I stumbled on this debate that he was in. All he says the entire time is:
"We've totes learned from all of the socialist/communist failures of the past!"
"Bosses are literally the worst!"
"People are so mean to Marxists and totes don't understand us!"
It's funny because he keeps going back to how horrible bosses are and that everything should be employee owned. It's basically his only point. And every time he does his opponent just keeps pointing out that people are free to start/work for an employee owned companies in a capitalist system. At one point, after harping about how there shouldn't be bosses who tell you what to do and every action of the company should be decided democratically, he admits that there would still be people in managerial roles in his socialist utopia.
Even he doesn't believe he has anything substantial to say. That's why he talks in that put on angry voice. He can't convey rationally how evil capitalism is, so he's forced to try to convey it emotionally.
Everyone who has ever been in a meeting with more than one person knows that it's a completely horrible idea to decide the direction of a company democratically, let alone the minutae of everyday-work.
I stumbled on this debate that he was in. All he says the entire time is:
"We've totes learned from all of the socialist/communist failures of the past!"
"Bosses are literally the worst!"
"People are so mean to Marxists and totes don't understand us!"
It's funny because he keeps going back to how horrible bosses are and that everything should be employee owned. It's basically his only point. And every time he does his opponent just keeps pointing out that people are free to start/work for an employee owned companies in a capitalist system. At one point, after harping about how there shouldn't be bosses who tell you what to do and every action of the company should be decided democratically, he admits that there would still be people in managerial roles in his socialist utopia.
Even he doesn't believe he has anything substantial to say. That's why he talks in that put on angry voice. He can't convey rationally how evil capitalism is, so he's forced to try to convey it emotionally.
Everyone who has ever been in a meeting with more than one person knows that it's a completely horrible idea to decide the direction of a company democratically, let alone the minutae of everyday-work.