- Joined
- 7 September 2009
- Posts
- 272
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- 3
Smelly,
So what you are saying is:
1/ The socialists have realized their ideology is a failure.
2/ Recognized that free enterprise is the only viable way to have a successful economy.
3/ Decided to leech from the producers to create a welfare dependent client constituency, AKA welfare state.
Yes?
It's still socialism, abeit a pragmatic version that recognizes and farms the power of the profit motive.
Pretty much, yeah (though I'd object to the subjective language
But the quote from you I was responding to was this:
...has never worked successfully as a system, ever, without the the influence of the capitalistic spirit to prop it up.
Point being that it's not supposed to.
Your error (still making it? "The socialists have realised...") was lumping all socialists together. Like I said in the first post. There are plenty of socialists who believe in a command economy, and there are plenty who disagree with that and believe in moderated capitalism. These groups have different names.
Social democrats do NOT want communism. That's why they're called social democrats, and why they're very VERY different (to the point of spitting hate) from democratic socialists. As I said: very "Peope's Front of Judea".
Plenty of hard-core socialists haven't recognised the failure of their ideology. That's why the dudes that have discovered that socialism can only work in small doses and only inside a democratic and largely capitalist framework need a name to differentiate themsevles from the nuts. And if it's a crap and misleading name, well blame the politics professors that decide to go on using it... /shrug
My point was to correct what you appeared to believe: that is, that social democrats reject capitalism. They don't. The world is not black-and-white, all-or-nothing.
Re: point 3, again, I'd use universal health care as an example of a successful "socialist" policy. It's not all bad. It's a philosophy that - we agree - needs to be scrutinised carefully to prevent ridiculous excess, and will always carry a element of inefficiency and corruption, but it also gives us some pretty decent net-outcomes. Just like a lot of philosophies.
So it's unfair to dismiss anyone who identifies as an SD as lacking objectivity.
The "welfare state" can be an unmitigated disater if it goes too far. But with no welfare at all, you've got something just as bad, IMO.
Or do you oppose universal health care?