Yeah, so I'm asking what's so individualistic about being poor? — Shawn
What he's pointing out, however, is hypocrisy. Why? Because when it comes to the rich, they're the first ones that benefit from a welfare state, despite professing the ideal of "individualism." When the poor ask for anything, however, they're told to take a hike.
I can't make it any clearer than that. — Xtrix
I don't quite see the utility of the quote. — Shawn
OK, so I'm poor, have to pull myself up by my bootstraps, and have to struggle to get forward. — Shawn
By the way, this quote of rugged individualism isn't any new thing, as Reagan promoted it to the right in his days. — Shawn
So, do idiots believe that they have to just bite the bullet and muster the willpower to pull themselves from their own bootstraps? Is that what this topic is about? — Shawn
I really don't know what you mean by this. Are you describing a reality or are you describing an attitude about the poor? — Xtrix
OK, then you said:
"I'd like to get reactions to this assertion from the Forum." — Shawn
A major part of keeping the ruling minority class in the position they are, is keeping the majority divided. Most of us know this, and it takes various forms: race, social issues, religion, geographical area, etcetera. But one of the greatest (and easily overlooked) ways of keeping people apart is by encouraging the internalization of "rugged individualism" as an ideal.
I'd like to get reactions to this assertion from the Forum. — Xtrix
I'll state it another way. Who would want to internalize 'rugged individualism' in regards to how MLK professed it?
And, yet the right and many on the left embrace it. — Shawn
As a monarchist, it's also probably how she genuinely saw things: citizens as subjects of the government, the way people are subjects of the monarch. She might not have seen herself as an elected official at all. Subjects of the monarch owe the monarch, not the other way around.First, it’s creating a problem that didn’t exist. Much like welfare queens, it’s a myth created to justify shifting power from the public to the private sphere. If all Thatcher sees is people wanting government to solve all their problems, that’s her own delusions. People should demand their government do more to help them. — Xtrix
I think you are confusing what people want to hear with what they need to hear. People like to think of themselves as rugged individualists, risk-taking, bootstrapping, captains of daring-do. /.../ — James Riley
Absolutely, on both counts.What I said was, I bet you would struggle write a simple elegant paragraph articulating community over individualism in the manner of that speech of Thatcher's. — Tom Storm
There is far greater power in numbers, working as a team, collaboration, networking, solidarity, education, etc. This is the only point. It has been systematically beaten out of people's heads for decades. — Xtrix
The overjustification effect occurs when an expected external incentive such as money or prizes decreases a person's intrinsic motivation to perform a task. Overjustification is an explanation for the phenomenon known as motivational "crowding out." The overall effect of offering a reward for a previously unrewarded activity is a shift to extrinsic motivation and the undermining of pre-existing intrinsic motivation. Once rewards are no longer offered, interest in the activity is lost; prior intrinsic motivation does not return, and extrinsic rewards must be continuously offered as motivation to sustain the activity. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overjustification_effect
It's much deeper than this. The mainstream Left seems to have been bad at articulating rival narratives. And there is no question that Murdoch hasn't helped. I don't wish to dwell on this. — Tom Storm
People still don't realize just how dangerous that would have been, and how important it was to vote him out. Which is very discouraging. — Xtrix
It's not that the left is simply bad at articulating a rival narrative, it's that the left, if we take it as a whole doesn't have one. — Echarmion
Groups hijack certain terms to make them more appealing to others. Just look at how the terms, "liberal" and "progressive" have been hijacked by the left as sheep's clothes for their authoritarianism and maintaining the status quo.Not even close. To be "Libertarian" today is to be essentially a corporatist. The term is almost the opposite of what it once meant -- as is true for most political terminology in the United States.
"Government should leave us alone" and "support free markets." That's at the core of neoliberalism through and through. Translation: Big Government is bad, so reduce it. It's no solution, it's the problem. What IS the solution? Private business -- privatize everything, take it out of the public ("Big Government") sphere and put it into the hands of private power, which is unaccountable to the public.
No honest business person believes in free markets. It's a fantasy. They value socialism and big government more than anyone -- they simply believe the government should serve them. Subsidies, bailouts, tax cuts, deregulation, etc.
Capitalism cannot survive without state intervention. Never has in any developed country. — Xtrix
I mean, all you have to do is look up the word, "Libertarian" in the dictionary and see that is makes no mention of corporatist. — Harry Hindu
It's up to us level-headed folk to educate these numbskulls what the terms really do mean. — Harry Hindu
What he's pointing out, however, is hypocrisy. Why? Because when it comes to the rich, they're the first ones that benefit from a welfare state, despite professing the ideal of "individualism." When the poor ask for anything, however, they're told to take a hike. — Xtrix
In US history at least wealthy economic conservatives have talked a good game about the virtues of self-discipline and freedom from government control, but they've also been the quiet beneficiaries of centralized influence over protective tariffs, immigration policy, monetary policy, bailouts, subsidies, etc. — Erik
Chomsky is talking about contemporary Libertarianism — thewonder
and the origins of Libertarianism as an Anarchist school of thought. — thewonder
Read the article. — thewonder
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