K. A. Pital wrote:Let's be quick now because you seem to have completely strawmanned my argument into something that it's not.
Simon_Jester wrote:I accept your concession on the matter of how much to pay parliamentarians.
Even if (meaning, better NOT) they get the upper end of income ~ 150% or 200% of average, they shouldn't get
greater luxuries. Where is the concession?
Well, if that was the position you have occupied all along, then you have conceded nothing- but in that case you have agreed with me on the subject of appropriate compensation for parliamentarians all along, and have simply been charging along in angry, violent agreement with me.
I think a reasonable salary for parliamentarians would be, oh, 150-200% of median, plus compensation for any expenses occurred specifically because of things it is mandatory that parliamentarians do (such as maintain residences in two places at once, which almost no other employee is required to do for any reason).
Simon_Jester wrote:...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.
Where have I described the Stone Age as a paradise? Where have I said we need to return to the conditions of the Neolithic farming settlements?
You have called those conditions superior to the alternatives. Now you are surprised that people think you want to go back?
Simon_Jester wrote: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.
Your opinion - about me. Yep. Yet, some of these empires bite the dust in mere four years; crowns lying in the mud with nobody to pick them up. Uprisings rock the world, and even the core countries like Britain are not immune; they lose colonies, and basically a whole century of struggle begins. The world is not a monolithic capitalist thing ruled by US-based MNCs. This was not the end of history. It was the start of history. But today? Maybe I'm just too pessimistic, but it does look like the end. In a non-positive sense of the word "end".
Again, my point is fundamentally that your equivalents of 1915 had reasons for pessimism just as good as the ones you have, if not better. The only real difference is that their cause for pessimism was born of war (which meant change would come quickly, when it came), rather than of peace (peacetime change is usually slower).
I could equally well have cited the socialists of 1895, who
also had excellent reason for pessimism, and who lived in a peacetime era when in fact they
were facing a world order that had changed only slightly in their favor for decades and was unlikely to change drastically in the near future. Or of 1905-
The Iron Heel was written when it was for a reason.
Simon_Jester wrote: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
Okay, in that case your statement was justified, no doubt. In any case, thanks for providing this information. I had a general impression of the Stone Age as violent, but not based on actual studies of violence of the period. Once again - I did not suggest to reconstruct the Neolithic society. You misinterpreted my attacks on the division of labour - which are made from the standpoint of justice, namely, that in a society without division of labour suffering is distributed more or less evenly, whereas with division of labour suffering and risk are distributed unevenly, and with inequality of incomes (and outcomes) it means in such societies
some people live a sheltered life while
others risk and die to either construct this sheltered life or protect it. This is wrong.
I would argue that we are finally nearing the point at which it becomes possible for division of labor to put an end to the injustices it created. Because we are reaching the point- have already begun to reach it, but so far only in developed societies, where instead of saying "human A will live well while humans B, C, and D suffer from drudgery," we CAN say "humans A through D will all live well and the drudgery will be done by a machine."
We are not yet there, not quite, not even in the developed world. And the arbitrage created by low living conditions in the developing world makes it
harder to reach that desirable state
But we are closer now than we were fifty years ago, and vastly closer than we were a century ago, and infinitely closer than we were two centuries ago.
It is at least within the realm of the possible that within our lifetimes, the means will be available for technological societies to break through to a fundamentally higher and finer level of being than that of the injustice-riddled messes and viciousness that has characterized human civilization since the days of Ur of the Chaldees.
So the injustices of divided labor... I would argue that those have the potential to fix themselves, with proper care and guidance and governance.
Whereas the injustices of undivided labor under conditions of primitive communism (e.g. mothers having to kill their babies on a regular basis because the tribe's condition does not make it possible to raise them to adulthood)... those do not fix themselves. Ever.
Simon_Jester wrote: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.
During the whole century? Yes. It was mostly peaceful, after all. During the large wars themselves, however, people died in percentages greater than the hunter-gatherer violent death rate you quoted.
I would argue that this is beside the point.
No human in a technological society can know at birth whether they will live in times of war or peace. If they were born in Russia in 1896 they lived through about ten years of intense warfare and sixty years of peace- assuming the wars didn't kill them before then. If a person were born in Russia in 1946 the odds are good they've lived through seventy years of peace..*
*By this I mean
this individual personally have experienced peace or war, not whether your entire society was uniformly and without exception at peace.
A human in a primitive society
can know at birth that they will live in times of war, with little or no time of peace. With some of the surrounding tribes being mortal enemies for years at a time, often with the threat of massacre by one's neighbors as a common and routine danger. In any one year the odds of being killed by one's enemies in this constant Stone Age warfare may be low due to the primitive nature of their weapons and tactics. But the risk you experience of dying by violence, just as a result of being born, in such a society is much higher.
The fact that in a modern society all the risk of death is compressed into narrower parts of time and space- if anything this is
progress, from an admittedly perverse point of view. Wouldn't you rather have five or ten years of danger, among sixty years of safety, rather than being in constant danger for all of your life?
Simon_Jester wrote: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.
In time, it does. Inequality is the foundation of class division. The settelements had special people enjoying a greater standard of life by giving them more than others. Eventually, these people formed a ruling class. Your point is invalid. At a snapshot, in a given moment, A and B's unequal incomes do not mean one is part of the ruling class and the other is not. In time, it does.
In that case, we will likely never be free of class systems except by imposing primitive misery on all humans, or by turning all humans into useless drones while the robots do literally
all the relevant work. Or perhaps by some bizarre
Harrison Bergeron-esque scenario in which we artificially prevent anyone from doing anything valued enough that they are in a position to command any significant form of compensation that not everyone else gets.
In which case it is pointless to bemoan that which cannot be fixed.
Simon_Jester wrote: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.
Class originates with the division of labour, which is at first driven by necessity, but later - driven by class power, by the tasks set through the will of the ruling class. We can think of workarounds, sure - we overthrow the ruling class, we devise rules that combat the ruling class' power, we create our own alternative systems. But realizing that problem is the first step. Once again, at no point is this a talk about returning to the Stone Age.
Simon_Jester wrote: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...
You are saying that as if people were some sort of "tick" achievement in a strategy game to be produced. But they're not. And not being born is what China did to its children. You just hailed this solution, but in the next paragraph you state that people would not prefer not to be born. All industrialized societies practice birth control. That's millions of unborn for the welfare of the living. So I kind of... lost your point. The production of people is an industrial achievement or should we curtail the production of people?
Neither.
The point is, suppose our choices are as follows:
-Six or seven billion people are born into a world where living conditions for all of them are becoming acceptable, or more likely are already acceptable because of reduced overpopulation problems.
-Nine billion people are born into a world where living conditions for all of them are becoming acceptable.
-Nine billion people are born into a world, half of them have unacceptable living conditions.
-Nine billion people are born into a world, half of them have unacceptable living conditions, and three billion of those people die horribly in plagues and famines.
-Nine billion people are born into a world, a half billion of them have unacceptable living conditions, and the other 8.5 billion of them die horribly.
Clearly, each of those choices is better than the one above it.
"No division of labor" leads to the
bottom outcome, the horrible outcome no one would desire. Living in a slum is better than dying of starvation. If this were not so, well... it's not as if the slum-dwellers don't know how to starve to death, if starvation would be preferable than their current existence.
Now, before I did not speak precisely enough. I referred to this point (that slum-dwellers would no doubt rather be alive in a slum than having been born and then died of starvation). But I referred to it by saying "ask the slum-dwellers if they would rather not exist at all."
So you became confused, and thought I was referring to birth control, when I was simply referring to
not allowing people to starve.
Basically, if those nine billion people are all
alive in 2050, rather than having died horribly, it will be because of the Light Side of division of labor. Half of them will live in slums because of the Dark Side, but if you interviewed them, I suspect they would consider the Light Side consequence more significant than the Dark.
And literally
any thing that our world can possibly do to reduce or limit the suffering of those nine billion people (population control, development aid, etc.)... all those things will in turn flow from the Light Side of division of labor.
So while the Dark Side of division of labor may exist and in some sense be 'the root of class inequality and suffering,' this is only true in the same sense that one can blame the water cycle for hurricanes. It isn't the fault of the planet's ecological water cycle that hurricanes happen, even if hurricanes could not happen without the water cycle.
Talking at length about how the water cycle is (or even about how it
can be) an evil is deeply counterproductive.
Simon_Jester wrote:And one minute you're attacking all division of labor
And I keep attacking it from the chosen angle. Who said that you get the right to enjoy a sheltered life with cheap clothes and cheap food while the textile workers die in droves and farmers suffer from First World dumping in the Third World? You get no such right - nobody does, and I don't think I have a right to even live.
I don't have such a right. However, if there is to be any chance of ending the suffering in the Third World, rather than merely making it worse...
...That ending will come through division of labor.
Therefore, I cannot reasonably call division of labor an evil, since it
always solved roughly as many problems as it created, and sometimes solves many more problems than it created, and may in the relatively near future even find us a way to solve
all the problems that it created.
You can say that your ancestors took this right by violence; by a kind of natural selection among nations, etc. That's all social darwinism recast. Means you get the right to something just because you punched the other guy in the face and stole his things. Division of labour produces inequality which you defend. I attack it solely because the separation of sufffering between people is injust.
Except I didn't
Why are some suffering, but not all? Why is one suffering, but another is enjoying better conditions because of the first one's suffering?
You don't have a good answer to that. Nobody here does.
My answers are:
1) The alternative is for everyone to be suffering, and for the vast majority of them to suffer
worse- even the miserable slum-dwellers in the Third World do not run off into the jungle to be Stone Age tribesmen, even in places where that is theoretically possible such as New Guinea. Indeed, the reverse is true- people are deserting the tribal villages in favor of the slums. And they are even better informed about the consequences of making such a choice than you are.
2) The current world system is far more unjust than it should be or 'needs' to be in any meaningful sense, because, and this is the fundamental source of evils, NOT division of labor:
Owners are rats. The mechanisms that would allow us to make the world a better place in a fair manner are so consistently under the control of people who will not use them for that purpose, and who skillfully prevent them from being used for that purpose. This is a problem that urgently needs fixing- far more urgently than any problem that is a direct result of division of labor.
If we didn't have division of labor it wouldn't matter if the owners stopped being rats, because we still wouldn't be able to lift the world out of misery no matter what we did.
And like I expected, it did fell on deaf ears. You've done well - first saying that equality is unnatural and flies in the face of anthropology and history, to which I correctly replied with the Paleo- and Neolithic classless society (indeed, what could be "natural" - 1% of human history or 99%?)... and then attacking me as if I wished to reconstruct the Neolithic society. Perfect!
What I actually said is:
" But at the same time, people are making a wide variety of arguments based on a wide variety of different kinds of evidence for the idea that it is not realistic, that it contradicts all of human history, sociology, and psychology, to create a situation in which every person's living conditions are just exactly those of the median person."
The hell of it is... even in a primitive society this remains true. Everyone's living conditions may be
commensurate, but they are not identical. In particular, the healthy are vastly privileged over the sick (because there is no meaningful health care). Those who have stable family ties are vastly privileged over social outcasts or orphans (because there is no support structure other than the extended family that will show any caring for you at all). Those are perhaps the two most prominent examples.
Now, nonetheless, the fact that everyone lives under commensurate conditions is at least
less unequal in some ways than a typical technological society. But if you look at what I actually said... frankly, the example of primitive societies was not relevant to that in the first place.
Nothing is more insulting than inequality. Death is fearsome; suffering is painful. But inequality - that thing is insulting to the mind, and hateful, hateful beyond measure.
If you are prepared to embrace an arbitrarily large amount of suffering (for yourself or others) in order to remove a finite amount of inequality...
Well, let's just say that when I meet a man who is willing to inflict vast injuries for the sake of removing an insult, I worry about his sanity.
And I will note that Starglider's
deliberate parodies of your position become more validated, when you explicitly claim that you find suffering and death to be less bad than inequality, without setting any limits on how much suffering and death are acceptable, so long as everyone enjoys equality.
After all, the easiest equality of all to attain is the equality of the cemetery.