that I have chosen to reject capitalism and embrace democratic socialism. As Peter Frase says, "The socialist tradition... holds that there is and should be something special about labor, because labor is
people, and the freedom and welfare of the people is the proper subject of political economy."
Cogs that must be directed by a large central government.
Nope. That is
one form of socialism, but it is not the onl or the inevitable form of socialism. Indeed, the major problem with a centralized, planned national economy is that it obliges faith in what noted capitalist and science fiction author David Brin calls
"guided resource allocation" by a small minority of commissars with imperfect knowledge of a complex economy. And yet
Brin also notes that this same problem arises when an economy falls under the control of a few thousand corporate CEOs rather than a few thousand commissars.
(Side-note: I disagree with Brin's faith that capitalism, properly regulated, can return American society to a more egalitarian state it enjoyed in the post-World War II, pre-Regan era, but I greatly respect his commitment to a level playing field, fair and transparent markets, and a diamond-shaped society in which very few people are poor or rich and most people are somewhere in the middle class. He's the kind of capitalist opposition I'd want to have in The World According to Sci to keep a democratic socialist majority in check.)
Again, the tendency of elites to think they can control an economy that can itself only be the aggregation of the individual life decisions of hundreds of millions of people -- whether those elites are Soviet commissars or corporate CEOs -- reduces people to the status of cogs in a machine.
That's why I am a member of
Democratic Socialists of America rather than, say, the
Revolutionary Communist Party USA. DSA recognizes, and I agree with, the necessity of some forms of market competition, while also seeking ways to place the means of production into the hands of those whose labor produces surplus value, rather than into the hands of an unproductive capitalist minority. The goal is
worker empowerment rather than the reduction of people to the status of cogs in a machine. The goal is to find some way to make markets distribute wealth to a larger majority of people, instead of redistributing worker-generated wealth to a small minority.
And, to go and link it back to
Star Trek, this is why I outlined an idea of socialism that, to me, makes sense and sounds most ideal. I tried to find an idea of an economy which, to me, seems most likely to promote freedom and social justice, and which, to me, seems reconcilable with Gene Roddenberry's anti-capitalist tendencies (even if I think the idea that there would be literally no medium of exchange/no currency to be ludicrous).
I suppose this would be awesome if this overarching government wasn't prone to establish iteslf as a ruler de facto, overcoming and eventually eliminating checks and balances to it.
Or if the leviathan was able to define and enforce "fair" in such a way that truly covers the needs of each and every subject under its rule without deference so special interests. Again, the big questions with socialism are:
A) Who gets to define fair?
B) How exactly is it defined?
C) What recourse does a constituency have in the case of disagreement or disenfranchisement?
The Unpopular Opinion Puffin has some insight to offer:
As
sonak pointed out, all of these questions are applicable to capitalism. How could they not be, when the capitalist system is premised upon unequal contracts?
And as I and others have pointed out, there are versions of socialism that are
not based upon state ownership of the means of production.
I've never seen these questions answered in a satisfactory way. My frustration with socialism in Star Trek is that these questions go completely unadressed. We never learn how the utopia was gained. It just is. That's lazy.
I agree with you here, actually. Obviously,
Star Trek is about the people who live on the frontier
away from the centers of this pseudo-utopia (not
dystopia), and so the nature of how their society works and was built will never be its main focus. But I do firmly agree with you that
Star Trek ought to deal more firmly with exactly how Federation society works and what its costs and benefits are. No system is perfect, and even a very optimistic vision of the future rooted in a leftist tradition will leave room for conflict and drama.
Government is like fire. Fire is essential. It's good, as long as you control it. Lose control of the fire, however, and disaster results.
I would go one step further:
Wealth and power are like fire. Government is merely one of the ways in which wealth and power are channeled; government is just one way to control the fire.
Sci, you shouldn't expect people to respect socialist principles when actual socialists don't respect people's time. Long, self-indulgent replies do little to sway support to one's cause.
I am not responsible for someone else's desire to reduce complex concepts into 30-second soundbites.
You're not preparing the Federal Budget; you're trying to sell it.
Actually, this thread is all about how we think Federation society works. Since this entails talking about how we think the Federation economy works -- that means that I am, indeed, preparing the federal budget, so to speak.
Arpy said:
Umm, you know Sci was kinda backing you up, right?
Does it matter if his point doesn't get through to others? Or if adopting his preferred economics would only replace greedy in power with the arrogant?
I am aware of no system that can provide adequate safeguards against the accumulation of wealth and power by those who are arrogant. So far as I am aware, the best we can do is create mechanisms to empower the majority to hold the minority of those with power accountable; to limit the amounts of wealth and power any given person may accumulate; and to make the functionality of their power dependent upon their being competent.
For a future civilization that doesn't have money, we're spending a lot of time discussing the economics of the Federation.
Because there's a lot of contradiction in
Star Trek about whether or not the Federation has money -- and because a society can ultimately be described as the aggregation of the economic decisions its citizens make.
I would love to see what Parrises Squares is actually like. All we know is that it involves a ramp, an "ion mallet", and teams of 4 people.
I don't know. Sometimes I think it's more fun not knowing.
