Chunky Milk wrote:
Nexus Kinnon wrote:
he's from slovenia iirc and was an old school leftist, so he's coming at the issue from a marxist point of view - i.e.: he probably thinks if workers can achieve class consciousness then they will move to revolt and craft a society which is fairer than a capitalist society
that's just conjuncture though i admit, i haven't read enough of his philosophy to speak with authority, but that is his background. i disagree with the majority of workers will ever achieve true "class consciousness" as marx or engels imagined as traditional leftist thought believes, but i must say i'm at a loss as to what the catalyst of change will truly end up being. probably victorian style poor houses, deprivation and starvation?
I listened to it and not sure how you got that from what he actually said. He seemed to make a fair bit of sense to me. He even said, he's not an idiot, he's not suggesting we stop charity but rather more simply pointing out that because consumer charity is making us feel 'ok' about poverty, in the sense that we are doing something, then it's stopping real substantive change from happening. He does mention that if you want to stop poverty for real then you need to change the social structure but at least in this talk he doesn't actually tell us what kind of change would accomplish this.
without even looking the guy up i guarantee you nexus is right about this. and it's not by accident that he glosses over the parts nexus is at a loss about. that's because he is basically arguing for a planned economy, where the planners are "the people".... well, the "representatives" of the people... well, dictators essentially. But don't worry, they'll still do the right thing and not use their position to entrench their power, unlike 99.999999% of people in a similar situation throughout history (the remaining .000001% were quickly removed for lack of entrenching themselves).