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Originally posted by daskakik
While those definitions do say that government or state control everything some would argue that those definitions are wrong. But, regardless of that, the NAZI Party was fascist and fascism is anti-socialist so there is no way that Hitler could have been a socialist.
The problem is that people think that rightwing means smaller government but that isn't always true. Fascism is centralized capitalism.
Originally posted by GogoVicMorrow
India, I do believe?
I mean they are controlled by the people as much as we are.edit on 8-12-2011 by GogoVicMorrow because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by GogoVicMorrow
Don't put words in my mouth. I was in it only to show you were wrong.
They are poor, we are all aware. Same haves and have nots in this country we just haven't seen such a great disparity yet.
Originally posted by GogoVicMorrow
So what? You are moving on to another point after you were proved wrong with your point.
You didn't say a socialist country that isn't poor, or a socialist country that you would want to live in. You said one that is run by the people. I gave you that. So you are welcome. You were wrong. It's funny to see someone that would literally die before they admitted they were wrong. You have squirmed so much in this thread.
(The Varna and Jati Systems)
by Terence Callaham and Roxanna Pavich
The Indian caste system has been in use for many years. Still today the values of the caste system are held strongly. It has kept a sense of order, and peace among the people. There are five different levels of the system: Brahman, Kshatriya, Vaishya, Shudra, and Harijans. Within each of these categories are the actual "castes" or jatis within which people are born, marry, and die. They all have their own place among each other and accept that it is the way to keep society from disintegrating to chaos. This system has worked well for Indian people and still has a major role in modern India.
Brahman
priest
Kshatriya
ruler, warrior, landowner
Vaishya
merchants
Shudra
artisans, agriculturalists
Harijan
"outside" the caste system
(once known as "untouchables")
Originally posted by ElectricUniverse
Wrong. I even posted evidence that the hatred that Hitler had for jewish people was the same hatred that Engels and Marx had for Jewish people...
They had the same military standpoints, and the speeches of HItler, plus what he did and implemented shows he was a socialist...
Hitler, and his close circle just didn't want to share with other socialists. That was it...
The history of EVERY socialist ideology is one of control over the others.
Centralization of everything can be found in socialist and communist ideologies. Heck, the communist manifesto itself explains in the 5th plank that there must be a central bank in a communist system...
When the state, no matter in whose name they CLAIM to do it, controls all means of production that is also centralization of power and infraestructure....
Yet some people want to claim centralization is not a tenet of socialist/communist ideologies?....
Originally posted by ElectricUniverse
When the state, no matter in whose name they CLAIM to do it, controls all means of production that is also centralization of power and infraestructure....
Yet some people want to claim centralization is not a tenet of socialist/communist ideologies?....
CAPITALISM TRIUMPHANT, SOCIALISM SUBVERSIVE
In an important, well argued and easy to read book, Bookchin forcefully notes the obvious: we have seen the triumph of capital since the 1980s; this has resulted in increasing working hours, decreasing pay packets, increasing alienation, mass unemployment and poverty, increasing misery, and the brink of an ecological crisis...
...Yet in a time when capitalism is encroaching upon almost every aspect of life, Bookchin ironically claims that the left today has little understanding of capitalism. This can be seen in the current "anti-capitalist" movement, which often confuses the ideology of the free market with capitalism as a whole. To Bookchin, who has been involved in revolutionary leftist politics since the 1930s, the tradition of revolutionary socialism seems lost...
...Bookchin essentially argues we need to rediscover socialism, that is, libertarian socialism. Anarchists need to also rediscover the socialism in anarchism. Many of the basic concepts of the leftist anarchist tradition have been lost. For example, many anarchists now view anarchism as a form of liberalism rather than socialism and completely distrust any talk of class. This means, as Bookchin notes, anarchism is losing its traditional left-wing core, and thus is fast becoming an unthreatening version of liberalism with a bourgeois emphasis on the freedom of the individual, on personal autonomy (a notion that suits capitalists just fine). "Anti-statism" isn't enough. Many reactionaries and even corporate bandits are against state intervention too. In my view, unless socialism is an integral part of anarchism, then anarchism becomes self-indulgence. Anarchists who aren't socialists might as well just call themselves individualists." (p. 125). So Bookchin claims what is sorely needed is a serious, coherent, organised, revolutionary anarchist left which is well-versed in anarchist socialist theory...
Anarchism, the no-government system of socialism, has a double origin. It is an outgrowth of the two great movements of thought in the economic and the political fields which characterise the nineteenth century, and especially its second part. In common with all socialists, the anarchists hold that the private ownership of land, capital, and machinery has had its time; that it is condemned to disappear; and that all requisites for production must, and will, become the common property of society, and be managed in common by the producers of wealth. And in common with the most advanced representatives of political radicalism, they maintain that the ideal of the political organisation of society is a condition of things where the functions of government are reduced to a minimum, and the individual recovers his full liberty of initiative and action for satisfying, by means of free groups and federations—freely constituted—all the infinitely varied needs of the human being.
Originally posted by GogoVicMorrow
reply to post by ElectricUniverse
India, I do believe?
I mean they are controlled by the people as much as we are.I think.. I am not gonna claim I know a lot about Indian politics, but they are a socialist democracy with three branches of government.
Originally posted by ElectricUniverse
Originally posted by EarthCitizen07
...
Anarcho ANYTHING closely resembles tribalism, like the native american tribes or african zulu tribes. Is that what you really want???
So, are you claiming that native tribes didn't/don't have chiefs? That they don't have a council of elders who decide what the tribe should do?
Originally posted by EarthCitizen07
I would focus more on democracies versus republics. THAT is were the conspiracy between the masses and elite lies. Everything else is bs!
Republic has NOTHING to do with "elites"... What in the Republic means in the U.S. doesn't have to have the same meaning in another country. For example, it has a different meaning in China, and North Korea.
The true conspiracy lies in the fact that when socialism puts it's nose in any country, the banker elites take control of such country.
Heck the IMF is a socialist central bank, just like the Feds in the U.S.
edit on 8-12-2011 by ElectricUniverse because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by GogoVicMorrow
reply to post by ElectricUniverse
India, I do believe?
I mean they are controlled by the people as much as we are.I think.. I am not gonna claim I know a lot about Indian politics, but they are a socialist democracy with three branches of government.edit on 8-12-2011 by GogoVicMorrow because: (no reason given)
In April, 1920, Hitler advocated that the party should change its name to the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP). Hitler had always been hostile to socialist ideas, especially those that involved racial or sexual equality. However, socialism was a popular political philosophy in Germany after the First World War. This was reflected in the growth in the German Social Democrat Party (SDP), the largest political party in Germany. Hitler, therefore redefined socialism by placing the word 'National' before it. He claimed he was only in favour of equality for those who had "German blood." Jews and other "aliens" would lose their rights of citizenship, and immigration of non-Germans should be brought to an end.
Originally posted by sonnny1
In April, 1920, Hitler advocated that the party should change its name to the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP). Hitler had always been hostile to socialist ideas, especially those that involved racial or sexual equality. However, socialism was a popular political philosophy in Germany after the First World War. This was reflected in the growth in the German Social Democrat Party (SDP), the largest political party in Germany. Hitler, therefore redefined socialism by placing the word 'National' before it. He claimed he was only in favour of equality for those who had "German blood." Jews and other "aliens" would lose their rights of citizenship, and immigration of non-Germans should be brought to an end.
The Nazi Party (NSDAP)
On the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War the leaders of the military uprising immediately asked the German government for help. The first request was for ten transport planes to ferry Nationalist troops from Morocco to Spain. Constantin von Neurath, the German foreign minister, initially rejected the request, expressing fears that such a move could lead to a European war. Adolf Hitler did not agree with Neurath and after consulting with Herman Goering, Wilhelm Canaris and Werner von Blomberg, he told General Francisco Franco on 26th July 1936 that Germany would support his rebellion.
Hitler justified his decision by arguing that he was attempting to save Europe from "communist barbarism".
The primary basis for this claim is that Hitler was a National Socialist. The word "National" evokes the state, and the word "Socialist" openly identifies itself as such.
However, there is no academic controversy over the status of this term: it was a misnomer. Misnomers are quite common in the history of political labels. Examples include the German Democratic Republic (which was neither) and Vladimir Zhirinovsky's "Liberal Democrat" party (which was also neither). The true question is not whether Hitler called his party "socialist," but whether or not it actually was...
For perhaps ten years past I have had some grasp of the real nature of capitalist society. I have seen British imperialism at work in Burma, and I have seen something of the effects of poverty and unemployment in Britain. One has got to be actively a Socialist, not merely sympathetic to Socialism, or one plays into the hands of our always-active enemies. George Orwell
Originally posted by daskakik
That is where you keep making mistakes. You keep pointing to things that are irrelevant. There are people in the US who are rightwing and also profess hatred of Jews. You would be in some deep trouble if you walked up to them and said that hating jews made them commies.
Originally posted by daskakik
There you go again. Military standpoints don't indicate left or right.
Originally posted by daskakik
Maybe because they were in fact anti-socialist? That is what shows that they are really fascist posing as socialists. Is it really that difficult to stand back and realize that they never had any intrest in promoting equality.
Leon Trotsky
Stalin Seeks My Death
The following article, now published for the first time, was written by Trotsky two weeks after the May 24, 1940 attempt to assassinate him. As the article relates, Stalin’s GPU was able to bring powerful pressure on the Mexican police to steer Its investigation away from the GPU murder band which had attempted to kill Trotsky. Shortly after this article was written, however, the investigation was brought back on the right track. Our press at the time published all the details of how the police arrested David Serrano, David Alfaro Siquieiros and a score of other Stalinists; how some of them confessed their complicIty, and the guilt of the Stalinist murder machine was established.
...
Trotsky’s article gives us his own description of the May 24th attempt on his life and of the events of the next two weeks. Another article by Trotsky on the attempt was “The Comintern and the GPU” published in the November, 1940 Issue of FOURTH INTERNATIONAL.
Originally posted by daskakik
The history of EVERY form of society is one of control over others. Even tribes have elders that decide for all on certain issues.
Originally posted by daskakik
What I am claiming is that it is also a tenet of fascism which happens to be a rightwing ideology so saying that it is unique and indicative of socialism/communism is wrong.
Socialism /ˈsoʊʃəlɪzəm/ is an economic system characterized by social ownership of the means of production and cooperative management of the economy; or a political philosophy advocating such a system.[1] "Social ownership" may refer to any one of, or a combination of, the following: cooperative enterprises, common ownership, autonomous public ownership or state ownership.[2] As a form of social organization, socialism is based on co-operative social relations and self-management; relatively equal power-relations and the reduction or elimination of hierarchy in the management of economic and political affairs.
A cooperative (also co-operative or co-op) is a business organization owned and operated by a group of individuals for their mutual benefit.[1] A cooperative is defined by the International Cooperative Alliance's Statement on the Cooperative Identity as "an autonomous association of persons united voluntarily to meet their common economic, social, and cultural needs and aspirations through jointly owned and democratically controlled enterprise".[2] A cooperative may also be defined as a business owned and controlled equally by the people who use its services or by the people who work there. Various aspects regarding cooperative enterprise are the focus of study in the field of cooperative economics.
The PROUT Worker Cooperatives
By Carla Dickstein, Ph.D.
Cooperative enterprises—worker, consumer, agricultural and credit—form the core of a PROUT economy. The majority of manufacturing and service enterprises are organized as worker cooperatives.
...