Capitalism hits record low favorability in the US. Only 54% of Americans now view capitalism positively down from 60% in 2021 and the lowest ever recorded by Gallup.
Meanwhile, Big Business approval has cratered. Only 17% of Democrats and 36% of independents view it positively, and 62% of all Americans now have a negative view of big business.
Exactly. Capitalism is an extremely obsolete and outdate mode of production. Why? Because: A) Relies on the management scarcity; 2) Is essentially anti-democratic. If democracy is the best mode of government, and economic production impacts government, why the hell shouldn't we extend democracy to economic production?
"[C]apital cannot be trusted to resolve the climate crisis. As long as capital controls investment and production, we are careening toward a very bleak future indeed. It’s also not only energy where this problem arises. The green transition requires many other investments: we need to expand public transport, insulate buildings, develop more efficient technologies, regenerate ecosystems, and implement ecological farming methods. These are essential to the transition, and they are simple to do, but capital does not invest in such activities because they are not sufficiently profitable. Under capitalism, we suffer critical shortages of existentially necessary things that could otherwise easily be delivered.
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Exactly. Capitalism is an extremely obsolete and outdate mode of production. Why? Because: A) Relies on the management scarcity; 2) Is essentially anti-democratic. If democracy is the best mode of government, and economic production impacts government, why the hell shouldn't we extend democracy to economic production?
"[C]apital cannot be trusted to resolve the climate crisis. As long as capital controls investment and production, we are careening toward a very bleak future indeed. It’s also not only energy where this problem arises. The green transition requires many other investments: we need to expand public transport, insulate buildings, develop more efficient technologies, regenerate ecosystems, and implement ecological farming methods. These are essential to the transition, and they are simple to do, but capital does not invest in such activities because they are not sufficiently profitable. Under capitalism, we suffer critical shortages of existentially necessary things that could otherwise easily be delivered.
Furthermore, we know that to meet the Paris Agreement goals, high-income countries must reduce total energy use. Some of this can be achieved through efficiency improvements, yes — and we need more investment in this area. Yet it also requires scaling down damaging and unnecessary forms of production — not just fossil fuels, but also things like SUVs, private jets, mansions, fast fashion, industrial beef, advertising, and the practice of planned obsolescence. Scientists have made it clear that if we want to achieve sufficiently rapid decarbonisation, this must be on the table.
This approach can have powerful benefits. Not only does it reduce energy use and make decarbonisation easier to achieve, it also liberates productive capacities — labour and factories — which can be remobilised to accelerate socially and ecologically necessary production." #ClimateChange#ClimateCrisis#Decarbonization#Degrowth#Democracy#Capitalism#Socialism
It fucking blows my mind that people still buy into the lie that politicians will bring about change. That’s exactly what’s wrong with this fucked-up world. Real change only comes when the people take power for themselves equally!
Feeling Sad and Depressed? You might be suffering from CAPITALISM Symptoms may include: homelessness, unemployment, poverty, hunger, apathy, loss of free speech, incarceration, death.
Today in Labor History September 1, 1880: The utopian communistic Oneida Community ended after 32 years. The Community was founded by John Humphrey Noyes and his followers in 1848 near Oneida, New York. They believed that Jesus had already returned in AD 70, allowing them to bring about Jesus's millennial kingdom themselves. The Community practiced communalism (holding all property and possessions in common). They also practiced complex marriage, where 3 or more people could enter into the same marriage, and male sexual continence, where the male’s goal was to not ejaculate during sex. They were also one of the first groups in the U.S. to practice mutual criticism, to root out bad characteristics in people, something adopted by many later cults, and even by Cesar Chavez and the UFW under his leadership.
The Oneida Community has been portrayed in numerous works of fiction such as “Silken Strands,” by Rebecca …
Today in Labor History September 1, 1880: The utopian communistic Oneida Community ended after 32 years. The Community was founded by John Humphrey Noyes and his followers in 1848 near Oneida, New York. They believed that Jesus had already returned in AD 70, allowing them to bring about Jesus's millennial kingdom themselves. The Community practiced communalism (holding all property and possessions in common). They also practiced complex marriage, where 3 or more people could enter into the same marriage, and male sexual continence, where the male’s goal was to not ejaculate during sex. They were also one of the first groups in the U.S. to practice mutual criticism, to root out bad characteristics in people, something adopted by many later cults, and even by Cesar Chavez and the UFW under his leadership.
The Oneida Community has been portrayed in numerous works of fiction such as “Silken Strands,” by Rebecca May Hope (2019). “Assassination Vacation,” by Sarah Vowell (2005) and “Pagan House,” by David Flusfeder (2007).
Today in Labor History August 24, 1922: Howard Zinn, American historian, author, teacher and activist was born on this day. Zinn has written over 20 books, including his most well-known book, “A People's History of the United States” (1980). He has described himself as an anarchist and as a democratic socialist. He was initially opposed to U.S. involvement in WWII, but later enlisted to help fight fascism. However, after napalm-bombing a town in France, he later learned that over 1,000 civilians had been killed. This experience reinforced the anti-war stance he would maintain for the rest of his life. In the 1960s, he was heavily involved in the SNCC and Freedom Summer. Zinn has mentored many famous activists and writers, including Alice Walker and Marian Wright Edelman. In 2008, the Zinn Education Project launched to support teachers using “A People’s History” in their curriculum. He died in 2010 from an …
Today in Labor History August 24, 1922: Howard Zinn, American historian, author, teacher and activist was born on this day. Zinn has written over 20 books, including his most well-known book, “A People's History of the United States” (1980). He has described himself as an anarchist and as a democratic socialist. He was initially opposed to U.S. involvement in WWII, but later enlisted to help fight fascism. However, after napalm-bombing a town in France, he later learned that over 1,000 civilians had been killed. This experience reinforced the anti-war stance he would maintain for the rest of his life. In the 1960s, he was heavily involved in the SNCC and Freedom Summer. Zinn has mentored many famous activists and writers, including Alice Walker and Marian Wright Edelman. In 2008, the Zinn Education Project launched to support teachers using “A People’s History” in their curriculum. He died in 2010 from an apparent heart attack.
Be sure to come to the annual Howard Zinn Book fair this December 7, 2025, (10am-6pm) at San Francisco City College, Mission Campus. There will be lots of great writers and workshops. This year’s theme is “Fight Supremacy: Actions Against Authoritarianism.” I will be hosting a working-class writers panel with San Francisco Poet Laureate and activist Tongo Eisen-Martin, poet Daphne Gottlieb, educator and author Jenny Worley, and possibly more tbd.
It's election season in Norway, and I've spent most of the day on the party's stand in the town where I live (Sola), with the guy on the right who's on the city council.
We also had the party leader (in the middle) visit from Oslo for a bit, with our local representative in parliament (on the left). This drew a lot of attention for a while. 😊
If you can vote in Norway, please consider voting for SV for both green politics and social equality!
It's election season in Norway, and I've spent most of the day on the party's stand in the town where I live (Sola), with the guy on the right who's on the city council.
We also had the party leader (in the middle) visit from Oslo for a bit, with our local representative in parliament (on the left). This drew a lot of attention for a while. 😊
If you can vote in Norway, please consider voting for SV for both green politics and social equality!
“[…] a predicted exodus of the rich, trumpeted in endless alarmist headlines, has not materialised. Forbes counted 26 Spanish billionaires in 2021. This year, it lists 34, with a combined net worth comfortably over $200bn.”
“[…] there is no sign that it has affected growth. Spain was the world’s fastest-expanding major advanced economy last year, outpacing even the US, with GDP up 3.2%.”