Thanas wrote:Yet it happened in every communist country so far (with the exception of Nepal?).
No. Nepal, SFRY, aforementioned Chile, hmm... What else? It is a bit hard to find nations which did not employ collectivization, because communism primarily spread in the Stalin or post-Stalin version throughout the world, owing much to the prestige of the USSR as the winner in World War II. So deviations are mostly found among nations that either came under communist rule after the USSR collapsed, rejected Soviet patronage or maintained lax ties with the USSR. However, that is enough to prove collectivization is hardly a necessary element for any socialist or communist government. Besides, while we are here, collectivization in many other communist nations did not lead to famines. This indicates that not only collectivization, but also Soviet export policies were linked to the famine. And those export policies are not unique to communist governments.
Thanas wrote:No, however it would be wrong to paint communism as something beneficial or more beneficial than capitalism when the actual record reflects the opposite. In the 20th century, how many people died due to hunger in Western Europe? How many died due to communism?
How many died due to hunger in East Germany, the only communist nation in Western Europe? None, as far as I know. Besides, communism can be beneficial or counterbeneficial depending on the initial conditions. Communism was undeniably beneficial for Central Asia - these nations achieved a higher level of development than their cross-border counterparts with similar initial conditions. Communism was undeniably counterbeneficial to some West and East European nations in the COMECON and WARPAC, because these nations achieved a lower level of development than their cross-border counterparts with similar initial conditions.
Thanas wrote:You'll first have to establish a pattern of deportions during downturns, which should happen in all capitalist countries according to you. As for the firings, that has more to do with the specific economic things than with ideology. High-risk jobs are the first to go in an economic downturn. And as you have snipped out the line about the Communist countries and their treatment of minorities, I suppose you concede that communism is not inherently superior to capitalism in how minorities are treated?
A pattern of deportations, in my view, has been quite adequately established. In the 1920s boom in the USA mass immigration of Mexicans was made extremely easy by the government because they needed cheap labour for the construction industry. After the onset of the Great Depression,
between one and two million Mexicans were deported, notwithstanding the fact many were either legal residents or had children who were born in the States. In 1953-1954 the US entered
a costly recession. And lo, results were swift to come one:
million illegals were deported. The current recession has resulted in tightening immigrant laws, revisions and actual expulsions all across Europe: France, Britain, etc.
I never said communism offers overall superior treatment. However, when it comes to things like universal employment and equality, post-Stalin era USSR was quite adequate in providing everyone regardless of race and nationality with a workplace and similar, if not 100% equal, guarantees and living conditions. I am not sure why you think that firings have anything to do with ideology. Capitalism is a much an economic system as ideology. Economic events like mass firings are quite relevant here, because they can happen under the economic system of capitalism (ideology regardless, be it nationalism, pan-Europeanism or something else).
Thanas wrote:Of course, the same thing does not happen in the USA, but what do you expect of Obama?
Social-democratic regimes also have ideological imperatives to introduce a measure of accountability, unlike their more right-wing counterparts. After all, political power over a capitalist system is likewise not a monolithic entity. However, I have yet to see any adequate reaction to the events that have transpired.
Thanas wrote:(And I fail to see how no regulation happening is in the end more beneficial to business, especially in a business area where losing skilled workers is hugely problematic, like in mining).
Certainly the low cost of Irish and Chinese workers, who fled famine at home and ended up in the USA and Canada, where they were, well, worked to death on railways and canals by the then-employers, helped to complete these projects with lower costs and in a reasonably fast time, because thousands of dead did not hinder the process of digging or construction, allowing to move further despite mass fatalities. In an essence, dirty and deadly industry spreads fast, because with little regulation, it is easier to set up factories, and with labour unprotected, the costs are kept in check. Later on it becomes a hindrance, but initially this is an important factor accelerating industrialization. Britain was the first to industrialize, and it is not a coincidence that Britain's policy of enclosures, which created a mass of destitute and rightless workers, coupled with lax labour regulations, helped to speed up industrial development. The USA demonstrated extremely fast industrial growth tempoes in the period immediately after the initial phase of industrial and infrastructural buildup was more or less complete. The critical pieces of U.S. infrastructure were built with extremely lax regulations and lots of fatalities as well.
Thanas wrote:No, but it does show that industrialization does not necessarily result in massive death if it is competently run. Something the Soviet Union lacked in parts.
European and North American industrialization resulted in massive deaths both in the territories proper and in imperial posessions nonetheless, especially during construction of most critical infrastructure (Panama, Suez, railways and canals in Britain, USA, etc.). Considering the USSR copied the British-American model more so than any other model, it is not surprising. And why did the USSR decide to copy Britain and America? The first was obvious, Britain was the heart of Industrial Revolution, and America by the early XX century became the foremost industrial power in the world. So both models had something else than sheer megadeaths speaking for them. The USSR lacked competent management, but Europe wasn't uniformly competently run either. I do not see a reason to make any general observations about superiority based on single examples. After all, some territories in the USSR fared much better than others, and some COMECON nations had a much greater success with collectivization than the USSR. I don't make any general observations, because the failure in the USSR alone is a serious problem. So a lack of failure in other places does not validate universal acceptance of the policy. Likewise, a lack of some patterns of Industrial Revolution in Bismarckian Germany doesn't validate universal acceptance of capitalist industrialization as victimless.
Thanas wrote:I deliberately left out India because that seems to me a consequence of oppression, of an excess in capitalism. Otherwise we might just as well count the millions killed in communist oppressive regimes as well against communism - the Khmer, the casualties of China, of the Stalinist purges and of the Civil wars.
Um... why? *eyes suspiciously* Besides, most people do count the victims of Stalin's purges as victims of communism, regardless of the fact that some communists and socialists were against Stalin. Why victims of civil wars should be counted as victims of communism, instead of being split in two between the warring parties? And finally, India and Ireland were not "consequences of opression". They were a consequence of the same export policy: food was being exported out of the nation despite the domestic population not having enough to buy it and thus dying.
From Wikipoodia wrote:Reacting against calls for relief during the 1877–79 famine, Lytton replied, "Let the British public foot the bill for its 'cheap sentiment,' if it wished to save life at a cost that would bankrupt India," substantively ordering "there is to be no interference of any kind on the part of Government with the object of reducing the price of food," and instructing district officers to "discourage relief works in every possible way.... Mere distress is not a sufficient reason for opening a relief work."
In 1874 the response from the British authorities was better and famine was completely averted. Then in 1876 a huge famine broke out in Madras. Lord Lytton's administration believed that 'market forces alone would suffice to feed the starving Indians.' The results of such thinking proved fatal (some 5.5 million starved), so this policy was abandoned.
Wikipoodia on the 1899-1900 Indian famine wrote:The British had established control over Western India in the early decades of the 19th century; this consisted of direct administration of the conquered territories in the expanded Bombay Presidency as well as in the British outpost of Ajmer-Merwara farther north. The middle decades of the 19th century saw not only the implementation of a new system of land revenue and land rights in these areas, but also the establishment of new civil law. Under the new land rights system, peasants could be dispossessed of their land if they failed to pay the land-revenue (or land-tax) in a timely fashion. The British, however, continued to rely on local Baniya usurers, or Sahukars, to supply credit to the peasants. The imposition of the new system of civil law, however, meant that the peasants could be exploited by the sahukars, who were often able, through the new civil courts, to acquire title-deeds to a peasant's land for non-payment of debt.
The mid-19th century was also a time of predominance of the economic theories of Adam Smith and David Ricardo, and the principle of laissez-faire was subscribed to by many colonial administrators; the British, consequently, declined to interfere in the markets. This meant that the Baniya sahukars could resort to hoarding during times of scarcity, driving up the price of food grain, and profiteering in the aftermath. All this occurred in Western India during the famine of 1899–1900.
In Khaira District in present-day Gujarat, many peasants were forced to hand over their lands to the sahukars as security for meager loans that not only didn't granted them much relief, but that they later couldn't repay on account of exorbitant interest. The sahukars were to foreclose on these loans in the years after the famine; in the princely state of Baroda, for example, the recorded land-transfers were to jump from an average of 13,000 per year during the decade of the 1890s, to over 65,000 during the year 1902–1903.
The sahukars, in their effort to drive up prices, were even able to export grain out of areas of scarcity using the faster means of transport that came in with British rule. Here again the colonial administrators declined to intervene, even though they themselves often disapproved of the practice. This happened, for example, in the Panchmahals—one of the worst famine-afflicted areas in 1900—where a railway line had been built in the 1890s. A British deputy district collector recorded in his report, "The merchants first cleared large profits by exporting their surplus stocks of grain at the commencement of the famine, and, later on by importing maize from Cawnpore and Bombay and rice from Calcutta and Rangoon." He went on to record that the sahukars were building new houses for themselves from these windfall profits.= The blatant profiteering, however, led to grain riots in the Panchmahals by Bhil tribals, and grain riots became a feature of other British-ruled areas during times of famine. This contrasted markedly with the princely states, where the authorities often did intervene. For example, in Jodhpur State, a famine-stricken area in Rajputana, in August 1899, the state officials set up a shop to sell grain at cost price, forcing the Baniya merchants to eventually bring down their prices
Where is any "excess" of capitalism? It is simply capitalism. Private property, exports, prices. Like I said, in pre-industrial socities the size of the harvest, prices and export volume balance singlehandedly determines food safety. Opression doesn't even factor in here.
Thanas wrote:You might have a point if you can cite the figures of people who died due to the climate. Otherwise, this remains an argument without backup - and still a very long stretch from "communism is inherently more beneficial than capitalism". Again, if we take the high-end communist country and compare it to high-end capitalist countries (and the development of industry there) communism does not come out ahead. Especially since every communist regime so far has been an oppressive one which, when push comes to shove (or just when they feel like it) does not care one bit about civil rights.
Um... why is Simon's point invalid? Twenty seven thousand workers (French, then American) perished during the construction of Panama Canal, a critical piece of industrial infrastructure for the US and the overall American continents' market development. Around a hundred thousand workers perished building the Suez, due to harsh climate and primitive labour tools which required physically draining the labourers. The Suez was more than critical for European industrialization, creating a way for major European empires to facilitiate Europe-Asia trade through the Indian ocean, instead of going around Africa. By how many years the lack of a Suez canal would have set Europe back in it's pursuit of industrial future? This is not easy to calculate. New Basin Canal in the USA, Transcontinental railway, Manchester Ship Canal in Britain, et cetera. Panama railway. African railways built by British and other colonial Empires, operated in the same environment - harsch climate, little industry, primitive tools - and cost thousands of lives. The list could go on and on. The number of projects I know off-hand is large enough, and there's probably dozens, if not hundreds, I don't know about. There's a massive difference in death tolls between the White Sea Canal in the USSR (ten thousand dead) in the early 1930s and the Volga-Don Canal (several hundred dead) in the early 1950s were built under Stalin, and the latter hardly became less opressive (in fact, numbers of incarcerated in the early 1950s were greater than those in the early 1930s). However, the introduction of modern machinery meant the canal was no longer dug by hand. The casualties immediately fell several times. Same happened with the penal system - in the early 30s, casualties reached around and sometimes over 5%, whereas in the 1950s they were a fraction of 1%. The penal system didn't change overnight - the introduction of industrial machinery, less manual labour and antibiotics, however, lowered the death rates.
Besides, communism in the USSR has had what, 70 years of history, and it was industrially mature, i.e. finished industrialization by the mid-1950s? It's mature period lasted barely for another 30 years. On the other hand, First World industrialization proceeded for many years before that, and by the onset of the XX century was completed. Besides, why is a second-rate, underindustrialized nation like Russia forced to compete with First World nations? And even then, this competition wasn't entirely a loss for Russia. Having a 20-year difference in life expectancy between Russia and US in the 1900s, in just 50 years (1919-1959) the USSR shortened the gap and reached almost the same long life. This is just one indicator, but it is quite important. The USSR reached rank 22 on the HDI table by the late 1980s, being outperformed
almost entirely by First World nations. This is not the best possible result, obviously, but neither is this result bad enough to make a sweeping generalization.
Thanas wrote:I posit it still is an unproven assertion
I think the point is not communist superiority. It is a difference in ideology. Communist ideology in post-Stalin days centered on technicism, scientific triumphs that will lead humanity to the stars, etc. When the USSR collapsed, the space race and scientific triumphs were put in the dust bin of history, because commercialization became more important across the entire world. Consumerism triumphed, and triumphed globally. As a result, long scientific projects with no clear commercial gains in sight related to fundamental science, exploration of space, etc. had their funding reduced. A general shift to short-sightedness, and preferrance of short-term, immediate benefits occured across the entire world, not being confined to a single nation. Both the USA and former USSR experienced major setbacks in further exploration of space, reduced funding, etc. Many scientific projects that could come to fruition never saw the light of day.
It is not related directly to some sort of
moral superiorty of either ideology. However, the system which puts selling stuff in front of making stuff, which is today's capitalism, is related to this setback, because it occured during its universal triumph. It is very hard to
sell space exploration, fundamental science, etc. - costs are incredibly large, often too large even for governments, not speaking of private entities, and benefits are uncertain and often lay far in the future, despite being possibly more significant and substantial than any short-term consumerist bullshit I'm going to buy at the shop tomorrow.
Hmm. I need to be more concise next time.