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submitted 1 year ago by jlou@mastodon.social to c/anarchism@lemmy.ml

Anarchists should rethink common vs private property
https://www.ellerman.org/rethinking-common-vs-private-property/
@anarchism

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[-] jlou@mastodon.social 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The difference is that workers can take the entire company with them when they go somewhere else.

You are confusing the difficulty of establishing a co-op today with the difficulty of establishing a co-op under a system where co-ops are the only firm. The employment contract's pervasiveness has caused the former. Ellerman advocates abolishing the employment contract and private property in natural resources.

There have been anarchists that do not oppose markets such as Proudhon

[-] StrayCatFrump@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 year ago

There have been anarchists that do not oppose markets such as Proudhon

They didn't propose those markets as a way to preserve private property relations for the sake of capitalists, as you are doing.

And even those anarchists (and socialists more generally) who don't wholly oppose markets usually want to decrease their influence, especially regarding necessities like food, water, housing, health care, etc. "Here's how markets will fix that," is a galaxy-brained thing for any leftist to say at this point in history.

[-] jlou@mastodon.social 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Not a market fundamentalist. Common ownership applies to housing (land) and water.

Capital rental benefits workers. Renting is buying the services of a thing for a period rather than buying the whole thing. Sometimes workers will prefer to buy only the services for a period thus paying less. In value terms, there is no difference between renting and owning because
capital's price = future rentals' discounted present value

Such transactions would be with worker coops on both ends

[-] StrayCatFrump@slrpnk.net 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Capital rental benefits workers.

Wrong. Capital rental benefits the capitalist (e.g. the landlord).

Renting is buying....

Wrong. Weird, dumb misunderstanding that you are really irrationally obsessed with right now, and already explained. Rent is an exploitative property relation, that leaves the owner with ultimate power. If the dictator doesn't like you for any reason including that you don't follow his every edict (easily the equivalent of that "employment contract" you're so worried about), he terminates (e.g. evicts you). And I'm not sure why you keep putting @anarchism at the end of your comments, because you aren't advocating for it. You're just advocating for a property-based hierarchy with a different flavor.

Okay. Done with this exchange, and won't be replying further. Take care.

[-] jlou@mastodon.social 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You haven't been listening to what I have been saying. I am explicitly excluding land as we both agree that land should be commonly owned. With capital (as in equipment and machinery), if the party you're renting from has a condition you don't like for use of their capital, you can compel a sale at their self-assessed price in the scheme I mentioned. This eliminates the monopoly power associated with capital ownership. Thus, it confers no hierarchical authority to the owner

this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2023
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