BC'er
Established Member
Those in power will milk whatever system they are in charge of. But a socialist system allows anyone in society to milk the system too, it encourages fecklessness.
Complete opposite of the truth. The whole point of brexit and everything about free-market neoliberalism, de-regulation etc is to allow businesses to "milk the system" with as little constraint as possible.
The childish ideology says that this will somehow work out the best for everybody. But it does not, never has, and socialism in its many forms exists precisely to correct this and fill the gaps, "for the many not the few".
Globalisation has made things more difficult for many by shipping jobs abroad. Automation adds to this by reducing the number of jobs required. These add up to a large class of people in insecure and low paid jobs, and/or dependant on benefits. It's not their own fecklessness which has taken their jobs and opportunities away and created mass unemployment.
In fact the "socialist" model as it has played out in reality rather than in Fabian fantasies is that the ruling class, the "apparatchiki" as they were called in Russia, are the ones who milk the system as they have the power and the perks to do so, while the "workers & peasants" who of course must remain workers & peasants unless by dint of ability, "loyalty" or nepotism they manage to join the ruling class, have only the black market to turn to; that and what they can produce for themselves by growing on the small plots they were allowed or a bit of hunting & gathering.
The bulk of what the USSR produced was grown on those small plots by the way. Strangely enough, having promised the peasants "land and peace" the communists then took back the land and those who didn't go along got the peace of the grave. Of course when the state starves you to death as a matter of policy, loyalty isn't going to do you much good anyway.
One of the grotesque ironies is that the average standard of living by every measure was pitiful in 1924, 34, 44, 54, 64, 74 etc. compared to what it had been in 1914. Even the top apparatchiki lived miserable lives compared to what they would have done had Russia continued on the course she was on before WWI.
The truly childish idea; though to say so is to insult the common sense of children, is that the state can, should or ever would legislate material equality in any meaningful sense. As Churchill well put it, socialism is "equality of misery", at least for all but the ruling class, a group always composed of the most ruthless, grasping and fanatical components of the population who naturally rise to the top in all societies.
Marxism is nothing but a black comedy, the man himself referred to his works as "swinish books". He was a sponger who lived off Engels, allowed several of his children to die of starvation, fathered an illegitimate child by Helen Demuth his household servant, and squabbled obsessively with anyone in the so-called revolutionary movements who aroused his jealousy. The "workers" like the rest of humanity, he despised and wrote of with contempt. His true desire as he expressed it one of his poems was "tear down everything and stride like a colossus through the ruins". Not surprisingly, several of his surviving children and their spouses committed suicide.
The real problem we have in the West at present is the financial and banking oligarchies riding herd on politicians and corporations. Nothing new about that of course, its been going on for centuries, but now we have vast pools of capital chasing immediate returns and essentially looting corporations to get it. That of course and enforcing ludicrous "social" and "environmental" policies with ever greater trans-national controls and censorship. The "long march through the institutions" which parlour leftists and two bit American radicals used to declaim about: gradually enlarge the state while choking off private enterprise and personal freedoms, until voila, "SOCIALISM"!. The crackpots and misanthropes who dream of this stuff will be its victims of course, just as they were in the USSR and the PRC. Once the machinery of repression is created it no more "withers away" than the state does; it merely goes in search of new grist for its mill, and those who had a hand in creating it of course know too much to be allowed to live.
And those who do live with it will be like the cab driver in Leningrad in the 50s who remarked to his foreign passenger: "My father says we did a lot of stupid things in 1917 and we're paying for it now".