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4 votes
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United Methodist Church votes to maintain its opposition to same-sex marriage, gay clergy
21 votes -
Oh or zero? When the evolution of language clashes with linguistic purism
5 votes -
Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric, Cardinal George Pell, has been convicted of sexually abusing two choirboys while he was archbishop of Melbourne
17 votes -
Wild Bill Hickok: He Claimed He Killed 100s, But His Fatalities Were Closer To 10
6 votes -
How Spanish got its ñ - the story behind that "n with a tilde"
5 votes -
Atheists and non-believers could soon receive civil rights protections under Portland law
18 votes -
Who is really a socialist?
10 votes -
Wikipedia editors have been fighting over corn for at least a decade
20 votes -
Personal vs. private property in Marxism
Consider three examples: I am a farmer. I have a piece of land that can grow just enough potatoes to feed me. I work this land, I gather potatoes, ad nauseam. I am a farmer, but this time I have...
Consider three examples:
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I am a farmer. I have a piece of land that can grow just enough potatoes to feed me. I work this land, I gather potatoes, ad nauseam.
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I am a farmer, but this time I have ten times the amount of land. I hire four workers and also work myself. Together we grow enough potatoes to feed all of us, and we also have a surplus. I sell this surplus potato for ¤5000. I am a greedy man, so I take ¤3000 for myself and give ¤500 to each of my workers.
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The situation is the same as in 2, but this time I am a just man. I share the money equally, so everyone including myself gets ¤1000.
It seems to me that in the first case the land can be considered personal property, since there is no exploitation and no surplus is generated. In the second example the land is clearly a piece of private property, because I use it to exploit other people, taking most of the profit for myself.
But what about the third example? On one hand, the profit is distributed equally, so there is technically no exploitation, right? On the other hand, I am alienated from the workers, because I still have the power to fire one of them (or all of them if I know I can replace them) or to distribute goods unfairly (even if I don't do that). What is the Marxist point of view here?
12 votes -
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American History Textbooks' Lies: Everything Your Teacher Got Wrong - Myths, Education (1995)
9 votes -
Tildes folks, are you learning another language or multilingual?
pretty straightforward ask. i have some basic, rusty Spanish (on and off learning) and a bit of Esperanto to my name (currently learning) but not much else eventually i want to speak French...
pretty straightforward ask. i have some basic, rusty Spanish (on and off learning) and a bit of Esperanto to my name (currently learning) but not much else
eventually i want to speak French conversationally since my boyfriend can and i think it'd be neat to converse with him in more than English, but that's a long term goal.
33 votes -
Our increasingly fascist public discourse
24 votes -
Revolutionary War fighting ended in 1781. The last shots exploded two months ago.
10 votes -
Are we on the road to civilization collapse?
31 votes -
The Metropolitan Museum will return prized gilded coffin after learning it was stolen
5 votes -
When it comes to learning a foreign language, we tend to think that children are the most adept. But that may not be the case – and there are added benefits to starting as an adult.
9 votes -
Noam Chomsky & Michel Foucault - On human nature
5 votes -
Confusion over medicine names threatens lives
5 votes -
Pope makes unprecedented move of defrocking ex-cardinal McCarrick over sex abuse
19 votes -
Teutoburg Forest 9 AD - Roman-Germanic wars
5 votes -
In 1939, 20,000 Americans rallied in New York’s Madison Square Garden to celebrate the rise of Nazism
16 votes -
Melbourne Archbishop enlists LGBTI faithful as church tries to reset
7 votes -
What is the difference between translation and interpreting?
6 votes -
The assassination of Fred Hampton
5 votes -
Why White people don't use White emoji: Does shame explain the disparity in the lesser use of light-skin-tone symbols in the US?
18 votes -
The overlooked history of African American skate culture
6 votes -
How the US has hidden its empire: The United States likes to think of itself as a republic, but it holds territories all over the world – the map you always see doesn’t tell the whole story.
12 votes -
Gossip was a powerful tool for the powerless in Ancient Greece
8 votes -
Chimpanzees’ gestural communication follows same laws as human language
3 votes -
Emoji don't mean what they used to - The pictorial language has moved away from ideography and toward illustration
23 votes -
The philosopher redefining equality
9 votes -
Conservative Christian group launches campaign against “Buddhist meditation” in public schools
32 votes -
Ardha Kumbha Mela starts with much fanfare; your guide to the mega event
5 votes -
The fatal ensnaring of Dan DePew
7 votes -
Sack of Constantinople 1204 - Fourth Crusade
8 votes -
Is ‘Huh?’ a universal word?
17 votes -
Seeking Utopia in Louisiana - The lost story of a group of socialists who built an extraordinary, but flawed, colony
9 votes -
There’s a vanishing resource we’re not talking about - humans are losing our cultural diversity even faster than we’re destroying the planet
27 votes -
Meet the guardian of grammar who wants to help you be a better writer
4 votes -
Words as feelings. A special class of vivid, textural words defy linguistic theory: could ‘ideophones’ unlock the secrets of humans’ first utterances?
11 votes -
Emmeline Pankhurst: The Suffragette who used militant tactics to win women the vote
7 votes -
Death and valor on a warship doomed by its own Navy - An investigation into the crash of the USS Fitzgerald
6 votes -
The rise of the swear nerds
13 votes -
Black mecca or most unequal US city: Will the real Atlanta please stand up?
7 votes -
God is not male or female, says Archbishop of Canterbury
9 votes -
UAE’s tolerance embraces faiths, runs up against politics
4 votes -
Eastern Front of WWII animated: 1943/44
5 votes -
Zela, Ruspina, & Thapsus (47 to 46 B.C.E.)
6 votes -
Let’s Talk: The hypocrisy of Bell Canada and mental health under capitalism
4 votes