Pantopia Reading Nook 📰🚩
Am I sending too much content (articles, essays, publications etc)?
Since around a third of voters feel like I'm sending too much stuff, I'll try to filter the content a bit more before sending it here (it will not be a huge change, consider it an adjustment). This week tho I've already planned to send some long videos, but then I'll stop for a while (2 long videos, one of which will be published today and a documentary next week). We'll see how it goes. Thank you for your feedback and have a good day ❤️
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Visualizing Bezos's wealth.
This is not the product of Bezos's hard work or meritocracy, but mainly of luck, reckless corporate practices, of owning various monopolies and the actual work of hundreds of thousands of people who are given the barest minimum just to survive.
source
This is not the product of Bezos's hard work or meritocracy, but mainly of luck, reckless corporate practices, of owning various monopolies and the actual work of hundreds of thousands of people who are given the barest minimum just to survive.
source
socialists like Richard Wolff have argued that we should redirect our attention away from the structure of the wider economy and to define socialism as a matter of workplace relations. Wolff tells us that socialism is “less a matter of state versus private workplaces, or state planning versus private markets, and more a matter of democratic versus autocratic workplace organization. A new economy based on worker co-ops will find its own democratic way of structuring relationships among co-ops and society as a whole.”
[I'm not sharing this articles because I necessarily agree with it, but I think it has some interesting takes]
https://jacobinmag.com/2020/05/planned-economy-public-ownership-corporate-management
[I'm not sharing this articles because I necessarily agree with it, but I think it has some interesting takes]
https://jacobinmag.com/2020/05/planned-economy-public-ownership-corporate-management
Jacobinmag
What Socialists Can Take From Corporate Strategic Management
How might we imagine a transition to a socialist economy? There are clues in unlikely places: the management practices of some private corporations, which have been developing planned economies in miniature.