Typically it becomes an issue when the nation state is formed. There are ample examples from history about this.Nationalism becomes a thing when theres dispute over territory and the territory matters to people. — schopenhauer1
Not in my country.Not too long ago, nobody gave a rat's ass what party you belonged to, — synthesis
Some countries do have a problem with corruption, yes.The swamp (although incredible deep by historical standards) has always been in place. — synthesis
Well, if you don't get a seat in the elections, the hassle with lobbyists won't happen either.If you are forking over a great deal of money to a politician, they know EXACTLY what is expected, and if they do not follow-through, then they are through. — synthesis
In my view, no.Secondly, doesn't the absence of self-consistency foreshadow, that an intractable crisis permeates the heart of all (conceivable) logical architectures? — Aryamoy Mitra
I somewhat disagree. I think those who change wildly the parties they vote are actually a minority (even if they are a very important minority).I once asked my father why he was a Democrat and he told me that you are whatever the party in power happens to be. I believe this is how the majority of (successful) people see it. They are going to protect what they worked a lifetime to build. Ideology runs very thin when you get out into the real world (except if you're an academic where it apparently doesn't seem to matter very much). — synthesis
Is it easily acceptable?Why is it that nationality talk and Nationalism in particular is so easily acceptable, and race talk and Racism is so difficult and unacceptable? — unenlightened
Of course. This is the normal procedure. I don't think that there is any moral dilemma in this.If evidence arises linking him to the crimes he committed should he be prosecuted. — Steve Leard
And they see that authority protecting their niche in the system. — synthesis
I didn't say that only intellectuals support totalitarianism. And do notice that I said "part of the so-called" when referring to the the intellectuals. And who are here these "intellectuals"? Well, they are those who people listen, who journalists interview and ask their views about various issues. It's those who dominate the public discourse and are seen as intellectuals. Usually they have achieved positions in the academia or are successful authors.Given that intellectuals are intelligent, and nobody but the intellectuals suppor totalitarianism, you are saying that it's the dumbfucks only who oppose totalitarianism. — god must be atheist
Our present society makes it easy to live in your bubble by reinforcing it. And actually there are many reasons for the increasing polarization and populism being so widespread in the US. And of course, if those people have been for many months bombarded with saying that the elections will be stolen and then the sitting President that you support urges you to march on Capitol Hill, what would these people do in a crowd?Then how do you explain the Trump phenomenon and the storm of the Bastille Capitol? — god must be atheist
The horror, the horror...This nonentity, whoever he is, closed my discussion called Evolution Debunked — Joe0082
Yeah, too bad there are so many that insist on logic, the scientific method and that stuff instead of free-thinking...Philosophy is supposed to be a free-thinking pursuit for individualistic, intellectually-inclined people, not rigid narrow-minded morons. — Joe0082
Bye.Well I am outta here. — Joe0082
Of course there are smart thinking people who understand how the World is. But rarely are they the ones that set the lines in the public discourse.Does anybody in the West still want to be free? — synthesis
Bruno Latour posits that we have never been modern. Although there are hybrids of nature and culture –non-human and human, object and subject– and quasi-objects, modernity prefers to purify nature and society as distinct. Latour argues that there have always been hybridizations and quasi-objects in history. — Warren
"compostmodernity". — 180 Proof
Does anybody see anything on the horizon that might indicate a reversal this incredibly disturbing trend? — synthesis
See US Stimulus Will Boost Growth at a Cost of Higher Deficits, DebtFederal debt, which recently surpassed 100% of GDP, will approach 109% of GDP in FY 2021, assuming the US Treasury finances part of the upcoming spending from its unusually large cash balance, while general government debt will reach 127% of GDP in 2021, before surpassing 130% by 2023.
In my view this has improved somewhat: at least when Turkey opened it's borders (just prior the Covid outbreak last year) for the next influx of migrants, Greece shut the border down and the EU stood behind the country. And this is the way to do it: do what the member states first in line want and forget getting those brownie points in your domestic political debate back home. When one country is left alone to face a commen problem, everyone will understand that they too will be left alone, if it would be them on the line.This is why is so funny when some Nordic countries say to Spain, Portugal, Greece and Italy that “we must have more solidarity” really? But how? It is a complex situation having this kind of dangerous frontiers. — javi2541997

Exactly. EU being US will never work towards Russia policies... — javi2541997
And after Mao died, it wasn't an advanced economy. That's the key point. History and where countries start from matter.Yes, Nazi Germany is a much better comparison to modern China than comparing it to Mao's China or Stalin's Soviet Union because Nazi Germany was an advanced capitalistic economy. — Judaka
Now there's a revisionist line!Which ties back into, why did the cold war happen in the first place? Why was the US interested in ensuring China did not become communist? It's because the US is an advanced capitalistic economy, they want markets for their goods, communism threatens that. The US got what they wanted and the price China paid was the abandoning of communism. — Judaka

That's the worst parts of capitalism? So you mean they ought to be less competitive in the global market or what?Even if China has socialism, the businesses that are owned by the government are highly competitive and profit-driven, it resembles all the worst parts of capitalism that communism was supposed to do away with. — Judaka
Have the US go back from Europe to eat apple pie and have the EU collapse and Russia is the strongest country in Europe. That's why they are so against the EU and hope that the US goes back to it's Continent.As you said one of the big fails was giving the rule of West to politicians that were so mediocrities like Bush senior. But what is pretty interesting here is how Russia is still dominant in Europe. — javi2541997
First of all, there is no European singular policy towards Russia. Only a desperate attempt to have one.I wish a EU more connected with Russia or Kremlin but it looks like hard to reach it and each European country can only make business or diplomatic affairs with Russia by their own. — javi2541997
They have had now since their independence 73 years of insurgency, so go for it!- why not? — The Opposite



Don't waste my time. If you don't have a logical, philosophical, reasoned response to give, then you can go give an unreasoned, illogical, baboon mating call to some barn animal instead of wasting my time here. — Dharmi
Why can't the protesters be armed? Better than them being butchered on the streets like they are right now — The Opposite
Have we really proved the existence of irrational numbers? That's the name of this thread.All proofs of the existence irrational numbers (that I'm aware of) are proofs by contradiction. For example, we assume that √2 can only be 1) a rational number or 2) an irrational number. Since we've proved that √2 is not a rational number we conclude that it's an irrational number. Is it possible that this is a false dichotomy? — Ryan O'Connor
It's still not so evident. The Belt and Road initiative might be compared to a "Marshall Plan", but China isn't building up an alliance to contain the US. A more logical reason for the "Belt and Road" initiative is to do something with the massive industrial base that has been created to build those hundreds of new cities in order to prevent a huge economy recession.I think Xi Jinping is failing in some points because he is showing how evident China wants to control the world. — javi2541997
Or perhaps once you have been a Superpower, an ordinary "Great Power" status where you still would need to work with your peers as equals simply isn't the thing for you. Putin's Russia thinks it can be a Superpower still and Xi Jingping's China thinks it ought to be a Superpower.. Nevertheless it is interesting how always they avoid "European market" or the Euro itself. They don't want be part of it. This shows how powerful Russia is despite the fall of socialism/communism in 1991. — javi2541997

Exactly.. Deng Xiaoping was clever making this statement. — javi2541997
It's typical that you say it resembles Nazi Germany, not that it grew out of something similar to Stalinist Soviet Union, which was close to heart for Mao. The Third Reich emerged from the Weimar Republic, which was capitalist. Modern day China emerged from Maoist China. For some peculiar reason Soviet Union or Marxism-Leninism or the authoritarianism of (Marxist) socialist regimes is all disappeared from the definitions of communism in the 21st Century. How neat.The CCP resembles something like Nazi Germany, an advanced capitalist economy with a totalitarian government. — Judaka

Never heard of the BRIC countries?Not a lot heard about the two cooperating, indeed. — Shawn



Remember that even the Soviet Union and Communist China had a border conflict in 1969 after the Sino-Soviet Split, starting from things like Mao didn't like that Khrushchev denounced Stalin.I've been surprised by how China and Russia have somewhat cold relations with one another. Although, they plan to go back to the moon soon for scientific reasons. — Shawn


We simply don't care what they actually think, if it's not what we think. We judge those that think else than us. And unfortunately, we are getting only worse.What's your take on the West judging whether China is really communist or not? Hilarious or just dumb? — Shawn
Perfect.Those policy points are very clearly and unapologetically authoritarian, which is not only completely contrary to the original (libertarian) socialism, but even contrary to the stated end-goal of Marxism, and is the reason why Marxism(-Leninism) consistently fails to actually achieve socialist ends: — Pfhorrest
This is simply wrong. It's not.China is not communist
— Judaka
:100: :up:
China is the epitome of state capitalism. — Pfhorrest
Scientific socialism is not an immutable dogma. I once said that China’s great social transformation is not a masterplate from which we simply continue our history and culture, nor a pattern from which we mechanically apply the ideas of classic Marxist authors, nor a reprint of the practice of socialism in other countries, nor a duplicate of modernization from abroad. There is no orthodox, immutable version of socialism. It is only by closely linking the basic principles of scientific socialism with a country’s specific realities, history, cultural traditions, and contemporary needs, and by continually conducting inquiries and reviews in the practice of socialism, that a blueprint can become a bright reality.
Really?Not at all. Naturalism is a caricature, a non-position. — Dharmi
It's not that simple even in a small economy.I still don't totally understand why this is. I think it's because it leads to a state of equilibrium between wages and prices so that profit margins become small. Workers are then laid off to try to increase profitability and invite investment for R+D, new facilities and equipment, etc, but that only lowers demand. Now inventory becomes bloated. More workers are laid off. Is this right? — frank



