Late stage capitalism just means late stage fiat doesn’t it, since all the money flooding in is debt and QE?
Comment on Datacenters in space are a terrible, horrible, no good idea.
Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 1 week ago
Of course they are, same with undersea data centers (for different reasons).
But it doesn’t matter. In the late-stage capitalism we find ourselves in, you don’t need a real product, nor a promising prototype. You don’t even need a good idea, you just need the promise that you’ll come up with a good idea soon. That’s enough to get the investors drooling, the shareholders hyped, and the gullible idiots engaged.
And you only have to maintain that long enough to pay yourself and your insiders some fat checks. Then when inevitably, reality barges in and people start to realize it was all bullshit and pipe dreams, you’ve already cashed out, and if you’re PR team is good, the media and your sycophantic fans will praise you as a visionary who was simply, “ahead of their time.” And you can go on to scam more people.
It’s basically Patreon scams but with billions of dollars.
maplesaga@lemmy.world 1 week ago
JcbAzPx@lemmy.world 1 week ago
You can have late stage capitalism with any monetary system. Though relying on inherent value tends to leave poor people in much worse conditions much more quickly.
maplesaga@lemmy.world 1 week ago
If anything it seems more like crony capitalism, when the CPI is understated and all investments are excluded it drives down borrowing rates and bond yields, which raises stock values and provides a stream of revenue with those with the largest access to the most credit. People like Elon Musk who avoid paying taxes by borrowing cheap debt, which who would lend him when his collateral is Tesla stock, which is entirely built on speculation and pumps to new all time highs whenever QE is unloaded into the market.
Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml 1 week ago
Everything you described falls under the umbrella of Capitalism.
Capitalism will always result in this sort of devolution, because it rewards this sort of behavior.
Constant GDP growth fuels capitalist enterprises because valuations go up and Capital is expanded. That incentivizes governments to make access to Capital easier and regulations on growth looser, which the firms themselves favor in terms of lower taxes, cheaper loans, larger capital markets, etc.
How many business leaders lobby, vote, and push for higher general taxes, stronger labor rights, stricter regulations, and more expensive loans?
The only time you’ll see them doing any of those things, is when it directly hurts one of their major competitors.
This makes perfect sense within a Capitalist framework, because private ownership of the means of production and increasing profitability are literally the core of Capitalism. So of course Capitalists will always tend towards what makes the most money.
All the worst traits of modern Capitalism, (Everything is a subscription, planned obsolescence, shrinkflation, extreme litigiousness over patents and copyrights, ads in everything, predatory pricing & monetization) are the logical result of a Capitalist system.
Murdoc@sh.itjust.works 1 week ago
Interesting. So the “post-truth era” isn’t just for the masses, but the rich as well, as they cannibalise each other.