Lumpenproletariat
Veteran Member
- Joined
- May 9, 2014
- Messages
- 2,740
- Basic Beliefs
- ---- "Just the facts, ma'am, just the facts."
He begins the topic at about 3 minutes into the video.
Dr. Wolff's lectures are strange. He talks in a way that makes him sound anti-capitalist, and yet virtually all his facts and conclusions from the facts are pro-capitalist. He uses language to sometimes chastise the capitalists, but he never really says what's bad about capitalism. Whatever facts he gives always show how capitalism has worked well and makes us better off.
And yet his hate for "capitalism" comes through. One hateful thing he says is that the capitalist system (and globalism) makes only the rich capitalists better off, not all the rest of us. This is false. Capitalism (and globalism) makes everyone better off, and this lecture proves it once again. I.e., the particular facts he presents prove the opposite of what his (anti-capitalist) sentiment seems to be
There is hate in this lecture ("hate" for something he calls "capitalism" and "globalization"). His contempt for "capitalism" is clear, and yet in the end he cannot articulate anything wrong with capitalism. Except perhaps the one false claim that capitalism is good only for the (rich) capitalists, and that they are lying when they say their system is also good for the little guy, for the workers and anyone not a capitalist. But Wolff is wrong -- the capitalists are telling the truth when they make this claim. It's true that we all benefit from the higher performance of the capitalists when they're driven by competition, by profit-motive, by supply & demand in the marketplace, by their self-interest instinct to make more money.
Of course it's true that some regulations are needed, and that total "Laissez-faire" can be bad (for society generally) and yet profitable for a particular capitalist, depending on the negative incentives in some cases. E.g. in the case of "externalities" -- yet in this lecture Dr. Wolff says nothing about that, but implies that "capitalism" per se is bad for everyone else and is good only for the capitalists.
This is a hate-capitalism and hate-globalization lecture. But it virtually refutes itself, because everything he says about capitalism and globalism just reconfirms that we're all made better off by the capitalists when they follow the normal profit-making principles, including when they downsize and relocate to Asia and lay off workers who are more expendable. All that is good for us, because it serves the consumers, which is what producers are supposed to do.
Why does Dr. Wolff come across as a socialist, or Marxist, or anti-capitalist, and also a protectionist or anti-globalist -- and yet all his facts are arguments in favor of capitalism and globalization?
What fact does he give in this lecture which is not a straightforward argument in favor of capitalist competition and globalization?
(This Wall of Text to be continued)
Dr. Wolff's lectures are strange. He talks in a way that makes him sound anti-capitalist, and yet virtually all his facts and conclusions from the facts are pro-capitalist. He uses language to sometimes chastise the capitalists, but he never really says what's bad about capitalism. Whatever facts he gives always show how capitalism has worked well and makes us better off.
And yet his hate for "capitalism" comes through. One hateful thing he says is that the capitalist system (and globalism) makes only the rich capitalists better off, not all the rest of us. This is false. Capitalism (and globalism) makes everyone better off, and this lecture proves it once again. I.e., the particular facts he presents prove the opposite of what his (anti-capitalist) sentiment seems to be
There is hate in this lecture ("hate" for something he calls "capitalism" and "globalization"). His contempt for "capitalism" is clear, and yet in the end he cannot articulate anything wrong with capitalism. Except perhaps the one false claim that capitalism is good only for the (rich) capitalists, and that they are lying when they say their system is also good for the little guy, for the workers and anyone not a capitalist. But Wolff is wrong -- the capitalists are telling the truth when they make this claim. It's true that we all benefit from the higher performance of the capitalists when they're driven by competition, by profit-motive, by supply & demand in the marketplace, by their self-interest instinct to make more money.
Of course it's true that some regulations are needed, and that total "Laissez-faire" can be bad (for society generally) and yet profitable for a particular capitalist, depending on the negative incentives in some cases. E.g. in the case of "externalities" -- yet in this lecture Dr. Wolff says nothing about that, but implies that "capitalism" per se is bad for everyone else and is good only for the capitalists.
This is a hate-capitalism and hate-globalization lecture. But it virtually refutes itself, because everything he says about capitalism and globalism just reconfirms that we're all made better off by the capitalists when they follow the normal profit-making principles, including when they downsize and relocate to Asia and lay off workers who are more expendable. All that is good for us, because it serves the consumers, which is what producers are supposed to do.
Why does Dr. Wolff come across as a socialist, or Marxist, or anti-capitalist, and also a protectionist or anti-globalist -- and yet all his facts are arguments in favor of capitalism and globalization?
What fact does he give in this lecture which is not a straightforward argument in favor of capitalist competition and globalization?
(This Wall of Text to be continued)
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