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in deference to @Nellyb78 id like to start a discussion on the nature of socialism
As a very broad sweep, my opener would be that it is a wonderful ideal which falls apart as soon as human nature is introduced
Where are yo on this?
I dont understand how any member of the human race cannot see it as fundamental to human existence.
I also understand that any person whose basic view on life is ME ME ME and absolute selfishness can make socialism difficult, if not impossible. So it is up to all of us who believe in people and the inherent need to ensure the welfare of all people, to prevent the selfish from taking charge of anything.
Oh damn ................
I dont understand how any member of the human race cannot see it as fundamental to human existence.
I also understand that any person whose basic view on life is ME ME ME and absolute selfishness can make socialism difficult, if not impossible. So it is up to all of us who believe in people and the inherent need to ensure the welfare of all people, to prevent the selfish from taking charge of anything.
Oh damn ................
Just out of interest, are there any places where socialism has been tried as a method on a large scale and worked in your view?
I can think of a couple but I'm not sure I'm using the same idea of 'worked' as you.
It seems to work pretty well in much of Scandinavia
There is an evolutionary concept known as the hawks and the doves.
There is an evolutionary concept known as the hawks and the doves. Hawks eat doves. \if there are a lot of doves around there is a good food supply for hawks whose numbers will increase. The increasing number of hawks eat more and more dovesuntil there aren't enough doves to sustain the hwk population which decreases quite rapidly through starvation. As there are fewer hawks more doves survive and their numbers increase until the nimber of hawks increases because of the increased food supply. In an ideal world there is an equilibrium point which produces stable population numbers of hawks and doves.
I see socialism as trying to maintain that equilibrium in human society. Unfortunately there are a few too many hawks around at the moment, although some of them are beginning to die out, like Carillion which was a classic hawk.
How are you defining socialism, surely it's important to all be talking about the same thing.
Its an economic concept, not an evolutionary one.
Well it was taught to me as part of evolutionary biology.
[QUOTE="Mark T Jones, post: 2887782, member: 255658"As a very broad sweep, my opener would be that it is a wonderful ideal which falls apart as soon as human nature is introduced
Presumably as an example of Game Theory, rather than as an actual part of evolution?
My humble opinion is that Capitalism is really the only thing we've found so far that more or less works.
Fortunately, we're all different though, and others will have a different opinion to me.
I think capitalism is fair and equal (all sacrifice the same), but many would consider socialism to be more fair and equal (all have the same).
I tend to think that effort should produce more return, and also that socialism strives to bring everyone towards equality of outcome, which I think is totally wrong. Equality of opportunity is good, and should be striven for, but equality of outcome is usually confused as the same thing.
Yes, capitalism made a bigger difference in past few decades for the poor than all the socialism touted by national politicians.
Indeed. How does socialism look to fund the support? Tax the rich more and after a point they lose the marginal benefit for earning, so they are no longer incentivised to earn to fund that system. Does that mean that people are inherently selfish? Probably yes.
I seem to remember from my time studying economics that one of the key principles in basic economics is that rational people are motivated only by economic and financial gain.
The problem we face now is that our implementation of Capitalism with an eroding social conscience and shoddy rules based framework is causing untold harm and driving huge divisions in society.
“The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings. The inherent virtue of Socialism is the equal sharing of miseries.” - Churchill, 1945
Churchill also stated that Capitalism was the least worst option.
History shows that the entrepeneurs were not dis-incentivised during periods of much higher taxation than now. In fact if you remove tax altogether from the rich they stop being productive altogether, just look at the rentier class before the French Revolution.Tax the rich more and after a point they lose the marginal benefit for earning, so they are no longer incentivised to earn to fund that system.
and there is no way that Capitalism can reverse that trend.
Neither can Socialism.
just look at the rentier class before the French Revolution.
We've tried Capitalism and it has failed. we haven't tried real socialism so you cannot say that iy cannot reverse that trend
We've tried Capitalism and it has failed. we haven't tried real socialism so you cannot say that iy cannot reverse that trend
That just sounds like a Momentum protest board slogan.
Living under capitalism has given my family the opportunities to rise from the very poorest in society to being quite well off within a generation, and the next generation of my family are forging ahead with their own career choices to better the standard of living for their children... all under capitalism.
The problem with capitalism is that social mobility is out of reach for those in generational poverty, those hamstrung as much by their own parents as they are the system we live under.
No, capitalism hasn't failed it needs modernising.
However humans are not birds.
Are you sure,what about their brains!
If capitalism had its way many of us would have been dead by now.
It seems to work pretty well in much of Scandinavia
So the first thing the UK should do is get rid of the minimum wage and massively cut down immigration?
I wouldn't really say any of Scandinavia was particularly socialist but I'm sure having a lot of natural resources and not having your country trashed by the 2nd world war helps with any economic model.
They also have different snow than us, they can keep trains running
So the first thing the UK should do is get rid of the minimum wage and massively cut down immigration?
I think they just have regular snow, the same every year, for a lot of the year. This means they can spend money on rail and road infrastructure that can cope with weather.