BigMike wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2024 8:57 am
First, your claim that socialism
always sells out the working class is rich
Great. Tell me where it hasn't.
You want examples? Sure. Let’s talk about the Nordic countries—Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Norway—you know, those places with strong social safety nets, high union membership, universal healthcare, and education systems that don’t leave their citizens buried in debt.
Norway would be bankrupt except for its oil sales...very capitalist. And places like Sweden and Denmark have laws that are more open for capitalist enterprise than the US is. In all of these,
a free democracy, not
Socialism is the dominant system.
But any place where Socialism is, you find economic failure and piles of bodies. Let's talk Russia, China, North Korea, Cambodia, Romania, Albania, Venezuela, Zimbabwe, multiple African states, Vietnam...and on, and on and on. In North and South Korea, we have a pretty perfect comparison, in fact: both have the same language, same culture, same people, same geography, same peninsula, in fact...and the main difference is that one is free and one is Socialist...that, and that one is a thriving economy, and the other is a Hell-hole of human rights abuses, starvation, tyranny and death.
So no, yours are not examples of Socialist states. Let's focus on the places where Socialism
rules, and is thus freed to do what Socialism always does...not those countries in which the few social-welfare items on the public agenda are shored up by capitalism and free markets.
“Oh, but that’s not real socialism!” you’ll cry, because that’s always the escape hatch, isn’t it?
No. Because it's easy to see it's true. Socialism is not the dominant system in any of those countries. They're totally capitalism-funded, and they have free elections, multiple parties, and the government does not own the means of production, which is the
sine qua non of Socialism -- one would think you'd know that.
Yes, corporate interests have co-opted progressive policies in some cases—look no further than companies that slap rainbow flags on their products during Pride Month while lobbying against higher wages or workers’ rights.
That's an accurate example, but completely trivial, too. Rather, we should look at things like how corporate interests have been served by the fusion of the US with the military-industrial complex, so that foreign wars have become a gigantic tax-money laundry where politicians can get right at the workers' expense. Or we should look at the corporate bailouts. Or we should look at how the bloated executive is using big government interference to milk the public -- for example, Biden's promise of broadband internet access, which has resulted in not a foot of cable being laid, at a cost of billions for nothing. Or we should look at how media refused even to investigate the Hunter Biden computer issue, so that Biden could still be elected.
Or here's an even better one: why are the rich folks and celebrities at the WEF all thrilled with Socialism? Isn't the story of Socialism supposed to be about how the rich get their riches redistributed to the poor, and how that celebrities have no more income than anybody else? Why then do the rich and powerful throng to Davos on their jets, to figure out how to impose Socialist reforms on the general public? Why do the power brokers at the UN and the EU love it, too? Wouldn't that be slitting their own throats? And just how much of their own income have you noticed them "redistributing" in the process?
Or do they realize something that you, as a Socialist, just do not?
So there are lots of examples...and you picked "rainbow flags"?
But here’s the thing: that’s not socialism selling out;
You're right. It's Socialism being coopted by the rich and powerful, and being used to oppress the masses and to deprive them of possessions and freedoms. But isn't it astonishing to you, as a Socialist, that it can be done so easily...and that they are currently aiming to do that very thing?
So let’s turn this around. Since you’re so eager to play professor, name a country where unregulated capitalism has made the working class better off in the long run. I’ll wait.
Nobody's advocating "unregulated" capitalism. In fact, free markets have to be defended and protected. But that's best done by a government of more than one party, and by free elections, and free criticism of the government, and regulations and regulators responsible to the people, including the working voter -- all of which are
anathema to any genuinely Socialist system.