#1721
america will revert back to steampunk
#1722
the first thing to revert will be expensive, frivolous pursuits like weddings
#1723
but photography will still be used extensively and to great effect
#1724

babyfinland posted:

AmericanNazbro posted:

aerdil posted:
i had to write an essay about baudrillard a couple weeks ago and as far as i can tell his political/philosophical project is "welp we're fucked, capitalism rules everything around us and always will" so im pretty surprised he's not more popular here

it's impossible for capitalism to reign as the dominant social-economic system forever due to global warming and resource scarcity

in america, i think it will revert back to a feudalistic system, where capitalism is gradually edged out, though, i don't think capitalism will ever completely be removed from the governing social-economic system

america has never been feudalistic, attempts by the french to transfer feudal political structures failed miserably



i was using the term loosely i guess. a rentier economy where the aristocracy owns the land that is worked by serfs

i don't think it's incorrect to believe america is moving in that direction

#1725
i don't see how increasingly abstract finance capitalism leads to that at all
#1726

discipline posted:

AmericanNazbro posted:
it's impossible for capitalism to reign as the dominant social-economic system forever due to global warming and resource scarcity

lol



i dunno why you think that's wrong unless you are using a really broad term for capitalism but w/e

#1727
feudalism was a lot weirder than i think most people realize
#1728

AmericanNazbro posted:

discipline posted:

AmericanNazbro posted:
it's impossible for capitalism to reign as the dominant social-economic system forever due to global warming and resource scarcity

lol

i dunno why you think that's wrong unless you are using a really broad term for capitalism but w/e

you're both way braver than i to risk speaking definitively on the subject

#1729
when you are flying over quebec you can still see a lot of land laid out in seigneuries
#1730

thirdplace posted:
feudalism was a lot weirder than i think most people realize


lol

#1731

getfiscal posted:
i think predicting the future is a mug's game



That's one mug you don't wanna chug!

#1732

thirdplace posted:
feudalism was a lot weirder than i think most people realize



ya it was very peculiar to the historical conditions of the time and place and its even debatable whether or not its coherent to speak about "feudalism" as a consistent mode of production and social organization. its certainly not a 'stage of development' in the marxian sense

#1733
why not
#1734

jools posted:
why not



because theres no evidence to suggest that that kind of evolutionary trajectory of accumulative development occurs hth

#1735
as in the concept that within feudalism there are necessarily the seeds of capitalism?
#1736

jools posted:
as in the concept that within feudalism there are necessarily the seeds of capitalism?



thats a seperate question; i'm talking more about the alleged universality of feudalism as a 'stage of development' or its surrogate, the 'asiatic mode of production'

#1737

Groulxsmith posted:
when you are flying over quebec you can still see a lot of land laid out in seigneuries

heheha hahahhhehehea

#1738
to me the history of feudalism is mostly proof that nothing is inevitable, that power relations can be mediated through culture in any old way
#1739

thirdplace posted:

to me the history of feudalism is mostly proof that nothing is inevitable, that power relations can be mediated through culture in any old way


#1740

aerdil posted:
i titled it "mr. baudrillard, we're not that fucked, yet." and the professor said the vulgarity distracted from my essay



fuck the shit out of that cocksucker. imho.

#1741

Groulxsmith posted:
i don't see how increasingly abstract finance capitalism leads to that at all



Feudal models are a Literal Thing in Central Oregon.

See how it works is you decimate manufacturing and put smaller farmers against the wall by having them compete in a market overwhelmingly advantaging larger producers. When a few jobs begin to trickle back you cut the wages to $12.50/hr and cut benefits 100% and say with a straight face the economy is in recovery.

While this is going on you inculcate a desire for "Fresh And Local Meats and Produce" in the remaining albeit dwindling and increasingly distressed well-to-do classes.

The natural effect then is to have individuals approach farmers with offers like "my home is underwater and i have nowhere to go please let me build a cabin on your land so i have a job and some food and some shelter, plus at least my commute is small and doesn't burn gas." and the farmer's like "whatever, sure man thanks!"

off the top of my head rainshadow organics and dancing cow farms are two central oregon farms who have taken on hands who live on the land full time b/c they were desperate and had nowhere else to go. the relationship is congenial, but y'know, coercive economic forces etc etc you get it.

#1742
that sounds a lot like our old friend capitalism if you ask this troper
#1743

Groulxsmith posted:
that sounds a lot like our old friend capitalism if you ask this troper



is it part of the capitalist model to have people forsake wages entirely in order to live on the 40 acres passed down through someone's family in the name of increased security outside the wage system? living on a farm working the land for a hereditary land and title owner?

idk, while it isn't Literal Serfdom (just mostly) it doesn't fit what i've come to recognize as a conception of capitalism.

#1744
i'm mostly certain the future is technocapitalist police states mobilized as nomadic machines in an eternal desert of autonomous sand forms and a sky blackened by profane drone swarms while divine war machines operate on complex paths of consecrated ground and i'm pretty convinced you're insane if you disagree with me
#1745
whatever particular niceties are being employed to placate workers is more or less immaterial, even if it has superficial similarities to feudalism (which pretty much end there)
#1746

Groulxsmith posted:
whatever particular niceties are being employed to placate workers is more or less immaterial, even if it has superficial similarities to feudalism (which pretty much end there)



people are cutting themselves out of the system of credit and taxation for the relative freedom of tilling the land in exchange for shelter and subsistence. is the fact that the people are not literally bought and sold as property along with the actual property of the land such a big difference? because fwiw while those farms haven't been sold yet, i don't think the tenants really have anywhere else to go and i can't imagine a new owner not availing themselves of the trained labor already present on the land.

#1747
didnt zizek have a Thing about how the intellectual-property economy is basically organised on feudalistic lines.
#1748

deadken posted:
didnt zizek have a Thing about how the intellectual-property economy is basically organised on feudalistic lines.


yeah. well hardt and negri think that more and more capitalism is about rent rather than profit, like enclosing the commons in various ways rather than productive technologies.

#1749
importantly though they mean that it is hegemonic, not by majority but by vanguardness. like they think the areas where capital is reproducing itself in a leading sense is in those areas of enclosure, like its lifeline and therefore vanguard. they still think (obviously) that the economy is mostly peasants and informal workers.
#1750

WillieTomg posted:

Groulxsmith posted:
whatever particular niceties are being employed to placate workers is more or less immaterial, even if it has superficial similarities to feudalism (which pretty much end there)

people are cutting themselves out of the system of credit and taxation for the relative freedom of tilling the land in exchange for shelter and subsistence. is the fact that the people are not literally bought and sold as property along with the actual property of the land such a big difference? because fwiw while those farms haven't been sold yet, i don't think the tenants really have anywhere else to go and i can't imagine a new owner not availing themselves of the trained labor already present on the land.

i would call that something more a superficial similarity but the fact that it is all based on and motivated by selling commodities for profit rather than amassing and maintaining bannermen is pr important

#1751

thirdplace posted:

WillieTomg posted:

Groulxsmith posted:
whatever particular niceties are being employed to placate workers is more or less immaterial, even if it has superficial similarities to feudalism (which pretty much end there)

people are cutting themselves out of the system of credit and taxation for the relative freedom of tilling the land in exchange for shelter and subsistence. is the fact that the people are not literally bought and sold as property along with the actual property of the land such a big difference? because fwiw while those farms haven't been sold yet, i don't think the tenants really have anywhere else to go and i can't imagine a new owner not availing themselves of the trained labor already present on the land.

i would call that something more a superficial similarity but the fact that it is all based on and motivated by selling commodities for profit rather than amassing and maintaining bannermen is pr important



that and it's also untenable for the vast majority of capital to function or provide returns that way and even what is described still does not isolate the 'serfs' from broader society clearly shaped by modern capitalism

#1752
it's almost as though transitions between forms dont happen instantly and uniformly across entire societies
#1753

shennong posted:
it's almost as though transitions between forms dont happen instantly and uniformly across entire societies



KINDLY. LEAVE!

#1754
lol @ the dude talking about hippies living on organic farms as an alternative to capitalism or whatever
#1755

jools posted:

discipline posted:

jools posted:
shes not postmodern. poststructuralist, perhaps...

care to delineate that for me sensei

yeah postmodernism is everything bad, poststructuralism is everything salvageable. so baudrillard goes in one box, foucault goes in the other. its like splitting up.



the the left to the left, everything you wrote, in a box "of The Left"

#1756

EmanuelaOrlandi posted:
lol @ the dude talking about hippies living on organic farms as an alternative to capitalism or whatever



well it wasn't an ideolgoical decision for most and most of them you probably wouldn't call "hippies" for all the farms were called rainshadow fucking organics and dancing cow farms.

mostly it was just running out of nonfarming options

#1757
sounds like you made this up
#1758
i literally dont know a thing about marxism or postmodernism or anything, really. is there anything salvageable to be found in postcolonialist theory? its been something ive been thinking about researching but thats about as far as ive gotten so far
#1759
fanon and spivak and all the rest of it
#1760
[account deactivated]