Since their Civil War, the English have been able to solve the problems in their society without large scale violence. Ok, there's Ireland and some colonies that were problematic, but otherwise...Right, I’m sure there was zero polarization on the issue in the UK. — NOS4A2

Some call it strategic silence.Out of sight out of mind. — NOS4A2
Let's see how well the centrist / right-wing duopoly can answer to Americans in the future.I take the view of Popper that the two-party system is the superior one. I don’t see it as a monster. I see it as a boon. — NOS4A2
Oh yes:And I believe polarization is an important aspect of a country’s progression and politics. The polarization surrounding civil rights, slavery, war has amounted to a better future for all. — NOS4A2
Revolt against their parents and everything they portray to stand for.What makes people from wealthy, academical background lean left? — Ansiktsburk
Kamala Harris said the “protests” won’t stop. — NOS4A2
The "right-wing" during the French revolution was where the conscientious defenders of the constitution sat. Don't think that the supporters of the Ancien Régime sat there during the French Revolution.As as libertarian socialist, I stand by the original notion of left and right, with the left being for both liberty and equality and the right being opposite both — Pfhorrest
There you go.I try not to make a habit of predicting the future, but no, I do not believe that. — NOS4A2
We have seen above, that the first step in the revolution by the working class is to raise the proletariat to the position of ruling class to win the battle of democracy.
The proletariat will use its political supremacy to wrest, by degree, all capital from the bourgeoisie, to centralize all instruments of production in the hands of the State, i.e., of the proletariat organised as the ruling class; and to increase the total productive forces as rapidly as possible.
Of course, in the beginning, this cannot be effected except by means of despotic inroads on the rights of property, and on the conditions of bourgeois production; by means of measures, therefore, which appear economically insufficient and untenable, but which, in the course of the movement, outstrip themselves, necessitate further inroads upon the old social order, and are unavoidable as a means of entirely revolutionizing the mode of production.
And that's the objective here?It certainly solicits the worst of the racists to come out touting their guns. — Benkei
Which politicians are listening?It shows which politicians listen and which don't. — Benkei
So not only are the Republicans the problem, but also the liberals too?US liberals are mostly cowards that talk the talk but never walk the walk. — Benkei
If totalitarianism has taught us anything, it is that we must always pay attention to the sabotage of democracy. It would not have been possible for Hitler or Stalin to do what they did if there were democratic checks on their power. — JerseyFlight
Absolutely, I agree. — jamalrob
How are violent protests working out so far?How is peaceful protesting working out for them so far? — Benkei
So how Wayfarer saying:I think you accidentally managed to say what is actually the case here: bothsidesism is indeed an "assault on common sense", since there is no equivalence, moral or otherwise, between "radical" leftwing and rightwing groups, fascists and anti-fascists, white supremacists and BLM protesters, and suggesting that there is is completely non-factual sophistry. — Enai De A Lukal
Rioting and looting is not civil protest. — Wayfarer
More like a vacuous assault on common sense and the political center from radicals from both sides, but in this case especially from the left.aaaaand there's that vacuous bothsidesism, right on cue — Enai De A Lukal
But will the Democrats put the demonstrators in charge of every lever of power in the U.S. Government?I’m not sure Trump’s comments are so outrageous, especially given the unrest, violence and destruction of property occurring right now. — NOS4A2
The Weinstein brothers are a refreshing alternative to the ordinary hyper partisan approach. "Unity 2020" is a bit far off, but still, great insights. Nice to notice that others follow them too here.I share this view as far as the Republican-Democratic frontrunners go. Interestingly, I just recently came across an "Articles of Unity 2020" push for Gabbard, Yang, McCraven, Ventura, and others as potential last minute alternatives, though I don't see them getting much exposure to have any impact on November as of yet, nor do I know much about the organization behind the push other than it seems spearheaded by Brett and Eric Weinstein and looks like it may have some possible backing by Peter Thiel of Thiel Capital. — Kevin
But there will be those, and they will be heard by Foxnews etc. And the mudslinging and modern day tribalism will continue.I don't imagine we'll won't see many (if any) on the left trying to glorify whoever shot this member of Patriot Prayer — Enai De A Lukal
?Without Hitler, we would still have a weak and cowardly NATO that would not act when needed. — Gus Lamarch
Let's do one reality check here before we continue. First, there are whole states that have seen NO riots in the last 20 years in the US including this year:But to blame Trump for the division, when most if not all of the rioters inform themselves through a hostile media, seems to me to be short-sighted and to attribute omnipotent power to one man. — NOS4A2

Oh yes, a skateboard. Such a deadly weapon.then he slayed another who tried to hit him with a skateboard. It turns out if you attack a man with a gun you get shot. — NOS4A2

When your strategy is to be divisive, to increase the antipathy between the left and right, sure, Trump will do so. And the current environment will happily help him in this.No, I think it’s wise for the president to show support to the victims of riots, and I think it’s a good move politically. — NOS4A2


The United States has among the lowest case fatality rates of any major country in the world. The European Union's case fatality rate is nearly three times higher than ours. Altogether, the nations of Europe have experienced a 30 percent greater increase in excess mortality than the United States.
Unfortunately, from the beginning, our opponents have shown themselves capable of nothing but a partisan ability to criticize. When I took bold action to issue a travel ban on China, Joe Biden called it hysterical and xenophobic. If we had listened to Joe, hundreds of thousands more Americans would have died. Instead of following the science, Joe Biden wants to inflict a painful shutdown on the entire country. - My Administration has a different approach. To save as many lives as possible, we are focusing on the science, the facts and the data.
Joe Biden's campaign has even published a 110-page policy platform co-authored with Far-Left Senator Bernie Sanders. The Biden-Bernie Manifesto calls for suspending ALL removals of illegal aliens, implementing nationwide Catch-and-Release; and providing illegal aliens with free taxpayer-funded lawyers. Joe Biden recently raised his hand on the debate stage and promised to give away YOUR healthcare dollars to illegal immigrants. He also supports deadly Sanctuary Cities that protect criminal aliens. He promised to end national security travel bans from Jihadist nations, and he pledged to increase refugee admissions by 700 percent. The Biden Plan would eliminate America's borders in the middle of a global pandemic.
The most dangerous aspect of the Biden Platform is the attack on public safety. The Biden-Bernie Manifesto calls for Abolishing cash bail, immediately releasing 400,000 criminals onto your streets and into your neighborhoods. When asked if he supports cutting police funding, Joe Biden replied, "Yes, absolutely." When Congresswoman Ilhan Omar called the Minneapolis police department a cancer that is "rotten to the root," Biden wouldn't disavow her support and reject her endorsement -- he proudly displayed it on his website.
Make no mistake, if you give power to Joe Biden, the radical left will Defund Police Departments all across America. They will pass federal legislation to reduce law enforcement nationwide. They will make every city look like Democrat-run Portland, Oregon. No one will be safe in Biden's America.
When there is police misconduct, the justice system must hold wrongdoers fully and completely accountable, and it will. But what we can never have in America -- and must never allow -- is MOB RULE. In the strongest possible terms, the Republican Party condemns the rioting, looting, arson and violence we have seen in Democrat-run cities like Kenosha, Minneapolis, Portland, Chicago, and New York.
There is violence and danger in the streets of many Democrat-run cities throughout America. This problem could easily be fixed if they wanted to. We must always have law and order. All federal crimes are being investigated, prosecuted, and punished to the fullest extent of the law.
When the anarchists started ripping down our statues and monuments, I signed an order, ten years in prison, and it all stopped.
During their convention, Joe Biden and his supporters remained completely silent about the rioters and criminals spreading mayhem in Democrat-Run Cities. In the face of left-wing anarchy and mayhem in Minneapolis, Chicago, and other cities, Joe Biden's campaign did not condemn it -- they DONATED to it. At least 13 members of Joe Biden's campaign staff donated to a fund to bail out vandals, arsonists, looters, and rioters from jail.
Let me put it this way.Your argument is that we can judge what Marx wrote based on what Stalin did. That's what you literally say: — boethius
And that's too bad, because this forum is a bit of a mirror to our times. As usually it's the more informed people here.No I agree with you. Forum has been a bit toxic of late. — DingoJones
Just as Jesus Christ obviously doesn't talk anything that would justify a crusade, I don't.So, to be clear, you attach the genocides and slavery of "Christendom" to the teachings of Christ? — boethius
Tiff, it's very sorry to hear that because I have found you to be a positive person on the forum.Having said that: as I push through college to become a Social worker, I have had to table a program that works in tandem with the police department, because no one is going to have faith that peace on the street can be achieved by a group of social workers, without weapons, being able to deescalate the mood.
That is a division that might not heal. One that gives me heavy heart. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Great answer, which tells just how open you are to open discussion.This needs to be stated and clarified: ssu has been thoroughly refuted at this point. — JerseyFlight
Well, I too find it as a ridiculous argument. If not Stalin, then some other. In the end all Proletarian dictatorships have become true dictatorships, if they have lasted long enough.If the answer is obviously no, as that's a ridiculous argument, — boethius
As this accusation will be hurled at anyone criticizing Marx, I have referred to what Marx has written.so too is the idea the actions of Stalin somehow condemn the ideas of Marx to such a degree that it can be just assumed without even needing to know anything about Marx and what he wrote (which you obviously don't). — boethius
What a strawman. Of course notDo you only bring this kind of argument against Marxism, but wouldn't against market theorists or Christianity — boethius
Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God.
Another strawman.You shouldn't quote Mikhail Bakunin if you have no idea what he was about and what was his basis of disagreement with Marx. - Go research the Bakunin-Marx disagreement and come back and defend Bakunin. — boethius
Liberal capitalist theory? What is liberal capitalist theory? Having studied economics, I don't recall this kind of theory. Perhaps be more specific just who you are talking about.Liberal capitalist theory is adamant, indeed ferociously convinced, that a similar structure does not happen in liberal capitalist economies, that everyone gets their fair shake — boethius
Seems you don't even read what I wrote, because I did refer to this above in the discussion.If you were interested in history, you'd know, or could quickly find out, that nearly all achievements made by labour — boethius
Not all trade unions are Marxists. There obviously are Marxist unions, but a lot aren't. Just like Marx isn't the only socialist around.More specifically, actually achieving those things through unions and so on while calling themselves Marxists — boethius
Any credit? Trade unions were legalized in the UK when Karl Marx was six years old. And the reason why a brilliant philosopher like Marx got things so wrong, that the revolution didn't happen in the UK or Germany, is exactly because the state and the capitalists did do concessions and the Western States could do something about the inequalities brought on with the industrial revolution (and with earlier ones too).though we can't assign all the credit to Marx, we can't assign any credit to large owners of capital who were the opposition at every step, nor any of the credit to liberal economists decrying political action as "inefficient" because any state interference in the market will be bad for everyone. — boethius
What I'm arguing is that the modern welfare state was an answer to many issues that Marx pointed out and it didn't eradicate capitalism and private property. It has worked somewhat well.Are you arguing the welfare state is incompatible with Marx's ideas? Or just coming from totally different conception of society? — boethius
I have no idea what you are implying with "people feeling alienation as producers of commodities". Finnish economy is a small export oriented economy with an ageing population, which is hard hit during global recessions (like this one), which naturally present a problem for the welfare state as taxes ought to pay for the system.Would you argue that the problem of depression in Finland has nothing to do with alienation people feel as producers of commodities (or managers of producers somewhere down the line of commodities)? — boethius
Ideas of Marx aren't irrelevant, especially how much influence he has had on the World stage, but the main point was the reality of how the system works, how the government would work and how all the various experiments with Marxism have been a bit of a disappointment.you'll need to actually read Marx and demonstrate how his ideas are simply irrelevant — boethius
If you would refer to "socialist roots" of the welfare state I could agree with that, but you insist using "Marxist roots". As a person who has gotten a masters in economic history from the university, I do beg to differ here, because this simply isn't true in the historical perspective. You simply have to make a difference between social democracy and the Marxist-Leninist communists of the 20th Century as this divide was huge during the Cold War. Simply put it, not all "socialism" is Marxism and especially with the history of the Nordic countries, Marxists and Marxism hasn't been the driving force behind the welfare state but social democrats and usually the social democratic parties and ideological figure behind were people like Gunnar Myrdal. And of course, the programs were accepted and furthered by right wing parties too.Welfare states are obviously a mix of liberal capitalism and socialist (including Marxist socialism) ideas; refusing to engage with the Marxist roots of the welfare state (that you enjoy the benefits of!), which, again, aren't the only roots, simply because "Soviets bad" is to simply choose to live in ignorance of history. — boethius
In this case, you are simply creating your own fantasy. In the Real World Soviet Union is considered socialist and leftist. Sorry.I did not merely try to call the Soviet Union a Right-Wing-Dictatorship, in actual practice that's what it was. You don't like this fact because it refutes your strawman argument. — JerseyFlight
Right, Marx is on the pedestal. I thought it would be so with you.I am not sure I have ever encountered a more species-intelligent-thinker. One cannot think about material life and ignore Marx, even those who try end up in the same place. He simply thought about society in concrete terms, unshackled from the errors of idealism. — JerseyFlight
So you do agree with the criticism that Bakunin makes of Marx? Interesting.What a great Bakunin quote. I wish I knew the full context but I agree with what he said here. — JerseyFlight
The divide can be less inflammatory, but it still does continue: the whole political system depends on it.It would undoubtably be far less divided without the orange Divider-in-Chief continuously inflaming the situation. — praxis
I'm saying that there weren't those checks, not even after Stalin, even if the totalitarian system became more "humane" by changing the labour camps to mental institutions.. It doesn't matter what you or I say about the Soviet Union, what matters is what the Soviet Union actually was. Did democracy exist in the Soviet Union? Did Stalin have power? Were there any democratic checks on his power? — JerseyFlight
But in the People's State of Marx, there will be, we are told, no privileged class at all. All will be equal, not only from the juridical and political point of view, but from the economic point of view. At least that is what is promised, though I doubt very much, considering the manner in which it is being tackled and the course it is desired to follow, whether that promise could ever be kept. There will therefore be no longer any privileged class, but there will be a government, and, note this well, an extremely complex government, which will not content itself with governing and administering the masses politically, as all governments do to-day, but which will also administer them economically, concentrating in its own hands the production and the just division of wealth, the cultivation of land, the establishment and development of factories, the organisation and direction of commerce,, finally the application of capital to production by the only banker, the State. All that will demand an immense knowledge and many "heads overflowing with brains" in this government. It will be the reign of scientific intelligence, the most aristocratic, despotic, arrogant and contemptuous of all regimes. There will be a new class, a new hierarchy of real and pretended scientists and scholars, and the world will be divided into a, minority ruling in the name of knowledge and an immense ignorant majority. And then, woe betide the mass of ignorant ones!
Such a regime will not fail to arouse very considerable discontent in this mass and in order to keep it in check the enlightenment and liberating government of Marx will have need of a not less considerable armed force. For the government must be strong, says Engels, to maintain order among these millions of illiterates whose brutal uprising would be capable of destroying and overthrowing everything, even a government directed by heads overflowing with brains.
Indeed you don't.I care little about your formalism or anyone elses. The Soviet Union was a Right-Wing-Dictatorship presided over by Joseph Stalin. — JerseyFlight
I guess we aren't. With utterly crazy statements from you like the one above it isn't surprising.Hard to see how we are even on the same page here? — JerseyFlight
Please don't turn this in another anti-natalism thread. — Benkei
