I mean think about it.

You just need a library card (usually free if not always) and you can get anything a library offers for free with no fees. This use to be just movies, books, music CDs (think early 2000’s and 1990’s but now you can even get new video games for free. (physical copies)

it’s a collective resource for a lot of media based products. Most countries, (if not all) have and tend to support public libraries.

but is this a good communism service. when looking at communist principles? What does the community think?

  • Finiteacorn@lemmygrad.ml
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    6 hours ago

    libraries are great but they predate communism, not everything which is good or communal/community centered is communists. The simple act of sharing and cooperating with ur geographical community isnt communist or even revolutionary its just basic human shit. I think neo liberalism and individualism and consumerism have poisoned our brains so much that we can look at something which is just human and assign to it political values that have existed for at most a couple centuries, because it has become so rare.

  • itspostingtime@lemmygrad.ml
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    20 hours ago

    I think most communists would agree that libraries are a good resource.

    As a side note, there can also be libraries of things other than books and media, like toy libraries (so parents aren’t pressured to buy tons of toys but kids can still borrow and play with different toys), tool libraries (so people in a community don’t have to all individually buy tools that they might only use occasionally), home appliance libraries, electronics, musical instruments, etc.

    These services are more marginal under capitalism because they’re not for profit. Under capitalism, big libraries of items which can easily be borrowed for free is not a welcome idea for capitalists seeking to profit of off false scarcity of their products, and its harder to maintain non profit services like this. In a communist society, there wouldn’t really be a reason to hinder the expansion and enhancement of libraries to make them even better resources for the public.

  • diegeticalt (any)@lemmygrad.ml
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    23 hours ago

    Socialized civil services aren’t communism. Communism is more like worker ownership of the means of production. Typically here it’s used to signify the potential end stage of socialist building, a “stateless moneyless society”.

    Libraries are cool, but they’re not communism.

    • Rob200@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      21 hours ago

      Libraries could easily be adapted to fit Communism, most of the ground work is already set up, you might have to make some changes for it to work under communism as defined.

      While they might not be communism they do share a lot of similar principles to communism. While their might not be a lot of specific production, collective ownership is also an important key to communism, which libraries share.

      One person can borrow a copy of a book and then months later another person could get that same copy in their own household.

        • Rob200@lemmygrad.mlOP
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          20 hours ago

          I understand communism to be a classless society, to have Collective (or common) ownership of the means of productions. Along with the absence of money eventually. Or at least it aims to for most of these things.

          Libraries meet most of this, if not all of it.

          • diegeticalt (any)@lemmygrad.ml
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            19 hours ago

            Libraries are not a whole society.

            They are funded by property taxes, harvested under capitalism, and beholden to a web of reactionary shitlib beaurocracy.

            • Rob200@lemmygrad.mlOP
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              19 hours ago

              Like I said depending on the environment, you can make small changes to how libraries work to fit it under communism. It doesn’t *have to be like that just because it is in certain locations with their own ways of doing things.

  • Rob200@lemmygrad.mlOP
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    18 hours ago

    Personally, even though a library isn’t necessarily a means of production, I don’t think it would be not be welcomed under a communism environment. I feel the concept of a library and how they work overall is similar to what communist might be looking for in general from such a service.