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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)JL
Posts
57
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262
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • If the employer has the legal right to appropriate the positive and negative fruits of their labor, then the workers have legally alienated their right to appropriate the positive and negative fruits of their labor to the employer violating their inalienable rights. The workers have to first jointly appropriate the positive and negative fruits of their labor. This appropriation essentially implies a worker co-op mandate

    @noncredibledefense

  • An inalienable right is one that can't be given up or transferred even with consent. This is because the right is tied to the person's de facto personhood. Like political voting rights, workers' right to appropriate the fruits of their labor is inalienable. Workers can't exchange their labor for a paycheck because, at a non-institutional level, labor is de facto non-transferable even with consent. What really happens is that inputs are transferred to workers

    @noncredibledefense

  • A country where worker coops aren't legally mandated is illiberal because it violates workers' inalienable rights. It denies workers' private property rights over the positive and negative fruits of their labor.

    The government is already involved in the legal structure of firms, so I don't see how a worker co-op mandate could be considered as more government involvement. It seems to me like different government involvement

    @noncredibledefense

  • Worker co-ops don't necessarily involve the workers owning the means of production as worker cooperatives can lease means of production from third parties. Who owns the means of production doesn't determine which legal party is the firm. The firm is a contractual role determined by the direction of the hiring contracts.

    A market economy where all firms are legally mandated to be worker co-ops is not capitalism

    @noncredibledefense

  • Popular, here, isn't meant in an ad and attention grabbing sense.

    With quadratic funding, people make voluntary contributions to newsrooms they like. The government matches these contributions using a neutral formula that results in newsrooms that receive small contributions from many people receiving a greater level of funding than those supported by small number of wealthy people. The fear mongering and bias can be avoided by allowing citizens to make negative contributions

    @canada

  • Remember: anti-capitalism ≠ socialism

    Democratic worker co-ops are postcapitalist, but are also non-socialist because they are perfectly compatible with markets and private property. I'm suggesting that Sanders is authentically anti-capitalist, but he conflates his anti-capitalism with being socialist in a category error and thus buys into a false dichotomy.

    All firms must be legally mandated to be worker coops on classical liberal inalienable rights theory grounds

    @noncredibledefense

  • I agree that giving alienable voting shares to workers isn't anti-capitalist. It becomes anti-capitalist when the voting rights over management and corporate governance are inalienable meaning they are legally recognized as non-transferable even with consent.

    Here is a talk by people involved with Bernie Sanders politically about how all companies should be democratically controlled by the workers: https://youtu.be/E8mq9va5/_ZE

    Sanders supports worker co-op conversions

    @noncredibledefense

  • Socialism @beehaw.org

    Scaling up democratic ownership: Adapting the employee ownership model to build truly democratic businesses

  • Instead, we should implement new mechanisms for funding public goods like news such as quadratic finance. Quadratic finance is a non-market mechanism that enables a decentralized ecosystem of self-organizing public goods producers such as newsrooms. It overcomes the collective action problem of donation-based models by considering the number of people contributing as well as the amount of money contributed. Newsrooms with a large base of popular support receive greater funding

    @canada

  • I agree he is not a socialist in the 20th century sense, but he clearly says that workers should have ownership stake in companies, which is not a capitalist sentiment. He advocates for employee ownership of companies. I also am aware of who his economic advisors on these issues are and they are very much anti-capitalist

    @noncredibledefense

  • 2/2

    If a worker voluntarily commits a crime for their employer, that is still inalienably their decision. Yes, the employer told them to do it, and that gave them a reason to do it, but having a reason doesn't absolve them of guilt or responsibility for their actions

    @technology

  • 1/2

    A group of people is de facto responsible for a result if it is a purposeful result of their intentional joint actions. The pure application of the norm that legal and de facto responsibility match is to deliberate actions. The workers joint actions that use up inputs to produce outputs are planned and deliberate. They meet the criteria for being premeditated. The workers are not under duress in normal work, and consent to the employer-employee contract.

    @technology

  • I'm not a socialist because I think markets are useful and haven't seen a planned economy proposal that seemed plausible. Worker co-ops and unions aren't socialism in 20th century sense because they are technically compatible with markets and private property.

    An economic democracy is a market economy where all firms are worker co-ops, so I was speaking about managers in a worker co-op

    @technology

  • 5/5

    Creating or joining a worker coop is a much more actionable political step that someone could take then completely transforming the government. If the worker coop movement grows big enough, it could acquire the economic power to purchase it own lobbyists to influence the political process to hopefully pass those reforms

  • 4/5

    It is irrelevant that some workers don't want to be held responsible for the positive and negative results of their actions (the whole result of production). Responsibility can't be transferred even with consent. If an employer-employee cooperate to commit a crime, both are responsible. This argument is establishes an inalienable right i.e. a right that can't be given up or transferred even with consent like political voting rights today

  • 2/5

    The empirical evidence I have seen on worker coops and employee-owned companies seems to suggest that worker-run companies are slightly more productive.

    I oppose socialism as I think markets are useful. I advocate economic democracy

    In an economic democracy, the employer-employee contract is abolished, so workers automatically legally get voting rights over management upon joining a firm.

  • 1/5

    Worker coops can have managers. Managers' interests can be aligned with the long term interests of the firm by giving them non-voting preferred shares as part of their compensation. Managers will make sure workers they are managing perform. The difference is that these managers are ultimately accountable to the entire body of workers and are thus their delegates.

    Profits/wages don't have to be divided equally among workers.

    I'm going to use multiple toots since I'm on Mastodon

  • Your reforms sound good, but aren't pragmatic. Today's system requires you to have lobbyists to push an agenda through. Who is going to fund the lobbyists to make these reforms happen.

    Also, even in an ideal capitalism, there is still an injustice at the heart of the system. The employer-employee contract violates the tenet of legal and de facto responsibility matching. The workers are jointly de facto responsible for production, but employer is held solely legally responsible.

    @technology

  • A variant of this should replace non-profit tax exemptions and all campaign finance rules.

    The way to prevent bribing is secret and anonymous contributions. You could, for example, imagine including these contributions to your favorite media and FOSS organizations as part of your ballot.

    This could be implemented by a federation of worker coops to fund local public goods that all the member coops benefit from with the matching pool coming from membership fees and Harberger leases

    @socialism

  • Socialism @beehaw.org

    TED talk on quadratic funding, a non-market mechanism that a postcapitalist society could use to support a decentralized ecosystem of public goods available to each according to need

    politics @lemmy.world

    A distraction from the election: The case for employee-owned companies

    Politics @beehaw.org

    James Robinson, Nobel laureate in Economics: ‘You cannot achieve an inclusive economy with an authoritarian regime’

    science @lemmy.world

    Math Is Still Catching Up to the Mysterious Genius of Srinivasa Ramanujan

    General Discussion @lemmy.world

    Can a sentence be both true and false in the same sense? - Dialetheism

    Socialism @beehaw.org

    John Rawls and the death of Western Marxism

    Socialism @beehaw.org

    What are your thoughts on liberal anti-capitalism and reclaiming liberalism for the radical left?

    Socialism @beehaw.org

    Economic Socialism is Teaching Me What a Free Market Actually Looks Like

    Humanities & Cultures @beehaw.org

    Does economic education spoil students’ morality? Economists and the Trolley problem

    Humanities & Cultures @beehaw.org

    The Problem of Collective Harm: A Threshold Solution

    Socialism @beehaw.org

    A profoundly stupid case about video game cheating could transform adblocking into a copyright infringement

    Humanities & Cultures @beehaw.org

    Utility, social utility, democracy, and altruistic and moral behavior from unexploitability, Darwinian evolution, and tribes

    General Discussion @lemmy.world

    A moral argument for why all firms should be employee-owned - "Inalienable Right: Part 1 The Basic Argument"

    Socialism @beehaw.org

    "Inalienable Rights: Part I The Basic Argument" - All responsibility lies with workers

    Politics @beehaw.org

    AI, Guaranteed Income, and the “Which Way Is Up?” Problem Afflicting Our Elites

    Socialism @beehaw.org

    Rethinking free and open source and its role in the movement against capitalism - "Copyfarleft and Copyjustright"

    Politics @beehaw.org

    Capital Has No Borders—Why Should We?

    Socialism @beehaw.org

    Tax the land

    Humanities & Cultures @beehaw.org

    Does classical liberalism imply democracy?