This Black History Month, it’s important to recognize that economic injustice—both in Canada and around the world—is deeply rooted in racism. The property system in Canada was founded on the forced displacement and exclusion of Indigenous peoples from their land and immigration policies that prevented non-white immigration, effectively barring many thousands of people from accessing property in Canada. These racialized colonial systems laid the foundation for the current racial wealth gap, where racialized Canadians have about half as much wealth as their non-racialized counterparts.

Unlike the United States, where constitutional barriers have historically shielded the ultra-rich from direct taxation, Canada faces no such constitutional legal obstacles—only political ones. And those political excuses are running out.

A wealth tax enjoys overwhelming public support. Nearly 90 percent of Canadians back it, yet successive Liberal and Conservative governments have refused to act. Their refusal isn’t due to legal constraints but to the immense influence of corporate lobbyists and billionaire donors who oppose any effort to make them pay their fair share.

Just last year, powerful corporate interests mobilized to kill a progressive tax measure that would have primarily targeted Canada’s wealthiest citizens and corporations: the partial closure of the capital gains loophole.

  • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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    2 days ago

    That’s the infrastructure we have been left with historically. We also know that radical revolution that replaced with old systems with novel systems did not work out either. USSR failed, China backtracked on "the private ownership of the means of production.

    Also. Labour was exploited under all and every system to ever exist that support civilization grade societies. There is nothing inherently exploitation of the labour about “capitalism”, that comes from power structure and regime being degenerates goons who hate common people.

    Decentralizing private ownership would weaken the exploitation of labour since it is a lot harder to fuck over somebody all the time if they got resources and agency to fight back OR opt out.

    • Kelsenellenelvial@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      Exploitation is the key term here. Things like Co-ops and Crown corporations work to put capital back in the hands of the workers/customers/tax payers, but they can have a hard time competing with private industry. People like the idea of supporting local/sustainable/family owned/etc. but budgets are tight and Walmart or Loblaws fill your grocery cart for 10% less than the local Co-op. This all snowballs, the chains can pay less because they’ve got more positions to fill, they keep things cheap through economy of scale or negotiating power and keep that scale because they’re a bit cheaper then the socially responsible options. People work for the chains because there’s not enough jobs available at the local stores and they can only afford to shop at the chain because they’re being paid chain wages. If we could get enough people together we could enact a change, but that’s hard to do when so much of the population is one missed paycheque away from not being able to pay rent or groceries.

      That kind of leaves regulatory or Crown-corps as the better solutions.

      • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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        1 day ago

        We can’t walmarts the grocery store but we can all avoid McDonald’s…

        It ain’t much but that’s a start and something everyone can do today.