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Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
warmonger1981 wrote:I think your confusing communism for fascism.
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
mrswdk wrote:A lot of people often say 'communism' when what they mean is 'authoritarianism'.
Detaching words such as socialism, democracy, communism and capitalism from their true meanings and instead turning them into loaded, emotive terms is unhelpful, because it obscures meaningful debate about the systems we or other people live in.
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
mrswdk wrote:A lot of people often say 'communism' when what they mean is 'authoritarianism'.
DaGip wrote:mrswdk wrote:A lot of people often say 'communism' when what they mean is 'authoritarianism'.
Detaching words such as socialism, democracy, communism and capitalism from their true meanings and instead turning them into loaded, emotive terms is unhelpful, because it obscures meaningful debate about the systems we or other people live in.
I think your post summed up what people really hate. People do not like their freedoms infringed upon. What does freedom mean? Do you think communism allows for freedom? Freedom from want and from fear? Freedom of speech and freedom to worship?
I hate being taxed through my nose and not receiving any of the benefit. It would be different if I was being taxed and I could see the benefit, but I don't. You either have to be totally poor or super wealthy to see any type of benefit...if you are stuck in the middle, you will just remain in limbo. Perhaps China is seeing a boom in their Middle Class, but as far as America is concerned...our Middle Class is almost dead.
Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:A lot of people often say 'communism' when what they mean is 'authoritarianism'.
I wonder if that has anything to do with the authoritarian governments of the major communist nations this world has seen.
mrswdk wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:A lot of people often say 'communism' when what they mean is 'authoritarianism'.
I wonder if that has anything to do with the authoritarian governments of the major communist nations this world has seen.
The fact remains that communism and authoritarianism are two completely separate concepts.
Metsfanmax wrote:Pretty sure that nuclear weapons are the most effective method for eliminating differences between people. Or eliminating people. Whatever.
Army of GOD wrote:This thread is now about my large penis
Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:A lot of people often say 'communism' when what they mean is 'authoritarianism'.
I wonder if that has anything to do with the authoritarian governments of the major communist nations this world has seen.
The fact remains that communism and authoritarianism are two completely separate concepts.
But that's exactly what a communist would say, and we can't trust communists because all of the ones we know of believe in authoritarianism.
(See why this won't get you very far?)
mrswdk wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:A lot of people often say 'communism' when what they mean is 'authoritarianism'.
I wonder if that has anything to do with the authoritarian governments of the major communist nations this world has seen.
The fact remains that communism and authoritarianism are two completely separate concepts.
But that's exactly what a communist would say, and we can't trust communists because all of the ones we know of believe in authoritarianism.
(See why this won't get you very far?)
No, it's exactly what simply Wikipedia'ing each of those concepts would tell you.
Marx, the original communist, sought a society in which government didn't exist at all, so while you educate yourself about what those two words actually mean you might also want to try again with the 'all communists believe in authoritarianism' claptrap.
Dukusaur wrote:Communism requires people to exchange goods and services in ways that they would not exchange them of their own free will
Dukasaur wrote:mrswdk wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:A lot of people often say 'communism' when what they mean is 'authoritarianism'.
I wonder if that has anything to do with the authoritarian governments of the major communist nations this world has seen.
The fact remains that communism and authoritarianism are two completely separate concepts.
But that's exactly what a communist would say, and we can't trust communists because all of the ones we know of believe in authoritarianism.
(See why this won't get you very far?)
No, it's exactly what simply Wikipedia'ing each of those concepts would tell you.
Marx, the original communist, sought a society in which government didn't exist at all, so while you educate yourself about what those two words actually mean you might also want to try again with the 'all communists believe in authoritarianism' claptrap.
Whether they "believe" in authoritarianism is irrelevant. Communism requires people to exchange goods and services in ways that they would not exchange them of their own free will, so it necessitates an authoritarian enforcement mechanism. The road to hell is paved with good intentions; actions have inescapable consequences, regardless of what "beliefs" people want to delude themselves with.
GoranZ wrote:Communism is the most efficient system for achieving United Earth because it has ability to effectively eliminate differences between people. On the other hand Capitalism creates and endorses differences.
I think that Western Media and Hollywood are generally responsible for distorted picture about what communism is and is not... Thats the only way powerlords to stay in power in flawfull system like capitalism.
mrswdk wrote:Maybe the implementation of communism usually requires authoritarian methods of governance, but that's not the point I was making. The point is that if you are talking about authoritarian government then you should use the word 'authoritarian', not 'communist'. Conflating the two as if they mean the same thing is just ignorant.
Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:Maybe the implementation of communism usually requires authoritarian methods of governance, but that's not the point I was making. The point is that if you are talking about authoritarian government then you should use the word 'authoritarian', not 'communist'. Conflating the two as if they mean the same thing is just ignorant.
Many people hold the view I proposed precisely because they think communism is inevitably linked to authoritarianism, for the reasons Duk and BBS are hinting to. This is a matter of empirical fact, but if it is true, then saying that communism and authoritarianism are interchangeable is only a minor error in the practical scheme of things. Your attempts to convince them otherwise will fall flat in the face of the fact that they don't care whether it's different -- they don't want authoritarianism. This only seems something worth getting actively upset about if there's a way to really do communism the "right" way.
mrswdk wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:mrswdk wrote:Maybe the implementation of communism usually requires authoritarian methods of governance, but that's not the point I was making. The point is that if you are talking about authoritarian government then you should use the word 'authoritarian', not 'communist'. Conflating the two as if they mean the same thing is just ignorant.
Many people hold the view I proposed precisely because they think communism is inevitably linked to authoritarianism, for the reasons Duk and BBS are hinting to. This is a matter of empirical fact, but if it is true, then saying that communism and authoritarianism are interchangeable is only a minor error in the practical scheme of things. Your attempts to convince them otherwise will fall flat in the face of the fact that they don't care whether it's different -- they don't want authoritarianism. This only seems something worth getting actively upset about if there's a way to really do communism the "right" way.
Who said I'm trying to convince anyone of the benefits of communism? I don't give a shit about communism. Today's PRC is achieving far more than Mao's communist PRC could ever have dreamed of.
The point is that in Western parlance, 'communism' has become some sort of shorthand for secret police, persecution and the desperate masses being plundered and oppressed by a corrupt bureaucracy. Therefore, whenever someone looks at an authoritarian government and says 'oh look, communism' the resulting discussion will not be a debate about authoritarian rule and the balance of state vs individual autonomy but just a chorus of 'oooh baaaad, evil regime, communism!!!!'. That kind of conversation is good for a Western government which merely wishes to demonize countries like China and avoid frank discussion of its own range of powers and intrusions, but it's no good if you want to have a meaningful debate about the system you or anyone else lives in. Use the terminology correctly.
mrswdk wrote:The same thing applies to demonization. If you refuse to think about what words such as 'communist', 'democracy', 'racist', 'progressive' etc. actually mean and instead just assign random emotive values to each of them then you are never going to be able to discuss anything seriously. Just jump whenever master tells you to.
Look, boy! The government of China is called the Chinese Communist Party!
Ruff ruff, I hate Reds! Gulags! Arr, hate China!
Look, boy! That banker is a capitalist!
Woof, I hate capitalism! Bankers! The 1%! Money is fascist ruff ruff!
It would be much more difficult for the manipulators to propagandize and sow the seeds of division if people didn't buy into those sorts of stupid over-simplifications.
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