You are talking about Marxism, I think.Speaker to Animals wrote:Hanarchy Montanarchy wrote:A farm co-op is an example. Producers agree to split profits from selling their produce, while agreeing not to undercut each other. By collaborating in this way they hope to make more by cutting out middle men and rent seekers at the same time.C-Mag wrote:
Can you cite any examples ?
This is the socialist version of a farmers' market.
Of course, it is often 'worse' for the consumer, so some one is having their liberty curtailed, if I include access to cheap produce as a liberty, but this is a conflict between the liberties of producers and consumers, not a devaluing of Liberty as an abstract idea.
And, @Hash, I have it on good authority from the anti-bolshevik hero, Smitty, himself, on public display on this very forum, that I am not a socialist, just a terrible liberal. So, not 'only' socialists argue that socialism and liberty aren't in conflict.
I am all for voluntary collectives. If you want to do open source projects, great. If you want to join a farm coop, great.
That's not really what we are talking about here either.
I took the OP to be talking about socialism more broadly, for which I provided an alternative definition, which I think includes voluntary collectives.
Now, if you want to talk about specific forms of government, or how to manage the needs of individuals within a voluntary collective, then that is a little more dicey.