| > ... you have one king with associated subordinates per physical area Yes and no. Land changed hands. As recently as the 19th century, a distant relative of mine fled Eastern Europe from an area where he could be conscripted by either the Prussians or the Russians. > In Capitalism, anyone(*) with sufficient capital can become a king in a specific fief We're talking about social mobility here, basically. This existed in feudal times too. A Viking called Rollo became the first ruler of Normandy and didn't seem to come from noble beginnings. A direct descendant of his became the King of England by conquest. In fact every European monarch today is a descedant of Rollo. The land here is simply the means of production, just like Amazon is. Amazon has many owners but is it that different really? Social mobility in modern times is more limited than you might expect. ZIP codes tend to be strong predictors of your economic outcomes. This is exacerbated by our existence being laden with debt. Student, medical, housing, etc. It's why a lot of people use terms like "neofeudalism" as all this debt makes is increasingly indistinguishable from brick kiln workers in Bangladesh, Pakistan and India. This is by design because a debt-laden worker is a compliant worker. > Socialism (depending on brand), means of production are usually controlled by the state That's more communism. Even so, the state is comprised of and answerable to the workers. Even then I'd rather have the state capture "profit" to build roads and schools rather than some guy buying another mega-yacht. A lot of people, myself included, focus on the workers owning the means of production because this can be done incrementally and we'd all be substantially better off if our megacorps were instead collectives. |
Do you have a preferred approach, or is the big thing just getting workers to own at least part of the means of production?