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| #Post#: 30567-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 5, 2025, 5:50 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "If the public sector implements production activities, those | |
| who plan production activities are certainly educated in | |
| ideological thinking and the possibility of planning production | |
| and consumption activities that are exploitative becomes very | |
| minimal." | |
| This is ludicrously optimistic. Exploitative people exist. Under | |
| free-market conditions, they will congregate in the private | |
| sector, because that is where it will be easiest for them to do | |
| their exploiting. Under your proposed conditions, they will | |
| congregate in the public sector, because that is where it will | |
| be easiest for them to do their exploiting. | |
| "How can we check the private sector, which numbers millions in | |
| one country, to ensure that they continue to follow a single | |
| idea that rejects exploitative planning?" | |
| We don't. We let workers themselves react by switching to public | |
| sector jobs if they want to. | |
| "If we check the party groups that plan production and | |
| consumption activities, we can do it more easily, because they | |
| are certainly better known to the state than the private sector | |
| groups that are further from state supervision." | |
| But can you trust those doing the checking? What if they being | |
| incentivized to conceal the corruption? This is why checking is | |
| unreliable (and to assume otherwise is naive). I would rather | |
| let workers react by switching back to private sector jobs if | |
| they want to. | |
| #Post#: 30572-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: antihellenistic Date: July 5, 2025, 7:29 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| We must monitor the private sector, see the incident regarding | |
| Starbucks' economic policies highlighted by the American | |
| Renaissance author below. The laws of capitalist market | |
| mechanisms cause this problem: | |
| [quote]The conflict came when two black men were arrested at a | |
| Philadelphia Starbucks after refusing to leave the store. The | |
| company�s leadership is panicking; Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson | |
| has already met with the two to apologize. On May 29, 8,000 | |
| Starbucks stores will close so 175,000 employees can undergo | |
| �racial-bias training,� which will cost the company millions. | |
| Mr. Johnson vows that the training �is just one step in a | |
| journey that requires dedication from every level of our company | |
| and partnerships in our local communities.� | |
| Those �local communities� are usually white, just like the one | |
| in Philadelphia. According to Vox Media�s Eater in 2015, �U.S. | |
| Census data on race and income shows 83 percent of Starbucks | |
| stores in the U.S. serve predominantly white areas, mostly | |
| wealthy or middle class ones.� | |
| In a piece about the incident in Philadelphia, Brentin Mock at | |
| Citylab writes, �When opening in a black community, a concern is | |
| whether the cafe actually will adopt the character of that black | |
| neighborhood, or if it will traffic in the kinds of values that | |
| personify it as a �white space,� as Jamelle Bouie calls it in | |
| Slate.� Starbucks mostly avoids the problem of a culture clash | |
| by not operating in black neighborhoods. Asia Rene� at | |
| WearYourVoiceMag admits she patronizes Starbucks, but writes, | |
| �In non-white, low-income neighborhoods, the cup is a symbol | |
| that gentrification has arrived, and that people of color are in | |
| danger.�[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| Starbucks: Hypocrisy as a Business Strategy by Gregory Hood, | |
| American Renaissance, April 19, 2018 | |
| https://www.amren.com/news/2018/04/starbucks-hypocrisy-as-a-business-strategy/ | |
| #Post#: 30573-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 5, 2025, 7:46 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Explain precisely what you consider the problem to be in the | |
| above example, and how you would solve it if you were in | |
| government. | |
| #Post#: 30575-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: antihellenistic Date: July 7, 2025, 4:56 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=90sRetroFan link=topic=3223.msg30573#msg30573 | |
| date=1751762776] | |
| Explain precisely what you consider the problem to be in the | |
| above example, and how you would solve it if you were in | |
| government. | |
| [/quote] | |
| The private production sector [Starbucks for example] if left to | |
| have the will to determine the production plan, will practice | |
| gentrification and complexity in order to get consumers, and | |
| charge high prices for products. This causes a gap in enjoying | |
| public facilities and products/services, especially for people | |
| who are less able to earn enough money to buy expensive | |
| products/services. | |
| I choose to forcefully require society and producers to make | |
| products and services that are easy to produce, can be | |
| inexpensive to produce, and can be consumed by all levels of | |
| society | |
| [quote]The economic order under the Nazis, indeed, was | |
| Socialistic, also from an economic point of view, because in a | |
| totalitarian state the factory owner or banker no longer | |
| automatically holds genuine property. He is merely a steward, | |
| the tolerated representative of an almighty government which can | |
| expropriate him at the drop of a hat.[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| Leftism from de Sade and Marx to Hitler and Marcuse by Erik von | |
| Kuehnelt-Leddihn Page 177 | |
| https://archive.org/details/LeftismFromDeSadeAndMarxToHitlerAndMarcuse/page/n17… | |
| [quote]The economy was comprehensively organized by industries | |
| und by territory. Geographical districts, Gaue, were defined, as | |
| were the chief economic sectors such as industry, handicrafts, | |
| commerce, banking, insurance, and power. These great sectors, or | |
| Reich Groups, were subdivided into numerous smaller groups, each | |
| under the command of a leader named or approved by the | |
| government. As a rule the leader was an executive in the | |
| respective industry who within his jurisdiction had considerable | |
| powers and responsibilities. All in all, this apparatus was very | |
| cumbersome; everyone in economic life without exception was a | |
| member and was subjected by it to all the regulations, | |
| instructions, and orders which the government was pleased to | |
| decree. From this system there was no escape. | |
| Even before the war, managers were often told what to produce | |
| and by what methods, how much coal and raw materials would be | |
| available to them, what materials to use and not to use, what | |
| prices to pay and to charge, from whom to accept orders for | |
| delivery, to and through whom to sell, and in which order to | |
| fill requests. Thus, at some times government orders had | |
| priority, at other times export orders, and among government | |
| orders some- times those of the army, at other times those of | |
| government plants were first in line.[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| The German Economy: 1870 to the Present by Gustav Stolper Page | |
| 140 | |
| https://archive.org/details/germaneconomy1870000stol/page/140/mode/2up | |
| [quote]��What is the difference between communism, socialism and | |
| national socialism?� the riddle asks. �If you have six cows,� | |
| the answer says, �the communists take all six, the socialists | |
| take three and leave you three, but the Nazis make you keep all | |
| six--and they take the milk.��[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| People under Hitler by Deuel, Wallace Rankin, 1905-1974 Page 124 | |
| [quote]The German pattern differs from the Russian one in that | |
| it (seemingly and nominally) maintains private owneiship of the | |
| means of production and keeps the appearance of ordinary prices, | |
| wages, and markets. There are, however, no longer entrepreneurs | |
| but only shop managers (Betnebsfuhrer) These shop managers do | |
| the buying and selling, pay the workers, contiact debts, and pay | |
| interest and amortization. There is no labor market, wages and | |
| salaries are fixed by the government The government tells the | |
| shop managers what and how to produce, at what prices and from | |
| whom to buy, at what prices and to whom to sell The government | |
| decrees to whom and under what terms the capitalists must | |
| entrust their funds and where and at what wages laborers must | |
| work Market exchange is only a sham. All the prices, wages, and | |
| mteiest rates are fixed by the central authority They are | |
| prices, wages, and interest rates in appearance only, in reality | |
| they are meiely determinations of quantity relations in the | |
| government�s orders. The government, not the consumers, directs | |
| production. This is socialism in the outward guise of capitalism | |
| Some labels of capitalistic market economy are retained but they | |
| mean something entirely different from what they mean in a | |
| genuine market economy.[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| Omnipotent Government by Ludwig Von Mises Page 56 | |
| https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.6798/page/n65/mode/2up?q=The+gove… | |
| [quote]The New York Times, March 14, 1934 | |
| BERLIN, March 13. A complete reconstruction of the German | |
| business world involving both sweeping organizational changes | |
| and the cre- ation of a new business code was anncunced today by | |
| Dr. Kurt Schmitt, the Minister of Economics. | |
| He made this announcement by virtue of new powers delegated to | |
| him by the Cabinet under a decree passed Feb. 27, but made | |
| public only today, which makes him in effect the business | |
| dictator of Germany. | |
| According to an official announcement, the purpose of the new | |
| decree is to do away with the enormous overorganization of | |
| business and the rivalry and unrest caused thereby and replace | |
| it with an all-embracing, rigid and unitary organization of the | |
| various business associations. | |
| For this purpose Dr. Schmitt is empowered to designate certain | |
| organizations as the sole representatives of their branch of | |
| business, create new organizations and dissolve or merge others, | |
| dictate or change their by-laws, appoint or remove their leaders | |
| and force individual outsiders to join them and submit to their | |
| regulations. Severe punishment is threatened for violations of | |
| the Minister's orders.[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| The New York Times: Wednesday March 14, 1934. (2024). Retrieved | |
| November 8, 2024, from Nytimes.com website: | |
| https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1934/03/14/95036893.html?pageNumb… | |
| #Post#: 30576-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 7, 2025, 3:16 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "The private production sector [Starbucks for example] if left | |
| to have the will to determine the production plan, will practice | |
| gentrification and complexity in order to get consumers" | |
| I would say the answer to gentrification is to prevent the buyer | |
| from acquiring property in certain neighbourhoods. | |
| I am not sure what you mean by complexity. | |
| Also, if such methods are indeed effective, does it not imply | |
| that such consumers are the real problem? | |
| "and charge high prices for products. This causes a gap in | |
| enjoying public facilities and products/services, especially for | |
| people who are less able to earn enough money to buy expensive | |
| products/services." | |
| I do not consider this to be a problem in itself. When a | |
| consumable (and hence non-resaleable) product is priced above | |
| its actual value, it is still a good thing when it is bought, as | |
| it makes the buyer poorer, which is what the buyer deserves. The | |
| only problem is that the seller profits excessively, which can | |
| be remedied by taxing the seller sufficiently to offset this. | |
| "I choose to forcefully require society and producers to make | |
| products and services that are easy to produce, can be | |
| inexpensive to produce, and can be consumed by all levels of | |
| society" | |
| Besides the high likelihood* that you would be initiating | |
| violence in so doing, you would be getting rid of the beneficial | |
| dynamic I described in the above paragraph. | |
| (* If the state banned only production methods that initiate | |
| violence, then the state would be doing retaliatory violence, | |
| which is fine. This is what I would do. But what you advocate | |
| would also involve banning many production methods that do not | |
| initiate violence, which means you would be the one initiating | |
| violence.) | |
| #Post#: 30589-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: antihellenistic Date: July 11, 2025, 11:47 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote]I would say the answer to gentrification is to prevent | |
| the buyer from acquiring property in certain neighbourhoods. | |
| I am not sure what you mean by complexity.[/quote] | |
| Gentrification tends to be accompanied by the construction of | |
| elaborate and complex public facilities. This makes them | |
| difficult to operate and accessible to those with lower levels | |
| of intelligence. Gentrification makes it easy for people with a | |
| Westernized and Jewish mentality to dominate society and exploit | |
| those with lower intelligence but who are innocent. | |
| [quote][quote]"and charge high prices for products. This causes | |
| a gap in enjoying public facilities and products/services, | |
| especially for people who are less able to earn enough money to | |
| buy expensive products/services."[/quote] | |
| I do not consider this to be a problem in itself. When a | |
| consumable (and hence non-resaleable) product is priced above | |
| its actual value, it is still a good thing when it is bought, as | |
| it makes the buyer poorer, which is what the buyer deserves. The | |
| only problem is that the seller profits excessively, which can | |
| be remedied by taxing the seller sufficiently to offset | |
| this.[/quote] | |
| A socialist society is one where essential consumer goods are | |
| readily accessible. It's absurd to claim to be a socialist and | |
| yet still justify the existence of high-value products that | |
| remain unaffordable to the general public. The producers of | |
| high-value products, but unable to sell them affordably, have | |
| created social inequality. This occurs because these high-value | |
| products are difficult for those with low incomes to afford, but | |
| readily accessible to those earning substantial incomes. | |
| Therefore, the makers of these high-value products have | |
| initiated violence. | |
| [quote][quote]"I choose to forcefully require society and | |
| producers to make products and services that are easy to | |
| produce, can be inexpensive to produce, and can be consumed by | |
| all levels of society"[/quote] | |
| Besides the high likelihood* that you would be initiating | |
| violence in so doing, you would be getting rid of the beneficial | |
| dynamic I described in the above paragraph.[/quote] | |
| Capitalists will say the same thing, I don't take them | |
| seriously. The best product advantage is that the product is | |
| easy to buy, and can still be used properly and can solve | |
| problems that exist in various activities. | |
| [quote](* If the state banned only production methods that | |
| initiate violence, then the state would be doing retaliatory | |
| violence, which is fine. This is what I would do. But what you | |
| advocate would also involve banning many production methods that | |
| do not initiate violence, which means you would be the one | |
| initiating violence.)[/quote] | |
| High-value products that cause gentrification and social | |
| inequality will make the perpetrators of the products initiate | |
| violence in the first place. Only a bourgeoisie would ignore the | |
| consequences of selling high-value products at high prices to | |
| the surrounding society. And the bourgeoisie are decadent and | |
| degenerate. | |
| [quote]Dorothy Thompson, who interviewed Adolf Hitler in 1931 | |
| and again in 1934, was the first American journalist to be | |
| expelled from Nazi Germany. She reported in 1939 that, �After | |
| robbing the Jews, the Nazis will begin to rob the Church, and | |
| then will almost certainly take over what remains of the | |
| property of the bourgeoisie.�[/quote] | |
| Sources: | |
| 1. March 6, 1939, page 7 � Harrisburg Telegraph at | |
| Newspapers.com. (2025). Retrieved April 10, 2025, from | |
| Newspapers.com: | |
| https://www.newspapers.com/image/43551234 | |
| 2. Killing History: The False Left-Right Political Spectrum and | |
| the Battle between the �Free Left� and the �Statist Left� by Mr. | |
| L.K. Samuels, page 417 | |
| 3. (2004, October 24). American journalist and radio broadcaster | |
| (1893�1961). Retrieved April 10, 2025, from Wikiquote.org: | |
| https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Dorothy_Thompson | |
| [quote]The enemies of National Socialism, to whom she addressed | |
| the 1935 Party Congress, included not only �Jewish Marxists� and | |
| Catholics, but also �certain incorrigible, ignorant, and | |
| reactionary elements of the bourgeoisie.� ^[/quote] | |
| Source: | |
| Hitler�s Social Revolution by David Schoenbaum, page 65 | |
| https://archive.org/details/hitlerssocialrev00scho/page/n11/mode/2up?q=1935+Par… | |
| [quote]Hitler was also known to publicly and privately threaten | |
| industrialists who failed to properly fulfill the tasks set by | |
| the state and the Party leadership. He threatened the German | |
| business community with massive confiscation of their property | |
| for disobeying Nazi orders. Hitler later threatened that if | |
| "German industry" failed to fulfill the tasks set by the state, | |
| "it would not be Germany that would go bankrupt, but at most, | |
| only a few industrialists."[/quote] | |
| Sources: | |
| 1. Hitler: The Policies of Seduction by Zitelmann, Rainer, pages | |
| 252 to 253 | |
| https://archive.org/details/hitlerpoliciesof0000zite/page/252/mode/2up?q=our+bo… | |
| 2. The Nazi War against Capitalism by Nevin Gussack, page 56 | |
| https://archive.org/details/hitlerpoliciesof0000zite/page/252/mode/2up?q=our+bo… | |
| There are no businesses in a socialist world, only workers. And | |
| capital owners have become mere managers of the means of | |
| production, obedient to the state's economic plans. They are no | |
| longer businesspeople, but workers. | |
| #Post#: 30590-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 11, 2025, 5:55 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "Gentrification tends to be accompanied by the construction of | |
| elaborate and complex public facilities." | |
| Are you claiming that such construction can occur without the | |
| prospective constructors first acquiring the property? If so, | |
| how? If not, then my previous reply already covered this. | |
| "A socialist society is one where essential consumer goods are | |
| readily accessible." | |
| Yes. | |
| "It's absurd to claim to be a socialist and yet still justify | |
| the existence of high-value products that remain unaffordable to | |
| the general public." | |
| Why? We are talking about consumable and thus non-resaleable | |
| products here, as I explictly noted in the previous post. If A | |
| is richer than B, and A eats at a more expensive restaurant | |
| while B eats at a less expensive restaurant, the wealth gap | |
| between A and B is decreased afterwards. Isn't this what | |
| socialists want? | |
| "The producers of high-value products, but unable to sell them | |
| affordably, have created social inequality. This occurs because | |
| these high-value products are difficult for those with low | |
| incomes to afford, but readily accessible to those earning | |
| substantial incomes." | |
| The exact opposite is true. If the more expensive restaurant | |
| does not exist, and thus A and B eat at the same less expensive | |
| restaurant, the wealth gap between A and B is unchanged | |
| afterwards. Is this what you want? | |
| "Therefore, the makers of these high-value products have | |
| initiated violence." | |
| How? | |
| #Post#: 30598-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: antihellenistic Date: July 13, 2025, 11:31 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote][quote]"Gentrification tends to be accompanied by the | |
| construction of elaborate and complex public | |
| facilities."[/quote] | |
| Are you claiming that such construction can occur without the | |
| prospective constructors first acquiring the property? If so, | |
| how? If not, then my previous reply already covered | |
| this.[/quote] | |
| [quote][quote]"It's absurd to claim to be a socialist and yet | |
| still justify the existence of high-value products that remain | |
| unaffordable to the general public."[/quote] | |
| Why? We are talking about consumable and thus non-resaleable | |
| products here, as I explictly noted in the previous post. If A | |
| is richer than B, and A eats at a more expensive restaurant | |
| while B eats at a less expensive restaurant, the wealth gap | |
| between A and B is decreased afterwards. Isn't this what | |
| socialists want? | |
| .......... | |
| [quote]"Therefore, the makers of these high-value products have | |
| initiated violence."[/quote] | |
| How?[/quote] | |
| My answer : | |
| Expensive food tends to be of better quality than cheaper food. | |
| This is because only people with high-income jobs can afford it, | |
| but those with low-income jobs struggle to afford it. Even if | |
| they can afford it, they can't eat it regularly. This living | |
| situation can lead to social inequality. Therefore, it's not | |
| socialist if a society still experiences social inequality. It's | |
| better for everyone to consume the same products, and the | |
| products are still fit for consumption. Those who enjoy | |
| high-priced products, whether producers or consumers, have | |
| created the violence in the first place. Because they perpetuate | |
| the conditions that make it difficult for low-income people who | |
| want to consume high-priced products to afford them. I told you, | |
| the middle class and the bourgeoisie are degenerate and don't | |
| understand the conditions of their country. | |
| [quote]The exact opposite is true. If the more expensive | |
| restaurant does not exist, and thus A and B eat at the same less | |
| expensive restaurant, the wealth gap between A and B is | |
| unchanged afterwards. Is this what you want?[/quote] | |
| What I want is for the middle class and the bourgeoisie to have | |
| their incomes drained through high taxation and to be denied | |
| personal initiative in managing their wealth. Their money and | |
| property belong to the state. They are forced to consume | |
| products that are cheap but still fit for consumption. | |
| [quote]To calm any fears that capitalists might have in regard | |
| to the term socialism though, Reupke deceivingly stressed that | |
| "socialization, collectivized economy and a centrally directed | |
| planned economy are expressly rejected [in the party pro- gram]" | |
| (29). Instead, he noted, National Socialist ideology demanded | |
| "that private property and private initiative, that economies | |
| all together should not be directed solely toward person | |
| advantage, but rather always with the benefit of the commonweal | |
| in mind" (29). Yet while official Nazi rhetoric conceded the | |
| right to private property, the alleged rejection of physical | |
| nationalization was disingenuous, because, as Reupke explained, | |
| "nationalization, if we can call it such, is not brought about | |
| in a corporeal manner, rather it is shifted into the domain of | |
| the mind" (32). He further explained that this would be brought | |
| about by "suppression of personal pursuit of profit and | |
| cleansing the economy of 'financial ethics' (30).[1][/quote] | |
| Johannes "Hans" Karl Eduard Reupke (* July 23, 1892 in | |
| Saargem�nd; � November 20, 1942 in Dijon) was a German lawyer, | |
| businessman, and publicist.[2] | |
| Source : | |
| 1. Antisemitic Elements in the Critique of Capitalism in German | |
| Culture, 1850-1933 by Matthew Lange Page 294 | |
| https://books.google.co.id/books?redir_esc=y&id=jMQpHAMEF1EC&q=Zentrale+Planung… | |
| 2. Seite �Hans Reupke�. In: Wikipedia � Die freie Enzyklop�die. | |
| Bearbeitungsstand: 27. Januar 2025, 23:18 UTC. URL: | |
| https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hans_Reupke&oldid=252753749<br | |
| />(Abgerufen: 14. Juli 2025, 04:00 UTC) | |
| [quote]Even heavy industry, which in the early 1930s supported a | |
| certain degree of self-sufficiency and state assistance, found | |
| that the level of state control imposed after 1936, as well as | |
| the emergence of a state-owned industrial sector, also | |
| threatened its interests. The tensions resulting from such | |
| relationships have been demonstrated in the automobile, | |
| aircraft, and iron and steel industries; however, more research | |
| is needed to achieve an adequate historical assessment of the | |
| relationship between Nazism and German business. What is clear | |
| is that the Third Reich was not simply a regime of entrepreneurs | |
| supporting authoritarian capitalism, but rather, it sought to | |
| reduce the autonomy of the economic elite and subordinate it to | |
| the interests of the Nazi state�[Page 56] | |
| As the state expanded its role in overseeing or regulating all | |
| major economic variables, they developed a more coherent | |
| economic system. German economists called this system 'die | |
| gelenkte Wirtschaft,' the controlled economy. In such a system, | |
| entrepreneurs were viewed as economic functionaries serving the | |
| interests of the state, rather than as independent and | |
| innovative creators of wealth. The concept of the 'controlled | |
| economy' suited the regime's ideological ambitions but limited | |
| entrepreneurial initiative.[b][Pages 56-57][/quote] | |
| Source: | |
| The Nazi Economic Recovery, 1932-1938 by Overy, R. J. Pages | |
| 56-57 | |
| https://archive.org/details/nazieconomicrecoveryover/page/56/mode/2up?q=As+the+… | |
| [quote]Both public works and rearmament required massive deficit | |
| financing, in effect the printing of money to pay workers and | |
| stimulate demand. Although fundamentally �socialist� in outlook | |
| and politics when it came to the economy, however, Hitler did | |
| not nationalize industry. In fact there were large-scale | |
| privatizations during the first five years or so of his regime, | |
| not for ideological reasons, but to raise cash quickly by | |
| flogging off distressed enterprises.80 What Hitler did very | |
| effectively was to nationalize German industrialists, by making | |
| them instruments of his political will. Control, not ownership | |
| was the key. The major German economic institutions, especially | |
| industry, business and the banks, were completely sidelined from | |
| decisionmaking. 81 Unlike the Reichswehr, they were not let into | |
| any secrets about Lebensraum, at least at the beginning. They | |
| were simply told what to do, and if they jibbed were threatened | |
| with imprisonment, expropriation or irrelevance.[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| Hitler : A Global Biography by Brendan Simms Page 254 | |
| #Post#: 30601-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 14, 2025, 4:16 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "Expensive food tends to be of better quality than cheaper food. | |
| This is because only people with high-income jobs can afford it, | |
| but those with low-income jobs struggle to afford it. Even if | |
| they can afford it, they can't eat it regularly. This living | |
| situation can lead to social inequality." | |
| So why shouldn't everyone be allowed to decide for themselves | |
| how regularly/irregularly they eat expensive food? B might still | |
| appreciate having an option to eat expensive food occasionally, | |
| but you are removing that option from B on the grounds that A | |
| might eat expensive food more frequently than B? How does this | |
| make any sense? | |
| "Therefore, it's not socialist if a society still experiences | |
| social inequality." | |
| Why not? Recall: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/colonial-era/national-socialism-is-revolution… | |
| [quote]Socialism is the belief that state intervention is | |
| essential to realistically combatting social injustice, and that | |
| it is the moral duty of the state to so intervene.[/quote] | |
| The problem is social injustice, not social inequality. A | |
| socially just society will still be socially unequal because | |
| people are unequal. The whole point of True Leftism is to | |
| dissociate leftism from egalitarianism. | |
| "It's better for everyone to consume the same products" | |
| Why is it better? What if different people prefer different | |
| products? | |
| "Those who enjoy high-priced products, whether producers or | |
| consumers, have created the violence in the first place." | |
| WHAT VIOLENCE FFS? | |
| "Because they perpetuate the conditions that make it difficult | |
| for low-income people who want to consume high-priced products | |
| to afford them." | |
| I already explained how the opposite is true: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/questions-debates/re-national-socialists-were… | |
| [quote]If A is richer than B, and A eats at a more expensive | |
| restaurant while B eats at a less expensive restaurant, the | |
| wealth gap between A and B is decreased afterwards.[/quote] | |
| "What I want is for the middle class and the bourgeoisie to have | |
| their incomes drained through high taxation" | |
| That's precisely what will happen by keeping both restaurants, | |
| with the more expensive restaurant paying more in profit tax | |
| than the less expensive restaurant (where the profit comes more | |
| from A's bills than from B's bills since as yourself say B does | |
| not eat here as frequently as A does). But you want to get rid | |
| of the more expensive restaurant! | |
| "and to be denied personal initiative in managing their wealth. | |
| Their money and property belong to the state. " | |
| You need to be denied personal initiative in managing the state. | |
| "They are forced to consume products that are cheap but still | |
| fit for consumption." | |
| You are the one initiating violence. | |
| #Post#: 30606-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: National Socialists were socialists | |
| By: antihellenistic Date: July 14, 2025, 11:06 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote]So why shouldn't everyone be allowed to decide for | |
| themselves how regularly/irregularly they eat expensive food? B | |
| might still appreciate having an option to eat expensive food | |
| occasionally, but you are removing that option from B on the | |
| grounds that A might eat expensive food more frequently than B? | |
| How does this make any sense? | |
| ... | |
| Why is it better? What if different people prefer different | |
| products? | |
| [quote]"Those who enjoy high-priced products, whether producers | |
| or consumers, have created the violence in the first | |
| place."[/quote] | |
| WHAT VIOLENCE FFS? | |
| ... | |
| If A is richer than B, and A eats at a more expensive restaurant | |
| while B eats at a less expensive restaurant, the wealth gap | |
| between A and B is decreased afterwards. | |
| ... | |
| [quote]"They are forced to consume products that are cheap but | |
| still fit for consumption."[/quote] | |
| You are the one initiating violence.[/quote] | |
| Being socialist means that everyone feels the difficulty of | |
| accessing higher-value products and participates in consuming | |
| affordable, usable products that are affordable for everyone. If | |
| there is still a disparity in affordability, and lower-class | |
| people feel unable to consume higher-value products as | |
| frequently as upper-middle-class people, this causes lower-class | |
| people to feel less worthy of the community. Even though they | |
| are already doing what they should be doing according to the | |
| government's work plan. That's why Hitler's regime forced the | |
| population to consume according to government directives, | |
| without giving them the will to determine their own consumption | |
| plans. If the middle and upper classes refuse to understand the | |
| simple reasoning I've outlined, they deserve to have their | |
| earning power liquidated. Because they preserving humiliation | |
| and psychological violence to the people of the lower class | |
| [quote]The New York Times, Thursday, November 26, 1931 | |
| REVEALING THE 'NAZI' PLAN TO TAKE CONTROL | |
| This outlines an emergency decision for the future National | |
| Socialist Government, adopted at a meeting of four newly elected | |
| "Nazi" deputies in the Hesse State Parliament. | |
| These forthcoming decrees stipulated the suspension of private | |
| property rights and monetary claims, the confiscation of all | |
| foodstuffs, which would be distributed only to those who worked, | |
| and the seizure of executive power by the National Socialist | |
| assault troops. | |
| To save the nation, according to the document, war would be | |
| declared immediately and executive power would be handed over | |
| exclusively to the assault troops. | |
| Obedience to orders and membership of the assault troops would | |
| be enforced by the death penalty, and anyone found carrying | |
| weapons would be shot. | |
| In addition to these orders, drafted in the form of a "manifesto | |
| to the people," the document contained drafts of three emergency | |
| decrees. All were carefully written and ready for use. | |
| The first decree stipulated the confiscation of foodstuffs and a | |
| ban on their sale and purchase. Foodstuffs were to be delivered | |
| free of charge by producers and would be rationed by the | |
| government. | |
| The second decree stipulated the suspension of private property | |
| rights. No interest would be paid, and the enforcement of | |
| monetary claims was prohibited. This decree detailed the | |
| structure of the courts that would try charges of violation. | |
| The third decree declared that work was a universal obligation. | |
| Everyone, except Jews, over the age of 16 would be required to | |
| work or be denied the right to demand food.[/quote] | |
| Source: | |
| The New York Times: Thursday, November 26, 1931. (2024). | |
| Retrieved November 7, 2024, from Nytimes.com: | |
| https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1931/11/26/98348031.html?pageNumb… | |
| [quote]Furthermore, in an effort to socialize the economy, | |
| Germany was transformed into a surveillance-informant state. | |
| Small business owners were required to provide daily reports to | |
| local Nazi officials about what was being "discussed in Herr | |
| Schultz's bakery and Herr Schmidt's butcher shop." If shop | |
| owners complained too much, they would be deemed "enemies of the | |
| state," and could lose their business licenses or lose their | |
| quotas for often-scarce goods. | |
| ... | |
| Regarding food shortages, an American magazine reported in 1937 | |
| that Germany was experiencing "the most serious food shortage" | |
| since the First World War. German restaurants were ordered to | |
| limit their menus. A popular German ditty expressing discontent | |
| ran: "Hitler has no wife; the farmer has no sow; the butcher has | |
| no meat; that's the Third Reich."[/quote] | |
| Source: | |
| L.K. Samuels: How Anti-Capitalist Were the German National | |
| Socialists? - Stopping Socialism | |
| https://stoppingsocialism.com/2022/11/lk-samuels-how-anti-capitalist-were-the-g… | |
| [quote]Why not? Recall: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/colonial-era/national-socialism-is-revolution… | |
| [quote]Socialism is the belief that state intervention is | |
| essential to realistically combatting social injustice, and that | |
| it is the moral duty of the state to so | |
| intervene.[/quote][/quote] | |
| This is a precise definition of socialism. This is a correct | |
| definition of socialism. If we use your definition of socialism, | |
| even the Social Democrats could be called socialists, but in | |
| reality they were the ones who betrayed socialism. Hitler also | |
| hated the Social Democrats. | |
| [quote]From minute 25:28 to 27:03 | |
| Today, some people have rejected the historical definition of | |
| socialism�though none of them can offer an alternative | |
| definition that isn�t simply a rewording of the historical one. | |
| [b]The historical definition of socialism is: social ownership | |
| of the means of production (hence the term �socialism�). The | |
| idea is that society would be centrally organized, private | |
| ownership would be abolished and transferred to �social� | |
| control, and that �socialized man [would] rationally regulate | |
| their interaction with Nature��in other words, they would plan | |
| the economy rather than leave it to the free market.[/b] | |
| [Reference: Marx, Das Kapital, Vol. 3, p. 593.] | |
| That is socialism. It�s not when workers do something. It�s not | |
| about puppies and rainbows. It is social ownership of the means | |
| of production. | |
| So, to prove that Hitler was a socialist, all we have to do is | |
| show that he sought to centrally plan the economy, sought to | |
| abolish private ownership, sought to transfer ownership into | |
| �social� control, and sought to regulate economic activity� | |
| which is exactly what we have already shown.[/quote] | |
| References: | |
| 1. DiLorenzo, The Problem with Socialism, Kindle edition | |
| 2. Luxemburg, The National Question, p. 24 | |
| 3. Marx, Das Kapital, Vol. 3, p. 593 | |
| 4. Mises, Socialism, pp. 11�12, 45 | |
| 5. Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford University Press, 3rd | |
| Edition, 2010, p. 1693 | |
| 6. The American Economic Review, Vol. 1, No. 2, Papers and | |
| Discussions of the Twenty-third Annual Meeting (Apr., 1911), pp. | |
| 347�354 | |
| [quote]Minute 00:10 to 02:29 | |
| TIKhistory Comments : | |
| The process of collectivizing the German people began as soon as | |
| the Nazis seized power and developed progressively over time. As | |
| outlined in primary sources such as G�nter Reimann�s The Vampire | |
| Economy, Adam Tooze�s Wages of Destruction, and many others, | |
| Nazi Party officials and SA members would literally walk into | |
| factories and businesses and take control from the | |
| inside.[/quote] | |
| References: | |
| 1. Mierzejewski, The Most Valuable Asset of the Reich, p. 4 | |
| 2. Tooze, Wages of Destruction, pp. 111�113 | |
| 3. Reimann, The Vampire Economy, Chapter 2 | |
| 4. Temin, Soviet and Nazi Economic Planning in the 1930s, pp. | |
| 576�577 | |
| [quote]TIKhistory Comments : | |
| This was not �privatization,� as claimed by the British | |
| Keynesian magazine The Economist in 1936, which used the term to | |
| describe German banks selling shares. That had nothing to do | |
| with selling industry to private interests. Even worse, other | |
| political commentators in the 1940s described this government | |
| centralization of the economy as �privatization,� which clearly | |
| isn�t how we use the term today. Regardless, actual Nazi | |
| policies were not privatization � I have no idea where the media | |
| got that term from; they may have simply invented it. | |
| �The Party, furthermore, facilitated the accumulation of private | |
| wealth and industrial empires by its most prominent members and | |
| collaborators through privatization and other measures, thereby | |
| intensifying the centralization of economic and governmental | |
| affairs into an increasingly narrow group that could be called | |
| the national socialist elite.�[/quote] | |
| � The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1943 | |
| References: | |
| 1. Bel, �The Birth of �Privatization� and the National Socialist | |
| German Party,� Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 20, pp. | |
| 187�194 | |
| 2. Buchheim & Scherner, �Private Property in the Nazi Economy,� | |
| p. 394 | |
| 3. Kennedy, "Yes, They Were Socialists: How the Nazis Waged War | |
| on Private Property," 07/05/2022 | |
| https://mises.org/wire/yes-they-were-socialists-how-nazis-waged-war-private-pro… | |
| Source : | |
| Hitler's Socialism: The Evidence is Overwhelming - TIKhistory, | |
| 14th February 2023 | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLHG4IfYE1w&t=1199s | |
| There is no class solidarity in a socialist regime. | |
| [quote]The totalitarian dictatorship will become more ruthless | |
| in its attitude toward businessmen as well as toward the workers | |
| and middle classes. The so-called radicals among the Party | |
| bureaucrats will claim that their program has been fulfilled | |
| after the expropriation of most private property holders, while | |
| simultaneously the ruin of the middle classes will be completed | |
| and the workers will be exploited on an unprecedented scale. | |
| ... | |
| Employers have been badly shocked by their new legal status, | |
| especially the "conservatives" who have held their property for | |
| generations and to whom the sanctity of private property has | |
| been a part of their religion. They might have excused previous | |
| violations of property rights as exceptional emergency measures, | |
| but they hoped that the buttressing of the State power through | |
| fascism would also bring about a strengthening of the sanctity | |
| of private property. They were independent and individualistic | |
| businessmen, not only economically, but politically and | |
| psychologically. For this very reason they are the most | |
| disappointed and unhappy over the new state of affairs and are | |
| likely to get into trouble with a Party secretary or the Gestapo | |
| (the Secret State Police) for having grumbled incautiously or | |
| for not having shown enough devotion to the Fuehrer. | |
| ... | |
| This state of affairs must lead to the final collapse of | |
| business morale, and sound the death knell of the self-respect | |
| and self-reliance which marked the independent businessman under | |
| liberal capitalism.[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| Vampire Economy: Doing Business Under Fascism oleh G�nter | |
| Reimann Page xii and 20 | |
| [quote]In 1943, Das Schwarze Korps commented that �When we | |
| reconstruct our economic life after the war we shall at least | |
| not repeat our former mistakes. The middle classes do not exist. | |
| The term is only a catchword from democratic times.�[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| 1. The Nazi War Against Capitalism oleh Nevin Gussack Page 80 | |
| 2. Royal Institute for International Affairs. Review of the | |
| Foreign Press 1939-1945 Series A Volume VIII Enemy Countries; | |
| Axis Controlled Europe Nos. 169-192 (Kraus, 1980) | |
| [quote]The New York Times, February 21, 1943 | |
| NAZI MILITARY DEFEAT BRINGS 'TOTAL WAR' HOME | |
| German Upper and Middle Classes Fear Hitler Might Try to Destroy | |
| Them | |
| By GEORGE AXELSSON By Telephone to The New York Times. | |
| The Junkers, the bourgeoisie and the small businessmen now think | |
| that Hitler intends to sacrifice them on the altar of a 'total | |
| war effort,' in the Soviet style. They fear that this operation | |
| will open the horizon of a permanent dictatorship of the | |
| proletariat, also on the Stalinist model, in which these classes | |
| will disappear without any visible chance of revival� That | |
| Hitler might also want to save his war by transforming the | |
| National Socialist State into a National Communist State at the | |
| expense of the middle and upper classes seems to be the chief | |
| worry in Berlin today.[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| The New York Times: Sunday February 21, 1943. (2024). Retrieved | |
| November 7, 2024, from Nytimes.com website: | |
| https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1943/02/21/88519072.html?pageNumb… | |
| [quote]Herr Goebbels ended it in his May Day radio address this | |
| year, with his flat assertion that the anti-capitalist offensive | |
| "will be resumed on the first day of peace!" | |
| The people in the democracies would do well not to mistake the | |
| Nazis' anti-capitalism for mere hostility to big business. It is | |
| more than a war against free enterprise. It is a war against the | |
| democratic way of life. Capitalism, in the Nazi mind, means the | |
| free way, the individual's way. The Nazis are out to smash it. | |
| And they have gone a long way toward doing just that in Europe. | |
| Their special victim is the middle class. On the continent they | |
| have all but liquidated this class which the backbone of the | |
| democratic world.[/quote] | |
| Source : | |
| 1. The Nazi War Against Capitalism by Nevin Gussack, page 79 | |
| 2. The American Mercury 1944-08: Vol 59 Iss 248. �German Plans | |
| for the Next War� Page 181 (Page 55 in pdf format) | |
| ***************************************************** | |
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