Bernie is an avowed socialist. Straight from the horse’s mouth. That was my only point. You don’t have to look at the countless other leaders and states who have claimed the same, but because there is always a trail of death and tyranny behind them should at least be cause for scepticism when someone once again picks up the mantle. I doubt your equivocations would occur if Bernie called himself a fascist, for instance. — NOS4A2
Those policies actually fit the technical definition of social democracy (which is not a kind of socialism), not democratic socialism, or any kind of socialism. They have nothing to do with capital being owned by those who use it, they just provide a band-aid over the worst excesses of capitalism. — Pfhorrest
That was interesting. There is a lot in there I agree with. But they go much farther than I...I just want a more interested voter (not just interested in having their opinions agreed with). They want everyone to actually engage with their community. I am way too socially uncomfortable for that sort of behavior :grimace: But I can appreciate its usefulness and support those actions when I can. I can admit that I would definitely count as a "hobbyist" based on their description. — ZhouBoTong
Let's at least be very clear: Bernie is an avowed "Democratic Socialist." It sounds like I'm splitting hairs, but it happens to matter in this case. Why? Because Bernie, as anyone would expect, does not identify with the state owning the means of production or any Soviet-type government. He's not in favor of dictatorship or authoritarianism. What Bernie means is a label for New Deal style policies. That's all. Given that, any way you feel about socialism, its history and track record, is already moot -- why? Because that's not what Bernie is talking about. That's precisely why he adds the "democratic" part, to differentiate from Russian and Cuba and others.
I think swinging the country in the direction of a new New Deal is a very smart choice and very much needed, after years of neoliberal policy -- the results we see all around us. If you really feel we're (the working and middle classes) better off now than we were in the 50s and 60s under New Deal policies, that's a debate worth having.
What do you make of Krugman's position vs. Wolff's? I'll link below, if you're interested:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6J3ROV4IPc — Xtrix
Bizarre the way Americans talk about Sanders. He's a middle-of-the-road Social Democrat advocating for stuff that most of the developed world takes for granted. That's about it. The rest is figments of diseased political imaginations. — Baden
But oh no, he said Castro did something good. Yes, he did. He drastically improved literacy levels, for example. Obama said it too.That doesn't make Castro mother Theresa, but a thing he didn't do was massacre millions of Vietnamese and Cambodian civilians or sponsor murder and torture across Central and South America etc etc. Again, nuts that Americans are delusional enough to assume moral superiority for their leaders. Wake the fuck up and read some history. — Baden
Trump on Kim Jong Un, a hardline communist dictator and one of the worst human rights abusers in history. A guy who regularly tortures political opponents to death and imprisons their children for life:
"We fell in love.”
"He likes me, I like him. Some people say I shouldn’t like him. Why shouldn’t I like him?”
"He's... a real leader."
B... But Sanders once said Castro raised literacy levels! :scream:
I give up. — Baden
No one who was caught off-guard by underestimating voter turnout or Trump's ability to secure enough support to beat Clinton will allow that shit to happen again, assuming that their worldview is much the same as it was four years back. Give Sanders the national spotlight. Place him on stage with Donald John Trump, and watch school start for all those willing to learn.
The most pleasant slaughter that one may ever see.
I cannot wait. — creativesoul
being easy for the Right to manipulate for their interests — Wayfarer
The Sunrise Movement and other large, national organizations and movements is interesting and all of that, but I think I'd be more comfortable locally -- and that's kind of the point of the article anyway, in the sense that this is where everything starts. — Xtrix
being interested, informed, and willing to have the conversations with other people in a rational way, are all necessary. Even THAT would be sufficient to change things, too, because in that case we'd be voting very differently. Unfortunately we're being indoctrinated in all kinds of ways, and having our consent "manufactured," to a large degree. How to overcome this is an interesting topic. — Xtrix
Three, we need a genuine working class party -- not slightly more and slightly less conservative parties serving the interest of the ruling class. — Bitter Crank
This means taxing wealth at a high rate. Maybe it should be enshrined in the constitution, so it can't be changed easily. — Bitter Crank
One, the members of the Supreme Court need to be rotated more often -- which means ending life-time appointments. Fixed terms would solve part of the problem. The court IS POLITICAL. It has to be knocked off its pseudo-august pedestal. — Bitter Crank
As far as I can tell, Wayfarer's argument is that America has moved so far right over the last few decades, that they don't want this. I tend to disagree, and would point out that most people under 40 don't seem to have an automatic problem because the word "socialism" was mentioned — ZhouBoTong
:up:Rank and file are more liberal than the ruling class. Naturally they we are more liberal; they we have far less to lose from economic democratization, and far more to gain. — Bitter Crank
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