Not sure which is worse, them having never read up on history being the reason they think socialism is a good idea or that they have read up on history and yet still think the ideology can work.
Edit: Also, aren't you a socialist, Ewok? Or have I misinterpreted our arguments in other threads?
You have. I'm not an avowed socialist, communist, capitalist, or libertarian. I am just me, and I try to take each theory as it is. Taking socialism as it is means acknowledging that the umbrella of socialist theories are all attempts at evolving capitalism to the next step of economic theory development. I don't throw all of that away just because the language of the various ideologies in question were co-opted by a set of murderous dictators. Neither do I just blindly accept that we are in "the best of all possible worlds" with our current capitalistic economy. And I also recognize that even modern America fits the definition of a country following a socialist model. It is a weaker model than that in most contemporary Europe, but we today are all living as socialists of one stripe or another, despite the lingering cultural damage of McCarthyism.
If you like history, here's a lesson for you: when Marx spoke of a violent revolution to overthrow capitalism, the context is that he believed such a revolution to be
inevitable, not necessarily desirable. In the world of his time, Britain's transition to the Industrial Age had transformed the old peasant class who could at least eke out a living working their lord's land into a wandering pauper class with no means of providing for themselves unless they could get a job in the various workhouses and factories where Britain turned its imported materials (the products of colonialism, but that's a different facet of the horrors wrought in the age) into finished goods. Those workhouses had horrendous working conditions, hours, and pay. If you google up some videos of modern sweatshops in Asia, they probably still aren't as bad as what those factories were like. In the face of this suffering, Marx simply said that eventually the people would have enough and would bloodily overthrow those who gate-kept economic mobility.
Marx ended up being wrong, about that at least. The ruling powers that be ended up having enough self-awareness to compromise with socialist labor movements before the breaking point was hit (in some countries, on some levels), and we are the beneficiaries of those 19th and early 20th century struggles in our modern workday and the middle class. That is a
very simplified and abbreviated history of the modern labor struggle. But it does illustrate that if you are working today, you are a beneficiary of Marx's and the other keystone socialist figures' legacy.
If I had to sum up my thoughts on economics into a label, the best I can do is that I am anti-capitalist. Capitalism
demands restraint. To borrow terminology from a popular kind of strategy game, it's focus on exploration, expansion, and exploitation leads unswervingly to extermination of anything that gets in the way of its mechanical processes. I am sure that your response will be something along the lines of "that's every civilization ever". You would be wrong. There's been conquest and exploitation a-plenty across the history of agricultural society, but capitalism strips out any of the humanitarian sentiments ever blended into the social fabric in favor of cold, hard, inhuman efficiency, to a unique level.
I could go on a long screed, but I don't need to. All that is needed to see all of the humanist problems in capitalism without evolution is a couple of videos of factory farms.
This one gets the point across without being too gruesome for the PG-13 guidelines.
See the baby cows dragged and put into boxes where they cannot turn around. See the chickens mill around in cages where they cannot spread their wings or collapse under their own genetically modified weight. See the pigs who don't see sunlight until they're led to slaughter.
Then look at human sweatshops, and realize that the only reason the capitalists haven't put us all in cages in the name of efficiency is because of the socialist-inspired labor movement.
I don't know what's the best way to get society out of the hole it's continually digging. But I do know that blind adherence or even just acceptance of capitalism is killing the planet, is killing our bodies, and is even killing our spirits.