Archive for the ‘Socialism’ Category

Nationalism and Socialism Are Very Bad Ideas – Reason.com – Reason

Between the Great Lisbon Earthquake and the revolutionary year of 1848 the European chattering classes had three big ideas. One was very, very good. The other two were very, very bad. We're still paying.

The good one, flowing from the pens of such members of the clerisy as Voltaire, Thomas Paine, Mary Wollstonecraft, and above all the Blessed Adam Smith, is what Smith described in 1776 as the shocking idea of "allowing every man [or woman, dear] to pursue his own interest in his own way, upon the liberal plan of equality, liberty, and justice."

Admittedly, true liberalism took a long time. "All men are created equal" was penned by a man who kept in slavery most of his own children by Sally Hemings, not to mention Sally herself. Even his co-author Ben Franklin once owned slaves. In 1775, the English literary man Samuel Johnson had ample reason to launch a sneer from London, "How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes?"

But those liberal yelps re-echoed, and had force, amplified by the repeated embarrassment over two centuries of denying slaves, apprentices, women, immigrants, anarchists, socialists, communists, Okies, Nisei, blacks, Chicanos, gays, Vietnam protesters, criminal suspects, handicapped people, gender crossers, ex-cons, drug users, smokers, and citizens of the District of Columbia their own equality, liberty, and justice.

The fruits of the new liberalism, when it could make its way against the two bad ideas (wait for it), were stunning. Liberalism, uniquely in history, made masses of ordinary people bold, bold to try out their ideas for how to improve the world by testing them in the marketplace. Look around at the hundreds of betterments that resulted: from stock markets to ball bearings, from penicillin to plate glass.

The boldness of commoners pursuing their own interests resulted in a Great Enrichmenta rise in Europe and the Anglosphere of real, inflation-corrected incomes per head, from 1800 to the present, by a factor, conservatively measured, of about 30. That is, class, about 3,000 percent. The glory of Greece and the grandeur of Rome, Song China, and the Mughal Empire might have managed a 100 percent increase over a century or so, to something like $6 a daybut eventually they all fell back to the $3 a day typical since our species lived in caves.

And now, despite the best efforts of governments and international agencies to bungle the job, liberalism is spreading to the world, from Hong Kong to Botswana.

It's astonishingly good for the poor. Add up the fruits of illiberal government actionredistribution, licensing, tariffs, zoning, building permits, farm subsidies, restrictions on immigration, foreign aid, industrial policy, a third to half of income seized as taxes by the stateand all together, they might, if you suspend your economic disbelief, raise the income of the poorest folk by, say, 30 percent, one time only. Not the 3,000 percent attributable to liberalism, which continues to grow with no end in sight.

The two bad ideas of 17551848 were nationalism and socialism. If you like them, perhaps you will enjoy their combination, introduced in 1922 and still for sale in Europe and implied by Donald Trump's popularity: national socialism.

Nationalism, when first theorized in the early 19th century, was entwined with the Romantic movement, though of course in England it was already hundreds of years old. It inspired reactive nationalisms in France, Scotland, and eventually Ireland. In Italy, in the form of campanilismo, or pride in your city, it was older still. (Italians will reply when asked where they are from, even if speaking to foreigners, "Florence" or "Rome" or at the most "Sicily." Never "Italy.")

What is bad about nationalism, aside from its intrinsic collective coercion, is that it inspires conflict. The 800 U.S. military bases around the world keep the peace by waging endless war, bombing civilians to protect Americans from non-threats on the other side of the world. In July 2016, we of the Anglosphere "celebrated," if that is quite the word, the centenary of the Battle of the Somme, a fruit of nationalism, which by its conclusion three and a half months later had cost the Allies and the Central Powers combined over a million casualties, most of them dismembered by artillery. Thank you for your service.

The other bad idea of the era was socialism, which can also be linked to Romanticism, and to a secularized Christianity, with its Sermon-on-the-Mount charity and an apocalyptic view of history. It's all of a piecefrom central planning in Venezuela to building permits in Chicago. A communist is a socialist in a hurry and a socialist is a regulator in a hurry and a regulator is a corrupt politician in a hurry.

What's bad about socialism, aside from its own intrinsic collective coercion, is that it leads to poverty. Even in its purest formswithin the confines of a sweet family, sayit kills initiative and encourages free riding. St. Paul, not famous for being a liberal, scolded the Thessalonians: "We gave this order: 'If anyone doesn't want to work, he shouldn't eat.' We hear that some of you are living in idleness. You are not busy workingyou are busy interfering in other people's lives!" Good for St. Paul.

The not-so-sweet forms of socialism, especially those paired with nationalism, are a lot worse. Thus North Korea, Cuba, and other workers' paradises. As the joke goes, "Under capitalism man exploits man; under socialism it's the other way around."

What to do? Revive liberalism, as the astonishing successes of China and India have. Take back the word from our friends on the American left. They can keep progressive, if they don't mind being associated with the Progressive movement of the early 20th century, and its eugenic enthusiasms for forced sterilization and for using the minimum wage to drive immigrants, blacks, and women out of the labor force. And we should persuade our friends on the right to stop using the l word to attack people who do not belong to the country club.

Read Adam Smith, slowlynot just the prudential Wealth of Nations, but its temperate sister The Theory of Moral Sentiments. And return in spirit to the dawn of 1776, when the radical idea was not nationalism or socialism or national socialism, but "the obvious and simple system of natural liberty" that allows all men and women to pursue their interests in their own ways.

It was a strange but very, very good idea. Still is.

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Nationalism and Socialism Are Very Bad Ideas - Reason.com - Reason

President Trump’s Socialism For The Plutocrats Begins – Mediaite

To the soon-to-be dismay of President Trump supporters, when the reality-TV-star-turned-most-powerful-man-on-the-planet said the forgotten men and women of our country will be forgotten no longer, he was actually talking about his plutocrat pals.

Less than a week on the job, and Trumps already handing out candy to the wealthy. His tax cut planwhich is a version of George W. Bushs tax cuts on steroidsis now being shifted to the unpaid for category.

Thats right: Trumps team is mulling the notion of saying screw it, the tax cuts will pay for themselves through HUUUUUGE economic growth, so we dont have to offset them with additional revenue or spending cuts.

If you remember, this worked out very well under President George W. Bush, who implemented two unpaid for tax cuts skewed heavily toward wealthier Americans; two unpaid for wars; a new, unpaid for entitlement system (Medicare Part D); and other pearls of economic mastery that led to an unimpressive decade of job growth in the 2000s while keeping the level of income inequality trucking along unimpeded.

Its not just the fact that Trumps tax cuts for the wealthywhich nonpartisan tax analysts have said will add between 10 and 11 trillion dollars to the debt while giving the wealthiestamong us over $1 million in cuts this yearwill most likely be unpaid for.

Trump, working with his Ayn Rand-loving Speaker of The House Paul Ryan, will be giving out huge goodies through repealing Obamacare.

According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the 400 richestfamilies in America would get an average tax cut of $7 million per year while raising taxes on nearly 7 million low-to-moderate income Americans.

First, it would eliminate two Medicare taxes the additional Hospital Insurance tax and the Medicare tax on unearned income that both fall only on high-income filers, thereby cutting taxes substantially for those at the top.

-The top 400 highest-income taxpayers whose annual incomes average more than $300 million apiece each would receive an average annual tax cut of about $7 million, we estimate from Internal Revenue Service (IRS) data.

-This groups tax cut would total about $2.8 billion a year.

-The roughly 160 million households with incomes below $200,000 would get nothing from the repeal of these two taxes.

Obamacares repeal will also raise taxes on working people through the removal of tax credits that helped low-income and minority people buy health insurance. For 2017, that tax credit is worth $4,800.

Im sure the millions of blue-collar working class Americans who were swept away by Trumps populist fire breathing will be swimming in a bed of Benjamins with policies like this!

Dont get me wrong: Obamacare is definitely not the ideal healthcare system. It has NOT significantly reduced the cost of healthcare or reined in the insurance companies from price gouging. Its also increased deductibles to frightening levels for a large swath of the country.

But, in the absence of a single-payer systemthe one the rest of the industrialized world uses to great effectits much better than the previous, your-shit-out-of-luck system that offered a death sentence to citizens with preexisting conditions.

Beyond Obamacare,the 45th president is reviving the Keystone XL Pipeline and the Dakota Access Pipeline: two oil pipelines that do NOT increase DOMESTIC energy or U.S. jobs but will certainly increase the already insanely large coffers of big oil executives and their shareholders.

Both pipelines will be used nearly exclusively for foreign exportsyou know, the kind of business that makes fat cat oil companies richer but doesnt lower the price of gasoline for the people who voted for Trump.

And, contrary to what the president says, these two pipeline will not create an explosion of jobs: pipelines create temporary jobs during construction, not permanent, good-paying jobs.

In the case of the Dakota Access Pipeline, the local North Dakota economy was stimulated more by water protectors flooding in to fight the pipelineand spending money on supplies and other necessitiesthan jobs the pipeline created.

But, heres the best part of all of Trumps socialism for the rich: Republicans and establishment, corporate Democrats are shown to be the hypocrites they truly are.

These same folks who railed against Senator Bernie Sanders radical policies steeped in Democratic socialism have no problem with the redistribution of wealth to plutocrats and their campaign donors.

And make NO MISTAKE ABOUT ITthese polices are indeed redistribution. You think wealthy folks get tax breaks and nobody pays for it? Payment time comes when leaders like Trump run up the debt and deficit and then rail about the need to cut spending.

What will get cut in order to shrink the debt he exploded in order to pay his rich pals? Education, police, fire departments, research & development, funds for critical government departments like the EPA, welfare, Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security.

Its called socialism for the plutocrats, where poor, low-income, and formerly middle class people pay for millionaire and billionaires to buy another yacht.

In reality, Trumps not making America great again, because its been super duper great for a long time for wealthy folks.

Instead, hes moonwalking America back again.

To the 1920s Gilded Age.

Jordan Chariton is a Politics Reporter for The Young Turks, covering the presidential campaign trail, where hes interviewing voters on both sides. Hes also a columnist for Mediaite and heres his latest column. Follow him @JordanChariton and watch videos at YouTube.com/tytpolitics.

This is an opinion piece. The views expressed in this article are those of just the author.

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President Trump's Socialism For The Plutocrats Begins - Mediaite

‘Socialism can beat Trump’ say Pittsburgh area students who protested inauguration – The College Fix

Socialism can beat Trump say Pittsburgh area students who protested inauguration

Following Fridays inauguration of Donald Trump, over 100 Pittsburgh area students (and others) consistingmostly of members of various socialist groups assembled at the citysPoint State Park to demand a break from the Republican and Democrat parties.

According to The Tab, all in attendance were given chant sheets which featured catchy rhymes like Sexist, racist, anti-gay/Donald Trump go away! No borders, no nations/Stop the deportations! and 1, 2, 3, 4, Poverty is class war/5, 6, 7, 8, Social justice cannot wait!

Prior to their actual marching, an (alleged) Iraq veteran spoke to those assembled, saying that the United States is addicted to war, and isnt the good guys anymore. Other speakers praised socialism and said it was the only solution to Trump. (Ironically, candidate Trump had criticized said addiction to war.)

From the article:

Jose Manuel, a member of the International Marxist Student Union and one of the protesters, said that none of the tall buildings we see would be there if it wasnt for the working class. Nothing happens without the kind permission of workersWe should take the Fortune 500 companies and place them under Democratic workers control.

Manuel hopes that, with time, Americans would be willing to accept a socialist lifestyle.

There will be a time when people are in economic crisis, and all their assumptions wont hold. All the people they listen to- they wont believe them anymore. Youre already seeing that with the discrediting of the establishment. I think our ideas are very attractiveto people right now. Our organization is growing!

We supported Sanders. Our position was that he needed to break from the Democratic party and run as a socialist independent That would shake this country to its foundation. I think socialism could beat Donald Trump.

As of 2014, Manuel was a member of the local Marxist Students Association, which is comprised of students from U. Pittsburgh,Duquesne and the Community College of Allegheny County.

His name Jos Manuel is actually a pseudonym as he says he fears being blacklisted. However, ironically, he said hed be infinitely more fearful if [he] was wearing a shirt that said capitalist or proud member of the 1 percent as capitalists are not perceived favorably among contemporary youth.

Infinitely!!

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'Socialism can beat Trump' say Pittsburgh area students who protested inauguration - The College Fix

Why Venezuela’s socialist meltdown COULD actually happen in the US – Conservative Review

Theres a predictable checklist for meltdowns in socialist countries, and its playing out with tragic regularity in Venezuela.

Nationalize agriculture? Check.

Start government-enforced rationing when the food supply dries up? Check.

Seal the border when people try to flee to buy food elsewhere? Check.

The next step, and usually one of the last before total collapse, is runaway inflation. Thats what were starting to see in Venezuela.

Rapid inflation, called hyperinflation by economists when it gets really bad, is one of the deadliest poisons for any economy. The spiral is usually triggered when a government prints too much money to pay its debts, and prices start to rise. Once the people see this happening, they realize that their money will be worth less tomorrow than it is today. Every day they hold currency will make them poorer, so people spend as fast as they can. This is turn causes prices to rise still faster, which exacerbates the spending, and so on and so on until the currency is worthless.

Without a functioning currency, economic transactions cannot easily take place, and the economy collapses completely. Its happened in a large number of socialist states, including Weimar Germany, Hungary, North Korea, and the Soviet Union.

In the worst examples, inflation rates can be astoundingly high. In Zimbabwe, perhaps the most dramatic example in history, monthly inflation topped out at 3.5 million percent. To make that number more comprehensible, imagine going out to McDonalds and buying an item from the dollar menu. Now imagine that you go back tomorrow, and find that the same item costs $100,000. Thats how bad it was. It was only a couple of years ago when Zimbabwe was able to reset its currency, revaluing at a rate of 35 quadrillion Zimbabwean dollars for one U.S. dollar.

Its not quite that bad in Venezuela yet, but we are seeing only the beginnings of the inflation death spiral. The government recently issued new denominations of 20,000 bolivars (the local currency) each worth about $6 U.S. Economists believe that the country exceeded 100 percent inflation in 2016 and are expecting 1,600 percent in 2017. Protesters have taken to the streets, setting fire to 100 bolivar notes in protest of their worthlessness.

Unsound money, runaway printing presses, deficit spending, and government mismanagement of major national industries have all conspired to destroy Venezuela, and its heartbreaking to watch the country fall apart, leaving millions of innocent people without food or medical care. But perhaps more upsetting still is our own countrys refusal to learn the lessons of the socialism, even when we can see its destructive power with our own eyes.

The Federal Reserve continues to get away with irresponsible and opaque currency manipulation, pumping large amounts of cash into the economy while concealing its operations from Congress and the American people. The national debt creeps ever closer to $20 trillion, and legislative efforts to rein in spending, reform entitlements, or audit the Federal Reserve have so far come to naught. Meanwhile, an admitted socialist like Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. (F, 17%) was regarded by many as a fit choice for the presidency.

It may be unpleasant, but we should all force ourselves to look good and hard at Venezuela and see the horrors that socialism has wrought. And then wed better do whatever we can to stop it happening here.

Logan Albright is a researcher for Conservative Review and Director of Research for Free the People. You can follow him on Twitter@loganalbright73.

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Why Venezuela's socialist meltdown COULD actually happen in the US - Conservative Review

Neither Fascism nor Liberalism. Socialism! – The Daily Gazette

One week ago, Donald Trump took office. We at SMAC, like many other groups on campus, condemn his presidency. But we emphasize that his electoral victory was not an isolated event. We cannot condemn just Trump and his Republican Party, but the systems and society that produced him. And as we make plans to fight back this Friday, we must reject the ideology and tactics of liberal politics, which have proven unable to prevent the rise of Trump.

Trump and the alt-right rallied the white working class, nationalists, and elites with white supremacist policies and rhetoric. The spectres of a border fence, mass deportations, fascist Muslim registry, and Law and Order dogwhistles are all in line with the core values of the American project: settler colonialism, racism, capitalism, and imperialism. It is only out of this history that Trumps success could be possible.

In addition to white supremacy, the rise of neoliberalism across both aisles of the corporate party system and the subsequent disenfranchisement of workers was central to Trumps success. After nearly forty years of stagnant wages, the dismantling of unions and workers power, and three imperialist wars, we should not be surprised when peoples anger manifests itself in diverse and unexpected ways. Discontentment with the status quo has manifested itself in riots, Senator Bernie Sanders grassroots campaign for president, and in Trumps popularity. Capitalism has leveraged this rage towards its own destructive reproduction, harnessing racist sentiments to elect Trump, while ignoring the socioeconomic exploitation at the intersecting nexus of oppressions.

Ironically, it is this very rage that will be its undoing.

No matter what liberal apologists and Democratic ideologues claim, Obamas presidency looked a lot more like eight more years of George Bush and neoconservatism than eight years of hope and change. Mass deportations, the modern surveillance state, imperialist military interventions overseas, mass incarceration, neoliberal economic policy, intolerance of dissidents, and a militarized police force have all been central policy features of the Obama administration and the Democratic Party establishment for years before Trump assumed office. Obama deported more than 2.5 million people, and Hillary Clinton, as senator for New York, voted for the Secure Fence Act which proposed a 700-mile border barrier not unlike Trumps proposed 1,000-mile wall. Under the Obama administration, the NSA expanded and continued its mass surveillance of the U.S. public and, despite his earlier condemnation, in 2011 renewed the Patriot Act.

While the Democratic party and Obama ran as the anti-war party in 2008, the U.S. continues to station ground troops in Afghanistan, Syria, and Iraq, intervened in Libya and left the country without a central government, and has employed drone strikes in Algeria, Mali, Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia killing hundreds of civilians. Ironically, despite massive opposition from the Republican Party, the Affordable Care Act and its health care mandate actually originated as the conservative alternative to a single-payer health care system.

The Obama presidency also oversaw the bailout of the nations financial systems, letting bankers off the hook for the financial crisis and buying their failing corrupt institutions with public funds. The Obama administration denied a record rate of 77% of Freedom of Information Act requests and mercilessly prosecuted whistleblowers such as Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning, and Jeffrey Sterling (Mannings recent pardon, while a victory, is no excuse for her seven years of torture). Perhaps most egregiously of all, excess military grade equipment and vehicles from Iraq and Afghanistan were sold and gifted to police forces around the country under Obama. The weapons used to occupy people overseas are now being used by the police to occupy domestic communities, particularly low-income communities of color, as exemplified spectacularly in Charlotte, Baltimore, Ferguson, Milwaukee, and countless cities and towns across the country. Make no mistake: white supremacy and imperialism put assault rifles and Humvees from the Invasion of Iraq into the hands of the heinously racist U.S. police.

As an organization, we denounce the system regardless of its figurehead. Since much of what Trump envisions has already been enacted with the consent of Democratic Party politicians, we feel that a reformation of the Democratic Party is not the proper response to this election. The Democratic Party and its role in themaintenance of slavery and its modern incarnations, imperial expansion and intervention, and dismantling of the labor movement,is antithetical to the goals of SMAC. Reformism is futile. If its history is any indication, the Democratic Party will always thwart the liberatory, transformative politicsfrom prison abolition and anti-imperialism, to climate justice and socialismthat we fight for.

We hope that the election of Trump becomes an opportunity for the left to organize and agitate, to empower workers to fight against a two-party system that does not represent their interests or needs. We seek liberation from corrupt, oppressive structures and the oligarchy that they uphold, which can not be done by conceding to or petitioning for authority to act on our behalf.

While we share their anti-Trump sentiments, many on the center-left have adopted misguided tactics and strategy that we similarly cannot endorse. Politics does not end at the ballot box or with your local representative; holding out for the 2020 electoral circus does not just represent a myopic notion of political change, its a privilege many cannot afford. The focus on calling legislators and letter writing, while well-intentioned, only reinforces this logic. We reject liberals obsessive interest in discourse, for dialogue cannot be confused with action.

Fascism wont be fought by calling Leanne Krueger-Braneky or hugging racist white people. These strategies didnt work in the past and they wont work now. For many people in this country, resistance is a matter of life and death and we will make no hesitation in defending these communities. SMAC aspires to mobilize such efforts.

Swarthmore Marxists and Anti-Capitalists seeks to be a place of collective struggle and solidarity. In these times, we must unite theory and practice by improving material realities for the people of our community and the greater Philadelphia area, with respect for the folks who have been doing this work before us. SMAC is an organizing hub, a space for critical Left thought, and a home for radicals on an otherwise liberal campus.

The nature of radical work is necessarily intersectional. We standand must actin solidarity with people of color, queer and trans folk, undocumented people, women, indigenous communities across the globe, and people with disabilities. Thus, we do not stand in solidarity (or seek to work) with Swarthmore Conservativesor any organization that invites racist eugenicists like Charles Murray to campus or endorses socially liberal advocates of economic exploitation. Similarly, if a racist eugenicist is invited to campus, a leader in SMAC wont defend their right to speak.

As a new organization on campus, SMAC is still evolving. We acknowledge that we do not have a final structure or agenda. Rather, our political lines will be flexible as current material conditions demand, aligning it with Swarthmore traditions of putting theory into practice. We desire to grow with new people, perspectives, experiences, and ideas. We will only learn what functions our organization can serve on this campus as we continue to expand. We also hope that through this work we will create new opportunities for other projects to establish themselves on campus.

SMAC will be meeting this Friday at 8 p.m. in Trotter 203 to discuss the way forward, to SMAC Back Fascism. We invite students disillusioned by the state of activism on Swarthmores campus to join our group and define our work. Fighting Trump requires an active and radical Left unwilling to compromise with the ascendant Fascism that is Trump and the far-right. We must reject the moral poverty of liberalism, for liberal politics contributed to the neoliberalism and racism that precipitated Trumps rise. We must continue organizing in our communities. And we must never lose sight of the radical future thats possible.

Featured image courtesy ofRed and Black Britain.

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Neither Fascism nor Liberalism. Socialism! - The Daily Gazette