This post has been de-listed
It is no longer included in search results and normal feeds (front page, hot posts, subreddit posts, etc). It remains visible only via the author's post history.
While I agree consumerist society and culture are bad, and if I remember The Capital correctly, a commodity is basically a use-value thing that is used for trade (or, if you search on google, production of something to be sold on the market). But while without money, stuff would still be sold, though with labour.
With that, why is marxism in general against commodity production, and why is that used to bash against current socialist experiments such as Vietnam, Laos or Cuba?
Sorry for wrong sub, can't ask on r/communism because I am banned there
Subreddit
Post Details
- Posted
- 2 years ago
- Reddit URL
- View post on reddit.com
- External URL
- reddit.com/r/DebateCommu...