♪alt13
Well-Known Member
Collectivism is a good example. Practically, communism turned into a party oligarchy and the root exploiting of state as an experiment for humanity reflected itself economically in that way in communist state of Russia. Collectivism could be a step, just like having a political party to protect the rights of proletarian class against the wealthy bourgeois, but obviously, it became just an illusion after Stalin, and weakness of human nature to power prevailed again.
Theoretically, socialism required the Workers' Party ending its historical function and get solved, collectivism turning into a natural understanding of the means of life that are not private properties, but means of a whole world's nation that has the knowledge to consume and reproduce them with a completely mutual, sci-fi'ly telepathic approach towards the means of living in the happiest way possible.
Then again obviously, it came down to just being a utopia. But socialist actions of mankind has made great benefits to the egalitarianization of the society as much as possible up until now, and it still lights a candle in the darkness of state's rule. Property could be a revolutionist action against the one-handed ruling of the state against society, but it could also simply mean that only the real holder of power who is the holder of property can balance or unbalance things up. So if the balancing effect of property is unbalanced, we're back to square **** once again with a fresh new governmental force that seeks for more property and power to exist.
The Anarchists of the 19th century were socialist. The communists were state socialists and they were collectivists. The anarchists had a(I think warranted) distrust of the state and collectivism. They favored the individual and mutualism instead. Mutualism is socialist it's just not communist. The anarchists argued for social ownership of the means of production as much as the communists they just did not think the state was the right way to achieve it.
I brought this up because ZCMI (Zions Cooperative Mercantile Institution) was a mutualist institution and not really a collectivist one. Nowadays it's a mall but when the mormons first came to Utah ZCMI was a great example of the power and desirability of mutualistic social institutions.