No, I’m saying that socialism requires worker participation in running the economy because that’s what happems when you have a publicly run economy. The party cannot be considered the same as capitalists, because this is an entirely different economic structure. Roland Boer’s Socialism in Power: On the History and Theory of Socialist Governance helps explain how democracy works within socialism.
You’re again looking at particular similarities, ie capitalists have power in capitalism and the communist party has some degree of power in socialism, while ignoring the economic foundations that each relies on and their innumerable qualitative differences. The communist party cannot “use the same ticks that capitalists use now to manipulate the public and answer only to themselves,” because socialism and capitalism are entirely different modes of production. You haven’t explained how, just equated both by virtue of having some degree of authority.
No, I’m saying that socialism requires worker participation in running the economy because that’s what happems when you have a publicly run economy. The party cannot be considered the same as capitalists, because this is an entirely different economic structure. Roland Boer’s Socialism in Power: On the History and Theory of Socialist Governance helps explain how democracy works within socialism.
You’re again looking at particular similarities, ie capitalists have power in capitalism and the communist party has some degree of power in socialism, while ignoring the economic foundations that each relies on and their innumerable qualitative differences. The communist party cannot “use the same ticks that capitalists use now to manipulate the public and answer only to themselves,” because socialism and capitalism are entirely different modes of production. You haven’t explained how, just equated both by virtue of having some degree of authority.