K. A. Pital wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:This is (to the best of my ability) an empirical observation- am I wrong? Can you recount in detail why I am wrong?
My argument, once again, was very specific: that hard and hazardous jobs, and this includes sewage cleaners, are not universally well-paid (as in, paid
above average income).
My reply to this is, this is obviously true, because owners are rats and will seek to minimize compensation paid regardless of who they're paying it
to. I will note that my metric for whether a hard and hazardous job is 'well-paid' would be to compare it to other jobs that have similar qualifications, though.
For example, consider "test pilot:" a dangerous job that requires a college education and several years of post-graduate education and experience. Such a job would, we fondly hope, be well-compensated in terms of prestige and material things compared to other jobs
with similar barriers to entry that are not as dangerous or difficult.
Cleaning sewers has low barriers to entry in that almost anyone
could take the job if they chose to. If you're going to compare it on equal terms (regardless of whether the results are disappointing), you would sensibly compare it to other jobs that nearly anyone could fill.
...If there is a town or country which has high rewards for this type of occupation, it's good. As for floor cleaners - it's a simple and non-hazardous job, but I don't see people being eager to take it. So the logic of "nobody likes the job and this will lead to higher wages" doesn't necessarily apply here either...
That wasn't quite what I was getting at.
Cleaning floors is unpleasant drudge work, but it is not
loathesome. Almost everyone would choose to clean floors if the alternative were being a homeless beggar in the streets, for instance.
By contrast, quite a few people would seriously consider homelessness as an alternative to working in the filth of a sewer.
Unless the owners have the usual rat-like means to coerce workers (i.e. very high overall unemployment, the risk of actual starvation if you lose your job, etc.), one would normally expect
unusually dangerous or loathesome jobs to pay noticeably more than other jobs
requiring comparable qualifications.
This expectation is not always met, because there are complications.
What I am most decidedly against is the attempt to derive some universal law of the capitalist system based on a primitive economic model and then run happily with this newfound "truth". Okay, we derived the law, but what do we do when it's not conforming to reality?
Revise the model. I mean, we can back up and try to figure out what we were talking about before we got sidetracked.
And it was about division of labor. Essentially, you were calling division of labor an evil. And people have been disputing that strongly, because practically every good thing we now have, including the few meager good things that are desperately clung to by the immiserated overpopulated masses of Third World slums, is a product of a technological civilization created by division of labor.
We can't go back to the way we were. Absent mechanized agriculture (supported by division of labor) the Earth supports something like one billion humans- the other six billion would
die. Indeed, allowing for environmental degradation in the past ten thousand years, and for the fact that even Iron Age farming often was built on a certain level of division of labor... Abolishing division of labor might well result in population dying back to only a few million- the level it occupied in the Paleolithic.
We can't go back, even if we wanted to.
And moreover, it's questionable whether we WOULD want to.
Because it's questionable whether
even the people living in Third World slums are worse off than they would be living in tiny farming villages or nomadic tribes under pre-civilized conditions. This question is illustrated by the fact that people are, even now, choosing to leave those tribes and villages and move to the cities those slums occupy. If it were obviously better in their minds to live in the Stone Age, more of them would continue to do so.
Moreover, we have many reasons to hope that IF development of the world continues, and is not interrupted by mass war or chaos, THEN the plight of those Third World slums will become much less bad than it is now.
So to drop this whole question of what theoretical models predict, we return to the question of "is division of labor evil?"
And I would argue that it is not. Or insofar as there is evil associated with division of labor, it is evil associated with, well... frankly, with private ownership of the means of production. Our debate has come full circle back to 1848, I guess, only you seem to have forgotten some things.
My argument is that there is no rule which would reward hazardous occupations more; each and every case of wage rise is actually a result of class struggle. Miners were paid way below average for literally coin-flip probability of various types of painful death; now they are paid well above average and the chance for crippling injury or a bad death is much lower than before. All of this is struggle: the miners actually fought, literally, with weapons, the ruling class to beat concessions out of them, and given their critical role in the industry they were able to achieve a lot. Other, less specialized jobs, are a lot less fortunate because they don't wield that type of economic power that the miners, or transport workers, do.
Yes. Because owners are rats, and it is a fundamental flaw of ownership-based societies that you can't accomplish any useful social change without a thousand very powerful men screaming "who is going to pay for it," as though a 2% loss to their pocketbook or whatever would actually cause them any real harm.
But this does not make division of labor, in itself, an evil that can or should be attacked. As I outline above, I would argue that it is both
incredibly unwise to attack (in the same sense that one should not blow up the bridge one is standing on), and
undesirable to attack (in the sense that one should not blow up the bridge by which vital relief supplies are reaching a billion famine victims)
But a minimum wage in a rich country which is an imperialistic metropole is not the worst there can be... Just google manual sewer cleaners in Indian megacities, and you will have your upbeat mood down in an instant. Industrial suffering, like I explain below.
I am aware. The situation was comparably terrible in my own country once upon a time. Many important things had to change to improve the situation. But what did
not change was the division of labor. It was not abolished, no one tried to abolish it. Things improved anyway.
There is also no way for wages to drop any further than a certain minimum (see my comment on marginalism). So your whole theory rests on the free adjustment of wages. Cashiers and retail clerks already get like the bare minimum, and it could be that either law or collective argreement keeps the wage at survival levels. In which case a flood of new candidates will not drop wages but simply increase the pool of unemployed - who usually get less than minimum wage in social assistance, and the questions on whether a person can truly live on this money are always raised. So basically, your model is flawed at the very start (where there's always a wage reaction to a flood of people being released).
That is a fair point- my model would be less flawed were there not a legally imposed minimum on what you can pay people. But there is such a limit, and it's a good thing there is for obvious reasons.
Simon_Jester wrote:By analogy, it is "natural" for humans to live in conditions of equality, insofar as it is natural for us to live under conditions of subsistence where starvation is a real and imminent danger that is only avoided by our utmost efforts.
If starvation forces people to cooperate in a classless fashion, there may be other motivators that will make them do the same.
Yes, and I would suggest researching until you find one. I don't know of any.
There are plenty of advantages to relative equality among citizens, they do not need to be justified to me. It is simply that, unless total equality is
forcibly imposed, there will be inequality. Even in classless tribal societies there is inequality. There are individuals at a disadvantage (e.g. widows and orphans), There are individuals with physical disabilities that the tribe struggles to care for, and will abandon if it becomes too difficult for them to keep up. There are individuals who are socially outcast from the community, or simply unpopular and as a result more vulnerable.
Now, these inequalities may be better or worse than the inequalities of class. And those inequalities vary. The inequalities of class are more toxic in some places, less so in others. A feudal society in which a knight is legally entitled to stab a peasant to death just to test how sharp his sword is... That has a much more toxic sort of inequality than in a social-democratic country where, say, the CEO of a large corporation has ten times the salary of a production worker.
(examples are hypothetical)
Simon_Jester wrote:... murder each other as individuals... So while they're not rebelling against the authorities that rule them (since they live in anarchy)... they are clearly rebelling against something. Or at least fighting against something. What would you call it?
Nature. But I take issue with your "they often murder each other as individuals". You need to back it up with anthropologic studies that will show Neolithic murder rate is high to justify such a statement.
Well, I'm just going to reach to the bookshelf by my computer, hang on here...
I am currently reading Jared Diamond's
The World Until Yesterday, which is based in large part on Diamond's extensive personal experience studying and living among the tribesmen of New Guinea, and also from other anthropological studies around the world. I would refer you to the book itself as it is good reading and is an interesting comparative exercise in looking at advantages and disadvantages of traditional human lifestyles versus technological-society human lifestyles.
If you want more detailed summaries of some specific texts from this book, I can provide them.
But to summarize, the mortality rates, measured in terms of deaths related to warfare or one-on-one violent killings, for traditional societies tend to be something like 1% per year or more, and those are time averages over periods of decades. By contrast, very few if any developed nations experience such a death rate over a comparable period of time- even in nations that experienced horrific slaughter such as Russia and China.
Likewise, if we measure by the percentage of the population that dies by violence... For example, in 20th century Russia, the average is 0.15% of the population dying by violence per year. Integrate over 100 years and you have a death toll of several tens of millions- I don't know exactly, it depends on how many Russians lived between 1900 and 2000. But the number is broadly consistent with the death tolls of the World Wars (deaths caused by Stalin-era purges may or may not have been counted, I don't know).
Whereas in a traditional society like the Dani tribesmen of New Guinea, the average is more like 1% of the population dying per year to interpersonal violence. Integrate over 100 years and... put this way, if there were as many Dani as there were Russians throughout the twentieth century, then the number of Dani who would have died by violence would be
six times the combined war deaths of both World Wars.
The reason this is the case is based on several things.
For one, Russians are usually not at war with anybody- or if they are at war, it is with some remote society that has no meaningful ability to do something horrible like kill 5% of all living Russians. Examples of such 'safe' wars would be the wars in Afghanistan or now in the Ukraine. If we only count active wars against enemies who could kill a significant percentage of the Russian population, Russia spent only about ten years out of the past hundred in such a war, and that's including the Russian Civil War.
Whereas Dani tribal villagers are very often at war, in chronic cycles of feuding and counter-feuding and revenge killings, such that in a real sense their society is
always at war, with people who live nearby and can easily just walk over to your village and murder one of your people, and then people from your village walk over to theirs and kill one of yours, and every few months during a 'serious' war there will be a pitched battle in which two or three people are killed, and every several years an entire village is slaughtered in a massacre or ambush... it adds up.
And while the Dani are more warlike than average, based on the statistics in this book, which are in turn based on other studies and which are being presented by a man who in general admires New Guinean natives... they are not unusual.
Simon_Jester wrote:I use it because I am sincerely of the opinion that technology allows us more control over our worlds than we used to have.
Us as a species, as humanity whole? True enough. Us as "myself"? No. I am utterly powerless, and frankly, after the last few decades my entire class is disempowered. The Western capitalist "techno-meritocracy" looks more and more like world-spanning cyberpunk technofascism.
Honestly, I am not sure that your class, or you personally, are more disempowered than your counterparts of 1915 were.
I mean, imagine the horror of watching the entire technologically developed world spiral into open warfare, with the working class of all the advanced nations, the ones that were
supposed to be close enough to socialism that it might even happen in a generation or two... all slaughtering each other, over absurd, trifling nationalist reasons, over the pride and anger of emperors and the jingoism of propagandized crowds.
Would you feel MORE empowered as an individual or as a class to be living in those days, with the elites manipulating the working class to do THAT? I beg permission to doubt it.
Simon_Jester wrote:If we compare the slum-dwellers of Jakarta to the peoples whose lives are most similar to those of Çatalhöyük, who still live in areas where government is sparse and the world ownership-class has not found anything it desires from them... in many ways they are living in worse conditions than the slum-dwellers.
In what "many ways"? You do know that slum living gives rise to horrible epidemics, that sanitation there is much worse than in some tribal societies? At what point will you concede that the modern world has created conditions -
actively created - which are worse than primal - both before and today? Would it be total war? Would it be the XIX century child mines? Would it be the concentration camps of Dora Mittelbau where lower race slaves "paved the way" into space under Nazi SS slavers, among them Werner von Braun? When will you admit that the industrial society
can create a whole new phenomenon:
the industrial production of extreme suffering? I am not going to say the savage's dignity is something to be easily dismissed either. Freedom from class rule and authority also has a value. People have shed blood for that, thousands of them.
Will you kindly stop tirading at me and pay attention to whether I'm using the past tense or the present tense? Whether I am comparing the present or the past, whether I am averaging over a given society or comparing the worst of one to the worst of another?
You keep shrieking at me to 'admit' things I've never denied, apparently because I do not abjectly crumble and admit to you that you are right in all things.
And you
keep moving the goalposts, in that one minute you're using modern slums as your reference point for 'bad,' then another minute you're using WWII concentration camps. And one minute you're attacking
all division of labor, then you're remaining silent about your previous claims that division of labor being an evil and pretending that I am a villain for speaking about the advantages of it.
I honestly feel that part of the problem here is that while you have a strong appreciation for the kinds of suffering that exist in even the worst urban slums of today, you do NOT seem to be even aware of the kinds of problems that exist for Neolithic tribesmen. Try reading the book by Diamond, or perhaps I can suggest others for you if that one is not to your liking.
It is all getting very tiresome, because I feel as though you are not actually engaging me in this debate, you are engaging some sort of generic strawman version that exists in your mind, and screaming angrily at this imaginary person, and no longer really listening to me.
The industrial society forged itself in blood. The invention of antibiotics came during a bloodbath that actually plunged most of the world in such conditions that Chatalhouyuk would seem an idyllic place.
And yet in one of the two worst-hit countries of that war (yours), the death rate during the 20th century due to violence
still managed to be lower than it was among a bunch of slightly more warlike-than-average Stone Age tribesmen. Several times lower.
I challenge you with this...
Well, frankly, here is my answer to your challenge.
There are four possibile outcomes of the trends you cite.
1) We might develop our way out of this trap. Those over four billion slum-dwellers scheduled to exist in 2050 may end up richer than we thought, rich enough to afford real buildings to live in.
2) We might try to develop our way out of this trap, and fail- but otherwise, the world would proceed unchanged. Then there will be four billion people living in slums, along with three billion living in decent buildings, and two billion in rural areas.
3) We might try to develop our way out of this trap, and trigger ecological collapses. The carrying capacity of the world would diminish, plagues would sweep the world. Billions would die. Perhaps of those nine billion, only seven billion will survive. Or six, or even more horribly, only five.
4) Things might be even worse than in (3). Perhaps there will be mass nuclear war, or a series of virgin field epidemics sweeping the world. In which case we might end up with, out of those nine billion people who 'should' be alive in 2050 only one or two or three billion surviving.
5) We might abandon division of labor, the basic underpinning of ALL the industries that produce ALL the necessities of life for literally 90 or perhaps even 95 or 99 percent of those nine billion people. In which case it is assuredly the case that at most a few hundred million of those nine billion people will survive.
Now, my point here is that each of these options is worse than the one before it. But ANY of options 1-4 is vastly, overwhelmingly less bad than option 5. And we can't even hope to get Option 4, hellish though it is, if we abandon or attack division of labor.
And if we are
somehow able to get Option 1, and I am not saying it is possible... Frankly, we will only get that through a massive
production. Through division of labor, among other things. If there is any solution to the problem of four billion slum-dwellers in 2050... it will occur because a society with division of labor (hundreds of such societies)
produced the means for a decent life for those four billion people. Or because organized societies limited population and expanded their access to drinkable water and so forth (e.g. China, which would be infinitely worse off, a miserable hellhole, today if not for the One Child policy)
No society lacking such division of labor could possibly accomplish that, no matter how badly it wanted to.
And even if this endeavour fails, and four billion people are living in slums... I would turn to them and ask them to tell you, would they rather not be alive at all?
Because the industrialized world may somehow produce nine billion people, four or five billion of them living in utter abject poverty of the worst sort...
But if we then took that industrialized world and tried to go back to the way we were, we would instead have four or five
hundred million alive, at most, and 8.5 billion corpses. And I think most of those slum-dwellers will still be looking at their lives, and not wishing they were dead, or that they had never been born.
So... We can't humanize horrible jobs which only exist because of the division of labour without division of labour? Correct. But that's also a tautology.
Yes, and yet it is true, and no purpose is served by you banging your head against the wall and raging about how unjust it is that seven or nine billion humans cannot all be Stone Age farmers in an idyllic imaginary paradise that never existed.
You can say that technology and division of labour aren't at fault, but seriously, does it pain you so much to admit that technology can kill? And that division of labour required to produce said technology can lead to FUCKING HORRIBLE THINGS?
I have considered this such an obvious proposition that I cannot recall having once denied it since I was a ten year old child.
Why is it so important to you to extract a 'concession' from me on this matter?
That's right. But suppose the mining community was actually a large commune with access to agricultural land and good climate. They may very well have supported themselves. And if people can do that under certain conditions under self-supervision...
Then you would have an experiment that was performed in nature many, many times throughout the prehistory and early history of the human race. People living together, with no obvious class hierarchy and minimum differences in the available supply of goods between individuals, with little division of labor, and with few men having any real means of coercing any other men beyond their own personal physical brawn.
This is exactly what the whole world looked like at the end of the last Ice Age.
The result is the world we have today, with all its horrors and glories.
So if you want a better result, a better world, then you need to either start engaging in mature, sane, delusion-free exercises in engineering on the world we
have, or you need to find a better plan than to recreate conditions that already existed in the past and led to the very same mess we're in now.
Idealizing primitive communism will accomplish nothing. We can't go back there, and even when we
were there it wasn't nearly as pleasant as you believe.
The problem is not division of labor. The problem is that the means to create a better world are controlled by those who have no incentive to do so, and are unwilling to do so or even
allow others to do so unmolested out of their own altruism.
Simon_Jester wrote:...but the only societies I know of to reject capitalism on a large scale were the 20th century communist ones, and they did the same thing the capitalists did! ... How could we improve on that, to provide special incentives greater than the ones people normally provide each other anyway?
The Paris Commune had the salaries of administrators set at no higher than those of the average worker. When the USSR started, there was a maximum
150% of average wage of supervised workers limit set for the party bureaucrats - called Partmaximum (secretly abolished by Stalin later)...
The Paris Commune was destroyed by outside force before we could find out what would happen. And as you note, Stalin arose and abolished the Partmaximum within a decade or two of the founding of the USSR.
So again, the experiment has been tried, and failed, and if you do not yet have an actual
plan for how to do better, then I suggest you stop wasting energy screaming at me for trying to tell you that such a plan is necessary.
Simon_Jester wrote:But in that case, you must first un-warp the society, then pay the legislators less.
What destabilizes the system of class power, is good.
Paying legislators less, in our present warped society, will not destabilize the system of class power, and will not be good. Do you not even try to predict the consequences of your own proposed policy changes anymore? Do you just randomly shout out demands and ideas based on pure loathing of the status quo?
I have zero interest in hypothetical scenarios of the liberals. They start with a lie - that in some abstract model people will not kill and rob to establish class power - and dismiss class, reducing their model to the Robinson Crusoe contacts Robinson Crusoe scenario, ignore the collective labour and individual appropriation - and then say that's what actually happened. Well, no, that's not what happened, and that's not what will happen. "Uncoerced" my ass. Even with bare hands people will fight, they will struggle to the end.
Very well- and yet you wonder how it is that primitive tribesmen can manage to kill each other at percentage rates as great as, or even greater than, the rates at which industrialized nations do the same.
Simon_Jester wrote:Incidentally, if my lawyer makes twice as much a year as I do, does that mean I "serve" her when she is the one doing jobs for me?
Your lawyer is a small-bourgeois self-employed. She is not your servant and not the elected representative of the people. She is someone you make a capitalist contract with. If you think that your government is just a bunch of contractors, like in a corporation, I am not even sure what's your problem with capitalism. Reconstruct the nation as a corporation, hire a CEO, and there you go. Wait... hahaha, your nation is pretty much that.
Honestly no, our corporations are mostly better organized than our government, at least in terms of being able to accomplish their own stated purposes. The average corporation today does a much more reliable job of increasing shareholders' money than our government does of:
"forming a more perfect Union, establishing Justice, insuring domestic Tranquility, providing for the common defence, promoting the general Welfare, and securing the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity,"
...which is our government's mission statement and has been since 1787.
It is simply that if someone performs a task on your behalf, the fact that they get paid more than you do does not mean that you are their servant. I was simply seeking to establish this point. In and of itself, the fact that A is more highly compensated than B does not make A into B's master.
Officers on Russian Empire battleships had different quarters and different food than the sailors. In the end, the sailors rose up and killed them, then sailed the battleship Potemkin with a red banner. Equality matters. Even if they get the upper end of income (which should not be without reason; it should be justified, for example, that their contribution to the country's well-being actually isn't negative and that they need the extra resources to better perform their job), say 150% or 200% of average, they shouldn't get greater luxuries until they finally get detouched and it's back to the Elysium oligarchy.
Since that was more or less my argument all along (just with some of the clauses switched around), I accept your concession on the matter of how much to pay parliamentarians.