Comment on Luigi Mangione Content Is a Challenge for Social Media Moderators - B…
t3rmit3@beehaw.org 3 days agoSo, still not Capitalism tho
Comment on Luigi Mangione Content Is a Challenge for Social Media Moderators - B…
t3rmit3@beehaw.org 3 days agoSo, still not Capitalism tho
DdCno1@beehaw.org 3 days ago
Only a Sith deals in absolutes. Nearly every real-world economic system sits somewhere on a spectrum instead of neatly slotting into one category only.
t3rmit3@beehaw.org 3 days ago
Sure, but the difference is that they (European countries) do not profess to be staunch Capitalists, whereas by large America does. That is a big difference, because it informs policy drastically. There’s a reason we’re much much closer to a corporate oligarchy than European nations are, and it’s our idealization of a system that literally is based around Corporatism.
DdCno1@beehaw.org 3 days ago
This is incorrect. When the concept of the social market economy was first brought to the public attention by the conservative German CDU in the late 1940s, it was meant to be a counterpoint to the “unsocial command economy”. Being staunchly anti-Socialist was a core policy of most large democratic parties in Western-European countries, not just West-Germany, as a reaction to the massive and very close threat from the East. Relations only began to thaw in the 1970s, only for the Cold War to heat up in the 1980s.
Yes, I know, this is the past and today, things are different in terms of rhetoric on the old continent, but this was when the economic systems that are still in place today were created.
t3rmit3@beehaw.org 3 days ago
I feel like we’re glossing over important parts of 1800s European history, and it being the literal birthplace of Socialism and Anarchism as philosophies, to just go to the 1940s emergence of the postwar Western Europe economies. The backlash against Monarchism and mercantile economies saw a lot of support for all sorts of new forms of government in the 1800s, and various forms of Socialism were chief among them and incredibly well liked and influential among citizens.
That it took 2 world wars shattering the remaining vestiges of the mainland European monarchic powers (who were very anti-Socialist for obvious reasons), and allowed Socialist ideas about the responsibilities of government to its peoples to actually take hold at a government level, is a story about Monarchism clinging to power, not about citizenry being anti-Socialist.