by exploited » Mon May 13, 2013 12:52 pm
I think any truly revolutionary system has to work for everyone, including shallow consumerists who only care about accumulating stuff. Or power players obsessed with gaining influence. Or crazy, self-hating wage slaves who do everything to benefit the plutocrats while deluding themselves into believing they have personal freedom - out of principle, no less.
The way to do that is to allow competition, in labour and markets, while curbing absurdities. I like the idea of a basic income guarantee. I like the idea of curbing excessive wealth (and contrary to popular belief, determining what is excessive really isn't that hard, it merely requires the adoption of a no-bullshit attitude and a willingness to abandon ideological stupidity). I even agree that some degree of worker control should be required to enjoy the benefits of incorporation... and absent that, the abolition of the corporation entirely.
But I find myself doubting that a system can last without being able to integrate those who oppose it. All it would take to destroy a participatory system is a third party who doesn't give a shit, can bankroll capitalistic growth, and knows how to exploit various human weaknesses, like greed. In order to avoid that fate, any revolutionary system needs to be able to stand on it's own two feet... and to me, participatory economics would require a huge consensus and a willingness to use violence to defend it. Thus it is extremely vulnerable, as both capitalist and centrally-planned economies do those things much better, either by coopting those who disagree or by destroying them.