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originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: MALBOSIA
originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: MALBOSIA
originally posted by: beezzer
a reply to: FyreByrd
Capitalism is the worst form of economics, until you compare it to all other forms of economics.
(nod to Winston Churchill)
It's interesting how the OP's article cries for "freedom" yet endorses an ideology that is the antithesis of freedom.
The author bemoans the "rights" of some, and ignores the "rights" of the unborn.
I would imagine that to embrace this ideal, the Bill of Rights and Constitution would need to be scrapped, so it is not a major concern of mine.
But I am curious.
How would this utopia be established in the US?
The green back and colonial script worked before it was undermined. Were they both not used under the constitution?
I suppose they were used.
As for being undermined, wasn't the undermining a nod towards socialism and a turn away from capitalism?
Not if they were undermined by federal reserve notes.
Who knows if capitalism works? Has it ever been done outside of a borrow/tax system?
I believe that our federal income tax system is relatively "new".
Capitalism does work. But it requires people who want to work.
I'm no economist so it is difficult for me to be succinct on this topic.
originally posted by: MarlinGrace
originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: MALBOSIA
originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: MALBOSIA
originally posted by: beezzer
a reply to: FyreByrd
Capitalism is the worst form of economics, until you compare it to all other forms of economics.
(nod to Winston Churchill)
It's interesting how the OP's article cries for "freedom" yet endorses an ideology that is the antithesis of freedom.
The author bemoans the "rights" of some, and ignores the "rights" of the unborn.
I would imagine that to embrace this ideal, the Bill of Rights and Constitution would need to be scrapped, so it is not a major concern of mine.
But I am curious.
How would this utopia be established in the US?
The green back and colonial script worked before it was undermined. Were they both not used under the constitution?
I suppose they were used.
As for being undermined, wasn't the undermining a nod towards socialism and a turn away from capitalism?
Not if they were undermined by federal reserve notes.
Who knows if capitalism works? Has it ever been done outside of a borrow/tax system?
I believe that our federal income tax system is relatively "new".
Capitalism does work. But it requires people who want to work.
I'm no economist so it is difficult for me to be succinct on this topic.
John Smith coined the term "Work or Starve" every colonist had to work 4 hours a day farming. Boy are we 180 away from anything resembling that concept today.
originally posted by: Hoosierdaddy71
originally posted by: MarlinGrace
originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: MALBOSIA
originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: MALBOSIA
originally posted by: beezzer
a reply to: FyreByrd
Capitalism is the worst form of economics, until you compare it to all other forms of economics.
(nod to Winston Churchill)
It's interesting how the OP's article cries for "freedom" yet endorses an ideology that is the antithesis of freedom.
The author bemoans the "rights" of some, and ignores the "rights" of the unborn.
I would imagine that to embrace this ideal, the Bill of Rights and Constitution would need to be scrapped, so it is not a major concern of mine.
But I am curious.
How would this utopia be established in the US?
The green back and colonial script worked before it was undermined. Were they both not used under the constitution?
I suppose they were used.
As for being undermined, wasn't the undermining a nod towards socialism and a turn away from capitalism?
Not if they were undermined by federal reserve notes.
Who knows if capitalism works? Has it ever been done outside of a borrow/tax system?
I believe that our federal income tax system is relatively "new".
Capitalism does work. But it requires people who want to work.
I'm no economist so it is difficult for me to be succinct on this topic.
John Smith coined the term "Work or Starve" every colonist had to work 4 hours a day farming. Boy are we 180 away from anything resembling that concept today.
To many people today think that work is a four letter word. They just don't understand the concept having been handed trophies just for showing up their whole lives.
When everyone is special, no one is.
originally posted by: MALBOSIA
That is a bit of a cheap shot. Want to work? Or willing to work in conditions competing with China?
originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: FyreByrd
originally posted by: beezzer
a reply to: FyreByrd
Capitalism is the worst form of economics, until you compare it to all other forms of economics.
(nod to Winston Churchill)
It's interesting how the OP's article cries for "freedom" yet endorses an ideology that is the antithesis of freedom.
The author bemoans the "rights" of some, and ignores the "rights" of the unborn.
I would imagine that to embrace this ideal, the Bill of Rights and Constitution would need to be scrapped, so it is not a major concern of mine.
But I am curious.
How would this utopia be established in the US?
The author - not yet off to work addresses your 'formulaic' responses.
Utopia's by definition are impossible so your psuedo-question, is irrelevant and distracting.
Avoiding the main question.
Perhaps I should have used the term, "Workers Paradise".
originally posted by: FyreByrd
originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: FyreByrd
originally posted by: beezzer
a reply to: FyreByrd
Capitalism is the worst form of economics, until you compare it to all other forms of economics.
(nod to Winston Churchill)
It's interesting how the OP's article cries for "freedom" yet endorses an ideology that is the antithesis of freedom.
The author bemoans the "rights" of some, and ignores the "rights" of the unborn.
I would imagine that to embrace this ideal, the Bill of Rights and Constitution would need to be scrapped, so it is not a major concern of mine.
But I am curious.
How would this utopia be established in the US?
The author - not yet off to work addresses your 'formulaic' responses.
Utopia's by definition are impossible so your psuedo-question, is irrelevant and distracting.
Avoiding the main question.
Perhaps I should have used the term, "Workers Paradise".
Yep - I do avoid irrelevant and insincere questions.
How would you establish the utopia of your dreams in the US?
And so we, in the 1960s, read Marcuse as a utopian, a socialist and eco-feminist dreamer, perfectly appropriate to a New Left springing not from the Communist Manifesto, but from Hayden's "SDS Port Huron Statement," which called for a left based not on tight vanguard discipline, but on participatory democracy .
In an interview, Hayden described the division of labor between himself and Dick Flacks, a red-diaper sociologist and his close friend in Ann Arbor who knew his Marx: "I was the New, and Flacks was the Left!"
Marcuse, like SDS and SNCC, urged a grassroots left that refused to sacrifice short-term liberty for long-term change , agreeing with Karl Korsch, that the dictatorship of the proletariat should not become a dictatorship over the proletariat .
originally posted by: FyreByrd
a reply to: MarlinGrace
I do enjoy being instructed by my betters. I do so enjoy arrogant bombast.
What revelence is the amount of taxes - people in those countries are generally (not universally).
What one man said a couple of years ago isn't 'TRUTH' any more then what you or I say.
As for other forms - look around you, I gave current examples; what the future holds, who knows.