1525
rating
2
debates
100.0%
won
Topic
#113
Capitalism is the superior ideology to socialism
Status
Finished
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
Winner & statistics
After 1 vote and with 4 points ahead, the winner is...
CARay
Parameters
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 5
- Time for argument
- One day
- Max argument characters
- 30,000
- Voting period
- One week
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
1266
rating
119
debates
15.97%
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Description
A debate on whether capitalism is a superior ideology to socialism
Round 1
For this debate I intend to measure Socialism by metrics
that can be empirically evaluated. Not emotional and knee-jerk biases against the
globally dominant ideology of capitalism. I will also mention as a preface that
the bulk of my arguments are intended against the original ideology of socialism,
not modern socialism which is a heavily watered-down variant of the ideology that is combined with capitalism. I assert that “modern socialism” is not true socialism
as it is not what Marx and Engels intended, although I do not count this an exoneration from its true socialist roots and the flaws that modern socialism inherits from the pure ideology.
The first metric I will apply is that of longevity and economic
vitality. Socialist states are not prevalent in today’s world. And many modern
states that claim to be “socialist” are economically turbulent at best, which
of course results in them being socially turbulent as well—a well-cited example
could be Venezuela. Also, most modern socialist states incorporate capitalist
elements into their economies, one example could be China. Socialism is
historically proven to fail, collapse, or—either to prevent its own total demise,
or find a path to power through democratic means—interlace with capitalist
economic apparatuses, subsequently becoming a bastardized and “cherry-picked” ideology
that is not “pure” socialism and is part capitalism anyway, and therefore not
the “pure” socialism of Marx and Engels and an ideology that is perpetually at
the mercy of the global economic winds of capitalism—ultimately rendering it
the inferior ideology.
The second metric is social order. One of the most common
arguments against capitalism is that capitalism has resulted in the
displacement and death of people. This is true. However, so has socialism—I would
argue that socialism has done so to a far more heinous degree. The three bloodiest
leaders in history: Mao, Stalin and Hitler were all socialists. Very
disturbing, a large proportion of the deaths attributed to these leaders were
their own citizens (with the exception of Hitler if we assume that people
living under Nazi occupation were not citizens of the Third Reich). Both
ideologies have blood on their hands, this is indisputable; but it seems to me,
at least, that socialism is blood soaked than capitalism. The colour that
socialism invokes on its flags and in its general symbolism is well chosen. Historically
speaking, “pure socialist” parties seem to require totalitarian political practises
to maintain themselves in power, often following a bloody revolution. This, of
course, means that socialism often finds itself being antithetical to democracy,
freedom of speech, and civil liberties, which in turns leads to revolutions, or
counter-revolutions, that tear the ideology from power, an example of this is what
happened across the Eastern Bloc in the eighties and early nineties.
All in all, socialism is a system that, subjectively, may
look good on paper, but is historically proven to be impossible to implement
without the curtailment of civil liberties and impossible to sustain long-term
without capitalist invocation.
For this debate I intend to measure Socialism by metrics that can be empirically evaluated. Not emotional and knee-jerk biases against the globally dominant ideology of capitalism.
I can agree to that, just make sure you don't resort to similar biases against the highly misunderstood and yet to be tested theory of socialism.
I will also mention as a preface that the bulk of my arguments are intended against the original ideology of socialism, not modern socialism which is a heavily watered-down variant of the ideology that is combined with capitalism. I assert that “modern socialism” is not true socialism as it is not what Marx and Engels intended, although I do not count this an exoneration from its true socialist roots and the flaws that modern socialism inherits from the pure ideology.
Very good, you seem to have some actual understanding of what Socialism is.
The first metric I will apply is that of longevity and economic vitality. Socialist states are not prevalent in today’s world. And many modern states that claim to be “socialist” are economically turbulent at best, which of course results in them being socially turbulent as well—a well-cited example could be Venezuela
You just got finished claiming that you would not conflate "modern" socialism( semi-capitalist with the state owning most of the means of production) with "real" socialism (collective ownership of the means of production). Now you are using a "modern" socialist country as an example of why "real" socialism is economically unstable. Real Socialism, much like a true capitalist free market, has never actually existed on earth.
Also, most modern socialist states incorporate capitalist elements into their economies, one example could be China.
China is less Socialist than the USA. They are very, very capitalist in practice despite their claims that they are Communist and they have less social programs than the US plus they have a centralized economy which is often mistaken for Socialism but is in fact the exact opposite of Socialism.
or find a path to power through democratic means
Real Socialism is by definition democratic, because it's all about community based decision making and equality.
the “pure” socialism of Marx and Engels and an ideology that is perpetually at the mercy of the global economic winds of capitalism—ultimately rendering it the inferior ideology.
There was a time when the exact same kind of argument could be made about Capitalism's relationship to Monarchy/Feudalism. Socialism is the next step and when the true Socialism comes it will render Capitalism obsolete just as Capitalism rendered Monarchy obsolete.
But it's not real Socialism though, remember?One of the most common arguments against capitalism is that capitalism has resulted in the displacement and death of people. This is true. However, so has socialism
"The three bloodiest leaders in history: Mao, Stalin and Hitler were all socialists."
Actually they where fascists, which is literally the precise opposite of Socialism. They had a mostly centralized economy and a stratified society whereas socialism has a collectivized economy and an egalitarian society.
Historically speaking, “pure socialist” parties seem to require totalitarian political practises to maintain themselves in power, often following a bloody revolution. This, of course, means that socialism often finds itself being antithetical to democracy, freedom of speech, and civil liberties
Looks like I was wrong, you have no idea what Socialism even is. Everything you said is propaganda mate, you should question why your Capitalist and authority-loving society wants you to think these things about a system based on stopping the upper class from taking advantage of you.
Round 2
Thanks for you for your response, I see little reason to
respond to the first two points you made.
Let’s get something out of the way; in my opening paragraph
I said: “the bulk of my arguments are intended against
the original ideology of socialism, not modern socialism which is a heavily
watered-down variant of the ideology that is combined with capitalism. I assert
that “modern socialism” is not true socialism as it is not what Marx and
Engels intended, although I do not count this an exoneration from its true
socialist roots and the flaws that modern socialism inherits from the pure
ideology.” Nowhere in that passage do I say that I won’t be going after
modern socialism as well—I am simply observing that modern socialism is distinct
from true socialism, but still a variant of socialism nevertheless, merely a
less concentrated version: “heavily
watered-down variant of the ideology”.
And the last sentence in my opening paragraph clearly states that I do not
count modern socialism as being exonerated from true socialism, meaning I see
it as just as culpable as true socialism, seeing as it inherits a flawed
outlook. When I say the bulk of my arguments are intended against the original
ideology of socialism I am just remarking that when crafting my arguments I was
focused, mainly, on real socialism, but I am not excluding other variants of
the ideology as per the emphatic last clause in that quote. In fact, I am virtually
forced to apply most of the arguments to the variants of socialism that have
actually existed for the simple fact that they, unlike “real socialism” can be empirically
analysed. Based on this, your counter argument to my point about socialism
resulting in the death and displacement of numerous peoples—that it was not
“real socialism” is simply invalid. I’m criticising all variants of socialism—all
ideologies that present themselves as socialism and are derived from the core ideology.
And the same goes for your separate counter point in reference to what I said
about Venezuela, however I will add that by your own admission “true socialism”
has never existed, therefore I can only utilise watered-down variants of the
ideology to illustrate my point regarding the mother ideology. And just because
the true ideology has never been achieved does not mean that it is above reproach.
I understand that given the crushing weight of multiple historical
precedents against socialism, your best chance for this debate and to absolve
the ideology from a moral standpoint is to claim that “socialism just hasn’t been done right yet”, but that, my friend, is
a weak counter argument. For one, it’s been attempted in many forms, and has
never flourished into the “real” thing. That in itself casts aspersions on
whether true socialism can ever be achieved, which makes it an inferior
ideology to capitalism if it’s only chance to implemented is with some form of
capitalist economic framework scaffolding it. And you say that “true capitalist”
free market economies have never existed, what is your proof of this? There are
some that would say they do. Also, I must ask, how many more people must die in
the name of the ideology before socialism is done right? And what of all the millions whom have already been
killed or displaced in the name of socialism? Is everyone who has died because
of socialism: in gulags, through economic failure, etc, men, women, children,
are they all merely acceptable losses for you in the grand experiment to achieve
a socialist utopia? And what of people who disagree with socialism? Are you
happy for those people to be eradicated in the name of your ideology?
Your point about China being less socialist than the U.S.A.
only reinforces my own argument about Socialism having no long-term longevity
and relying on Capitalist sustentation. Modern day China is very Capitalist,
yes, however, China not too long ago, during reign of Mao, was not. The fact
that a communist country would make the transition from a socialist economy
complete with collectivisation to a capitalist one says nothing for the merits
of socialism, and everything for the merits of capitalism. And I address your
claim that Mao is not representative of Socialism two paragraphs down.
In counter to the point you make about true socialism being synonymous
with democracy: on paper it may be, but as you yourself have said true
socialism has never been achieved, so it is impossible to analyse empirically,
we can only speculate. However, true socialism, naively, tends to assume the
best of human nature—there are many that would argue that the level of harmonious
co-operation required for true socialism is unfeasible. The variants of socialism
that have come to fruition are often antithetical to democracy, at least at the
national level.
Your point about capitalism, monarchy and feudalism… Can you
elaborate on this further, please, and provide an historical precedent? It does
not seem that capitalism has not rendered monarchy or feudalism obsolete, Saudi
Arabia is one example of a capitalist country with an absolute monarchy and
feudal structure and there are numerous states in Europe that have capitalist
economies and constitutional monarchies. Also, when you assert socialism is the
next step after capitalism, what is your rationale and historical precedent for
this? The relationship between monarchy/feudalism and capitalism does not
suffice as a precedent for this point. What you say about socialism being the
next step after capitalism is effectively just baseless conjecture; and citing/paraphrasing
Marx, saying that the workers of the world will unite and overthrow capitalism
is not a self-sufficient evidence.
You claim that Mao, Stalin and Hitler were all fascists, but
if that were so then why would they refer to themselves as socialists? If these
men were fascists then why would not title and style themselves as such, like
Mussolini did? I understand why you would desperately want to distance your
ideology from the three biggest monsters in history, but it doesn’t wash:
Hitler—leader of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party, Joseph Stalin—General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Mao
Zedong—Chairman of the Communist Party of China.
Also, on this point regarding collectivisation, the Soviet
Union under Stalin heavily enforced a mandatory policy of collectivisation in
1927; the policy is widely blamed by academics for the Russian famine
of 1930. Chairman Mao’s Great Leap
Forward, that began in 1958, saw
enforced agricultural collectivisation too, a policy that is widely blamed by
academics for the Great Chinese Famine between 1959 and 1961. You see the
pattern emerging here. From my research, I can’t find collectivism being put
into practise in the economy of the Third Reich, however, the Nazi government
was far more concerned with establishing a war economy, as opposed to
“investing” in the civilian economy. If the Third Reich had survived, or god
forbid, won WW2 it would not surprise me if they would have pursued such a
policy. Especially since the Soviets and the Chinese Communists employed these
policies when they had a fair amount of relative geopolitical and military
security—the Third Reich, up until the outbreak of WW2 was constantly rearming
and expanding its armed forces.
As you can see this economic policy of collectivism that you
yourself describe as being indicative of “true socialism” failed and led to
starvation. A microcosm of socialist failings. Regarding what you say about egalitarianism,
each of the three governments described here had egalitarian policies written
into their ethos, manifestos and laws in varying capacities. They may not have
come to fruition in actual practise for reasons that are myriad, but the
groundwork for them was there.
Your last “point” if I can call it that, isn’t much of a
point. More of a knee-jerk conjecture to everything I said—the very same kind
of knee-jerk reaction you agreed not to measure an ideology by in the first
point you responded to. I can just as easily claim “oh you have no idea what capitalism is, you’re misinformed, you only
follow socialism because you desperately want to disassociate yourself from
mainstream society because you’re intellectually and/or socially insecure, yadda
yadda yadda”, but I’ll be the adult here and chose not to. Let’s keep
things empirical, please?
Forfeited
Round 3
Waiting for your rebuttal to my last set of arguments, sir/madam.
Forfeited
Round 4
Still waiting…
“What's the face of a coward? The back of his head as he
runs from the battle” – Frank Underwood, House of Cards
Forfeited
Round 5
….
I hope my opponent and all readers are well
Forfeited