The common language of capitalists speaking different languages: Profit.
- The Capitalist’s National Identity is Secondary
Capitalists may be Chinese, American, German, Turkish, Arab, or Russian. However, their national identity does not override their position within the capitalist order. Because:
Their primary goal is to expand their capital, not their nationality.
A German boss prefers workers in China if the profit margin is high.
A French investor can partner with entrepreneurs of Kurdish or Turkish origin, as long as there is profit.
Example:
Apple has production in Foxconn factories in China. American capital uses Chinese labor to sell globally. The profit chain, not nationality, is paramount here.
- “Profit” is the True Mother Tongue of Capitalists
All economic decisions are shaped by the following questions:
“How can I reduce costs?”
“How can I earn more?”
“Where can labor cost me less?”
The answers to these questions depend not on which language the capitalist speaks, but on which opportunity they see.
Profit is a universal indicator:
Every capitalist looks at the balance sheet; even if languages differ, graphs, ratios, and profit-and-loss statements provide a common ground for communication.
- The Universal Structure of Exploitation
The methods used by capitalists are also universal:
Deunionization
Flexible working
Subcontracting
Exploitation of migrant labor
Destruction of natural resources
These structures exist in India, Chile, and Turkey. Although they are named in different languages, they all operate with the same logic: lower costs for more profit.
- The Language Barrier Among Workers – Partnerships Among Capitalists
Capitalists easily cooperate with each other through multinational corporations, international investment funds, and capital transfers.
But this is not so easy for workers:
Language differences, cultural differences, and prejudices divide them.
The diplomatic, technical, and financial networks possessed by capitalists are not possessed by workers.
Therefore, capitalists with different languages can unite, but for workers to unite, the barrier of language and consciousness must be overcome.
- The Profit Ethic Has No Nationality
In capitalism, values such as moral concerns, conscience, and cultural loyalty are secondary. For example:
A capitalist selling weapons to a war zone is unconcerned with the identity of the other side.
If child labor is cheap, he will not hesitate to invest in that country.
He can open a mine despite ecological destruction; he does not care about the ethnic or religious background of the local population.
In short: What matters to a capitalist is not who works, but how much they earn.
Conclusion:
Capitalists speak different languages, but they understand each other within the same system.
Because their true common language is “profit.”
Language, culture, religion, nation, morality: All of these can be put at the service of profit.


