From: Gerald_A_Levy@MSN.COM
Date: Wed Nov 03 2004 - 13:00:29 EST
Rakesh wrote: > Capital is not only directly destroyed, it is used up as a result of > war time activity. It is not as Jerry says factories have to be > bombed per se. War consumes capital in two ways. So, military goods are means of production which take the form of constant capital? Or, are the means of production which are used to produce military goods constant capital? If you mean the latter, then it is the case that when the use-value of military goods is exhausted through being used during war then the demand for replacement military goods grows. This presumes that corporations producing military goods which are sold to the state increase (constant and variable) capital spending. But, this is simply the using-up of commodity values. Why is it any more destructive of use-values than the process of eating a sandwich? OTOH, if a bomb is dropped on a factory it is easy to understand why there is a forcible destruction of commodity values. In solidarity, Jerry
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