Specifically, what arguments fail (that support capitalism) due to faulty evidence, misunderstanding of capitalism, lack of knowledge regarding Marxism, etc.?

  • @edward@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Probably not the most, but:

    “Capitalists are job creators.”

    The jobs will exist with or without them.

    • aedalla
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      71 year ago

      Well. There are some jobs that like. Aren’t actually real. Instagram influencers for instance. You don’t need somebody wiggling their ass or abs at you and telling you their favorite cereal flavor if the goal is just to sell decent cereal instead of inventing a bunch of wierdass subflavors based on marvel characters to try and get people to buy shit they don’t actually need for way too much money.

      • Rikudou_Sage
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        71 year ago

        I think it’s stupid as much as anyone who’s not gen Z, but to claim it’s not real because it’s not something I can understand is a little boomer-like. Guess we’re doing the whole “everything from my childhood is how it should be and the previous/next generations are stupid/misguided if they disagree” shtick.

        • @abbadon420@lemm.ee
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          41 year ago

          Agreed. “Influencers” are making money because people are paying them. So it’s clearly lucrative for some reason that I’ll never understand.

          • @maxprime@lemmy.ml
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            61 year ago

            I think their argument is that the job exists because of capitalism and without the driving force of an economy being capital, the role of an influencer is gone.

        • aedalla
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          1 year ago

          No its more like. I’m not gonna let capitalism lie to me about whether or not I need five different flavors of cinnamon toast crunch (one of which will specifically target my interests / demographics!) to feel fulfilled.

          That’s been going on way since the boomers and at least formally since the ww2 generation.

          Telling you that you need all of these #options plus an #attractive celebrity to identify with and tell you which flavor to like is waaay older than anyone still alive now.

  • @accidental
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    131 year ago

    my 2c:

    that we live in anything approaching an Adam Smith style capitalism at all. The scope of regulatory capture, anticompetitive behavior, cartel building et al in the current corporatist handwave means that prices can never go down, competition can’t really unseat incumbents and so on.

    • @PeepinGoodArgs@reddthat.com
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      101 year ago

      Oh, you about to give me started now.

      Adam Smith had another book entirely about morality. The current use of Adam Smith is wrong. Personally, for me, modern economics is a theory of selfishness, but if you go back and read Adam Smith both of the Theory of Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations. You know, he connects morality, educational economics there, they’re connected.

      Modern economics says nothing about morality (because it tries to supplant all alternatives entirely), thus justifying all sorts of social ills.

  • @birdcat@lemmy.ml
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    131 year ago

    “Having money is nice, I want to have a lot of money because I love spending money, and I want my personal freedom regarding the way I spend my money. I work hard for my money, and so do others. That leads to innovation and progress and is the only way to preserve freedom. Therefore, I support capitalism, and therefore, I am a capitalist.”

  • @atlasraven31@lemm.ee
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    91 year ago

    Capitalism favors the efficient use of resources and labor. Without capitalism, we would not have a smooth and efficient society with the comforts we enjoy!

    (I feel icky writing this. Big cognitive dissonance here.)

    • The Bard in Green
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      61 year ago

      And SO easy to debunk. It’s SO easy to attack the idea of the Free Market and construct logical arguments backed with real world examples to explain why it’s such a shitty, unworkable idea that opens the door for massive abuse.

      And when you’re talking to a true believer, it all goes in one ear and out the other.

  • @OwenEverbinde@lemmy.myserv.one
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    1 year ago

    First of All, we Lost the Vocabulary War

    There almost no arguments in favor of the thing anti-capitalists dislike and call “capitalism.” Every argument you see is an argument in favor of market systems and self-determination, which may be necessary components to some capitalist societies, but aren’t important criteria to the people advocating against our current system.

    It was a clever move on the part of whoever redefined, “capitalism” until it meant, basically, “all human, economic activity.”

    Fortunately, that’s a double edged sword. One can advocate communism these days, calling it instead, “democratic workplaces”, and “worker cooperatives”, and “worker owned businesses.”

    And the overlords can’t tell their workers, “that’s communism!” Because they’ve spent the past 180 years redefining the terms.

    Technically, according to their own warped-until-useless definitions, everything is capitalism. Because worker cooperatives ✨exchange goods and services for currency✨, they are capitalism too.

    That said

    Nevertheless, to answer the question: the most egregious argument in favor of capitalism is the businessman’s story. You’ve probably heard some variant of it.

    1. Tom has an idea!
    2. He makes a prototype, refines the process, and then starts selling his whatchamacallit!
    3. His watchamacallit has soared in popularity! The orders are coming in faster than he can meet them! He meets with investors who, in exchange for part of his company, give him enough startup capital to build a factory and hire wage workers.
    4. He manages these wage workers, becoming gradually more wealthy as his business expands. He is now able to recline on a beach as the fruits of his labor continue pouring in. And those clever investors can recline on a beach as well!

    By presenting (1) and (2) in the same narrative as (3) and (4), with the same characters, the story portrays (1) and (2) as mere extensions of (3) and (4), when in fact their presence in a society is hard to protect when (3) and (4) are also present.

    The Wright Brothers never could get royalties from the people who used their inventions to build planes. Tesla never gained wealth from his society-altering technologies. Hedy Lamarr never earned a cent for inventing WiFi (according to some stories, she never wanted to, and donated her patents to the American war effort. But she still struggled with poverty in the middle of enriching numerous people).

    The most telling part of this argument is that one could substitute (3) and (4) for literal slavery! And the narrative would look pretty much the same.

    “Tom’s getting more orders than he can handle, so he heads over to a slave auction to pick up some help! This way, he can produce more, and his new property can learn valuable skills! It’s a win-win! This is how slaveowning helps Tom profit off of his idea!”

    It was no accident that slaveowners of the American South considered their society and their struggle the last bastion against a communist takeover of the world.

    It’s a very compelling story (as misleading as it is). A tale where the beginning makes the listener root for the protagonist all the way to end – even after he’s committed unspeakable atrocities that plunder the world of its wealth.

    Because we all want to be Tom and come up with a wonderful idea (or learn a rare skill) that makes us valuable to the world. We all want to bring some contribution to the table and have that contribution recognized.

  • Fleppensteyn
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    31 year ago

    The free market is much more efficient and better for the public.

    I think we can all agree privatiation of pretty much everything didn’t work out that well

  • Vampire [any]
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    11 year ago

    “Free markets are the most efficient way of allocating resource resources”

    “How do you measure efficiency?”

    “I don’t know”