Spidey wrote:Tc I was referring to places like Cuba and such…ever seen what socialism did to agriculture there?
And have you seen what corporate farming has done to independent farming? Destroyed it
and the land the corporations have abused to do their so called "farming". Perhaps it's needed to feed our large population, but it will eventually be our detriment in the long run.
Spidey wrote:And…Geezee do I have to explain for the umpteen time why infrastructure and municipal services and such are not socialism.
Not every single thing done by a collective qualifies as socialism…get over it already. Socialism has very specific goals and things done for goals other than those specific things do not qualify. (of course trying to explain how other “isms” have specific meanings fell on deaf ears)
There is one shining example of true socialism in this country…the public school system, where not only is public education a main tenet of socialism, but the goals are exactly what socialism is designed to do. (create equality and fairness) What the fack does the military have to do with fairness and equality. The military has a goal…defending the country, not some grandiose philosophic goal. And yes…it’s a collective, but so is chipping in for a keg…is that also socialism. So I guess some business profits from socialism when some kids chip in and by some beer.
Just try to remember this when trying to identify socialism…socialism is a political and economic system designed to advance social goals, not just any system designed to get work/something done, such as trash collection. No social goals in trash collection, just good old practicality.
There is socialism in this country, but you have to know how to identify it.
Bernie Sanders is NOT a "socialist". He's a Democratic Socialist. Democratic socialists don't support a single-party system and the centralism of government. He's
not advocating a Leninist or Stalinist version of Socialism. Be that as it may, the swing towards Laissez Faire Capitalism we have going on now WILL result in another Great Depression in our foreseeable future. Hopefully not in my lifetime though. That's just the way things work when people do things driven by greed and the way our economic and political system works. Our system likes to make big bounces like a car with only springs for it's suspension. There are no shock absorbers to dampen the bounces because people keep taking them off. So in the future, another Great Depression is bound to happen, then we'll see that inevitable knee jerk swing back to the socialistic FDR-types of government regulation in reaction, yet again. The large support for Sanders is evidence of that. Too bad we can't work together to take the best of both economic systems for the benefit of everyone, bringing about less suffering and reactionary political policies. Sh*t! I forgot, we're all humans. Nothing ever changes.
As for the public schools, the only reason the public school system is in trouble is because half the country
wants it gone in favor of private schooling for profit, namely conservatives. Of course our public school system is a mess, one party wants to prop it up, the other wants to destroy it no matter what. No one wants to FIX IT. The system can't stand up to all that pushing and pulling, so it's falling apart. I came from the public school system in the 1960's and 70's and I was able to go to college on cheap instate tuition without getting a loan or scholarship or in debt. I also used that education to begin my career. It worked just fine for me.
As for our country's infrastructure, it IS a socialist
idea, not pure socialism. Everyone pays taxes to build and maintain that infrastructure for
everyone's ease of access and use, both public and private. Can you imagine how this country would have grown up if every road and bridge were private and had tolls, with our capitalists? I think our economy and the ease of which people can move around without exorbitantly paying for it would have made this country a totally different inaccessible place for most people. It certainly wouldn't have allowed for the easy distribution of goods and services for those who are poorer or even those who have small businesses.