Deleted User wrote: » Not what I said... did you even read what I wrote before replying?
mariaalice wrote: » What is the alternative though that is the big question?
spook_cook wrote: » I think social media, the ability of news outlets to now have real time info on what the public want and don't want, coupled with advances in AI,
AMKC wrote: » What else is there besides Domocracy? Socilism or Communism no thanks. They would just be worse. As for North America, well it's just a basket case. Any country that elects a reality president as there President is a basket case if you ask me. Hopefully he will be gone soon but what he leaves behind might take longer to go.
spook_cook wrote: » Have nutcases like Éirígí, alphabet soup leftie parties with tens of members (all members of every party), National Party etc get the same funding as mainstream parties with thousands/tens of thousands of members? No thanks. Set the stage for false flag events to get rid of a candidate? E.g. pull down a bunch of your own guy's posters, blame it on the other lad's supporters etc. No thanks.
Padre_Pio wrote: » that's a very simplistic view that's been rubbished here many times. "oh sure in the 70's a single income family could buy a house, a car and raise 5 children". Not true in an equivalent sense. Anyone today could do the same if they stuck to the living standards of the past. Today, people in general want more, and the opportunity is there for most. Why are the children limited to warehouse jobs, considering there's still a booming STEM sector in every Western country? Maybe, but you could say the achievements in the West were built on the backs of people in the East. Our conditions got better, theirs didn't. Now their conditions are on the up and ours not so much.
Thelonious Monk wrote: » The current system is about exploiting the earth and her resources no matter what the cost. The way we're going it can only lead to war and famine. Democracy means that all that matters to politicians is growing the economy and providing jobs, as that's mostly what people will vote for. So we're kinda screwed.
McHardcore wrote: » Even when you are presented with your own comment correcting your previous comment, you cannot admit you were wrong.
paddythere wrote: » Have you ever heard of democratic socialism by any chance?
ChikiChiki wrote: » For you. You can make it work if you want to. I find the people that claim capitalism has failed and socialism is the true path forward tend to be lazy unimaginative sods looking for an avenue to blame for failings in their own lives.
paddythere wrote: » I agree. Its the cultural hegemony that Gramsci talked about. The idea that a growing economy makes a government successful is just so short sighted but this idea reigns supreme.
440Hertz wrote: » That stuff most of Europe uses, including here, and that America uses but isn’t able to say the name of because they’re irrationally terrified of the word “social” and imagine they all life as self sufficient frontiersmen/women, not in any way supported by a socially provided national highway infrastructure, school system, significantly big public health expenditure, policing, a huge army, all those mad projects that were state funded through DARPA that ended up creating the underlying technologies for the Internet, farm subsidies, regulatory agencies, city transit authorities, COVID helicopter money payments, bank and industry bailouts, regulated mortgages, funding for vaccine development ... I could go on.... We’re all living in social democracies of various shapes and forms in the West.
PhilOssophy wrote: » So what the OP is looking for is Hitler or one of those mad fellahs?
paddythere wrote: » I don't disagree. I tend to call it state capitalism personally.
paddythere wrote: » What was the logic behind this conclusion?
440Hertz wrote: » It’s often not state capitalism though. It’s actually social provision or socially useful things, frequently without any profit motive at all - arts funding, public libraries, many health and welfare supports... list goes on and on. There’s an imagination in the USA in particular that it’s possible to live in an off grid bubble and they sell them spend a narrative of the self made man & pulling yourself up by your bootstraps without any social supports. It’sa mythology that’s based in American history and in more modern history about terror of Soviet style communism and various red scares. Europe and most other democratic parts of the world just aren’t as hung up on the term “social”. There’s a lot of subtly lost when you start vilifying words and basic concepts like that.
ILoveYourVibes wrote: » When one tires of democracy presumably one seeks dictatorships.
completedit wrote: » Millions maybe billions lifted out of poverty. Most peaceful era in our history and quality of life that would have been unthinkable 100 years ago I don't think we are truly able to grasp how bleak existence was for the majority of our ancestors.
spook_cook wrote: » Actually yes, I am scared at the outcome of your proposal. Funneling money and time to extremist groups, generally isn't a good idea. Whilst "levelling down" moderate parties. Genius. Whether it's morons in 2008 calling for the nationalisation of Dell, leaving the EU in the after time period, the "X hundreds of billions of oil" off the coast crowd in the early 2010s, parties which have literally supported murder in the past decade on this island, "turf out the immirgants", there's always a loudmouth ready-fix solution available in the wings. Removing the ability of sane parties to campaign to their level, giving the extremists the ability to remove mainstream candidates from other parties, removing the ability of me as a citizen to contribute to whom I wanna win... Yes, this is all a terrible, terrible outcome. Unless you're one of said loons in the previous paragraph?
ILoveYourVibes wrote: » It is state capitalism. Its built upon govt procurement contracts.
Deleted User wrote: » Because I'm not.