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Occupy Buddhism: Or Why the Dalai Lama is a Marxist
Comments
Wealth inequality... It's just buzzwords. It doesn't actually mean anything.
Superficially it means that some people are more wealthy than others. That in itself isn't a problem at all. On a deeper level, well, there isn't a deeper level. The term is essentially meaningless.
It doesn't mean we can't do anything to help people, it just means we can't force others to shoulder a burden that doesn't really belong to them. It's not their fault people are poor. If you're not charitable by choice but by force, you're just doing community service - a sentence, a punishment. Does that mean we stop helping? No. It just means that we don't force anyone else to do anything.
And he's actually incredibly charitable. If I remember correctly most of his wealth has been willed to charitable causes. He knows he won't spend all of his money, and is donating it accordingly.
I remember when Stephen King said "I don't care, I have plenty, go ahead and tax me more" which is a nice sentiment, but there's no need to tax him more, or tax any other wealthy person more (although they do have higher taxes) because they can just take that excess and write a check any time they feel like it. It's up to them
Granted, you might be more in line with the libertarian viewpoint that wealth is the property of the individual and he has a right to the fruit of his labor, but I've never found that argument very compelling and I think the flaws of capitalism, especially as practiced in the U.S., are becoming more and more apparent and the the system is in need of major reform, if not a complete replacement.
Yes, some rich people (like George Romney) primarily inherited their wealth, while others started with little or nothing and were self-made men. But, that's life, and do you really want to have a principle where you cannot pass your property on to your children when you die?
Another poster wanted to place the blame on capitalism. There are people in virtually all countries -- all along the scale of economic systems -- who are rich and others who are poor.
And then there's personal ambition. My sister used to be jealous because (to her) I was rich and she was poor. But let's see. I went to university for 6 years, mostly by working part time at a grocery store. She was too lazy to finish high school...dropped out 2 months before graduation because she was "bored". I worked more hours in a single year than see worked in her entire life. So I had a nice townhouse, based on a salary of up to $120,000 a year, while she lived in a shack with no working toilet based on earnings of $0 most years...she lived off a druggie. Then there's my nephew, who also sees the unfairness of capitalism. Of course, the reason he's poor is because he went to prison for 2 years (I think due to dealing drugs) and now can't get or hold a job.
Should there be a safety net? Of course. And lots of opportunities for advancement. But some of you are talking about some drastic redistribution of wealth based on...nothing but your concept that there is unfairness...and you don't really at look at why the inequality exists.
"Should there be a safety net? Of course. And lots of opportunities for advancement. But some of you are talking about some drastic redistribution of wealth based on...nothing but your concept that there is unfairness...and you don't really at look at why the inequality exists."
And Jason, you don't know me, either. None of us knows each other. So, perhaps you should also stop making judgments about all those who you feel don't share your personal viewpoint.
I didn't say you're a "jealous loser". What I said was, "I think some of the viewpoints here are too simple and superficial...[and] are more about jealousy than anything else." It wasn't even in response to any post of yours.
We want to improve things, but things that don't really exist like "wealth inequality" don't really deserve to be looked at. It's not actually a problem, it's just buzzwords designed to elicit an emotive response rather than a rational one.
I've met plenty of highly intelligent, intellectual and passionate Marxist types, but few rational ones.
Victim/perpetrator is a very naive and classically childlike perspective. As we mature and see that everyone is responsible for their own actions, we see that victim/perpetrator is actually a fictional perception.
Obviously this isn't a blanket statement and we can see there are instances where this is not the case (abuse for example) but when it comes to things like wealth and poverty, we see that the victim/perpetrator viewpoint more often than not has no basis in reality and is simply not applicable.
It's simply something designed to elicit an emotional response rather than a rational one, and I see this all the time when debating with people with Marxist leanings. Lots of attempts to provoke emotions like pity and guilt, to bypass the rational center of the brain. Obviously, there needs to be a little of both (compassion and rationality) but I rarely see the rational side of these conversations.
And I'm not just talking about this thread or pointing any fingers, I'm talking about a lot of past experience as a political activist who has been on both sides of the Marxist school of thought.
@Jason, I'm not saying your a Marxist, as far as I'm aware you haven't indicated at all your political/ideological preferences.
I'm drawing on a lot of past experience, not just this thread and it's not to be taken personally I assure you. I'm not accusing you of anything.
There are examples in American history where discrimination against one or another groups of people have forced them into poverty...and when I say American history, I am talking about history within my lifetime. For example, inherent discrimination against Black people in nearly every aspect of American life, including -- perhaps most importantly to this issue -- the inability to get a good education or be hired for significant jobs. And that deserved national action...which eventually took place. Even today, the way American Indians are treated and the mere existence of the reservation system -- one of the great unaddressed issues of our nation. The fact that in the 1960s there was still a dearth of passable roads and decent schools in Appalachia, and eventually that was addressed.
But then there are the other reasons for being poor...including making bad (or even stupid) life choices. At one point my mother had 2 choices, work as a secretary for a chiropractor (set salary, no benefits at all) OR a secretarial position in a school (roughly the same salary, health insurance paid for by the school system, pension benefits). Her choice -- the job with no benefits. And later she paid a great price for that.
In the Marxist sense, at least, exploitation refers to the worker's lack of ownership and/or distributive control over the surplus created by their labour. (That's why Marx defined slavery, feudalism, and capitalism as exploitative systems of production, i.e., in each, the producers/workers have no ownership and/or distributive control over the surplus created by their labour). In this sense, exploitation is an inherent part of the capitalist mode of production, which in turn, ties into Marx's theory of alienation. It's rather complicated, and I don't fully understand everything Marx wrote on the subject as much of it is very abstract, but in short, exploitation is the idea that the capitalist profits far more from a worker's labour than the worker does, and it doesn't really matter whether it's voluntary or not. Moreover, this type of social relationship ultimate debases labour and impedes our positive development as a species.
Adam Smith et al. assumed that labour creates wealth (surplus value). But according to Marx, in a capitalist system, labour itself becomes a commodity, an object that's bought and sold on the market. Moreover, due to private ownership of the means of production, the product of the worker's labour doesn’t legally belong to them (alienation), nor does the surplus value their labour creates (unpaid labour), which is kept by the capitalist.
Consequently, the product of the worker's labour becomes a commodity that's divorced from the labour expended on its production, thereby obscuring the social relationship between producer and consumer (commodity fetishism). Furthermore, the employer has the ability to increase their profit exponentially by reinvesting the surplus value extracted from the worker's labour into their company while the labourer is forced to spend their (more often than not) meager wages on the necessities of life such as food, clothing, shelter, etc.
For Marx, our ability to produce things, especially our means of subsistence, is what sets us apart from other animals. In his view, this ability to produce objects is a part of our essence as a human being. Put another way, Marx viewed human beings as productive creatures that, in the words of Jonathan Wolff, "are able to create according to our will and consciousness in a very elaborate way."
But, as Wolff continues, "workers under capitalism, Marx thinks, very rarely have the opportunity to express these powers. So, Marx says, from a human being, the worker is reduced to an abstract activity and a stomach. So rather than being a human being able to express our essence, we are like little machines ourselves." And I think understanding this point of view is integral to understanding an important part of Marx's critique of production under the capitalist system, which he argues not only estranges and alienates the worker's relationship to the products of their labour, but estranges and alienates the worker's relationship to the act of production itself.
As Marx wrote in Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844, under the capitalist system of production, the worker's labour becomes "external to the worker, i.e., it does not belong to his intrinsic nature; that in his work, therefore, he does not affirm himself but denies himself, does not feel content but unhappy, does not develop freely his physical and mental energy but mortifies his body and ruins his mind." As a consequence, the worker "only feels himself outside his work, and in his work feels outside himself. He feels at home when he is not working, and when he is working he does not feel at home. His labor is therefore not voluntary, but coerced; it is forced labor."
And when viewed from this perspective, it may become easier to understand why Marx saw labour within the context of capitalism as something debasing, particularly for the worker, and why it's ultimately an impediment to achieving self-realization as a species in the sense of resolving "the conflict between man and nature and between man and man – the true resolution of the strife between existence and essence, between objectification and self-confirmation, between freedom and necessity, between the individual and the species" that's characterized by the "positive transcendence of private property as human self-estrangement."
From an ethical standpoint, this inherently disparate relationship between capital and labour reminds me of a line from a letter written by Abigail Adams in the spring of 1776 to her husband: "I have sometimes been ready to think that the passion for liberty cannot be equally strong in the breasts of those who have been accustomed to deprive their fellow-creatures of theirs [referring to slave-holding Virginians]. Of this I am certain, that it is not founded upon that generous and Christian principle of doing to others as we would that others should do unto us." And I think the same sentiment can easily be applied to capital in relation to the wage labourer, at least in the sense of how the latter is coerced under the capitalist mode of production to surrender their labour-power to the former in exchange for their means of subsistence, which is always less than what they actually produce, as well as all rights over the product of their labour.
In essence, from one point of view, both slavery and wage labour can be seen to infringe upon individual autonomy in their respective ways, with former more obviously so, but the latter no less potentially oppressive from the standpoint of labour. As Frederick Engels wrote in The Principles of Communism, "The slave is sold once and for all; the proletarian must sell himself daily and hourly. The individual slave, property of one master, is assured an existence, however miserable it may be, because of the master's interest. The individual proletarian, property as it were of the entire bourgeois class which buys his labor only when someone has need of it, has no secure existence."
Moreover, the logic of the system, via what Marx termed the 'coercive laws of competition,' forces the hand of capital to exploit labour as much as it can; and at the same time, labour is coerced into the position of working for a wage and fighting for gains that capital quickly counter in an endless struggle punctuated by regular economic crises (these days better known as the 'business cycle'), creating continuous class antagonisms between capital and labour.
Hence much of what's historically been labelled as Marxism and/or socialism has been a search for practical as well as philosophical resolutions to these issues, which isn't to be found in things like equality of wealth or outcomes so much as the de-privatization (i.e., socialization) of opportunity and the weakening of class antagonisms and hierarchies arising out of social relations unique to capitalism and other predominately exploitative systems. As Marx wrote in The Poverty of Philosophy, "Social relations are closely bound up with productive forces. In acquiring new productive forces men change their mode of production; and in changing their mode of production, in changing the way of earning their living, they change all their social relations. The hand-mill gives you society with the feudal lord; the steam-mill, society with the industrial capitalist."
And Marx's focus, along with socialist movements in general, is in attempting to answer the question of how to liberate society from suffering and alienation by changing the material conditions that support it. In the words of Erich Fromm, "[Marx's] concept of socialism is the emancipation from alienation, the return of man to himself, his self-realization," a goal that's ultimately achievable via "the liberation of man from a kind of work which destroys his individuality, which transforms him into a thing, and which makes him into the slave of things."
You may disagree with this, of course, and some of it may be rather philosophical and abstract; but I don't think it's irrational or simply appealing to emotion.
As for poor decisions, we can all see this in our personal lives. I didn't go to university and when I go back to work I'll be earning minimum wage and saving up for tuition so I can go to school. It will be difficult and I won't be doing my ideal job for years to come. That's the result of my desicion.
My husband worked hard and spent years in school, and now at 28 he's earning the kind of salary most people wouldn't see their entire lives, and it's only going to go up. That's the result of his decision then, and his continuing commitment to working hard and improving his skills.
When we view poor people as individuals rather than as a collective, we start to see a pattern of poor choices, not oppression.
"[Marx's] concept of socialism is the emancipation from alienation, the return of man to himself, his self-realization," a goal that's ultimately achievable via "the liberation of man from a kind of work which destroys his individuality, which transforms him into a thing, and which makes him into the slave of things."
These are all very emotive sentiments. "freedom" "emancipation from alienation" "liberation" "destroys" "transforms" "slave".
These are all words and ideas that elicit a purely emotional response. It's very seductive, but not particularly rational.
It makes me think of Hitler's speeches. Highly passionate and emotional, devoid of meaningful substance. Using language that stirs the heart, but bypasses the head entirely. Propaganda.
We should never try to take away someone's opportunity to learn true self worth by bailing them out. It doesn't mean we shouldn't be there when they're ready for help, but that is THE key factor here. When THEY are ready for help, not when we decided they're ready for it.
When they're taking steps to improve their circumstances, we lend them a hand. But if they're just sitting in a hole waiting for us to climb down and carry them out, we're not doing them or ourselves any favors.
Sure, homelessness isn't a black and white issue, absolutely not, but trying to help people who simply don't want it is wasting valuable resources, and possibly taking from them a priceless opportunity for growth.
It's a key thing that kind hearted and well intentioned people often miss - most of them like taking advantage of the system and will not take responsibility for themselves. They don't want to. They don't care. Again, not applicable to all, but to a surprising majority.
Sure, they'll bitch and whine and bemoan the system for being so unfair, but they won't actually do anything for themselves.
Just like massacring Jews won't change anything about people or their nature, nor will changing modes of production. It just doesn't make any sense.
It's like me saying "I'm going to take a class in biology for one semester and then I will be the greatest doctor in all of the world and win all the nobel prizes and cure sickness forever!" It doesn't add up.
Sure emotive language has its place, but it's got to make sense within the context of the subject.
If talking about true liberation then, well, yeah, you gotta talk about liberation.
But some access to a desicion making process? Nah. That's not liberation or self realization, not by a long shot.
I think the example of public land applies. If there were no regulation, rich people could buy up literally every inch of beachfront and either block it off entirely, or charge an admission fee so high that only rich people could afford to visit the beach. No American child below a certain income would ever see an American ocean. Would this be fair? By the simple rules of capitalism, yes, but even (many) staunch Republican capitalists I know feel that some public lands are important. Very sticky issues.
I don't think it's unfair. I don't think Marx's theories offer any kind of liberation at all, and I think any claims as such are overstated at best, completely fallacious at worst. And definitely not comparable to the Buddha.
For one, the very same charge can levelled against the Buddha, as it's just as easy to say that his ideas about complete freedom from suffering (a much grander claim, in my opinion) is overstated/completely fallacious. For example, some critics of Marx claim that human nature is inherently and irrevocably greedy, etc., which means that an economic transformation in which the exploitation, alienation, and commodity fetishism of the present system is gradually reduced and/or eliminated via a more socialized mode of production is impossible. Similarly, a critic of the Buddha could say the same, and claim that nibbana, the complete extinguishing of greed, hatred, and delusion (SN 38.1), is impossible.
The point I'm trying to make here is that, just because you disagree with an idea doesn't mean it's not rational, overstated, fallacious, etc. And some of the things you're saying about Marx can equally apply to the Buddha, but you don't seem to see that because you're favourably biased towards Buddhism and not Marx or his writings. I honestly can't say either is 100% correct, myself; but I find each to at least have emotional and rational arguments as to why they may be on the right track, as well as for the desirability of what their both pointing towards.
And with that, I think I'll step out of the discussion for a while to prevent simply repeating myself, and to also think about what you've said. It's my hope that you (or anybody else engaged in this conversation) will try to do likewise and consider what I've been saying as well, especially if you feel my statements purely emotive, irrational, and/or motivated by jealousy. I think you'll find them to be quite the opposite.
Short History:
Started as an hardcore Neo-Conservative with the attribute of selfishness, but came to Buddhism which lead me to Marxism. Now I am an Democratic Socialist.
One must consider the work a product of its time – to judge it from the perspective of the current first world economy is a fallacy – by that I mean that, in the main current working / living standards are not comparable to the depth of suffering and poverty suffered by the working and under-classes at that time – it is challenging to fully appreciate the mentality imposed to those classes in Marx’s time.
To glimpse the significance of this, I think one needs to look further back in history, unfortunately into unchartered pre-history - the story will be suitably seasoned with conjecture.
Human’s arrange their societies as complex extensions of ape society – there are many uncomfortable parallels – take a limited set of family groups living together in relative isolation - there is no need for money - all trade is insular in a contained market - the economy is a stark one, trading in ‘survival tokens’ – the respective positions of the people in the group is determined by their survival potential (both for themselves and for the group)… e.g. you don’t mess with someone with a higher survival potential than you, only with a lower one otherwise chances are you won't survive.
So an early economy seems to naturally drive humans to develop their gene pool – enabling us as a species to ‘conquer’ (and I use that term loosely) our environment above and beyond our animal counterparts.
Then comes cooperation between groups – how to grade survival potential? How do you determine which big man is the bigger? Here, it seems the propensity is to revert to the ‘law of the jungle’… war, death, destruction. It is survival potential in action! Not a set of circumstances that engender continuing, stable relations.
Also, amongst many other considerations, fluid trade requires free movement of goods – how can I easily trade 20 pigs with someone else – it is difficult if I have to take the pigs everywhere with me – the logistics of it, what if they escape or are stolen etc etc…
In order for human society to flourish in concentrated numbers, a more abstract form of 'survival potential' was required - so was born the 'monetary standard' - linking the value of one universal object to all others by way of an agreed standard – so now, I don’t need to fight you to show you my survival potential – I can with a wave of my hand enlist a thousand people to fight for me – I no longer need to build a big house myself, with a wave of my hand it happens – gone in part is the disharmony caused by immediate conflict and jostle for the alpha position – but the alpha position remains, now ingrained in the institutions that support larger societies – those that support it, receive the favour of the alpha – the driver however is maintaining the alpha position within that structure - greater numbers mean greater power - the alpha gains in power as society grows - it is a driving force of cooperation..
So from its ‘genesis' to feudal tenure to capitalism – the status quo of the alpha position remains – it is clear from the distinction of 'old' and 'new' money - the spaces are ready to be filled by whoever can take them - the game is weighted towards those that already have it – the ultimate goal is to be the suppressor and not the suppressee – those are the consequences of the survival potential system.
With this broadly in mind, Marx’ struggle in my mind is put in better context - he is looking at the issue from the point of view of those in the system who have no hope of realising their own survival potential - that is to say that upon analysing the workings of the system he concluded that the benefit to these individuals (or class) in adhering to the survival system did not equate to (and was indeed inequitable detached from) the survival potential farmed from those individuals.
This was true in the context of its time – eventually heads began to roll.
Marxism’s greatest crime (proposed by Marxism and undertaken by communism) is in seeking to overturn the established capital system – in removing those at the top – this is an unforgivable crime - check out US policy against Cuba - does it even make sense anymore? The modern Islamic revolution is the same – it started in Iran with the elite being kicked out – unforgivable.
Money / capital itself is fascinating - the current system has abstracted money (as a number) so far away from the standard (say gold) that no-one really understand the layers in between - it is doubtful that the total sum of ‘cash’ swilling around the system accurately reflects the net survival potential position! Who could even begin to determine it? We all progress with hope nudging around the abyss of economic collapse – money is made from money, from potentials of money, from speculating… so many ways to pool survival potential in ever more abstract expressions - this has historically driven competition and development – one reason for the ‘Christian world’ overtaking the ‘Islamic world’ was that Islam forbade making money from money - this stagnated competition – it has also maintained and developed the alpha status – now, our alphas can destroy the entire world if they chose – they can spread their message for the farthest reaches of our world if they choose – the institutions are so ingrained that imagining life without them is impossible.
This does not mean they are equitable or the best thing for humanity’s development from this point forward.
I’ve tried to summarise some of the key areas but it doesn’t really come close to capturing it…
For me, Marx is a brilliant mind – he highlighted and provided a language to describe an inequity that is born of our very nature and has plagued and feed us through our development – I admire his ability to even attempt to liberate us from our inherent nature – to point it out to us so we can ourselves examine the contradictions.
In this limited way (and I say limited so as not to offend anyone who sees the Buddha as something more than a human being as any other) I see parallels between his work and Buddha’s work. I can also see why the Dalai Lama may relate to Marxism or Marxist (inspired) economic philosophies – he has known oppression and speaks to the oppressed – it seems to me a well thought out and subtle statement of opposition to the global capitalist system (that is not to say necessary that capitalism is the adversary but rather the global system) where the ‘good guys’ are determined with reference to the established institutions and established modes of determining survival potential.
Maybe your problem wasn't capitalism, but that you've "exploited people for capital with an attitude of selfishness"? Capitalism didn't make you do that, that was your choice. Of course it didn't lead you to happiness.
"For one, the very same charge can levelled against the Buddha, as it's just as easy to say that his ideas about complete freedom from suffering (a much grander claim, in my opinion) is overstated/completely fallacious. For example, some critics of Marx claim that human nature is inherently and irrevocably greedy, etc., which means that an economic transformation in which the exploitation, alienation, and commodity fetishism of the present system is gradually reduced and/or eliminated via a more socialized mode of production is impossible."
I don't think that exactly, but I do think people would stop trying to create wealth (because they wouldn't see any of it, so why bother?) and so they system would ultimately collapse. I don't think it's sustainable long term.
"Similarly, a critic of the Buddha could say the same, and claim that nibbana, the complete extinguishing of greed, hatred, and delusion (SN 38.1), is impossible."
Maybe, but I just don't think they're really comparable.
I think it's perfectly legal for people to sell outrageously-priced tickets, and it's perfectly legal for us to be dumb enough to buy them; but it should be illegal to use the proceeds to deprive others of access to every inch of ocean.
Capitalism is part of that. There is no altruistic value in capitalism. It is about the exploitation of others for capital. I used to work for a company called "Rent-A-Center." It a company that rents out electronics and furniture to people with little or no credit. Poor people will come to our store because they know their too poor to get a credit card. The customer wants a refrigerator. We will rent them the fridge until they pay off their payments. This is where the exploitation begins.
The fridge is the same brands you see at Home Depot. The big difference is the price. The fridge at Home Depot may cost $300, but at RAC the cash price is $600 and they have 90 days to pay that off until the real fun begins! We would rent to them for 20 dollars a week. You may find that is a small price, but wait again. They would have to pay that for 72 WEEKS. If the customer had done the full 72 weeks. The customer would pay $1,440 for that fridge and it would be officially theirs at 72 weeks. Also note most of my customers only make about $16,000-$22,000 a year. $1,440 is a huge chunck of their yearly income.
What happens if they can't pay it. I would have to repo them. I would go to their house and work places to harass them to make payments. Also I would call them 10-20 times a day. I would threaten their children by claiming if they don't give me the TV back their mommy & daddy would go to jail (BTW: We do use send customers to jail if they don't return items. We call the items stolen.) Why can we do this? We are not a debt collector and we don't follow the same laws.
Also at RAC we would exploit them in other ways. RAC had a payday loan in the side. Our customers would get a payday loan to PAY the RENT of the items! We just freaking doubled dipped on the poor by exploiting their situation!
Also I was exploited as well. I was getting paid well. 12 bucks an hour with 50 hour work weeks. Yet, the company exploited us by not letting us have our breaks or lunches due to the high demand. We are forced to eat while working and our boss would just manually punch us out for lunch while we are working. I destroyed my back at that job by forcing me to carry item which were too heavy. We were expected of us to carry things that required TWO people to carry. If we had any complaints about working conditions. We were told to shut up and deal with it because there are 100 people would love to go after my job. (I was working during the start of the great recession.) Also any mention of the "U" word was automatically termination. Also during the AG lawsuit against us. We were told to lie what we did to our customers to keep my job.
Rent-A-Center had shown me why Capitalism should be killed, but where was many other factor which lead me to Marxism as well.
"Also at RAC we would exploit them in other ways. RAC had a payday loan in the side. Our customers would get a payday loan to PAY the RENT of the items! We just freaking doubled dipped on the poor by exploiting their situation!"
That stuff isn't cool... Payday loans and stuff. They're just really, really bad news.
And as for the people who work there - get another job. It's not complicated. I had to leave a job because their practices were unethical, and my husband had to leave two!
Under pure capitalism, it would be acceptable to have completely unregulated ambulance operations. There would be no ambulance that would pick you up without a fee, paid on the spot, for as much as they chose to charge. The injured party would be totally at the mercy of whichever ambulance made it there first. No law would encourage the ambulance driver to pick you up, save your life, and trust you to pay later. Because your only choice is death or more severe injury, you would have to either pay or be left there to die.
Why isn't that allowed in capitalist societies? What is it about life or death situations that makes us bend capitalism towards socialism? As capitalists, do we have an economic justification?
I pay for my own healthcare right now, and pretty soon I'll be buying American insurance so I can see American doctors because their system is simply better.
But maybe I've broadened your point too far and gone a little off topic.
Three years later I was terminated from RAC and now I am stuck making only $17,000.
Here is the article: http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2009/09/new-study-finds-45000-deaths-annually-linked-to-lack-of-health-coverage/
Sorry I don't know why it quoted B5C, I meant to write a reply to him but never finished it. I'm not sure why it combined both of these into one post.
if not then you are in trouble. "
To add insult to injury, if you do have the 'good' stuff of insurance,
you are in trouble. Because of my job, I have top of the line insurance
here in good old USA, and as soon as the HMO's see my card, they light
up, and try to make everyone in my family sick. lololololol
My experience. Pills, sick notes, tests, teatments, you name it, they try to give
it to me. I can never have intelligent conversations about the medical/
science of my body because the Dr's are looking at me like the next
lottery ticket. Some have said it out loud, in fact.
They are constantly trying to sell me 'services' that people need.
Breaks my heart, sometimes.
Canada is the worst because there isn't an option for private healthcare even if you want it - why we'll be getting US insurance.
As I hope my opening copy and paste shows I'm not really enamored with our current capitalist system either. To me the true path forward is a mixed economy, adhering to one ideology or another doesn't work. The current problem with a mixed economy is that conditions are always changing and therefore require an adaptive regulation and taxation strategy. With the current state of politics that really isn't possible.
Personally I'm kind of done with most political and policy disscussion until the political process can correct itself, the only things that I put my mental energy into nowdays are issues of good governance and campaign financing.
Regarding HHDL's interest in Marxism. He generally makes it clear that while supporting the general philosophy he rejects the notion of class warfare and violent revolution.
In short nothing is perfect and Samsara is difficult and If you want to make a temporary political difference it must be infused with wisdom and compassion for your nation.