Cuba, I'd say, has hope. Mind you, it's not a proper command economy, in essence. But yes, I apologise, I should really have been more specific *cough*. Permit me to rephrase myself:Dele said:Please go to Google and put some effort to learning the current situation and history of the command economies. Do people of North Korea have hope? Does Cuba have hope? Command economies cannot sustain themselves without foreign aid or windfall resources from the ground.Rolling Thunder said:If we're talking about fatally flawed systems, objectivist/Libertarian capitalism sure as fuck comes out on top. At least a command economy can hold itself together, and actual communism has that utopic tinge of hope. Pure capitalism is as bleak as the plains of hell and twice as unpleasant to live in.
"At least a command economy can hold itself together on some vestigial level, instead of disintergrating into a squabbling, anarchic mess of a country while it's people starve, it's factories collapse and so on, as libertarian pure free-marketism promises. At least a command economy can facilitate a degree of economic growth, even if it is in armamanets and rocketry. At least, on a basic level, the command economy works, even if it is in the same manner as feudalism."