Escape from Capitalism: Difference between revisions
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*Understanding them holds | |||
emancipatory value. | |||
*However, about one-third of the food produced (1.3 | *However, about one-third of the food produced (1.3 | ||
billion tons, with an approximate value of $1 trillion) goes to waste every year | billion tons, with an approximate value of $1 trillion) goes to waste every year | ||
Revision as of 09:47, 24 March 2026
Clara Mattai
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9M_dq_0ljsc
Notes
- Understanding them holds
emancipatory value.
- However, about one-third of the food produced (1.3
billion tons, with an approximate value of $1 trillion) goes to waste every year because it remains unsold and is thrown away.
- The spectacle of strongman
personalities distracts us from the fact that their policies are in perfect continuity with capitalism and its austerity logic.
- I want to clarify the
mechanisms that oppress us and identify the freedoms for which we must fight.
- Instead, I want to clarify that classist economic decisions
are the basis of the major problems afflicting our time.
- most people have no
alternative but to sell their ability to work for a wage and inevitably be paid less than the value they produce.
- What is the first
step in this direction? It is a radical change of perspective. There is nothing more political than the lens through which we view the world. Only if we learn to look at the world differently can we act differently.
- central banks,
which began removing key policy decisions from democratic scrutiny.
- the profits of saver-entrepreneurs are the result
of their virtuous behavior, enabling them to sign workers’ paychecks, which sounds good. The message is so persuasive that today almost everyone has internalized it: if we try hard enough, each of us can become a rich investor