You gotta be f**** kidding me.
Oh dear, it appears someone got upset.
That a person old enough to know how the computer keyboard works thinks that lack of computers lead to downfall of communism.
I have said no such thing. The only thing is said was that economic inefficiency was a huge problem of any communistic system, and the the innovation of information technology should allow this to be resolved. For one, updating your economic plans more than once in the 5 years should be beneficial.
might be interested in seeing the USSR of all things back?
Interesting =/= Good
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_you_live_in_interesting_timesI have no faith in humans whatsoever, and it still too much and I outright refuse to believe that. Tell me that some troll hacked your account.
Definitively upset.
Also, actually, you got the automation part pretty much wrong way. In communism, the work is the ultimate good, and everybody should work because work is good.
Nope, not really. The central thing to the Communistic system is the common ownership of the means of production, and if those common means of production produce on their own, the system works just as well. In fact, the elimination of the need to work is pretty central to the communistic idea
The USSR just instituted the work is good propaganda because at said time, there was no such automation, and it's hard to be a superpower without an economy.
Communism (from Latin communis – common, universal) is a socioeconomic system structured upon common ownership of the means of production and characterized by the absence of social classes, money,[1][2] and the state; as well as a social, political and economic ideology and movement that aims to establish this social order
In capitalism, if you can get away with not working (because, for example, your spouse earns enough money), hey, good for you! So yeah, lack of work is problematic with communistic society, but not as much of a problem in capitalism.
You're looking at this from the wrong side. What we're facing with increasing automation is not a decrease in the Supply of workforce (ie, people not wanting to work) but a decrease in the demand for work.
In a communist system, this has no trouble. People are still paid by the state(or by their common ownership), social services keep running, all that stuff.
A capitalist system will collapse. An excess of labor will result, automatically, in average wages going down, due to the laws of supply and demand. This results in greater poverty, which reduces demand for goods, which further reduces demand for labor. This negative feedback loop continues for some time, until you enter either social turmoil, or transit to a neo-feudal system where you have a larger group of unemployed poor plebs living of charity from the rich, and a rich group who owns the means of production.
So I think I might need to adjust my statement. While it would certainly be interesting to see the USSR return, pure communism would be more interesting.