I tend to get the feeling that this country (the US) has a bad taste in its mouth about Communism. In your personal opinion, do you like the idea? Personally, I think if run correctly, without corruption it would be fine. Yes, that's highly unlikely, but given that highly unlikely event, wouldn't it be kinda cool? Thoughts?
10/21/2005 5:42:31 PM
youve been flagged by DoHS
10/21/2005 5:44:30 PM
10/21/2005 5:44:40 PM
10/21/2005 5:46:10 PM
If run correctly, with no corruption, then a dictatorship would be the most desirable form of government.You lose.
10/21/2005 5:56:10 PM
^it has one large flaw, that being that it isn't very self-sustaining. The Athenians loved democracy for this reason as well as the philosophical ones.
10/21/2005 6:03:57 PM
True democracy could coexist with communism.I'd go so far as to argue that true democracy could exist only with communism.[Edited on October 21, 2005 at 6:13 PM. Reason : .]
10/21/2005 6:13:10 PM
I don't like it. I am of the opinion that people should fend for themselves; 'people' meaning those who are capable of working and sustaining themselves through such - so, children, elderly, and legitimately disabled persons are exempt from this and should be helped when needed.That being said, I am in favor of laws restricting some parts of capitalism, such as no monopolies and so forth. Those are my thoughts.
10/21/2005 6:15:25 PM
communism, in theory, is the best possible form of government with equality for all...but that assumes, of course, that all people agree on equal treatment, and no one believes that they deserve more than othersthat being said, socialism is the closest alternative that's actually realistic...i'll go so far as to that i would happily support this country if we turned to socialism[Edited on October 21, 2005 at 6:39 PM. Reason : happy!]
10/21/2005 6:37:23 PM
capitalism is the only system that drives economic progress
10/21/2005 7:12:35 PM
10/21/2005 7:15:57 PM
^ if people consistently elected that powerful central government in free and open elections because they liked how it was running things...that could certainly be democracy...why not?
10/21/2005 7:25:59 PM
My strongest objection to communism is just how borring it is. Under a communist system, everything would be run by some committee somewhere making decisions that no one is happy with but is nevertheless willing to accept. In a free system, the "game" as some call it is excitting! The capitalist system is conflict, competition, Google is up! Microsoft fights back! Netscape goes under! Apple corners the market on underwater internet watches with new flaming action! How could anyone prefer living under a system of "Social Solidarity" and "Collective Cooperation"? Can you imagine how boring the WallStreet Journal would be!?!? In America, everyone asks "What will they come up with next?" In the Soviet Union, everyone knew what they WANTED to come up with, they could just read the latest 5 year plan, meticulously written up in lawyer speak. While Google has gone IPO and is starting up a whole new way to do wireless, the planning commission would be debating whether or not "People really need wireless"!As for the "efficiency" argument, it is pure bullshit. Never in history has human efficiency reached such heights. We produce more goods and services per unit of resources consumed than ever in history. The complaint people like Kris are really making is NOT that we are inefficient making the stuff we do, but that we make too much stuff. I'm certain the third world would LOVE to have our problem. [Edited on October 21, 2005 at 8:26 PM. Reason : asdf]
10/21/2005 8:15:59 PM
10/21/2005 8:24:07 PM
10/21/2005 8:29:28 PM
10/21/2005 8:35:38 PM
Challenge: spot the contractiction in the following quote
10/21/2005 8:37:41 PM
No.RatherThe world's greatest superpower destroyed itself.Sort of like every NC STate vs UNC football game.LOL at that.
10/21/2005 8:39:08 PM
^^ that honestly was a typo, I meant to type "one of the world's greatest superpowers" in refering to the USSR. I never meant to imply that the USSR ever surpassed the US, given geographic and age disparities between the two, it would be nearly impossible for the USSR to do so.[Edited on October 21, 2005 at 8:45 PM. Reason : ]
10/21/2005 8:45:24 PM
10/21/2005 8:46:49 PM
one of the main problems with early (revolution-based) communism was its dependence on one powerful and well intentioned man, one can plainly see this with Lenin vs. Stalin.
10/21/2005 8:49:16 PM
Nothing about communism demands a one party, stifling regime.Communism died in Russia when Stalin consolidated his power.Coincedentally though, he did take what was essentially a third world nation and hammer it into the 20th century in under a decade.
10/21/2005 8:50:08 PM
He also showed his iron resolve. I believe if anyone else had been in power at that time other than stalin, russia would have surrendered to the nazis. Stalin had an ego that kept him in, and god save that ego, if it wasn't for it, Britian would have fallen, Germany would have met japan and half the globe would be uner the control of the nazi regime.
10/21/2005 8:53:25 PM
He was also a terrible miltary commander and got completely blindsided by Hitler's betrayel.I think he added focus and intensity during the invasion but his generals are the ones that destroyed the German invaders.
10/21/2005 8:57:57 PM
americans are too paranoid about communism, especially considering 100% of them never even lived or experienced this system. most of the stuff people in this country learn about communism comes from history books written by historians who researched journals to write their books, or from professors who also never lived in communism.i lived majority of my life in what used to be Yugoslavia and before the wars, country had strong middle class (not the case now), everyone could afford a yearly vacation on adriatic sea, salaries were comparatively better than most of the eastern block countries and standards of living were far better, crime virtually NON-EXISTENT, middle class was able to afford moderately priced italian and german vehicles, country had its golden years in all international sporting events, military had high morale, civil progress in terms of new roads, buildings, factories etc, there was large influx of western and japanese technology, people worked some 30 hours a week, plenty of chances to naturally progress through company's hierarchy, had plenty of time to enjoy life and live stress free. in other words, unless somebody told you, it would be near impossible to tell this was a communist society. granted, military budget was huge, country leaders were hedonistic bastards, and at one point or another economic collapse was inevitable, but for some 30 years it worked just fine. communism would probably last longer if it wasn't for wars, which had causes not relevant to communism fallacies.the picture painted in this country, be it literature or by historians is borderline funny to pretty much anyone from my country. however, i cannot attest to chinese, cuban, north korean or any other country that had/still has communism as a political system/regime.[Edited on October 21, 2005 at 9:30 PM. Reason : f]
10/21/2005 9:24:41 PM
From what I understand Yugoslavia was a different kind of communism. Yugoslavia was one of those really well governed communism nations, it was no wonder they could not find anyone to replace him upon his death.
10/21/2005 10:00:49 PM
10/21/2005 10:45:26 PM
10/21/2005 11:11:05 PM
10/21/2005 11:19:38 PM
10/21/2005 11:22:28 PM
When you said that, you did realize that we are barely spending 3% of our GDP to cover all of our defense, not just the wars. As such, I assure you, Yogoslavia was spending a higher percentage on its military aparatus, such as it was.
10/22/2005 12:17:19 AM
yeah that was probably stupid comparison in the first place, but after all we are comparing number#1 economy in the world to former communist country ravaged by wars. still, if you want to say that US spends only 3% of its GDP on military then we should mention that USA public debt is 65% of its GDP, whereas YU it is 80%. not that much difference considering we had highest recorded inflation (i still have 10 billion dinars bill with me somewhere), communism, and wars. so whatever doesnt come out of GDP, comes from lenders and that part is not calculated in the GDP spending. bear in mind that in communism we didnt have lenders like in capitalism, so the only way to repay public debt was to print more money, which jacks up inflation even more.[Edited on October 22, 2005 at 12:56 AM. Reason : g]
10/22/2005 12:48:43 AM
10/22/2005 1:35:30 AM
Communism works if you can convince everyone involved to work within the system.Churches and businesses are microcosms of communism, in a way, but that's only because the people in each of those organizations are brainwashed to work as much as they can for the good of the company/church because hard work is a good, moral, righteous thing to do.
10/22/2005 2:25:45 AM
Is Democracy > Communism?
10/22/2005 2:51:28 AM
Democracy is more natural, practical, and stable than communism. If those are what define "greatness", then Democracy>Communism.
10/22/2005 2:54:54 AM
where do lazy people fit into communism?
10/22/2005 3:01:09 AM
There are jobs for lazy people.
10/22/2005 3:03:41 AM
Yugoslavia had good times because it had a semi-competent dictator keeping it from imploding in spite of all the many, many reasons it should have imploded. One could point to several instances wherein countries prospered for a while under a "benevolent dictator." Such a government has many of the benefits of democracy (government works for the people, and not exclusively for its own benefits...notice the "exclusively"), but without all the inefficiency.However, pending our discovery of some vast intelligence that could select benevolent dictator types to run a country, that system, as has been said, is unsustainable. The good leader dies and a psycho replaces him.---In answer to the thread, a quick view of history leads me to the conclusion that no extreme works out. Flat out communism doesn't, laissez-faire capitalism doesn't, raging anti-government libertarianism or anarchism doesn't, iron-fisted dictatorship doesn't. A market that's free, but not too free, controlled, but not too controlled -- that's the winning bet. A government that's powerful, but not too powerful, restricted, but not too restricted -- same deal.All extreme ideologies are based on, well, ideals -- near-perfections of human behavior on one end or the other that have not and will not ever manifest themselves on a nationwide scale. In spite of Kris's dream, the world is never going to be populated exclusively by unselfish people, and something comparable could be said for any other ideology.The only way that works in the long run is the middle way.
10/22/2005 3:07:58 AM
^thread, he wins
10/22/2005 6:46:34 AM
Holy shit
10/22/2005 7:51:07 AM
^^^agreed.
10/22/2005 10:17:08 AM
In theory, communism would work. However, the aspects of greed and equality would detour people from actually working to their potential.
10/22/2005 10:28:25 AM
10/22/2005 10:34:25 AM
10/22/2005 11:43:51 AM
10/22/2005 11:50:04 AM
10/22/2005 11:54:24 AM
And you must wonder why John Maynard Keynes and FDR have both been discredited. Sure, we like the guys, but only because we refrain from speaking ill of the dead. And note he said "The liberty of a democracy is not safe" because this statement is 100% true. In any society there is the liberties reserved for individuals and those reserved by the state, in this case a Democracy. As individuals become wealthy they become more capable of defending their own liberty against that of the Democratic State. This is not a problem if you believe individual liberties should be protected, it is even a benefit if you believe the individual is already overly regulated. You must decide if you believe individuals should be free or if the government should be free. Given our government is layed out in a constitutional republic, it seems the former is the assumption, at least until the socialists manage to defeat the US Constitution.
10/22/2005 2:09:37 PM
10/22/2005 2:33:25 PM
True. I often prefer to think of FDR of the 40s and FDR of the 30s. One has been discredited, the other will always be a war hero
10/22/2005 4:43:56 PM