Blind groper wrote:Two veins of extremist lunacy shown here.
1. Anti-capitalism
2. Calling anything socialist an evil Marxism.
Both are idiotic, because both are extremist.
Nah, anything socialist is evil Marxism because it flows from the fundamental presumption that the collective has the right to control and dispose of the labor and capital of the individual without his permission in order to achieve goals unrelated to the individual's use of public resources.
Trying to put a pretty name on it is just classic Marxist diversionary tactics. If the social model originates with Marxism, which ALL socialist societies do, then it's perfectly reasonable to call such societies what they are: Marxist. Just because you want to dress it up and plaster over some of the worst abuses of Marxism doesn't make it not-Marxism.
Capitalism is a good thing, when not permitted to get out of hand. It generates wealth, which is excellent. It is also inherently selfish and uninhibited. Capitalism without restraining laws and strong policing results in pollution and environmental degradation, exploitation of workers (think of Victorian England coal miners), and the accumulation of wealth in the hands of a few, while leaving everyone else in poverty. Capitalism controlled is a wonderful force for human welfare.
Quite right, and you'll find, if you bother to look, that I have never argued that Capitalism can or should be entirely unfettered and free of regulation. I've said many times that there are two types of regulations that affect Capitalism: First, there are regulations that control fraudulent behavior on the part of parties to a contract (and "exported harm" such as deliberate environmental damage outside of the property of the owner qualifies as fraudulent). These regulations are reasonable and necessary to ensure fair trading in the free markets.
The other type of regulation is government-imposed rules that are intended to select winners and losers in the free market. Examples of these sorts of regulations are egregious environmental regulations that affect only one disfavored industry (today that's coal) and government favoritism (through tax breaks, grants, or other regulations that favor political favorites over everyone else, like General Electric's government subsidies and tax breaks), which are intended to control and direct commerce in the free markets in order to achieve political or social goals by the current administration. Those regulations are fundamentally wrong and harmful to capitalism and free markets because they skew the internal controls of free markets that function in a very Darwinian fashion to drive inefficient, fraudulent or simply poor products out of the markets and which encourage entrepreneurship, innovation, cost effectiveness, and economic growth.
In the same way that it's morally wrong to force the individual to labor on behalf of others with whom he has no relationship and for whom he has not voluntarily accepted financial responsibility, it's morally wrong for the government, or the collective, to interfere in the free markets in order to pick winners and losers in the economy.
Socialism is not Marxism.
Sorry, but it is. All socialistic societies are based on the proposition stated by Marx: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need." The unspoken part of that is that the decisions about ability and need are ALWAYS determined by the State, according to the penchants or desires of the State to accomplish some social control or agenda regardless of the individual's desire, need or factual use or agreement with the social goals. All socialist societies are based on the fundamental premise that the members of the collective owe a duty of labor (and thereby property) to the State merely because they exist, not because they have consumed or made use of some public benefit or goods.
It is often a by product of a capitalist economy.
Complete horseshit. It's a product of Marxist thought and dependent-class pressure on the State to provide them with largess from the public treasury, which is of course obtained by taxing the productive class (and eventually simply seizing and nationalizing productive industry Viz: Venezuela), which the dependent class has been taught (as a part of the Marxist dialectic) are evil, selfish, rapacious and justifiably to be dispossessed of their labor, property and lives because it's "unfair" that they prosper (through hard work) while the dependent class suffers (because of sloth, greed and envy) under their "evil" grip on the economy.
Socialism, like Capitalism, when properly controlled, is a wonderful force for human welfare. Marxism itself, in its pure form, is a lovely idea. A bit like a utopia in fairyland. Sadly, unfettered Marxism tends to turn to evil dictatorship and exploitation with a different name.
First, it's not a "wonderful force for human welfare" because it ignores the most important aspect of human nature; the instinctive drive for personal autonomy and liberty that exists in every human being. Second, it's a utopian ideal because it utterly ignores well-known and understood human behavior, and therefore in every single instance where it's been attempted, corruption has flooded the society very quickly and this creates either a State-run despotic tyranny that disregards individual rights or it bankrupts the society when the members of the collective decide there's no point in working because the State has promised them support. But since that support depends on the productivity of the productive class, and the policies of socialism encourage people to be dependent on government rather than being productive in their own rational self-interest, socialism always fails when the productive class eventually collapses under the burden of supporting an ever-growing dependent class, and productivity ceases, whereupon the society collapses into death, destruction and anarchy (Viz: Greece) because the government cannot fulfill it's empty promises to the dependent class.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
© 2013/2014/2015/2016 Seth, all rights reserved. No reuse, republication, duplication, or derivative work is authorized.