It is true that nowadays most people on the left do not hold conservative religious positions. However, is that because there is something that makes religious/social conservatism inherently, or in principle, anti-left? Or is it merely because people on the left simply don't happen to be religious on average? — Agustino
About half of all the Europeans pray or meditate at least once a week. Three out of four Europeans say they are religious persons. Of course, there is a big gap between the more secularized north-western European countries and the more traditional south-eastern ones. ...
However, people who consider themselves as atheists are a small minority, except in France, where almost 15 percent say they are atheist. It is obvious that a vast majority of all the Europeans nominate themselves as religious persons. There are even more people who consider themselves as religious as there are people who attend church. It is a kind of 'believing without belonging'. — European Values Study.EU
As I said, I'm definitely not a communist, nor approve of communism.
But is the left subsumed by communism? Why is communism the only "left" system? Dorothy Day was a distributist for example, an ideology that she found expressed most closely by communist organizations at that time. — Agustino
O yeah, but I don't really understand why. — Agustino
It's not complicated: The United States has a long history of a very conservative politics based on protecting and promoting the prerogatives of private wealth, private enterprise, suppression of social dissent, anti-black, — Bitter Crank
:-O - why distributivism? Distributism sounds simpler. This series of videos here is a good introduction. I link to this particular video, but you can watch from episode 1:distributivism — Bitter Crank
authority, self sufficiency — Bitter Crank
They were socially liberal, fiscally conservative — Bitter Crank
This isn't really true. The hardcore left just assumes that private ownership, business and economic life generally are evils. They actually quite like corporatism - they enjoy working for corporations. What they dislike, at least many of them, are forms of entrepreneurship it seems. They would love it if one corporation owned everything and we all worked for it.The left strawmans capitalism, confusing it with corporatism — Thorongil
They do hate the 1% people, Wall Street and big banks. But they don't hate multinationals like Facebook, Google, etc. These companies are full of leftists.I don't know what part of the left you're talking about, but it is obvious to me that most who belong on said part of the political spectrum have a seething antipathy for multinational corporations, big banks, Wall Street, "the 1%," and the rich in general. To support such things and their subsidization by the state is to be a corporatist, not a capitalist, but the left fails to distinguish between the two. — Thorongil
It's interesting to me that one finds no socially conservative, fiscal liberals (in the American sense of these terms). — Thorongil
the Republican Party just passed a ruinous tax cut which resembles a Keynesian maneuver — Bitter Crank
Money doesn't generally "trickle down". — Bitter Crank
In order to get the good stuff that is locked up in the economic canopy of the jungle, you have to cut off the top of the "trees". Liquidate the plutocracy, in other words — Bitter Crank
this is a rather Keynesian move and one the Democrats ought clearly to have no issue with — Thorongil
The rich do not normally become rich at the expense of the poor, just as when running a race, the fastest sprinter does not cause the others to run more slowly. — Thorongil
What needs cutting off is the government gravy train to, and bailouts of, large corporations. Let them compete and succeed in the market to justify their existence and profits. — Thorongil
The rich do not normally become rich at the expense of the poor, — Thorongil
http://www.dailywire.com/news/19511/googles-leftist-goggles-leave-googlers-agog-ben-shapiro#On what basis do you make this improbable claim? — Bitter Crank
Keynes advocated government spending to counteract contraction in the economy. The economy is not, at this time, contracting. — Bitter Crank
Tax law is the principle means by which the extreme disproportionate distribution of wealth has occurred. The 2017 tax bill is simply more diversion of economic resources to the already richer-than-Croesus-crowd. — Bitter Crank
Yes, the rich do get richer at the expense of the poor. — Bitter Crank
They want the stuff and the freedom from toil that money brings, are you seriously suggesting that 'stuff' is in infinite supply? — Inter Alia
Material resources aren't the only source of wealth. Just think of the digital and service sectors. Some programmer who creates an app and becomes rich didn't exploit any poor person. — Thorongil
Material resources aren't the only source of wealth. Just think of the digital and service sectors. Some programmer who creates an app and becomes rich didn't exploit any poor person. — Thorongil
That's wrong. I want to be wealthy, but that's not because I want the stuff money can buy (I'm quite ascetic by nature, and have very low spending on myself) - if by that you're imagining freedom from having to work, luxuries, etc. I want to be wealthy because I'm very ambitious and I want to implement my vision in society. And that requires power, with financial power being just one of the key elements.I didn't mention anything about sources of wealth, I said that no-one wants just money, they want the stuff money can buy. — Inter Alia
Call the shots in terms of organisation of production AND of society, obviously. Finance academies, affect culture, etc. Literarily, in today's society, no work will get done - including politics - without the money. And if you don't have the money yourself - say if you're an NGO, then you're at the mercy of whoever has the money for the changes you actually implement. So if you want to control the whole process, there is no escape from controlling the economical aspect.If he's not going to do any of these things, then what is he going to do with the money? — Inter Alia
Well BC or any communist pretty much will never grant you this. In a certain sense, they are right. I make no qualms about the fact that we all live off the blood and sweat of others, and must inevitably do so. You simply cannot survive, even for one day, without abusing the labour of others in some form or another.Some programmer who creates an app and becomes rich didn't exploit any poor person. — Thorongil
I want to be wealthy because I'm very ambitious and I want to implement my vision in society. And that requires power, with financial power being just one of the key elements. — Agustino
Sure, but that's just the nature of the world, we have finite resources. For me, the ethical implication is that if you had the good fortune to be born in a relatively okay place as a middle-class person, (or even a poor person in a Western highly developed nation), then it is your duty to do everything in your power to make the world a better place. That does entail being capable to wield power in the world yourself, no?I'm not sure how this makes any difference ethically, we can't all have power either so the rich are still taking from the poor, if I extend my list to 'stuff', land, freedom from toil and power, it doesn't change either the truth of it or the ethical implications. — Inter Alia
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