> Don't forget the Apollo program and the space race was in response to a real existential threat. Once the threat lessoned the appetite for risk went down and other priorities took center stage.
Yes, there are various motives and pressures at play, but that doesn't change for private industry. And I worry about the core motive of the private industry: Profit. If a launch won't be profitable, why would it happen, no matter how much it benefits humanity?
I worry about the profitiziation of space. I don't think profitization has done good things to the internet, media, and technology in general.
Profit is exactly how we make sure individual and societal interests are aligned. Otherwise, how do we know what "benefits humanity"? Who decides? One says "let's feed the poor". Another "let's explore space". Yet another "let's build an AI". Who decides the allocation?
During Cold War, everything USSR did here in the Eastern Block was "for the benefit of all mankind". We all know what a crock of BS that was...
> Profit is exactly how we make sure individual and societal interests are aligned.
That's interesting, I disagree, but I'm curious why you think so? Slavery is extremely profitable, the only reason it doesn't happen is because it is illegal - a distinctly unprofitable decision made and enforced by a government for the sole purpose of it's better for mankind. Arguably all regulation under capitalism fulfills this purpose, outside of those designed to form regulatory capture. If what you say is true, wouldn't we be able to just remove all law and let the divine will of profit determine our every action? Or, where do you see the line?
> Otherwise, how do we know what "benefits humanity"? Who decides? One says "let's feed the poor". Another "let's explore space". Yet another "let's build an AI". Who decides the allocation?
You genuinely feel that profit motive will allocate this better than the normal way of "who decides," that being debates and appeals to rationality and ethics? What profit is there to be gained from feeding the poor? The most profitable thing to do is to collude to ensure there is a class of people who are one paycheck from a missed meal or missed rent, therefore you can pay them as little as possible and they have to accept that because they can't afford to spend the time to look for a new job. I just don't see how profit could possibly align with actual human ethics. Sometimes, certainly, but rarely.
> During Cold War, everything USSR did here in the Eastern Block was "for the benefit of all mankind".
What do you mean? Where does that statement come from? I'm searching for uses by USSR fokls but the most definitive historical usage I can find is from a US navy officer saying of the nuclear weapons, "We are testing these bombs for the good of mankind." Hm, I agree, that is a crock, but I'm not sure what that has to do with the USSR or why you brought it up. The USSR was a state capitalist nation, it suffered similar issues with profit motive, though exacerbated by a centrally planned economy. Hence the holomdor: caused partially by the purging of wheat fields in Ukraine so as to plant cash crops instead to fund Stalin's feverish mega-projects. That's the heart of my argument: profit almost never puts the needs of humans first.
Edit: IIRC "for all mankind" is also inscribed... yes, on the moon, by the USA lol. "We came in peace for all mankind."
Because human nature is inherently selfish. The great majority of people generally tend to do stuff that benefits them and their close ones. Capitalism recognizes that and realizes that the great majority of value created by self-interested people is captured by the society in form of innovation, creation of products and services, jobs and taxes.
Societies that reject this truth (communism) tend to starve since nobody does anything anymore and everybody tries to steal from the State.
> Slavery is extremely profitable
This is false at a society level. In the USA for example slavery was abolished when the industrialized North won the war thanks to its better industrial and economic performance. Turns out a society of self-interested free individuals is much more profitable and successful than reluctant slaves in chains. As soon as countries realized it - they abolished slavery.
> where do you see the line?
Some rules are essential for a rule-of-law society (like contract law, judiciary, police, externality taxation, etc), others are well intended but imply costs and time which adds up (see how housing is unaffordable due due to regulations making it impossible to build) and finally some are frivolous and should be avoided at all costs (EU's USBC charging ports come to mind).
> You genuinely feel that profit motive will allocate this better
Absolutely. Read up on how markets work and how they they are only mechanism we know for solving the pricing (valuation) and resource allocation problem.
> rationality and ethics?
The wallet always hits above. No starving person is ethical. During my life under communism I saw the worst human abuse imaginable all from people who in theory had no profit motive. Human nature is human nature.
> What profit is there to be gained from feeding the poor?
Are you kidding? Why do you think all those food companies exist if not for profit? In capitalism there is a glut of choice to the end that obesity is a big problem. In communism we kept looking hungry at empty shelves.
> I just don't see how profit could possibly align with actual human ethics.
This is getting too much to explain for me. I recommend reading up on free markets. Watch Milton Friedman's series, it's free on YouTube and it explains things extremely logical and much better than I ever could.
Who knows? They had to pretend some higher purpose to cover the fact that we were cold and staving. We knew how much better things were under capitalism so instead of denying it they went for heroics. No food but the state built ICBMs? It was "for world peace". No heating or A/C but with a space program? "For the betterment of all mankind". All kinds of pharaonic projects, monstruous brutalist monuments dedicated to our leaders were justified that way. We didn't believe them of course, but they just had to lie.
Watch some Cold War era movies or documentaries if you want to understand how it really was. I am sure you can find a bunch on YouTube. I can't recommend any, the memories are too painful for me.
> USSR was a state capitalist nation
So "war is peace, freedom is slavery" then. Communists always had this funny habit of trying to rename things, to pretend they were somethin else, trying to muddle the waters. Orwell saw right through them. Us that lived their horrors too. But I am not interested in discussing dialectics. The end result of all communist experiments was starvation, no matter how you want to call them.
> This is getting too much to explain for me. I recommend reading up on free markets.
I didn't mean to tire you, I have read a great many things on this subject over the decades, it's how I got to be how I am now (I wasn't always a dirty anticapitalist). At this point I'm less interested in debating the pillars of ideologies and more interested in individuals and why they believe what they do, and conversation around that.
Thanks for the video recommendation, I'll check it out. Please don't feel the need to continue, I'm just going to go through your post and make some notes mostly for myself, it helps me organize my thoughts and consider my own ideas.
> Because human nature is inherently selfish
I heard this all the time but my every life experience speaks against this. Have you ever been in a natural disaster? If our nature is selfishness, why then are we our most selfless when everything but our nature is stripped away? Others have noticed this, I recommend "A Paradise Built in Hell" by Rebecca Solnit.
> The great majority of people generally tend to do stuff that benefits them and their close ones. Capitalism recognizes that and realizes that the great majority of value created by self-interested people is captured by the society in form of innovation, creation of products and services, jobs and taxes.
Is that truly what capitalism does? Is there a possibility that a capitalist society instead repeatedly tells people to fear their selfish neighbor, and "get yours" before they do? In particular, does it really disperse selfish behavior to the benefit of all? I'm particularly skeptical of this point because while I agree that capitalism rewards selfish behavior, the very existence of billionaires seems to indicate that the "great majority of value" is not "captured by society" at all. If it were, I feel we would have fed our hungry children before we had launched a tesla car into space. At the very minimum, capitalism is a poor allocator of this great majority of value.
> Societies that reject this truth (communism) tend to starve since nobody does anything anymore and everybody tries to steal from the State.
Some semi-socialists states didn't starve, and one of them (Cuba) has better healthcare outcomes than the most powerful capitalist state on earth (the USA), though there are many other issues with its society of course. Furthermore, I can point you to many inherently anarchistic, share-and-share alike communities that aren't starving. In my experience this is because people love doing things for many reasons, and profit is often the very last reason. It's not just me saying this, I was taught this time and time again from my sales leaders: there's a reason a sales contest prize is a car and not a cash prize. Money is just not a good motivator for most people.
> This is false at a society level. In the USA for example slavery was abolished when the industrialized North won the war thanks to its better industrial and economic performance.
Well it certainly had better industrial performance, but even afterwards near-equivalent slavery was maintained in the South for quite some time. Where they couldn't pay no wages, they paid almost none. Then there was the industrial era upgrade in the form of Company Towns. Why did those go away? Because they also weren't profitable?
> Turns out a society of self-interested free individuals is much more profitable and successful than reluctant slaves in chains.
I argue that the chains haven't really been cast off. Though slavery was made illegal, black americans still worked fields at penny wages, and their cheap labor class was maintained through racist law. Even today the Americans maintain a slave labor pool in their prisons. So the richest country on earth still seems to think it's quite profitable.
> Some rules are essential for a rule-of-law society (like contract law, judiciary, police, externality taxation, etc), others are well intended but imply costs and time which adds up (see how housing is unaffordable due due to regulations making it impossible to build)
> Some rules are essential for a rule-of-law society (like contract law, judiciary, police, externality taxation, etc), others are well intended but imply costs and time which adds up (see how housing is unaffordable due due to regulations making it impossible to build)
This is interesting to me because one of the largest issues I've found with modern capitalist society is that these laws ostensibly maintain "rule of law" but in practice seem to maintain class boundaries. A great example is in most capitalist nations, wage theft in the form of stolen time, missed paychecks, etc, outstrips retail theft losses by orders of magnitude. And yet the society spends a great deal of money and time on police and judiciary efforts to prosecute one and not the other. I don't see how these "essential" laws are doing anything useful.
> Absolutely. Read up on how markets work and how they they are only mechanism we know for solving the pricing (valuation) and resource allocation problem.
Hmm, I have read quite a bit on the subject, but I'm always open to more suggestions. Regarding resource allocation, I mean, I can allocate resources from farm to table for my home without ever considering "value" or "price." Perhaps I've exchanged the calorie for the dollar, though!
> The wallet always hits above. No starving person is ethical. During my life under communism I saw the worst human abuse imaginable all from people who in theory had no profit motive. Human nature is human nature.
I'd like to learn more about this if you're willing to share. Where were you living, and what sort of things did you see?
> Are you kidding? Why do you think all those food companies exist if not for profit?
But... the poor can't pay for food lol.
> In capitalism there is a glut of choice to the end that obesity is a big problem.
I believe a lot of the obesity issues in America in particular are also due to food deserts and malnutrition. However, doesn't this just further demonstrate that profit is poorly determining what is good for people? It seems there's more money to be made by showing people commercials for food that's mostly just corn (one of the cheapest vegetables to grow) in various forms, getting them addicted from a young age, and continuing to feed them corn throughout their lives as they grow obese from malnutrition.
> In communism we kept looking hungry at empty shelves.
If you mean the USSR I do still hold to the theory that this was less an issue with the idea of resource allocation without profit at the heart and more an issue with a centrally planned economy. I don't support the idea of communist centrally planned economies, the failure modes are too obvious.
> Orwell saw right through them
Orwell is a great man, and I think it's good you bring him up, because he's an example of a marxist who was disgusted with general communist approval of a monster like Stalin. His quote: "One could not have a better example of the moral and emotional shallowness of our time, than the fact that we are now all more or less pro Stalin. This disgusting murderer is temporarily on our side, and so the purges, etc., are suddenly forgotten." I know it's common to doubt his leftist tendencies, but I feel it's undeniable: "Every line of serious work that I have written since 1936 has been written directly or indirectly against totalitarianism and for democratic socialism as I understand it."
I wasn't trying to be cute with my state capitalist comment, and I don't want to dredge up painful memories, I was merely stating what I believe to be the generally agreed upon understanding of the USSR economy. Communism may not be a popular idea but it is relatively well defined by its theorists: no state, no currency, no class, and workers owning the means of production. It sounds that you witnessed first hand that of course none of this was true in the USSR. I would in fact be quite happy to call the "no state, no currency, no class, and workers owning the means of production" ideology something other than communism at this point, too much dialectic debate has been fought around both that word and "socialism."
The litmus test for all these funny ideas about human nature, societies and economy is the reality. Remember: communist countries during the Cold War had machine guns on the border turned inwards so people couldn’t leave. We were trying to vote with our feet, to escape the “utopia” being pushed down our throats…
Do you know of a communists society that works? Go ahead, live there for a while and tell us how it is. There are a few “experiments” running in the world right now. Cuba, Venezuela, North Korea, even China. What I know is that when I was in Cuba people were asking me how we got rid of communism. They were still trying to swim/float to the USA instead of appreciating their excellent healthcare. When my country (Eastern Europe, not USSR) made the switch to capitalism we got the “privilege” to experience the difference live and it was night and day: we (slowly) transitioned from fear, cold and starvation to full shelves, city breaks and fat people.
I am not aware of any successful communist society but feel free to provide examples.
Yes, there are various motives and pressures at play, but that doesn't change for private industry. And I worry about the core motive of the private industry: Profit. If a launch won't be profitable, why would it happen, no matter how much it benefits humanity?
I worry about the profitiziation of space. I don't think profitization has done good things to the internet, media, and technology in general.