UK Class divide.

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TomWhitbrook

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Aug 27, 2008
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Secondly, I have given an example of a public institution that is haemmorrhaging funds - to the private sector. The single biggest drain on the public sector is the superprofits made by its private sector suppliers; in second place is the massive pay unaccountable politicians and civil servants award themselves.

I regard bring public servants to account, paying them an average worker's wage and eradicating the drain that private profit places on the public purse as being a far better solution to the imperfect situation than privatising everything (and just hoping it doesn't all go the way of Northern Rock). Look at the state of the infrastructure - water and power firms are laughing all the way to the bank.


So the consistently poor service, endemic corruption and shockingly bad business decisions made by state owned services are entirely the fault of the mean old private sector? These institutions have to be efficient and competetive if they're going to provide us with a proper service. Insulating them from the pressure of providing that service hasn't done us any good, and it won't magically improve by dragging the whole lot down to the same low standard.

And those water and power monopolies created out of botched privatisation by incompetent public sector employees are perfect examples of why we need proper competition to give people the best value.

Recent studies have claimed that the all-time highest quality of life for UK citizens was in the 1970s. The sum total of wealth in the UK has certainly grown since then; an overwhelmingly disproportionate amount of this is going to the rich - wages raises rarely significantly exceed inflation, whilst boardroom pay rises four times as fast. The super-rich have a message for those short-sighted workers who voted for Thatcher: "thanks, dumbass!".

Wealth creates wealth for those who are smart enough to use it properly. The incredible finances poured into the public sector since 1945 somehow haven't translated into such massive growth for us. And as the infant mortality and basic mortality rates have decreased, and life expectancy has gone up, we're objectively better off than our ancestors in at least some measures. As poverty no longer has an agreed upon measure and usually concerns relative poverty these days, theres little point looking at the wide range of survey results which aren't consistent.

Being unemployed is not laziness if there are not enough jobs. Thatcher deliberately increased unemployment to over 3 million - a figure which has been maintained - and slashed corporate and super-rich taxes, shifting the tax burden onto the higher paid and middle class.

The point he's ignoring, that I'm making, is that the amount of UK GDP that is visibly consumed by those not in work is dwarfed by the amount consumed behind closed doors in tax havens and boardrooms by unelected capitalists who never lift a finger. (Many of them own newspapers, which turn a blind eye to capitalist greed and scream blue murder at the welfare state.)

If you believe that Marx's ideology was centred around blaming the poorest for wages being low whilst ignoring rampant capitalist greed, then you clearly have never read what he had to say.


If there are no jobs, then why are we importing immigrants, skilled and unskilled, to do them?
And you're making the assumption that someone who provides leadership, management and decision making isn't providing a deeply valuable service to a company. Otherwise, why on earth would they pay them? This attitude goes a long way to explaining to awful management in the puplic sector.

Qualify this statement. Were these people scabs? Were they self-employed (no doubt totally reliant on the wages of miners trickling down to them and wondering why they lost so much trade after the Thatcher regime declared martial law to crush the unions)? Or what?

Qualifying: killing. My family and the people in our area weren't "scabs", or dependent on miners wages in any way. But there was no fuel to get to work, no power for heat and light, not enough food.

You're right, when workers organise they are under no obligation to help scabs. But they have - by campaigning for a minimum wage, free education, public health care, public pensions, welfare, peace, etc.

You're welcome!


Umm, what? Remind me again what peace was won by strike action in this country? I'm grateful to the German workers who ended world war one and saved their country from communism. What strike won us universal free education? Wasn't big business the driving force behind that? The liberal reforms that gave us social welfare and pensions didn't come from organised workers either, but were designed to protect them. So I guess I as the champion of 'capital L' Liberalism in this discussion, I can condescendingly claim credit for that too.

You're welcome!

And then along comes a supermarket which destroys the small business. And the shopkeeper blames the unions and foreigners.

Remind me again where the small business fits into the planned economy? And apparently this organic and local food craze has put the small businessman on the up.

The fundamental failure of your analysis of communism is that you assume that every government which calls itself communist is representative of everybody who calls themselves a communist. There is nothing in Marx's writings to suggest he would support the regimes of Stalin, Mao, etc.

You're right, he wouldn't, but systems attempting to follow his ideals have led inexorably to the same place. Surely there must be some correlation? Or are we to write that off completely?

[i}Schools run by pro-capitalist politicians have failed to make the working class well-informed enough to make major economic decisions, therefore the working class should not be allowed to participate in economic decision-making? Where else should we apply this maxim? This 'dumb people should not be allowed to vote' philosophy can only lead to an absolutist regime which denies education opportunites.[/i]

Well, people are better educated now than ever before, unless you really believe the exams are getting easier. That doesn't mean the education system is or should be geared around producing economic geneii. When it comes to planning an an economy I think a doctor tends to be on the same level as a carpenter. I know a number of very working class individuals who have taken the opportunity to study economics, and some extremely blue blooded people who can barely count. Birth isn't a bar to being involved in that world, only perspiration and ability.

It's certainly true that pro-capitalist economists have repeatedly been proven to be useless. Anti-capitalist economists are getting pretty sick of saying 'we told you so'. Economies will behave a lot more predictably when share & currency trading and war mongering are abolished.

Whoah, say what now? Of course, I forgot, the alternatives have proven to be so successful. And you're right, the whole history of warfare is the result of a capitalist plot. Some of the most blood soaked men of recent times haven't been unashamedly working class. The lower classes have never desired or made war, ever, and the evolution of a non barter economy has constantly held back our societal evolution.

If you take the media into public ownership so authoritarian racists like Rupert Murdock aren't spewing scaremongering antidemocratic propaganda, so-called anti-terror laws will have a far harder time getting erosions of civil liberties through.

So we're to revoke the right to free speech of people we don't like anyway? If that's the road we're to go down, what makes it so different to the one we're on now? And public ownership of companies rarely gets rid of any type of personality organically, if past examples are to be believed, so at the end of the day we're still just throwing out people we don't like.
 

lindsay40k

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Feb 27, 2008
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So the consistently poor service, endemic corruption and shockingly bad business decisions made by state owned services are entirely the fault of the mean old private sector?

State-owned enterprises are administered by pro-capitalist politicians with a vested interest in propping up private sector profits and manufacturing arguments to outsource to the private sector. Gordon Brown cannot possibly be ignorant of the guaranteed long-term consequences of his Private Finance Initiative.

These institutions have to be efficient and competetive if they're going to provide us with a proper service.

15% of the NHS budget is wasted on administering an internal market. The main achievement of efficiency drives is the creation of incentives to cook the books. The obsession with trying to replicate business practices is one of the biggest causes of damage to the public sector. Do you not think that breaking up entrenched layers of unelected senior civil servants with no interest in the consequences of their actions might help at all?

And those water and power monopolies created out of botched privatisation by incompetent public sector employees are perfect examples of why we need proper competition to give people the best value.

The incompetent public sector employees who privatised the utilities are politicians who were supported by the same big business clique that benefited from the manner in which privatisation was implemented. Don't blame anti-capitalists for capitalism's persistent track record of developing into cronyism.

The utilities were built up by the state because the private sector has consistently demonstrated epic fail in running them. Whatever the cost is of having a few more employees running the water supply able to afford a bit more stuff for their families, it's not as big a waste as building two, three or four water grids in competition.

Wealth creates wealth for those who are smart enough to use it properly.

Wealth and labour creates wealth for those who are smart or well-connected enough to use it properly.

The incredible finances poured into the public sector since 1945 somehow haven't translated into such massive growth for us.

Do you have any idea how many jobs that money created, and how many jobs were created by those jobs? And did I miss the meeting when we decided that having a large surplus of staff in essential services so we can meet demand spikes was a bad thing?

If there are no jobs, then why are we importing immigrants, skilled and unskilled, to do them?

By "we", do you mean big business? I get along really well with the Turkish, Caribbean and Iraqi communities where I live, but I'm not the one buying their plane tickets. There is a demand for skilled migrants because of the marketisation of education driving the working class out of university and causing grade inflation (and attacks on wages making it preferable for graduates to work in America). There is a demand for unskilled migrants because the bosses know that migrant workers are less likely to organise or complain about bullying managers, and that increasing the size of the labour pool drives down wages. Finally, centuries of superpower imperialism has built the UK into a higher wage economy than the economies - many of them former colonies "we" forced to learn "our" language - migrants are arriving from, meaning there is an economic incentive to go from being an appallingly low paid worker in country X to being a fairly low paid worker in the UK.

And you're making the assumption that someone who provides leadership, management and decision making isn't providing a deeply valuable service to a company. Otherwise, why on earth would they pay them?

Corporate politics isn't about atomised shareholders hiring the best managers, it's about the senior management caste protecting its common interests with golden handshakes, parachutes and handcuffs. Marx saw this coming over a century ago.

This attitude goes a long way to explaining to awful management in the puplic sector.

Then let's sack the managers and make sure the new ones are doing their job. Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.

Qualifying: killing. My family and the people in our area weren't "scabs", or dependent on miners wages in any way. But there was no fuel to get to work, no power for heat and light, not enough food.

If your family's livelihood diminished during the mass unemployment of the 1980s that followed the mine closures and you don't think that your family's livelihood in any way depended on miners' wages, you clearly don't understand how money circulates.

It is a known fact that the Thatcher regime started stockpiling coal from the very start with the express aim of building up sufficient stocks to win a confrontation with the Miners that the government intended to initiate - both in revenge for the Tories having been humiliated by the miners before, and as part of a wider project to crush the unions - knowing full well it would harm the economy. So the government decides to close down fuel production for partisan reasons and spite, and you blame fuel production workers for shortages?

Your family voted for the party whose actions caused them to go without fuel; are you trying to support your 'dumb people shouldn't be allowed to vote' proposal? Or, by supporting a regime that used the police and army to smash the right to free association, are you 'revoking the right to free speech of people we don't like'?

Remind me again what peace was won by strike action in this country?

When "National Liberal" thug Lloyd George decided (just after WWI) to spend more (after adjusting for inflation) on murdering Russian workers to restore the absolutist monarchy of the Romanovs (ie, revoke the freedom of speech of people he didn't like) than the current shambles have spent on murdering Iraqis to pour oil down Halliburton's throat, dock workers refused to load supplies on ships and forced the Nali imperialist adventure to end.

A general strike would have stopped the Iraq invasion and thus achieved a net saving - economically, and for humanity.

I'm grateful to the German workers who ended world war one and saved their country from communism.

Technically, the ongoing global imperialist conflict only really paused until the 1930s when the land-grabbing of pro-business governments started affecting Europe again; note also that Hitler's stormtroopers were recruited from the middle class, whilst his most determined opponents (and first victims) were the unionists, socialists and communists.

That said, WWI is a fantastic case in point; the Bolsheviks are the most successful anti-war movement in all history, their actions not only ending Russian aggression but also giving impetus to the German working class whose revolutionary mood made it impossible for their government to pursue imperialist policies. The German working class did not reject communism - they were terrorised back into submission by paramilitary thugs. (What was that you were saying about free speech for people we don't like?)

What strike won us universal free education?

A general strike would be enough to force the government to back down on its policy on tuition fees. Coordinated strikes in the education sector would probably do it, had a load of ill-informed voters not allowed the Tories to demoralise and cripple the unions.

Wasn't big business the driving force behind that?

No, it wasn't. Free education was a necessity after working class struggle won enfranchisement and illiterate people were given ballots, and the Liberals were formed as a hybrid of the old Whigs and the leading parliamentary members of the Chartists - who most certainly were not 'big business'. Big business was in fact opposed to compulsory education as it would take children out of the factories, and it took the influence of working class demands to break the Liberals out of their sycophantic worship of monies interests.

The liberal reforms that gave us social welfare and pensions didn't come from organised workers either, but were designed to protect them.

Supporting paternalist government is more characteristic of Conservatives such as Disraeli than Liberals - who advocate a free market and would be totally opposed to welfare. Liberals only implement such policies as a preference to food riots and revolution, or as an electoral strategy that directly contradicts their ideology (which is nothing new).

So I guess I as the champion of 'capital L' Liberalism in this discussion, I can condescendingly claim credit for that too.

Given that Liberals (that is, the ones who actually know what Liberalism is) advocate a free market with the role of the state being solely to enforce contract law and protect 'private property', no you can't. All of those so-called Liberals who advocate state intervention (ie, reject the market) are influenced by the socialist demands of the working class movement, so you just give us back our polices and go back to privatising schools and prisons.

Remind me again where the small business fits into the planned economy?

They're welcome to compete with publicly-owned enterprises. When the economies of scale enjoyed by the latter cause the former to become uncompetitive, they'll have a far better quality of life working as part of the community than as a shelf-stacker in a private supermarket.

You're right, (Marx) wouldn't (support the regimes of Stalin, Mao, etc), but systems attempting to follow his ideals have led inexorably to the same place.

Erm, no. There has been ONE revolution led by Marxists, and that was the Bolshevik revolution. If you really can't see how inheriting a war-shattered backwards economy with a tiny minority being literate and a huge majority being accustomed to centuries of absolutist rule, surrounded by aggressive militarist powers, economically isolated, with most of the politically educated killed in a civil war against absolutist thugs and invaders, and rationing having to be enforced by a bureaucracy and police might not be the optimal conditions in which to build a grassroots-led society of democratic communes (a blind spot which seems to be the norm amongst Liberals), then there really isn't much point having a discussion with you about history, economics and sociology.

Every subsequent "socialist" revolution - China, Cuba, etc - has been led by Stalinists who did not have any intention of building the social order Marx envisaged, but rather had the clearly stated aim of duplicating the system that existed in the Stalinist USSR.

Surely there must be some correlation?

There is a correlation between being a confessed Stalinist and implementing Stalinist polices, yes.

That doesn't mean the education system is or should be geared around producing economic geneii.

The stated aim of introducing public education in the UK was to make the population well-informed enough to responsibly exercise their right to vote. It is easily possible for a public speaker to make their economic policies understood to a numerate audience and thus gain informed consent to implement them. I have explained Marxian, Keynesian and neo-classical economic theory to people with no GCSEs and they've demonstrated understanding of it - keenly so when it was demonstrated how relevant these issues are to their daily lives.

I know a number of very working class individuals who have taken the opportunity to study economics, and some extremely blue blooded people who can barely count. Birth isn't a bar to being involved in that world, only perspiration and ability.

You have noticed that over the past ten years the Neo-liberal New Labour government has been attacking free education and privatising schools (which does create an obvious benefit to accident of birth), surely? And since when has having loaded parents sending you to Eton not been an advantage?

I forgot, the alternatives (to capitalism) have proven to be so successful.

Which alternatives, and successful at what?

If you are talking about those governments which have self-defined in their rhetoric as socialists, then I have to ask if you have factored in overt and hidden acts of interference by aggressive pro-capitalist regimes inhibiting the ability of sincerely socialist governments to implement their policies. (I notice so-called Liberals like Milton Friedman falling over themselves to support Pinochet.)

Also, co-operatives have been proven to work as a model of production and there are many with a turnover of hundreds of millions. Sure, none of them are as big as Microsoft or Wal-Mart, but then these giant corporations attain their position of economic dominance with massive help from the state and by having workers in less-developed countries oppressed to keep down supply costs. So if we're talking about success at being a horrible, authoritarian asshole, yes capitalism is way better.

And you're right, the whole history of warfare is the result of a capitalist plot. Some of the most blood soaked men of recent times haven't been unashamedly working class. The lower classes have never desired or made war, ever.

If you read the writing of Lenin (a Marxist) and Hobson (a Liberal) on the subject of imperialism, you will see that there is indeed a consensus between the two ideologies that imperialist warfare is driven by the whims of big businesses demanding cheaper imports & labour and larger export & domestic arms markets. The disagreement is on the solution - a different social order or constitutional limits on military action.

The war in Iraq could not have gone ahead without the right-wing tabloid press playing a leading role in whipping up a racist hysteria that indeed affected large sections of the working class, though union membership proved to be a strong inoculation (unfortunately, some morons in the 1980s decided it was a good idea to smash the unions).

the evolution of a non barter economy has constantly held back our societal evolution.

If you'd ever bothered to read Marx you'd know he recognises the progressive role of capitalism in that it is more advanced than feudalism. That is no more a reason to stick with it when it becomes an anachronism than the progressive features of feudalism relative to tribalism are a reason to revert to absolutist monarchy.

So we're to revoke the right to free speech of people we don't like anyway?

No, we're to break up a minority point of view's monopoly on the majority of the media. Let everybody have equal access to communications technology, not just those who claim 'ownership' of the printing press, servers and transmitters by selectively applying parts of property theory in a completely nonsensical manner.

Rupert Murdock would be allowed to form a party of racist, sexist, homophobic thugs who think it's acceptable to slaughter a million foreigners if you think it might make oil cheaper. He wouldn't be allowed to dominate the media to put that party's views forward.

at the end of the day we're still just throwing out people we don't like.

If you're a Liberal, you recognise the right to kill in self-defence, evict people from your property and for a group to set contractual terms of membership. As soon as the above party begins terrorising people it doesn't like (and big business has a proven track record of hiring thugs to initiate violence on the working class - especially when workers are well-organised), that's a declaration of civil war by them.

Since you're so keen on the 'N called himself a socialist therefore all socialists support N' strawman, I'll point out that Liberal ideology has been used to justify terrorist thugs like Pinochet having trade unionist murdered by an authoritarian state on the grounds that some of them might have been socialists who might win an election again.

And this isn't the Marx=Stalin strawman you parrot like a broken record. Strict application of Liberalism to formulating policy can only lead to a constitutional mandate for the military to overthrow a socialist government, in the interests of protecting 'private property' (which remains vaguely-defined to avoid admitting violence is inherent in the system).

The fact that you call yourself a Liberal and support all manner of state interventions is a microcosm of these contradictions that make the ideology totally unworkable.
 

TomWhitbrook

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Aug 27, 2008
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I suggest, in all seriousness, going and learning about the 1870 education reforms in Britain and the driving force behind them. Check in on the voting records and find out for me who supported Hitler, and those who actually made some attempts to resist his regime. I know it doesn't fit into the dialectical system, but occasionally pesky actuality has to intrude on even the most detemined ideological debate. "Parroting" the same rhetoric like a broken record should always be tempered by historical exactitude if you're going to get anywhere. Human beings have always failed to adapt to Marx's rigid model of how society should be, and likely always will, which is why a sytem that adapts to them instead has triumphed over it.

And on that note, we come to Marxism=Stalinism. I noted in my response that although Marx would have disproved of the systems that arose in his name, the fact that they have always done so cannot be ignored. Something is fundamentally broken with the ideology if it cannot be implemented successfully. If something had come along, better than capitalism, it would have replaced it, the way that capitalism has replaced previous uncompetetive ideologies. That is simply the way of human nature.

And for the record, as a capital L Liberal I do believe in intervention. Everyone should have the opportunity to exercise their freedoms, and everyone should be allowed those same basic opportunities. I like to think of myself as a very succesful product of that idea, because I went to a grant maintained Grammar school because my parents were far too poor to send me to a fee paying one. Most of my friends were in the same boat and came from similarly poor backgrounds, and the great majority have gone on to make a success of themselves too. I've met people from all walks of life who've been equally successful, and people from all walks who haven't. The fact that I disagree fundamentally with the way the system is currently being implemented or the socialist idyll doesn't mean I approve of unregulated cut throat capitalism either, something you seem quite happy to ignore.
 

BallPtPenTheif

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Is it truly a class divide with a real glass ceiling or are we talking about an education divide?

If somebody is raised by people who don't respect an education than it is very difficult for them to care about schooling or just plain learning.
 

Zio666

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Sep 3, 2008
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scarbunny post=18.71136.714852 said:
afrophysics post=18.71136.714836 said:
scarbunny post=18.71136.714757 said:
Either that or bring back Poll tax, much fairer, why should i pay for schools when i dont have kids?
Why should we pay your healthcare when we don't get sick?
Because you can never control if you get sick or not, however you have control over child birth and once you have children you will then pay greater tax, this would have the added benefit of stopping chavs popping out kids because the more they have the money they get with little to no negative impact.

As I never intend to have children why should I pay to support the schools when i will see no benefit from them? Same with play parks.

Also Maggie can be forgiven everything if she really did help invent soft scoop ice cream!
This man is a genius! Soon as I'm old enough to vote it will go to you. Anything to cut down the number of chavs!
 

zirnitra

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Jun 2, 2008
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here's how you fix things. LEAVE IT THE FUCK ALONE! I can't stress this point enough everything the government has done to correct it has worsened the state of it. I mean our comprehensive school system all in all is pretty fantastic. A child can become a doctor without it costing them or their parent's a penny thanks to the NHS doctor training system. so quite frankly a child of 6 not doing as well as another 6 year old who's richer is simply a internal family issue not because the wealthier child can afford magical cod liver pills that make him a genius. I think it purely is a family matter for the kids, I don't wanna sound all daily mailish (I'm not like that at all) but the majority of the poorer people have learned to abuse the welfare system and are simply a bit lazy and need a bit of help winging them from the teat of the welfare system, they're are plenty of jobs about despite what certain newspapers would have you believe, they need to encourage they're kids to take every opportunity thrown at them.

there needs to be a class divide of sorts it's unfair when some people work a lot harder than others. I don't see what's wrong with a class divide of sorts, I'm very liberal but socialism just is not right.
 

lindsay40k

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Feb 27, 2008
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I suggest, in all seriousness, going and learning about the 1870 education reforms in Britain and the driving force behind them.

I suggest, in all seriousness, instead of making snide comments you actually attempt to debunk my analysis. Did opposition not come from big business being afraid of a better-informed working class gettign ideas above their station? Was a large number of uneducated voters not a major political concern? Were the Liberals who put forward reforms the not influenced by the former Chartists amongst their number?

Check in on the voting records and find out for me who supported Hitler, and those who actually made some attempts to resist his regime.

I wasn't talking about voting, I was talking about the content of the paramilitaries - which were primarily made up of the former middle classes who had been left destitute by monopoly capitalism. It is common knowledge that the first victims of the Nazis were the socialists, communists and trades unions. That's why Hitler got so many donations from big business - his actions served their interests, elegantly demonstrating how the free market creates a demand for sociopathic thugs.

When the Nazis came for the communists,
I remained silent;
I was not a communist.

When they locked up the social democrats,
I remained silent;
I was not a social democrat.

When they came for the trade unionists,
I did not speak out;
I was not a trade unionist.

When they came for the Jews,
I remained silent;
I wasn't a Jew.

When they came for me,
there was no one left to speak out.


If you want figures etc, check out Fascism and Big Business by Guerin.

I know it doesn't fit into the dialectical system, but occasionally pesky actuality has to intrude on even the most detemined ideological debate. "Parroting" the same rhetoric like a broken record should always be tempered by historical exactitude if you're going to get anywhere.

Apparently you know nothing about dialectics other than it is a word associated with Marxism. Marxism is entirely about analysis of concrete evidence; that's why I've been trying to hammer home some historical analysis into your anti-Marxist mudslinging - I note that you have subsequently dropped almost all of the threads.

Human beings have always failed to adapt to Marx's rigid model of how society should be, and likely always will, which is why a sytem that adapts to them instead has triumphed over it.

Marx's model of human behaviour has not yet been unable to explain an historical event. The failure of some fallible human beings to use Marx's theories to accurately predict the future on the basis of imperfect information about the present disproves nothing.

And on that note, we come to Marxism=Stalinism. I noted in my response that although Marx would have disproved of the systems that arose in his name, the fact that they have always done so cannot be ignored.

You. Are. Wrong.

Seriously.

You cannot judge a person on the actions of people who pretend to support their ideas whilst doing the exact opposite. What if I went around calling myself a Liberal whilst murdering Jews, would that make you a Nazi? Where is your account for the atrocities inflicted upon the world by governments that call themselves Liberals, eh?

If you really are so dumb that you cannot see this line of argument is totally vacuous, or so intellectually bankrupt that you will carry on repeating this ad hominem falacy ad infinitum, there's really little point trying to have a debate with you. This sort of rubbish belongs on 'Red Scare' propaganda (so beloved of Liberals) designed to make people irrationally frightened of socialists - it has absolutely no place in a rational discussion on economic theory.

Something is fundamentally broken with the ideology if it cannot be implemented successfully.

Right, let's see some qualification of this. Explain how a movement around whatever brand of Liberalism you follow (see later) would have fared any better in the historical conditions of Russia in 1917; I seem to recall the Kadets were hardly the vanguard of progress. When the castle is under siege, it doesn't matter what you do inside - you can't make food magically appear.

Marism predicted that an isolated Russia would degenerate into bureaucracy - as it is not possible for a autarkic economy to flourish, regardless of the government's policies, nor is it possible for democracy to flourish when a starvation economy has to strictly administer and enforce rationing.

Russia was isolated, and this was the result. Don't blame Marxism for a Marxist revolution being starved to death by external forces - blame scum like Gladstone - a so-called Liberal (am I to judge your "Liberalism" by his actions, hmm?) - and Kornilov for creating the perfect circumstances for the likes of Stalin and his clique to seize power. You wouldn't reject a recipe for Derby Cakes as intrinsically flawed because it's only been attempted once by someone who didn't have flour and sugar and everyone else who subsequently claimed to be making Derby Cakes left out the flour and sugar.

If something had come along, better than capitalism, it would have replaced it, the way that capitalism has replaced previous uncompetetive ideologies.

Capitalism isn't a ideology, it's a socio-economic order. The rulers of the old order have never gone down without a fight; here in the UK, the birthplace of modern capitalism, we still have a monarchy - presumably this means that by your standards, monarchy is more "competitive" a system than democracy. If you'd ever bothered to read Marx before rejecting him, you'd know that social orders are only overthrown by the overthrow of the old ruling class, not by the competition of ideologies competing.

And for the record, as a capital L Liberal I do believe in intervention... The fact that I disagree fundamentally with the way the system is currently being implemented or the socialist idyll doesn't mean I approve of unregulated cut throat capitalism either, something you seem quite happy to ignore.

What sort of Liberal? Locke? Mill? Rawls? Friedman? The term 'Liberal' is used by so many groups to self-define or as a pejorative term for their opponents that it means absolutely nothing in itself - it's as broad a term as 'leftie'. I suggest, in all seriousness, going and learning about Liberalism and the thinkers behind it before nailing its colours to your mast.
 

SenseOfTumour

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Jul 11, 2008
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I'm gonna throw myself to the wolves here, I'm one of the many people on incapacity benefit in the UK for mental reasons, and just to put a few minds at ease, I don't drink and I don't smoke, don't have Sky or a big TV, my mobile phone is a £10 pay as you go model which I put about £10 on every few months when I can, and I'm really not choosing to live like this. It does kinda bug me when politicians who can claim like £250,000 in stuff for a second home, are blaming me on under £5,000 a year for destroying the country. I know they mean fraudulent benefit claimants, but it feels like unless you're bedridden, why are you not working?

I'm not on the poverty line, but I'd certainly be financially better off working. I also worked for nearly 15 years beforehand, so I have no fear of work, and I'd like to return when I'm ready.

I do wish people would be more careful about having children so young tho, as they can't be expected to look after them, support themselves and their kid with a job, and go to school, heh. More seriously, I do feel a lot of them are losing out on their childhood by having children so young, and the males often don't want to know. I do think they need to be told of the consequences, and informed that they can get all the contraception they can eat for free from doctors.
 

SenseOfTumour

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Also I'm no economics genius, but I really don't see a problem with just taxing people either the same percentage, or higher at really high wages, as if you're earning a million a year, you just flat don't need it, and I bet the country you're in had something to do with it.

By this I mean scrap almost all taxes, and hugely raise income tax. All that money goes to running the country, everything is simple and transparent, and all goods and services obviously get cheaper. Obviously it needs some work, do we still tax things that cause people to cost more than the average citizen, like cigarettes being a drain on healthcare, cars being a drain on roads etc.

Our current government does seem to have a hair trigger attitude at the moment tho, and I think they need to stop bringing in policies just because they read a snappy newspaper headline, road taxes are just idiotic, you've already got a yearly tax on cars, tax on buying a new car,and tax on the petrol/gas you use. As far as I can see, the new road tax is designed to charge you per mile, to reduce the amount of miles driven by cars. Surely increasing tax on petrol does exactly the same thing? Without having to spend millions bringing in new staff and new paperwork to achieve the same thing. Of course, they know they'd be unpopular, raising petrol at this time, but surely a statement to the press saying, 'We've scrapped the road tax, which would have cost the average driver X pounds, and are keeping to a simple raise in petrol tax, which will relate to a raise of about 60% of the proposed road tax, and mean no more administration costs.
 

SenseOfTumour

New member
Jul 11, 2008
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Last bit, honest! Here's where I get a bit cold and unfeeling I admit.

My last proposal is to scrap all advertising bans on cigarettes, fast food, etc. By all means have the information out there, but really, if people want to eat, drink and smoke themselves into a grave at 50, then they're a short term medical cost, followed by no pension costs. That's 15-20 years of not supporting a pensioner, who's already paid for their future.

I'd also impose some maximum amounts for legal fees and damages, if you were called names at work, you don't deserve £500,000 compensation, although you should be able to bring these suits still, if you really can't get the bullying dealt with in other ways.

I find it crazy when you hear that a 2 week court case has cost so many million pounds. What are they doing in there? I know judges and lawyers are highly trained but again, there should be a limit on raking in the cash. Oh and I'd like an upper age limit of say 70 on Judges too, some decisions about women etc, are from the dark ages it seems.

Hmm, maybe I need to impose a rule that my posts should be smaller than the original posters.
 

Typecast

New member
Jul 27, 2008
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Um... not sure if any of you 'private super-fund' types have heard lately, but they aren't doing so well at the moment.

Although I'm just an Australian with relatives in the 'isles'. Still, there is a class divide, and it is most artfully covered up with the abominable term "middle class". A lovely grey area into which people who aren't doing so good but aren't on the streets yet fit in with the crowd who can afford to go to Italy for the weekend and rent a yatch.

There are only 60million, last time I heard, of you islanders there. And your country is, and has been a well lubricated profitmongering mess for centuries. Mainly because the aristocracy has always cracked down on anyone who causes a fuss. Probably all that marauding foriegner blood in all your veins by the various occupation forces.

Anyway, I'm that the real argument here is about power. Who has it, and who doesn't. The truth is everyone has power. The art of any great society is tricking people into believing they are powerless but getting them to accept the status quo. This is true of both the rich and the poor. The rich see a great unwashed horde clawing at their purse strings, and the poor see a bunch of tight arsed toffs with more money than a batallion of them would see in a lifetime and wonder what's going on.
The numbers don't add up. They have never 'added up' because I think what everyone wants is a FAIR society. Well I'm sorry. A fair society isn't useful in the 'grand scheme of things'


Hmmm wasn't planning on making a rant... oh well... rant, rant, rant...etc ad nauseum.