• Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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    12 hours ago

    I’m a Marxist-Leninist, I’m committed to building socialism in the real world, not trying to come up with a hypothetical scenario where management is superfluous. Factories work at the scale of hundreds to thousands, not 4 people living an idyllic life, and these factories have massive supply chains ingoing and outgoing. Management becomes necessary at scales like these, because coordination at such scales cannot be all horizontal.

        • cassandrafatigue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 hours ago

          centralized

          Read the damn book. Sometimes it is in fact necessary to read more than a sentence from wikipedia to understand a new idea. This one’s worth it.

          Edit: nvm. The Wikipedia initial blurb also mentions devolving decision making in the main thing. Didn’t even read that much.

          • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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            2 hours ago

            It was a centralized system of bottom-up reporting and top-down management, it was an experiment in cybernetics first pioneered by the soviets and most ambitiously by Allende in Chile. The top-down management aspect is part of what made it so successful. I have read up on theory, don’t worry.

              • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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                2 hours ago

                Yes, I have. I am not contradicting it, information was sent to the central level and decisions sent back based on those inputs, typically aided by cybernetic algorithms.

                Information from the field would be fed into statistical modeling software (Cyberstride) that would monitor production indicators, such as raw material supplies or high rates of worker absenteeism. It alerted workers in near real time. If parameters fell significantly outside acceptable ranges, it notified the central government. The information would also be input into economic simulation software (CHECO, for CHilean ECOnomic simulator). The government could use this to forecast the possible outcome of economic decisions. Finally, a sophisticated operations room (Opsroom) would provide a space where managers could see relevant economic data. They would formulate feasible responses to emergencies and transmit advice and directives to enterprises and factories in alarm situations by using the telex network.

                Central planning.

                • cassandrafatigue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  1 hour ago

                  I wasn’t actually the one advocating specifically that program, and I’m not interested in arguing a Wikipedia article with somebody who’s never actually read the literature and understands none of the underlying concepts.

                  You’re reading to confirm what you believe, looking for key words, not to acquire new information. Thats how Hitler said to read in his book. I urge you to better reading material.

                  If you’re too addled by the 20s to make it through a doorstopper pike 'brain of the firm’¹ there was a podcast called ‘general intellect unit’ where a couple Marxists explored the concepts and went over the key points. Listen to most of that at minimum.

                  ¹not a dig at you; I probably couldn’t at this point. Shit’s fucked. Kind of afraid to check.

                  • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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                    23 minutes ago

                    I’m well aware already, I’ve read about cybernetics, I haven’t read Brain of the Firm specifically but have done other reading on the subject, including how to calculate prices, and how to move beyond price. I don’t just read to confirm what I believe, I became a Marxist-Leninist after changing my mind from an anarchist because I read to challenge my existing understanding and deepen it. You insult me with no actual knowledge of me, nor what I’ve read. It’s shallow.

        • cassandrafatigue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 hours ago

          Tankies are like Christians; you’ve all read exactly one book¹, and decided that was enough and you know everything.

          ¹counting ‘capital’ as one, admittedly a much better one on every metric but entertainment value and metalness

        • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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          10 hours ago

          Nope, it was decentralized. Read up on the theory, dawg.

          If you call that system centralized, then most anarchists want to establish a centralized system.

          • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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            2 hours ago

            It was a centralized system of bottom-up reporting and top-down management, it was an experiment in cybernetics first pioneered by the soviets and most ambitiously by Allende in Chile. The top-down management aspect is part of what made it so successful. I have read up on theory, don’t worry.

            As @[email protected] already replied to you:

            Each factory would send quantified indices of production processes such as raw material input, production output, number of absentees, etc. These indices would later feed a statistical analysis program that, running on a mainframe computer in Santiago, would make short-term predictions about the factories’ performance and suggest necessary adjustments, which, after discussion in an operations room, would be fed back to the factories. This process occurred at 4 levels: firm, branch, sector, and total.

    • cassandrafatigue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 hours ago

      factories are big and made of thousands of people and machines

      Sometimes. For some things. Not always. Especially for simpler products with fewer parts!

      A steel butt plug factory could convievably have a dozen or so employees and be perfectly fine, make lots of butt plugs. How many people seriously need to work on that? You’re either casting them or machining them, plus some finishing, maybe testing and packaging–and it’s a product that benefits from being fewer pieces. I just used butt plugs because it’s fun to say and ive seen sex toy factories and single piece metal thing factories, so it isn’t a complete ass pull when i think about how stuff is made.

      You seem obsessed with these ideas you have in your head, with no attention to reality. You’re being very idealist for someone who claims not to be.

      Again, you’re conceptualizing jobs=people. You’re shackled to capitalist abstractions and unable or unwilling to see past them. It’s incredibly frustrating because I have to restate every principle every time, and be really pedantic.

      • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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        2 hours ago

        No, your example is a hypothetical concocted specifically to imagine a case where management isn’t as useful. Even a small factory that needs less than a dozen people for a niche product needs complex supply chains, and moreover is an extreme minority of the total production and distribution. My point wasn’t that everyone needs a direct manager, my point is that management exists because it does solve problems when implemented correctly that horizontalism does not. This gets increasingly complex at larger scales.

        I’m not “shackled to capitalist abstractions,” you’re trying to make a point by describing a tiny portion of hypothetical production and trying to layer it over all of production and distribution. This is idealism.

        • cassandrafatigue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 hour ago

          I grew up watching ‘how its made’ while i did my homework, being babysat by my (pedo) uncle who was in industrial real estate, wandering around warehouses and factory floors¹ no sane responsible adult would have allowed a child near, and learned a non-zero amount of mechanical engineering. I am not a specialist, I do not have a degree in this, but this topic was one of my comfort foods as a kid, and kind of a special interest. I do have a real, if not comprehensive, knowledge base. I have been in factories where complex electronics were made.

          I tend to take every opportunity to look in on industrial production, because I think it’s cool. I’m not an expert, but I’m not talking fucking hypotheticals here. I’m talking about a composite of real places I’ve been, real people ive known and in some cases fucked who did these kinds of work. I have some actual knowledge, and youre talking about ideal heroic forms of ‘manager’ derived from a russian poster² who never as far as i know actually set foot in a factory and died like a century ago as if that information is as good as modern (or at least living memory) on the ground actual conditions.

          Yes there are other things. A car takes a longer supply chain, and a scaled up version of this process still works. Maybe you need a premises matrix or slack server and a local amateur sports league instead of team lunches and an SMS chat. The tools dont even need to be made; they exist already. I have used them.

          How the fuck would dedicated ‘managers’ wrangle supply chains better? Why is the factory managing the whole supply chain? Is the supply chain entirely passive and automated and lacking agency? This just sounds like ‘great man’ fetishism. Get over that shit.

          Your concept of management may as well involve phlogiston pneuma and agape.

          This may shock you, but some of us see materialism as a useful tool for understanding what we see in the world, and not just an identity to project into everything around us in a manner indistinguishable from idealism.

          ¹non-operational, still no clue how I’m alive

          ²admittedly one of the greats.

          • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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            1 hour ago

            I don’t think you want to play the “experience” game here regarding industrial production. Not only does it not constitute a point, but you’d lose in this instance. That’s all I’ll say on the matter.

            Management isn’t “great man theory.” Coordination of tasks and functions, especially in an industrial environment, is tremendously useful and necessary. Factories don’t control supply chains themselves, but they typically have quotas often pre-sold, and work with distributors and suppliers directly. Task planning, resource allocation, and more is a useful role, which is why it exists. None of this is “Great Man Theory,” you calling it that makes it obvious that you don’t know what the term means.

            This may shock you, but some of us see materialism as a useful tool for understanding what we see in the world, and not just an identity to project into everything around us in a manner indistinguishable from idealism.

            • cassandrafatigue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              1 hour ago

              Coordination does not require, and in fact is hampered by, a master! That’s literally the point of the book I suggested! Everyone can coordinate! It works better that way!

              thing you said like it’s a gotcha, after pretending I understand what the fuck youre talking about and ignoring all the actual science and math because it’s in a big scary book that would be too hard to read and just pretending I understand is easier.

              We’re done here.

              • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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                35 minutes ago

                I understand the point of the book. I also understand that horizontalism has some use-cases, but not all. The example of Cybersyn is a great one, it combines top-down decision making with bottom-up inputs. It has management, but is planned in a cohesive, centralized fashion.

                Your gotchas were cheap, so I just turned them around on you because they applied more to you than me.

                  • Cowbee [he/they]@lemmy.ml
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                    12 minutes ago

                    I’ve read a good deal more than just Capital. Again, though, trying to have a “theory measuring contest” is stupid, and it doesn’t matter if you or I have read more or less than the other, what matters is the content of the argument at hand, if it’s correct or not.