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Polcompball Wiki
Revision as of 03:29, 9 December 2023 by HeredyBall (talk | contribs)
This is a port from my official page from PCBA so it is likely to miss some content.



Self Insert
"People can really believe anything these days!" - Ismism

This page is meant to represent HeredyBall's political views. Please do not make any major edits without their permission.

Infrequently updated
"S l o w c h a n g e i s t h e b e s t c h a n g e !" - Decelerationism
This page is not frequently updated and the creator doesn't have time to do changes, or might do them later or the creator is just lazy.



Heredism is the self-insert of Template:HeredyBall. It is economically Mutualist with theories coming from Frankfurt School's members and Neo-Marxists, civically Libertarian, culturally Revolutionary Progressist with Socialists and Left-Illegalists praxis. It places the ideology in the File:LibFarLeft.png Libertarian, Far Left side of the compass.

Icon things : ////File:AnAg-2.png

Beliefs

List of Ideologies

Economics

  • Mutualism
    • Classical Liberalism
    • Ricardian Socialism
    • Localism
  • File:AnAg-2.png Agrarian Anarchism
    • Agrarian Socialism
    • Gift Economy
  • Self Sufficiency

Diplomacy

Government

  • Direct Democracy

Technology

  • Technoprimitivism
  • Technogaianism


Culture

  • Eco-Anarchism
  • Queer-Anarchism
  • Egalitarianism
  • Secular Satanism
    • Anti-Clerical

Unsure / to an extend

  • Anarcho-Individualism
  • Left Wing Market Anarchism
  • Egoism

Influences

Note : Every of these influential individuals shaped my thoughts but that doesn't mean I agree with them

  • Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677)
  • Adam Smith (1723-1790)
  • John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)
  • Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
  • Karl Marx (1818-1883)
  • Friedrich Engels (1820-1895)
  • Peter Kropotkin (1842-1921)
  • Emma Goldman (1869-1940)
  • Vladimir Lenin (1870-1924)
  • Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919)
  • John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946)
  • Friedrich Hayek (1899-1992)
  • File:Frescoismf.png Jacque Fresco (1916-2017)
  • Murray Bookchin (1921-2006)
  • Michel Foucault (1926-1984)
  • Fidel Castro (1926-2016)
  • File:Bourdieu.png Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002)
  • Thomas Sankara (1949-1987)
  • Jean-Luc Mélenchon (1951-)

On the Actual Situation

Content : Capitalism, File:Oligopoly.png Oligopolies, Imperialism

In a capitalist structure, power dynamics are shaped by the ownership and control of the means of production.

The bourgeoisie, as owners of capital and productive resources, control the economic forces that drive society. This ownership allows them to accumulate wealth and exert influence over the production and distribution of goods and services. They are in possession of tools that is lend to the working class in order to make money in exchange of a wage.

The bourgoisie, as employers, extract surplus value from the labor of the working class. This exploitation contributes to the accumulation of capital and the perpetuation of class distinctions.

The concept of private property, central to capitalist structures, empowers the bourgeoisie to accumulate and pass down wealth through generations. This concentration of property contributes to the perpetuation of social and economic inequalities.

These concepts are the economical structure of capitalism, called the base. The economic base is foundational, shaping and influencing the development of the superstructure.

The superstructure is the influence of the bourgoisie to all non-economic institutions such as government, media, and education. Through lobbying, campaign financing, and other mechanisms, they shape policies that often favor their economic interests, contributing to the maintenance of their power.[3]

This also create an ideological hegemony where the ruling class shapes perceptions and acceptance of the existing economic system. File:SlaveEconomy.png Exploitation is now seen as a norm because education and cultural values emphatize on hard work, loyalty to employers, and the acceptance of authority.

This base and superstructure model is however not complete, as they can't fully explain all of society. There are other forms of oppression of social categories such as race, gender, and sexuality. Because of that, the base-superstructure model is not determinist.

On a global scale, the bourgeoisie extends its influence through multinational corporations and imperialistic practices. Exploitation of resources and cheap labor in other regions contributes to the perpetuation of global economic inequalities and environmental degradation.

File:Oligopoly.png Oligopolistic structures often emerge as a result of mergers, acquisitions, and the global expansion of corporations seeking to dominate markets on an international scale. This leads to less competition, less innovation and more stable prices in order to avoid price wars that could erode their profits.

What is Liberty ?

Individuals generally seek liberty and the pursuit of happiness but there are many perspectives on what constitutes true freedom :

  • Capitalists view economic liberty as a way to fulfill one's desire. They see the ability to own, use and trade money without authority in the market as essential to individual freedom.
  • Marxists view freedom when a society is classless, moneyless and stateless. This way there is no exploitation of one self to another.
  • Mutualists view freedom as voluntary cooperation among individuals. It oppose hierarchical structures like a state and *usually* promote a decentralized free-market.

Why Mutualism ?

Fighting the Bourgeoisie

MISC

How to Draw

  1. Make a dark grey ball
  2. Add the orange symbol (hammer and arrows) and stars of various sizes

Personality

Like his creator Template:HeredyBall, Heredism love to read other political ideas. He's not a fan of post-leftists, anarchists and egoists unless they have common sense. He love Monster Drinks, talking about random stuff, going to the gym and focusing on a thing (a game or a book for example) until it's fully done.

Ideology Test

Redoing this after I finish my page so fck you

Relationships

Admirable

Somewhat agree somewhat disagree

Life is roblox

You can add an ideology if you think it works well

Friends

Ok

  • Nationalism - Liking your nation is great but you're too fanatic and racist.
  • Conservatism - Stability can come with changes, you're a bit old !
  • Libertarianism - I don't believe you will go far without regulation however individual freedom is really good.
  • Protectionism - Protecting your people doesn't mean closing entierely the market for them.
  • Capitalism - Wanting wealth is a great goal but I don't like the concentration of it.

Enemies

  • Fascism - The absolute opposite of my values. Authoritarianism, promotion of inequality, and suppression of individual liberties ? Like bro c'mon.
  • Racial Nationalism - Racist scumbag. Also my uncle.
  • Oligarchy - Society can have a hierarchical system as long as if they are not privileged.
  • Corporatocracy - REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE !!!
  • Plutocracy - The government should be run by competent people, not the wealthy.

Who do I remind you of ?

Adding List

Comments

Reading list

Read

  • Art of War - Sun Tzu
  • Yuval Noah Harari
    • Sapiens
    • Homo Deus
  • Utilitarianism - John Stuart Mill
  • A Quick-and-Dirty Introduction to Accelerationism - Nick Land
  • Marxist Theory and Revolutionary Tactics - Anton Pannekoek

Reading

  • The Wealth of Nations - Adam Smith
    • Book I

Planning (in order)

The basics

  1. The Wealth of Nations - Adam Smith
    1. Book II
    2. Book III
    3. Book IV
    4. Book V
  2. On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation - David Ricardo
  3. Critique of the Gotha Programme
  4. Principle of Communism - Friendrich Engels
  5. The Communist Manifesto - Karl Marx and Friendrich Engels
  6. Socialism: Utopian and Scientific - Friendrich Engels
  7. Preface to a Contribution to a Critique of Political Economy - Karl Marx
  8. Wage, Labor and Capital - Karl Marx
  9. Value, Price and Profit - Karl Marx
  10. What is Authority - Mikhail Bakunin
  11. On Authority - Friendrich Engels

Antithesis

  1. The Road to Serfdom - Friedrich Hayek
  2. The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism - Friedrich Hayek
  3. The Virtue of Selfishness - Ayn Rand
  4. Atlas Shrugged - Ayn Rand

In Depth Communism and Left-Communism

  1. The State and Revolution - Vladimir Lenin
  2. Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism - Vladimir Lenin
  3. What Is to Be Done? - Vladimir Lenin
  4. The Accumulation of Capital - Rosa Luxemburg
  5. State and Revolution - Rosa Luxemburg
  6. Reform or Revolution - Rosa Luxemburg
  7. The Mass Strike - Rosa Luxemburg
  8. Workers' Councils - Anton Pannekoek
  9. The Philosophy of Marx - Etienne Balibar
  10. Theories of Surplus Value - Karl Marx
  11. Society of Spectacle - Guy Debord
  12. The Revolution of Everyday Life - Raoul Vaneigem

On Anarcho-Communism

  1. The Conquest of Bread - Peter Kropotkin
  2. Anarchism and Other Essays - Emma Goldman
  3. The Ecology of Freedom - Murray Bookchin
  4. Communalism: A Liberatory Alternative - Murray Bookchin
  5. The Abolition of Work - Bob Black
  6. Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work - Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams
  7. Fully Automated Luxury Communism - Aaron Bastani
  8. Post-Scarcity Anarchism - Murray Bookchin

JAW's Present

  1. Principles of Sociology - Herbert Spencer
  2. The Triumph of Conservatism: A Reinterpretation of American History, 1900–1916 - Gabriel Kolko
  3. File:Anmoncap.png Anarcho-NRx: A Case For Neo Reactionary Anarcho-Monarchism - Stateless Sovereign
  4. We have Socialism - Milton Friedman
  5. File:GeoAust.png The Business Cycle: A Geo-Austrian synthesis - Fred Folvary
  1. Sabotage, Squatting, Hacking, Guerrilla Tactics...
  2. Examples : Yugoslavia, Burkina Faso, Cuba...
  3. One example of a policy that is often viewed as being in favor of capitalist economic interests is tax cuts for corporations.