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Not to outrightly disagree with you but a lot of the snippets presented seem to show just the controversial points without clarifying or qualifying them.....
In 1976 A typical American CEO earned 36 times as much as the average worker. By 2008 the average CEO pay increased to 369 times that of the average worker. timelines.ws...
Small firms:
* Represent 99.7 percent of all employer firms.
* Employ just over half of all private sector employees.
* Pay 44 percent of total U.S. private payroll.
* Have generated 64 percent of net new jobs over the past 15 years.
* Create more than half of the nonfarm private gross domestic product (GDP).
* Hire 40 percent of high tech workers (such as scientists, engineers, and computer programmers).
* Are 52 percent home-based and 2 percent franchises.
* Made up 97.3 percent of all identified exporters and produced 30.2 percent of the known export value in FY 2007.
* Produce 13 times more patents per employee than large patenting firms; these patents are twice as likely as large firm patents to be among the one percent most cited.
...Typically small businesses are more flexible, creative, nimble, innovative, and responsive. By proportion small companies deal with fewer challenges and incur less cost. Small companies are more open to change and can get things done faster. Because they are not mired down in a lot of bureaucracy they have the ability to ... quickly implement a plan of action. Speedy implementation leads to quick and measurable results. theinstituteforsustainability.com...
How many times have we heard that large farms are more productive than small farms, and that we need to consolidate land holdings to take advantage of that greater productivity and efficiency? The actual data shows the opposite --
small farms produce far more per acre or hectare than large farms.
.....Large farmers tend to plant monocultures because they are the simplest to manage with heavy machinery. Small farmers, especially in the Third World, are much more likely to plant crop mixtures -- intercropping -- where the empty space between the rows is occupied by other crops. They usually combine or rotate crops and livestock, with manure serving to replenish soil fertility.
Such integrated farming systems produce far more per unit area than do monocultures. Though the yield per unit area of one crop -- corn, for example -- may be lower on a small farm than on a large monoculture farm, the total production per unit area, often composed of more than a dozen crops and various animal products, can be far higher.....
Small Farms in Economic Development
In farming communities dominated by large corporate farms, nearby towns died off....
Where family farms predominated, there were more local businesses, paved streets and sidewalks, schools, parks, churches, clubs, and newspapers, better services, higher employment, and more civic participation. Recent studies confirm that Goldschmidt’s findings remain true.....
www.foodfirst.org...
Now as for Socialism. I really don't see any other reason then the residual programing of your grandparents generations during the Cold War for you to be against it. Other than of course a lack of real knowledge as to what Socialism actually is.
The Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776
....We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed....
...In his 'History of Plymouth Plantation,' the governor of the colony, William Bradford, reported that the colonists went hungry for years, because they refused to work in the fields. They preferred instead to steal food. He says the colony was riddled with "corruption," and with "confusion and discontent." The crops were small because "much was stolen both by night and day, before it became scarce eatable."
....The harvest of 1623 was different. Suddenly, "instead of famine now God gave them plenty," Bradford wrote, "and the face of things was changed, to the rejoicing of the hearts of many, for which they blessed God." Thereafter, he wrote, "any general want or famine hath not been amongst them since to this day." In fact, in 1624, so much food was produced that the colonists were able to begin exporting corn.
What happened?
After the poor harvest of 1622, writes Bradford, "they began to think how they might raise as much corn as they could, and obtain a better crop." They began to question their form of economic organization.
This had required that "all profits & benefits that are got by trade, working, fishing, or any other means" were to be placed in the common stock of the colony, and that, "all such persons as are of this colony, are to have their meat, drink, apparel, and all provisions out of the common stock." A person was to put into the common stock all he could, and take out only what he needed.
This "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need" was an early form of socialism, and it is why the Pilgrims were starving. Bradford writes that "young men that are most able and fit for labor and service" complained about being forced to "spend their time and strength to work for other men's wives and children." Also, "the strong, or man of parts, had no more in division of victuals and clothes, than he that was weak." So the young and strong refused to work and the total amount of food produced was never adequate.
To rectify this situation, in 1623 Bradford abolished socialism. He gave each household a parcel of land and told them they could keep what they produced, or trade it away as they saw fit. In other words, he replaced socialism with a free market, and that was the end of famines.... mises.org...
It should be pretty obvious by that definition that the only people who wish to defend the current system of being able to manipulate wealth distribution are those who are fiddling the system. Anyone who cannot understand the value of being able to take a full share for your effort.....
...Yes they talk about eugenics and gassing people but ours is not a society which can think clearly about topics such as these. They are a necessity however for any advancing civilization to consider....
....In 2005 Newkirk killed 90% of her defenseless captives and adopted only 6% - a ratio far worse than almost any pound in the country. Read her own grim statistics: [go to article for the statistics] www.nokillnow.com...
...Note that I completed this study in November 1993 while still engaged in collecting democide data. Not all the democide totals I mention here may be complete, therefore....
...the Soviet Union appears the greatest megamurderer of all, apparently killing near 61,000,000 people [61 million]
Communist China .... is the second worst megamurderer. [From TABLE 35,236,000]
Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge. Pol Pot and his crew likely killed some 2,000,000 Cambodians...odds of an average Cambodian surviving Pol Pot's rule of slightly over just over 2 to 1.
In sum the communist probably have murdered something like 110,000,000, [110 million) or near two-thirds of all those killed by all governments, quasi-governments, and guerrillas from 1900 to 1987.... www.hawaii.edu...
...“This visitor has just completed a 200-mile trip through the heart of Ukraine and can say opsitively that the harvest is splendid and all talk of famine now is ridiculous." www.ukrainiangenocide.com...
That's a good read on why unionisation is good for all of us.
The problem is 1% of the population of earth owns 99% of it's wealth.
WASHINGTON -- A recent analysis of the 2007 financial markets of 48 countries has revealed that the world's finances are in the hands of just a few mutual funds, banks, and corporations. This is the first clear picture of the global concentration of financial power, and point out the worldwide financial system's vulnerability as it stood on the brink of the current economic crisis....
www.insidescience.org...
Of mergers and acquisitions each costing $1 million or more, there were just 10 in 1970; in 1980, there were 94; in 1986, there were 346. A third of such deals in the 1980's were hostile. The 1980's also saw a wave of giant leveraged buyouts. Mergers, acquisitions and L.B.O.'s, which had accounted for less than 5 percent of the profits of Wall Street brokerage houses in 1978, ballooned into an estimated 50 percent of profits by 1988...
THROUGH ALL THIS, THE HISTORIC RELATIONSHIP between product and paper has been turned upside down. Investment bankers no longer think of themselves as working for the corporations with which they do business. These days, corporations seem to exist for the investment bankers....
In fact, investment banks are replacing the publicly held industrial corporations as the largest and most powerful economic institutions in America....
THERE ARE SIGNS THAT A VICIOUS spiral has begun, as each corporate player seeks to improve its standard of living at the expense of another's.
Corporate raiders transfer to themselves, and other shareholders, part of the income of employees by forcing the latter to agree to lower wages. January 29, 1989 www.nytimes.com... New York Times
Of all the contrivances for cheating the laboring classes of mankind, none is so effectual as that which deludes them with paper money. It is the most perfect expedient ever invented for fertilizing the rich man’s fields by the sweat of the poor man’s brow. Ordinary tyranny, oppression, excessive taxation, these bear lightly on the happiness of the community compared with fraudulent currencies and the robberies committed by depreciated paper. Our own history has recorded enough, and more than enough, of the demoralizing tendency, the injustice and intolerable oppression on the virtuous and well disposed, of a degraded paper currency, authorized by law, or in any way countenanced by Government.
~ Nelson W. Aldrich, United States Senator [sponsor of the first try of the Federal Reserve Act.] at a New York City dinner speech on October 15, 1913 IV Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science #1, at 38 (Columbia University, New York (1914)). www.linuxtoday.com...
Originally posted by SearchLightsInc
In my experience i would go as far as to suggest that capitalism.causes.poverty.
Corporations care about one thing - Making money. And they do it at the expense of the worker.
I do understand what Socialism/Collectivism is. My brother was a Marxist and I have friends I made while living in MA who were "card carrying" Communists. The University of Massachusetts by the way "is the home of some of the finest Marxist scholars in the world." I was proudly told.
I am NOT defending the present system! I think the Federal Reserve board and banks/bankers should be tried for high treason! The same goes for people like Dan Amstutz, Dwayne Orville Andreas, and the lobbyists and the Congress members they bought.
...Yes they talk about eugenics and gassing people but ours is not a society which can think clearly about topics such as these. They are a necessity however for any advancing civilization to consider....
This is the type of thinking that the Fabians through groups like "Animal Rights Activists" have been subtly promoting. The idea is to demote the RIGHTS of humans to the same level as animals and then TREAT us as animals. SHEEPLE if you will. That is what John Dewey's intentional dumbing down of Americans was all about. Turning us into a herd of easily manipulated Sheeple. Forget innovation, invention and independent thought.
So yes I do understand Collectivism/Socialism. It is all about farming us like cattle.