Author Topic: Fascism, liberal and tech fascism, progressivism, socialism, crony capitalism  (Read 340555 times)

Crafty_Dog

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When the govenment directs the economy
« Reply #750 on: November 01, 2021, 12:06:35 AM »

WSJ:

The Spending Bill Is an Attack on Work and Marriage
A single mom could end up paying thousands more for daycare if she marries. Children will suffer.
By Casey B. Mulligan
Oct. 31, 2021 5:45 pm ET


America’s children have suffered from ill-advised public-school closings. Now Democrats want to compound the damage with their welfare spending bill, which would push fathers out of family life and move mothers and fathers alike onto unemployment rolls.

Take Section 23001 of the latest draft of the Build Back Better bill, released on Thursday. It would create a large new federal child-care program. For each year that a couple has children under 5, being unmarried could easily save them over $10,000 annually in child-care costs compared with being married.

That’s because of how the subsidies are structured. A single mother earning 75% of the median household income in her state would pay nothing for child care, regardless of how much the child’s father earned. But the father’s income counts if he is legally part of the family. A husband and wife who each earned about 75% of the median income would have to pay thousands for the same daycare. In 2022-24, the married couple would pay full price, which would likely exceed $15,000 a child a year—$30,000 for two children under 5.

Child care is one of several provisions that would encourage even middle-income people to think seriously about single parenthood. Several Republican senators wrote to Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to object to the new marriage penalties built into Democrats’ proposed reforms to the Earned Income Tax Credit. There inevitably will be marriage penalties baked into the $150 billion the bill would spend on “affordable housing,” details to come.


Democrats will claim that their new bill at least encourages work by making child care free, but that refers only to a narrow slice of the population. Most families, especially those that don’t qualify for a full subsidy or that have older children, will pay more for child care. One reason: Under the heading of “quality regulation,” the bill requires that child-care workers be paid a “living wage” and that their earnings be “equivalent to wages for elementary educators with similar credentials and experience.”


The precise meaning of that would be left to regulators, but according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, elementary-school teachers earned an average of $63,930 annually in 2019, compared with $25,510 for child-care workers. By that benchmark, child-care facilities would need to pay workers 151% more. Perhaps child-care workers would be required to hold master’s degrees, or be represented by unions that could otherwise limit supply as they do with kindergarten teachers.

The new child-care program and various additions to major safety-net programs such as Medicaid and “affordable housing” also discourage work. As one’s income from working increases, the amount offered by these benefit programs decreases. The marginal tax rate on working an extra hour, day or week, or improving your skills, can be extremely high.

The revised bill also allows even America’s highest-income households to receive subsidized ObamaCare insurance as long as they can’t get coverage at work. Some Americans will retire earlier or spend more time between jobs. Much of the lost wages will be replaced by more-generous ObamaCare subsidies at taxpayer expense.

I estimate that the several implicit employment and income taxes in the revised bill would increase marginal tax rates on work by about five percentage points. I expect that such a change, over five years, would reduce full-time equivalent employment by about 4%, or about five million jobs.

Meanwhile, more kids will come home from a regulated child-care facility to an unmarried parent who is out of work. More families will be willing to tolerate this kind of care, regardless of the quality of cognitive or social development, since the price is “free.”

Quebec imposed “quality” regulation on its child-care market, which, a landmark study found, led to “increases in early childhood anxiety and aggression” with “little measured impact on cognitive skills.” Kids exposed to the program suffered “worse health, lower life satisfaction, and higher crime rates later in life.”

The Affordable Care Act taught us the hard way that nice-sounding bill titles don’t necessarily translate to sound public policy. Anyone looking inside Build Back Better will see incentives that work against Americans who want to build stable families.

Mr. Mulligan, a professor of economics at the University of Chicago and senior fellow with the Committee to Unleash Prosperity, served as chief economist at the White House Council of Economic Advisers, 2018-19





ccp

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Why the heck is this Klaus Schwab World Economic Forum
« Reply #755 on: July 23, 2022, 07:42:05 AM »

so influential?

Why do read about him and they so much

no one ever elected them

https://neonnettle.com/news/19677-world-economic-forum-calls-to-end-wasteful-private-car-ownership

he is just another academic with ties to , of course, Harvard:

https://www.weforum.org/about/klaus-schwab
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaus_Schwab

Crafty_Dog

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Definition of Fascism
« Reply #756 on: September 05, 2022, 10:58:43 AM »
Henry Olsen of the Ethics and Public Policy Center notes that fascists "believed that multiparty democracy weakened the nation, and that competitive capitalism was wasteful and exploitative. Their alternative was a one-party state that guided the economy through regulation and sector-based accords between labor and business."

=============

https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2022/09/who-are-you-calling-fascist-mr-president-david-harsanyi/?fbclid=IwAR0yV3AkhErkXvLH574hzWxlQKfIw2PZnwUDdHPAR-aSkfhel9IxDooUHEM
« Last Edit: September 05, 2022, 11:07:39 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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WT: Fascism for Dummies
« Reply #757 on: September 14, 2022, 03:32:46 AM »
Fascism for dummies

Those using the word should at least know what it means

By Clifford D. May

Fascism seems to be all the rage these days. I’ll give you a few examples.

Ben Rhodes, who was President Barack Obama’s deputy national security adviser for strategic communications (a title suggesting foreign policy with a spin), wrote last year that the presidency of Donald Trump was “an American experiment with fascism.”

Democratic National Committee chairman Jaime Harrison echoed him, declaring that the Republican Party has “become a party of fascism and fear.” Actor/activist Rob Reiner tweeted last week: “This Midterm there is no gray area. You either cast a vote for Democracy or Fascism. That’s it.” And, of course, President Biden recently charged that Republicans — many if not all — embrace “semi-fascism.”

Was he using that modifier to imply that there are a few tenets of fascism not endorsed even by the “MAGA Republicans” he so intensely despises? Since the most lethal variety of fascism is Nazism, he at least might have made clear that he’s not calling his political opponents genocidal.

My guess is that Mr. Biden, like others employing the term, knows little about this revolutionary ideology to which millions of people in Germany, Italy, Japan, and other countries adhered during the first half of the 20th century.

If you were so daring as to pull aside a black-shirted Antifa member during one of the street riots that group has initiated and ask for a definition of the “fa” he thinks he’s combatting, do you think you’d get a coherent answer?

Would he know that members of the paramilitary wing of Benito Mussolini’s National Fascist Party also wore and were called Blackshirts, and that a similarly violent wing of the Nazi Party wore and were called Brownshirts?

Expressions of fascist fashion — or, more properly, of the “Fascist Aesthetic” — were even more elaborately on display when Mr. Biden recently let loose a diatribe in front of Philadelphia’s Independence Hall, its walls bathed in bloodred lights, U.S. Marines menacingly backing him up.

The president directed his fury toward those millions of fellow Americans he regards as enemies of the state and its leader. “Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans,” he railed, “represent an extremism that threatens the very foundations of our republic!”

Did the White House communications team — whom I presume wrote the speech and designed the “optics” — realize they were drawing on fascist imagery when they cast the president as a strongman, an idolized and militaristic authority figure differentiating between pure and impure, and determined to crush those who, as Mr. Biden put it, “do not recognize the will of the people”?

Perhaps the president’s advisers thought: “Hey, our job is to make the midterm elections a referendum not on Biden and his record, but on Trump and any Republicans who have not publicly rejected him. So, whatever it takes — even if fascist-inspired.”

Consistent with this strategy, Mr. Biden’s supporters have spent more than $40 million to boost the most Trumpian MAGA Republicans in primaries around the country so that Democrats can run against candidates they believe will be easier to defeat in the general elections.

As Nora Ephron used to say: “No matter how cynical I get, I just can’t keep up.”

OK, class, now take your seats because it’s time for Fascism 101. Among the best scholarly books on the subject remains Eugen Weber’s “Varieties of Fascism: Doctrines of Revolution in the Twentieth Century,” first published in 1964.

Fascism, Nazism and other “national socialisms,” he writes, “had their roots in the 19th century and even earlier” in ideas promulgated by such philosophers as Rousseau, Hegel, and Nietzsche. The term derives from fascio, Italian for a bundle or sheath, conveying “strength through unity,” the unifying force being the government and its supreme leader. As Mussolini put it: “Everything within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state.” In common with communism, fascism in its diverse forms opposes liberalism, defined as “individualism and the apparently chaotic conclusions of private enterprise.” Also akin to communism, fascism has had a “passion for science” that often turns out to be pseudo-science. The Soviet Communists had Lysenkoism. Nazis believed, as Nazi ideologue Alfred Rosenberg wrote, that “history must be judged from the point of view of race.” The poet Ezra Pound, a well-known American fascist, moved to Italy in 1924 where he wrote for publications owned by the British fascist Oswald Moseley (whose streetfighters also were called Blackshirts). Pound supported Hitler’s rise, including in paid radio broadcasts attacking the U.S., the U.K., Roosevelt, Churchill, and Jews. Among the ideas he championed: “race pride.” As George Mosse notes in “Fascist Aesthetics and Society: Some Considerations,” the “human body indicates the structure of the mind.” Another attribute of fascism is hypernationalism. The Axis powers all invaded neighbors and folded them into their expanding empires. Neither Mr. Trump nor Mr. Biden has displayed any interest in foreign conquests, as far as I’m aware. On the contrary, I see too many Republicans and Democrats succumbing to the siren song of isolationism. This is an opinion column and I’ll close with this one: A serious argument can be made that Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, Ali Khamenei, and Kim Jong-un exemplify 21st century varieties of fascism. Had Mr. Biden addressed the increasing national security threats they pose, he might have helped unite us against those who hate us — Democrats and Republicans, progressives and conservatives, the woke and the unwoke. He chose not to.

I think that’s because he wants to win in the worst way. And it’s hard to imagine any way worse than this: slandering his political opponents as fascists while posing as a modern Mussolini in the City of Brotherly Love

DougMacG

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Re: Fascism, liberal and tech fascism, progressivism, socialism, crony capitalism
« Reply #758 on: September 14, 2022, 03:52:21 AM »
Yes.  Isn't it weird to be called fascists by fascists.

What is fascist about loving liberty, wanting to live free,supporting smaller government and stronger families and individual responsibility.  The accusation is beyond absurd.

I've been saying, all they do is project themselves when they attack us, but this goes way over any line.  What makes it grow worse over time is to notice the lack of outrage or push back at the reckless name calling of this ultra-divisive President and his deep state henchmen.

The only example they cite of conservatives wanting government control is when we try to limit the freedom of liberals to slaughter their young.  Maybe we should back off on that...



Crafty_Dog

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Mussolini on Corporatism
« Reply #761 on: September 17, 2022, 08:41:15 AM »
“Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power”
― Benito Mussolini

DougMacG

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Re: Mussolini on Corporatism
« Reply #762 on: September 17, 2022, 04:51:39 PM »
“Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power”
― Benito Mussolini

SO much to quibble with there, but the scary thing is, that is what the statists are doing today.

Merging 'corporations' with the state means they aren't corporations.
It is the destruction of free enterprise.

Obvious in hindsight, but that kind of thinking destroys liberties and lives and leads to war.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Fascism, liberal and tech fascism, progressivism, socialism, crony capitalism
« Reply #763 on: September 17, 2022, 05:55:10 PM »
"(A) merger of state and corporate power" e.g. FB and the CDC.

ccp

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Re: Fascism, liberal and tech fascism, progressivism, socialism, crony capitalism
« Reply #764 on: September 17, 2022, 06:23:12 PM »
that is what is so frustrating

to see young people who are so gullible saying WE ARE the FASCISTS because they read what Dem shysters are saying on line

or hear at the Universities

I am positive they rattle this off and when they have no clue what fascism is .

Trump deregulating industries
 downsizing government and getting them and corporations off our backs
is simply the opposite

impressionable young minds
ignorant enough to fall for the propaganda....

DougMacG

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Re: Fascism, liberal and tech fascism, progressivism, socialism, crony capitalism
« Reply #765 on: September 17, 2022, 09:08:30 PM »
"when they have no clue what fascism is "

  - Hard to get their attention, but we need to tell them what is, and that it's bad.

DougMacG

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Fascism in Housing
« Reply #766 on: November 27, 2022, 10:29:04 AM »
From Housing thread:

https://nypost.com/2022/11/26/nyc-landlords-could-soon-be-denied-criminal-background-checks-for-tenants/
---------
A couple of comments: 1) What happens in NYC (or Calif) does not stay there; it tells you what leftist liberals who govern all our other large cities are thinking and likely to do soon, cf. Minneapolis:
https://reason.com/2019/09/17/minneapolis-doesnt-want-landlords-to-check-tenants-criminal-history-credit-score-past-evictions/

2) Definitions vary but communism is when the government owns the means of production (no private sector) and Fascism is when ownership in name only is private sector but all key decisions are dictated by government, which is what is happening here. Who you rent to is the key decision in housing. Laws protecting race, gender, etc are matters of rights. 

Laws protecting convicted felons and known bad tenants of recent past violent behaviors and other issues make a mockery of tenant screening, the heart of the housing business. 

If the government makes all the decisions, isn't it just government housing?

All that's left is for private owners to get out of ownership but they have laws blocking that as well.
« Last Edit: November 27, 2022, 01:33:17 PM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

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G M

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Mark Kelly is garbage
« Reply #771 on: March 14, 2023, 07:34:12 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Proposed guidance
« Reply #772 on: December 11, 2023, 06:15:22 AM »
peachment vote. Images: Reuters/AFP/Getty Images Composite: Mark Kelly
While the press frets about Donald Trump establishing the Fourth Reich, President Biden is rewriting laws to arrogate sweeping power for himself. On Thursday the Administration threatened to seize patents of drugs and other innovations, which could be its most economically destructive executive act to date.


The Commerce and Health and Human Services Departments are proposing new guidance on “march-in” rights under the 1980 Bayh-Dole Act. The law was meant to encourage cooperation among industry, research institutions and government to bring innovations to market. Mr. Biden’s patent grab will do the opposite.

Bayh-Dole attempted to solve the problem of tens of thousands of government patents that were collecting dust. Government had taken the position that inventions stemming from federally funded research belonged to the government. But why develop a product if you won’t be allowed to profit from it?

Under Bayh-Dole, research institutions receiving federal funds were allowed to patent inventions and license them to companies to commercialize them. It worked. Only in limited circumstances can government “march in” and confiscate a patent—namely, when a company hasn’t made a good-faith effort to commercialize the research.

Progressives for decades have wanted to use march-in rights to seize patents on drugs they claim are too expensive. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra led the charge last decade in Congress. Yet Administrations of both parties have demurred until now because they understood its destructive impact.

Under the proposed Biden guidelines, march-in rights will be used as price controls. Government agencies could seize patents if “the price or other terms at which the product is currently offered to the public are not reasonable” or “unreasonably limit availability of the invention to the public.”

As Biden National Economic Council director Lael Brainard explained, “We’ll make it clear that when drug companies won’t sell taxpayer funded drugs at reasonable prices, we will be prepared to allow other companies to provide those drugs for less.” Translation: That’s a nice medicine you have there . . . shame if something happened to it.

Did the White House consult with the National Institutes of Health or other scientific agencies? The NIH this year rejected a petition by a left-wing group to exercise march-in rights on a prostate cancer drug by Pfizer and Astellas Pharma. NIH knows that seizing patents would dampen cooperation between research institutions and industry, harming innovation and patients.

That’s what happened 30 years ago when NIH briefly required companies exclusively licensing its inventions to pledge to sell the byproducts at a reasonable price. Private industry walked away. In rescinding the NIH policy in 1995, director Harold Varmus said “the pricing clause has driven industry away from potentially beneficial scientific collaborations with PHS (public health service) scientists” without offsetting benefits to the public. He called it “a restraint on the new product development.”

Former Sens. Birch Bayh and Bob Dole in 2002 explained that their law “makes no reference to a reasonable price that should be dictated by the government. This omission was intentional; the primary purpose of the act was to entice the private sector to seek public-private research collaboration rather than focusing on its own proprietary research.” They stressed that “the purpose of our act was to spur the interaction between public and private research so that patients would receive the benefits of innovative science sooner.”

***
Alas, the Biden Administration cares more about expanding government control over the private economy than accelerating life-saving treatments. The President’s cancer moonshot initiative boosts funding for research institutions, but his threat to seize patents will discourage companies from building on future discoveries. Does the Administration’s left hand know what its far left hand is doing? This will compound the damage from the Inflation Reduction Act’s Medicare drug price controls.

Progressives say government deserves paternity rights to drug patents because it plays an outsize role in funding their development. But of 18 medicines that have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration with patents linked to NIH grants in 2000, total private investment exceeded government funding 66-fold. Profits and intellectual-property protections drive American innovation. Mr. Biden’s patent heist undercuts both and will embolden China to seize U.S. patents.

Note, too, that the Administration’s plan would let the government seize patents of other products such as semiconductors, artificial intelligence, nuclear energy and lithium-ion batteries, and any inventions that result from the $200 billion in funding from last year’s chips bill. Stealing IP is now part of Bidenomics.

Crafty_Dog

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Body-by-Guinness

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The DEI Crowd Loses One
« Reply #774 on: March 18, 2024, 04:34:13 PM »
Novant Health takes a big hit for firing a high performing white guy and replacing him with a new hire black woman:

Employers May Not "Take Adverse Employment Actions … Based on [Employees'] Race or Gender to Implement" "Diversity and Inclusion" Programs

The Volokh Conspiracy / by Eugene Volokh / Mar 18, 2024 at 9:13 AM

From Tuesday's Fourth Circuit decision in Duvall v. Novant Health, Inc., written by Judge Agee and joined by Judges Quattlebaum and Floyd (upholding a damages award of "about $4 million"):

After a week-long trial, a North Carolina jury found that Novant Health, Inc. terminated David Duvall because of his race, sex, or both, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In addition to the finding of liability, the jury awarded Duvall $10 million in punitive damages [reduced to the statutory maximum of $300,000].

The court summarized the facts, as usual in this situation, in light most favorable to the verdict:

Duvall, a white man, began working for Novant Health in 2013, when Executive Vice President and Chief Consumer Officer Jesse Cureton, a black man, hired him as Senior Vice President of Marketing and Communications. Based in North Carolina, Duvall reported directly to Cureton and held the same position throughout his employment with Novant Health. Evidence presented at trial demonstrated that Duvall performed exceptionally in his role, receiving strong performance reviews and gaining national recognition for himself and the marketing program he developed for Novant Health.

Despite all that, Cureton fired Duvall in July 2018, a decision that came as a shock to both Duvall and his colleagues. Moreover, Novant Health—a multibillion-dollar company with tens of thousands of employees and an extensive human resources department—had no record of any documented criticism of Duvall's performance or reasons for his termination.

Immediately after firing Duvall, Novant Health elevated two of Duvall's deputies, a white woman and a black woman, to take over his duties. It then later hired another black woman to permanently replace Duvall.

Believing Novant Health fired him merely to achieve racial and gender diversity—or more specifically, to hit certain diversity "targets"—within its leadership, Duvall sued his former employer under Title VII and North Carolina state law in federal district court….

The court concluded there was sufficient evidence to support the jury verdict:

To begin, Duvall presented evidence about the context surrounding his termination. The jury heard that Duvall was fired in the middle of a widescale D&I initiative at Novant Health, which sought to "embed diversity and inclusion throughout" the company, and to ensure that its overall workforce, including its leadership, "reflect[ed] the communities [it] serve[d]." There was evidence presented that Novant Health endeavored to accomplish this goal by, among other things, benchmarking its then-current D&I levels and developing and employing D&I metrics; committing to "adding additional dimensions of diversity to the executive and senior leadership teams" and incorporating "a system wide decision making process that includes a diversity and inclusion lens"; and evaluating the success of its efforts and identifying and closing any remaining diversity gaps.

The jury also heard about the demographic data from 2015 and 2017 that Novant Health collected. From a factual standpoint, the data revealed a decline in female leaders and an overrepresentation of male and white leadership in comparison to the total workforce. It also showed an increase in white male representation "with each level of management," compared to a decrease in "African-American representation … at each level [of management] with the exception of the executive team." By 2019, however, Novant Health saw a dramatic increase in female leaders just from the year prior (the period in which Duvall was fired). It also reflected a decrease of white workers and leaders and an increase in black workers and leaders over the life of the D&I Plan. Additionally, after remaining gaps in the Hispanic and Asian workforce were identified, Novant Health adopted a long-term financial incentive plan that tied executive bonuses to closing those gaps by achieving a specific percentage of each group.

Against that backdrop, we consider the evidence specific to Duvall and his termination.

As noted above, there was substantial evidence at trial that Duvall performed superbly in his role at Novant Health…. But despite this evidence of his exceptional performance, the jury heard that Duvall was abruptly fired, having been told only that Novant Health was "going in a different direction." … Finally, the jury heard Cureton offer shifting, conflicting, and unsubstantiated explanations for Duvall's termination. [Details omitted, but can be seen in the full opinion. -EV] …

{To be clear, employers may, if they so choose, utilize D&I-type programs. What they cannot do is take adverse employment actions against employees based on their race or gender to implement such a program. And as recounted above, the evidence presented at trial in this case was more than sufficient for a reasonable jury to conclude that is precisely what Novant Health did to Duvall.}

But the court set aside the award of punitive damages, because such damages were available "only in limited circumstances:"

Title VII authorizes punitive damages only when a plaintiff makes two showings. First, the plaintiff must show that the employer engaged in unlawful intentional discrimination (not an employment practice that is unlawful because of its disparate impact). Second, the plaintiff must show that the employer engaged in the discriminatory practice with malice or with reckless indifference to the federally protected rights of an aggrieved individual. That is, an employer must at least discriminate in the face of a perceived risk that its actions will violate federal law.

And, the court held, plaintiff introduced no "affirmative evidence" that the employer actually "perceived [the] risk" that its actions were illegal: Duvall "offered no evidence as to the training or qualification that Novant Health offered to or required of Cureton, or a comparable executive, to establish the requisite knowledge of federal anti-discrimination law. Duvall even cross-examined Cureton yet never elicited from him testimony establishing his personal knowledge of federal anti-discrimination law, let alone that he perceived a risk that his decision to fire Duvall would violate it." And the "inference that Cureton had the requisite knowledge given his career as a corporate executive" was insufficient.

The post Employers May Not "Take Adverse Employment Actions … Based on [Employees'] Race or Gender to Implement" "Diversity and Inclusion" Programs appeared first on Reason.com.

https://reason.com/volokh/2024/03/18/employers-may-not-take-adverse-employment-actions-based-on-employees-race-or-gender-to-implement-diversity-and-inclusion-programs/


Crafty_Dog

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GOOD!!!

Crafty_Dog

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ccp

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I would have liked to see the guy asking the question response to Larry Elders response.

He probably changed the subject to sports........ :wink:

Body-by-Guinness

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Oft Cited DEI Study Proves Irreproducible
« Reply #779 on: April 06, 2024, 04:09:38 PM »
Study claims diversity in and of itself leads to greater corporate earning. The US military in particular has embraced these findings … and is paying the price in terms of recruitment of whites.

https://thefederalist.com/2024/04/03/new-study-shows-mckinseys-studies-promoting-dei-profitability-were-garbage/?fbclid=IwAR1f1lh9EHly59e8O9-QFXuy7Lpz2XoPre6QVqJEoSFvXH1ie10JvqD_o6w
« Last Edit: May 21, 2024, 06:06:07 AM by Body-by-Guinness »

ccp

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remembering Yeomni Park relating her College experience at Columbia
« Reply #780 on: April 22, 2024, 09:58:59 AM »
https://www.deseret.com/u-s-world/2024/2/8/24063748/human-rights-activist-yeonmi-park-freedom-god-socialism/

"Park warns against socialism
The UVU event was sponsored by the Young America’s Foundation, and Park compared the ideology she observed as a student at Columbia with the ideology she learned in North Korea. Park told the UVU audience, “The professors were telling us the only solution was us destroying America and the American Constitution and then rebuilding this country in the name of equity, which meant socialism.”

“These professors learned about socialism in their textbooks, in their comfortable rooms with their air conditioning, on their nice computers with internet,” she said

“They were saying amazing things about socialism and how it would save all of us and take us to a paradise,” she continued. “Instead of a theory, I lived it because I was born in North Korea, a so-called socialist paradise.”

Socialism “promises equality of outcomes,” Park said, comparing it with North Korea’s 51 different social classes. Park explained how the North Korean government divided up social classes after the Korean War, saying landowners and individuals who were anti-communism were put at the bottom. Anyone related to people at the bottom were also placed there.

Living in New York City, Park described conversations she’s had with her friends who “want socialism so bad.” They told her, “Look outside, there are billionaires, and there are homeless people. Capitalism creates inequality, therefore it’s evil.”

“What do you mean that you can be a billionaire?” Park asked. “If you work hard like Steve Jobs, create an iPhone, like Elon Musk creating rockets, you mean that I can be a billionaire? What a concept,” she said.

She continued, “What a thing to celebrate, that you can rise up, that you don’t all need to be equally poor and starving together. Inequality is not a sign of oppression, it’s a sign of progress.”



ccp

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« Last Edit: May 24, 2024, 08:15:39 PM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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Nazis, Marxists, and the History of Ideas
« Reply #783 on: September 09, 2024, 09:07:52 AM »
https://amgreatness.com/2024/09/07/nazis-marxists-and-the-history-of-ideas/

By Stephen Soukup
September 7, 2024

In light of recent events and discussions attempting to rehabilitate the historical reputation of Germany’s Nazis, it might be worthwhile to re-examine the foundations of the ideology that underpinned National Socialism and its close cousin fascism. Those who embrace the revisionism that excuses the Nazis’ crimes appear to believe that by doing so, they are defending themselves and their ideological brethren from unfair and ahistorical attacks by the broader left. They think—or at least seem to think—that because fascism is considered a “right-wing” ideology that was specifically pitted against both Communism and Western liberalism, it can hardly be as awful as has been assumed and that its association with unvarnished evil is mere propaganda.

They are wrong. Indeed, the very foundations of their sentiments are mistaken and result from the radical mischaracterization of history and the evolution of ideas in the two centuries after the Enlightenment.

The simple truth of the matter is that the standard depiction of National Socialism and fascism as right-wing ideologies is inarguably false. While Hitler and Mussolini both expressed their opposition to and hatred of “Marxists,” they nevertheless embraced a leftism that was only marginally different from that embraced by Lenin and Stalin. Their hatred was a practical matter, a question of power rather than ideas. Both economically and socially, the Nazis and their Italian cousins were inheritors of the leftist traditions.

Almost from the moment he put pen to paper, Karl Marx’s enemies, as well as his friends, set about explaining why his theories about and solutions to the conflict between capital and labor had no serious application in the real world. Marx was a fantasist, and everyone—save perhaps his occasional partner in crime, Friedrich Engles—knew it.

Among the most important—though least remembered—of Marx’s one-time friends to help try to restructure his ideas to fit reality was a young German labor activist named Ferdinand Lassalle. Unlike his friend and intellectual guide, Lassalle toughed it out and stayed in Germany after the 1848 Revolution. As a result, he had a far greater impact on the formation of practical German socialism than Marx ever did. Although the specifics of Lassalle’s adaptations to socialism frustrated Marx and especially Engels, by staying in Germany and fighting for radical leftism in praxis rather than merely in theory, Lassalle won other friends and admirers, including the most important and powerful Prussian of the 19th century, Otto von Bismarck.

Lassalle’s revisions to Marxism permitted, in theory at least, the maintenance of economic benefits created by the private control of capital, blended with the social change and “progress” demanded by the workers’ movements. Unsurprisingly, the promised results of these revisions appealed tremendously to the politically astute Bismarck.

So, while Lassalle is considered the godfather of German socialism, Bismarck—the conservative monarchist and rabid anti-socialist—is, ironically, the godfather of the German welfare state. He took Lassalle’s admonitions and advice to heart and, thereby, sought to preempt Marx’s “inevitable” revolution. Unlike Marx, who bleated on endlessly about the withering away of the state, Lassalle believed that effective socialism required a powerful state. Indeed, his vision postulated an alliance between the workers and the state, a confederation designed to bypass and undermine the “liberalism” of the bourgeoisie. He found an ally in this effort in Bismarck, who admired Lassalle’s intelligence and soberness and shared his revulsion at the liberal-capitalist middle class. Bismarck’s embrace of universal suffrage as well as his implementation of the continent’s first widespread social welfare measures were dictated in large part by his understanding of and appreciation for Lassalle’s ideas. Between them, Lassalle and Bismarck created the first operational version of the “middle ground” between Marxism and capitalism, the first form of “managed capitalism,” or what would, in time, come to be called “the Third Way.”

Though the first, Lassalle was far from the only socialist theorist to attempt to stake out the middle ground of state-managed capitalism. His fellow German socialist (and eventual Marxist revisionist) Edward Bernstein, the French journalist (and defamer of Jews) Charles Maurras, and the French engineer-turned-syndicalist Georges Sorel all offered thoughts, theories, and hypothetical modifications to Marxism that advocated state intervention and management of industry and capital to the detriment of the bourgeoisie and the benefit of the workers.

Likewise, Bismarck had successors as well. National Socialism and fascism sought to meld what its leaders perceived to be the most effective aspects of the left with the most effective aspects of the right. Having fought in World War I, both Mussolini and Hitler understood intrinsically that Marx’s “international” proletariat was a myth and that the workers of the world had no desire to unite and throw off their chains. Indeed, they had no desire to be “of the world” at all. Instead, they wanted to be “of Germany,” “of France,” or “of Italy.” By blending extreme nationalism with corporatist/statist economics, the fascists presented a more immediately practical alternative to the failure of the Marxist Revolution to manifest itself than was presented by their more culturally obsessed countrymen: Antonio Gramsci and the Critical Theorists of the Frankfurt School.

Building upon the ideas of Maurras and especially Sorel, the fascists and National Socialists cobbled together a program merging extreme nationalism, corporatist economics, utopianism, atheism, and historicism. Like Lassalle and Bismarck before them, Hiter and Mussolini were animated by Hegel’s twin notions that “the state is the presence of God upon the Earth” and that history is moving toward some predetermined, utopian end.

Even beyond economics, the Nazis and fascists borrowed liberally from their left-wing brethren. Both British Fabianism and American Progressivism were obsessed with racial purity and purification through eugenics. The contemporary left professes a dedication to racial equity and harmony, but its history is far different. Indeed, Richard Ely and Woodrow Wilson, two of the godfathers of American Progressivism and intellectual giants of the left, helped set the stage—philosophically and practically—for Hitler’s atrocities.

As part of his program to harness the power of the state to perfect man’s existence, Ely embraced the “science” of eugenics. Ely became a pioneer in the eugenics movement with the publication in 1903 of his book Studies in the Evolution of Industrial Society, in which he waxed optimistic about the positive effects that could be achieved by the ongoing efforts in the various states to limit the ability of “objectionable” people to breed.

And in eugenics, as in all ideological matters, where Ely went, Wilson followed. As the governor of New Jersey, Wilson signed one of the nation’s first and most draconian state eugenics laws, a law that was drafted by none other than Dr. Edwin Katzen-Ellenbogen, who would later turn against his fellow Jewish prisoners and become a notorious killer-doctor in Hitler’s Buchenwald death camp. Among other things, Wilson’s law created a special three-man “Board of Examiners of Feebleminded, Epileptics, and Other Defectives” to monitor the “advisability” of procreation among certain demographic groups.

In short, the plans and schemes put in place by Hitler and his National Socialists were unprecedented in their scope and effectiveness but were hardly so in their ideological derivation. In the rush to “defend” Hitler and his ilk from the supposed intellectual onslaught by Marxism, the members of the Nazi-sympathetic right would do well to spend some time investigating and understanding the relationship between Marx, Lenin, Hitler, and Mussolini. As even Hitler’s propagandist Joseph Goebbels noted in his private diaries, “It would be better for us to end our existence under Bolshevism than to endure slavery under capitalism.”

 

Crafty_Dog

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Malone: Paved with Good Intentions
« Reply #784 on: October 05, 2024, 12:40:04 PM »


Paved with Good Intentions
Utilitarianism + Socialism + Corporatism = Fascist Totalitarianism
Robert W Malone MD, MS
Oct 5

 

A recurring theme runs through modern Western political history—it provides the paving stones that line the road to hell. The core of this theme is that the State is responsible for enabling the greatest good for the greatest number. From this basic tenant flows a wide range of unintended consequences that, in retrospect, can be recognized as fundamentally evil. This naive concept of the State as a guarantor of positive outcomes logically progresses to the conclusion that the State should interfere in and “manage” the economic forces and outcomes that citizens experience. In other words, the State should manage the economy. This logic underpins the oft-repeated assertion that the State should provide for and manage “healthcare.” That the State is responsible for caring for the elderly and providing pensions for those beyond a certain age (whether or not they are able to productively contribute to society). None of these roles and responsibilities are enumerated in the US Constitution and Bill of Rights.

The State should not be involved in managing the economy or healthcare, if for no other reason that the more the State meddles in these things, the worse off they become. The root cause of this is that the State is incompetent and incapable of accomplishing these tasks, and these roles and responsibilities are outside of the powers vested in the State by the founding documents.

The enumerated, or listed, powers are contained in Article I, Section 8.  These include: to lay and collect taxes; pay debts and borrow money; regulate commerce; coin money; establish post offices; protect patents and copyrights; establish lower courts; declare war; and raise and support an Army and Navy.  Those powers and responsibilities not enumerated in the US Constitution as federal government powers generally remain the authority of the separate States that agreed to associate and structure and legally bind themselves as a Republic. Fortunately or unfortunately, at the very end of this list contained one more power: to make all laws “necessary and proper” to carry out the enumerated powers.  Also known as the Elastic Clause, this phrase allowed Congress to stretch its enumerated powers a bit to fit its needs.  For instance, in McCulloch v. Maryland (1819), the Supreme Court ruled that under the Necessary and Proper Clause Congress had the power to establish a national bank to carry out its powers to collect taxes, pay debts, and borrow money.  Broad interpretation of the Elastic Clause has allowed expanded Congressional and Executive Branch (ergo administrative state) power.

I assert that, under the US Constitution, the State (ergo the US Federal Government) has neither the right nor the responsibility to guarantee “the greatest good for the greatest number”. Therefore, those who reason that the State has a responsibility to guarantee outcomes, to manage the economy, to provide access to healthcare, to provide for the well-being of illegal immigrants, to care for elderly citizens, to “feed the world,” to manage and stabilize (or destabilize) other governments, or to insure world “peace” resort of appeals to a combination of utilitarianism and various ethical arguments which are completely outside of either the enumerated powers or the Elastic Clause. The US Federal State has neither authority nor power to create or enforce an imperial empire.

These are unconstitutional and unlawful roles for the US Federal Government. They are entirely outside the boundaries of the federal authority, and various forces and interests have unlawfully expanded State operations to encompass these missions.

Utilitarianism (as summarized by Brave AI)

The phrase “greatest good for the greatest number” originates from Jeremy Bentham’s utilitarian philosophy, which aims to maximize overall happiness or well-being. In essence, it suggests that moral actions are those that bring about the greatest positive impact on the world.

Key Principles:

Happiness as the metric: Bentham and later John Stuart Mill defined “good” as pleasure or happiness, which can be intellectual, emotional, or sensual.

Quantification: The concept implies a quantitative comparison of the good or happiness produced by different actions or policies.

Maximization: The goal is to maximize the overall happiness or good, rather than distributing it equally among individuals.

No inherent value: According to utilitarianism, there is no inherent value in any particular action, outcome, or individual; only the consequences matter.

Challenges and Critiques:

Justice and fairness: Critics argue that utilitarianism sacrifices individual rights and justice for the greater good, potentially leading to unfair outcomes.

Temporal considerations: The concept struggles to account for long-term consequences, as what may seem beneficial in the short term might have negative effects in the long run.

Defining “good”: The notion of happiness or good can be subjective and context-dependent, making it challenging to establish a clear standard.

Handling conflicting values: In situations where different values or principles conflict, utilitarianism may prioritize the greater good over individual rights or moral principles.

Real-World Applications:

Public policy: Utilitarianism has influenced policy decisions, such as resource allocation and social welfare programs, aimed at maximizing overall well-being.

Business ethics: Companies may prioritize the greatest good for the greatest number by balancing profits with social and environmental responsibilities.

International relations: Governments and organizations may consider the greatest good for the greatest number when making decisions about conflict resolution, trade, and development.

In conclusion, the concept of “greatest good for the greatest number” is a cornerstone of utilitarian philosophy, emphasizing the maximization of overall happiness or well-being. While it has practical applications, it also faces challenges and critiques regarding justice, fairness, and the definition of “good.”

The US Constitution does not implement a substantive ethical theory. By 'substantive ethical theory,' I refer to a theory that says, "An act is good if and only if. . "

The US Constitution embodies a social contract position since (at least some versions of) social contract theories say that a substantive ethical theory is unnecessary for the basis of legality or political authority. Not only do we not need substantive views about the nature of moral goodness, but encoding those in law will be positively harmful since this leads directly to certain kinds of discrimination, such as those that wracked Europe during the religion wars. When one “moral” outcome is favored over another, this directly results in theft enabled by the State on behalf of one social group at the expense of another. The Constitutionally reasonable thing to do is to let Citizens have whatever substantive moral theory they like but not let any of those theories become the basis of either law, legislation, or administrative fiat. To do otherwise is to functionally support one set of religious (ethical) beliefs over another. In other words, to violate the First Amendment.

The First Amendment to the United States Constitution prevents the government from making laws respecting an establishment of religion; prohibiting the free exercise of religion; or abridging the freedom of speech, the freedom of the press, the freedom of assembly, or the right to petition the government for redress of grievances.

So What is Fascism?
Often overlooked is that “mainstream media” is controlled by large corporations, and relies on organizations, cabals and aggregators (such as the “Trusted News Initiative” or Thompson/Reuters) to sustain and support its dominance and control of public information. Therefore, it should surprise no one that “mainstream media” actively supports and advocates for corporatist interests. Corporate or mainstream media has cooperated with political organizations (“parties”) from the left to distort, redefine and weaponize the 20th-century term “Fascism” to apply to politicians and political parties from the right side of the spectrum (assuming that “left” and “right” even have any meaning anymore.) Hence one observes repeated corporate media claims that populist center-right politicians such as Donald Trump (USA), Georgia Meloni (Italy), Marie Le Pen (France), Nigel Farage (UK), and of course, the Austrian School Economist Javier Milei (Argentina) as Fascists. But this is another example of the PsyWar method of gaslighting by redefining the meaning of words.

Sheldon Richman is the editor of The Freeman: Ideas on Liberty at the Foundation for Economic Education in Irvingtonon-Hudson, N.Y., and Mr. Richman has provided a practical definition of the true meaning of the political science and economic term “Fascism.” The following are selected quotes from his analysis.

As an economic system, fascism is socialism with a capitalist veneer. The word derives from fasces, the Roman symbol of collectivism and power: a tied bundle of rods with a protruding ax. In its day (the 1920s and 1930s), fascism was seen as the happy medium between boom-and-bust-prone liberal capitalism, with its alleged class conflict, wasteful competition, and profit-oriented egoism, and revolutionary Marxism, with its violent and socially divisive persecution of the bourgeoisie. Fascism substituted the particularity of nationalism and racialism—“blood and soil”—for the internationalism of both classical liberalism and Marxism.

Where socialism sought totalitarian control of a society’s economic processes through direct state operation of the means of production, fascism sought that control indirectly, through domination of nominally private owners. Where socialism nationalized property explicitly, fascism did so implicitly, by requiring owners to use their property in the “national interest”—that is, as the autocratic authority conceived it. Where socialism abolished all market relations outright, fascism left the appearance of market relations while planning all economic activities. Where socialism abolished money and prices, fascism controlled the monetary system and set all prices and wages politically. In doing all this, fascism denatured the marketplace. Entrepreneurship was abolished. State ministries, rather than consumers, determined what was produced and under what conditions.

Fascism is to be distinguished from interventionism, or the mixed economy. Interventionism seeks to guide the market process, not eliminate it, as fascism did. Minimum-wage and antitrust laws, though they regulate the free market, are a far cry from multiyear plans from the Ministry of Economics.

Under fascism, the state, through official cartels, controlled all aspects of manufacturing, commerce, finance, and agriculture. Planning boards set product lines, production levels, prices, wages, working conditions, and the size of firms. Licensing was ubiquitous; no economic activity could be undertaken without government permission. Levels of consumption were dictated by the state, and “excess” incomes had to be surrendered as taxes or “loans.” The consequent burdening of manufacturers gave advantages to foreign firms wishing to export. But since government policy aimed at autarky, or national self-sufficiency, protectionism was necessary: imports were barred or strictly controlled, leaving foreign conquest as the only avenue for access to resources unavailable domestically. Fascism was thus incompatible with peace and the international division of labor—hallmarks of liberalism.

Fascism embodied corporatism, in which political representation was based on trade and industry rather than on geography. In this, fascism revealed its roots in syndicalism, a form of socialism originating on the left. The government cartelized firms of the same industry, with representatives of labor and management serving on myriad local, regional, and national boards—subject always to the final authority of the dictator’s economic plan. Corporatism was intended to avert unsettling divisions within the nation, such as lockouts and union strikes. The price of such forced “harmony” was the loss of the ability to bargain and move about freely.

To maintain high employment and minimize popular discontent, fascist governments also undertook massive public-works projects financed by steep taxes, borrowing, and fiat money creation. While many of these projects were domestic—roads, buildings, stadiums—the largest project of all was militarism, with huge armies and arms production.

The fascist leaders’ antagonism to communism has been misinterpreted as an affinity for capitalism. In fact, fascists’ anticommunism was motivated by a belief that in the collectivist milieu of early-twentieth-century Europe, communism was its closest rival for people’s allegiance. As with communism, under fascism, every citizen was regarded as an employee and tenant of the totalitarian, party-dominated state. Consequently, it was the state’s prerogative to use force, or the threat of it, to suppress even peaceful opposition.

If a formal architect of fascism can be identified, it is Benito Mussolini, the onetime Marxist editor who, caught up in nationalist fervor, broke with the left as World War I approached and became Italy’s leader in 1922. Mussolini distinguished fascism from liberal capitalism in his 1928 autobiography:

“The citizen in the Fascist State is no longer a selfish individual who has the anti-social right of rebelling against any law of the Collectivity. The Fascist State with its corporative conception puts men and their possibilities into productive work and interprets for them the duties they have to fulfill. (p. 280)”

Before his foray into imperialism in 1935, Mussolini was often praised by prominent Americans and Britons, including Winston Churchill, for his economic program.

Similarly, Adolf Hitler, whose National Socialist (Nazi) Party adapted fascism to Germany beginning in 1933, said:

“The state should retain supervision and each property owner should consider himself appointed by the state. It is his duty not to use his property against the interests of others among his own people. This is the crucial matter. The Third Reich will always retain its right to control the owners of property. (Barkai 1990, pp. 26–27)”

Both nations exhibited elaborate planning schemes for their economies in order to carry out the state’s objectives. Mussolini’s corporate state “consider[ed] private initiative in production the most effective instrument to protect national interests” (Basch 1937, p. 97). But the meaning of “initiative” differed significantly from its meaning in a market economy. Labor and management were organized into twenty-two industry and trade “corporations,” each with Fascist Party members as senior participants. The corporations were consolidated into a National Council of Corporations; however, the real decisions were made by state agencies such as the Instituto per la Ricosstruzione Industriale, which held shares in industrial, agricultural, and real estate enterprises, and the Instituto Mobiliare, which controlled the nation’s credit.

Hitler’s regime eliminated small corporations and made membership in cartels mandatory. The Reich Economic Chamber was at the top of a complicated bureaucracy comprising nearly two hundred organizations organized along industry, commercial, and craft lines, as well as several national councils. The Labor Front, an extension of the Nazi Party, directed all labor matters, including wages and assignment of workers to particular jobs. Labor conscription was inaugurated in 1938. Two years earlier, Hitler had imposed a four-year plan to shift the nation’s economy to a war footing. In Europe during this era, Spain, Portugal, and Greece also instituted fascist economies.

In the United States, beginning in 1933, the constellation of government interventions known as the New Deal had features suggestive of the corporate state. The National Industrial Recovery Act created code authorities and codes of practice that governed all aspects of manufacturing and commerce. The National Labor Relations Act made the federal government the final arbiter in labor issues. The Agricultural Adjustment Act introduced central planning to farming. The object was to reduce competition and output in order to keep prices and incomes of particular groups from falling during the Great Depression.

It is a matter of controversy whether President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal was directly influenced by fascist economic policies. Mussolini praised the New Deal as “boldly . . . interventionist in the field of economics,” and Roosevelt complimented Mussolini for his “honest purpose of restoring Italy” and acknowledged that he kept “in fairly close touch with that admirable Italian gentleman.” Also, Hugh Johnson, head of the National Recovery Administration, was known to carry a copy of Raffaello Viglione’s pro-Mussolini book, The Corporate State, with him, presented a copy to Labor Secretary Frances Perkins, and, on retirement, paid tribute to the Italian dictator.

What is Socialism?
from Socialist author Robert Heilbroner.

It has been Friedman, Hayek, von Mises, and the like who have maintained that capitalism would flourish and that socialism would develop incurable ailments. Mises called socialism “impossible” because it has no means of establishing a rational pricing system; Hayek added additional reasons of a sociological kind (“the worst rise on top”). All three have regarded capitalism as the “natural” system of free men; all have maintained that left to its own devices capitalism would achieve material growth more successfully than any other system. By reviewing the history of Socialism, we can clearly see echoes of this failed logic in the centralized planning and “stakeholder capitalism” economic models which are so actively promoted by the World Economic Forum and its United Nations allies.

Socialism—defined as a centrally planned economy in which the government controls all means of production—was the tragic failure of the twentieth century. Born of a commitment to remedy the economic and moral defects of capitalism, it has far surpassed capitalism in both economic malfunction and moral cruelty. Yet the idea and the ideal of socialism linger on. Whether socialism in some form will eventually return as a major organizing force in human affairs is unknown, but no one can accurately appraise its prospects who has not taken into account the dramatic story of its rise and fall.

The Birth of Socialist Planning

It is often thought that the idea of socialism derives from the work of Karl Marx. In fact, Marx wrote only a few pages about socialism, as either a moral or a practical blueprint for society. The true architect of a socialist order was Lenin, who first faced the practical difficulties of organizing an economic system without the driving incentives of profit seeking or the self-generating constraints of competition. Lenin began from the long-standing delusion that economic organization would become less complex once the profit drive and the market mechanism had been dispensed with—“as self-evident,” he wrote, as “the extraordinarily simple operations of watching, recording, and issuing receipts, within the reach of anybody who can read and write and knows the first four rules of arithmetic.”

In fact, economic life pursued under these first four rules rapidly became so disorganized that within four years of the 1917 revolution, Soviet production had fallen to 14 percent of its prerevolutionary level. By 1921 Lenin was forced to institute the New Economic Policy (NEP), a partial return to the market incentives of capitalism. This brief mixture of socialism and capitalism came to an end in 1927 after Stalin instituted the process of forced collectivization that was to mobilize Russian resources for its leap into industrial power.

The system that evolved under Stalin and his successors took the form of a pyramid of command. At its apex was Gosplan, the highest state planning agency, which established such general directives for the economy as the target rate of growth and the allocation of effort between military and civilian outputs, between heavy and light industry, and among various regions. Gosplan transmitted the general directives to successive ministries of industrial and regional planning, whose technical advisers broke down the overall national plan into directives assigned to particular factories, industrial power centers, collective farms, and so on. These thousands of individual subplans were finally scrutinized by the factory managers and engineers who would eventually have to implement them. Thereafter, the blueprint for production reascended the pyramid, together with the suggestions, emendations, and pleas of those who had seen it. Ultimately, a completed plan would be reached by negotiation, voted on by the Supreme Soviet, and passed into law.

Thus, the final plan resembled an immense order book, specifying the nuts and bolts, steel girders, grain outputs, tractors, cotton, cardboard, and coal that, in their entirety, constituted the national output. In theory such an order book should enable planners to reconstitute a working economy each year—provided, of course, that the nuts fitted the bolts; the girders were of the right dimensions; the grain output was properly stored; the tractors were operable; and the cotton, cardboard, and coal were of the kinds needed for their manifold uses. But there was a vast and widening gap between theory and practice.

Problems Emerge

The gap did not appear immediately. In retrospect, we can see that the task facing Lenin and Stalin in the early years was not so much economic as quasi military—mobilizing a peasantry into a workforce to build roads and rail lines, dams and electric grids, steel complexes and tractor factories. This was a formidable assignment, but far less formidable than what would confront socialism fifty years later, when the task was not so much to create enormous undertakings as to create relatively self-contained ones, and to fit all the outputs into a dovetailing whole.

Through the 1960s the Soviet economy continued to report strong overall growth—roughly twice that of the United States—but observers began to spot signs of impending trouble. One was the difficulty of specifying outputs in terms that would maximize the well-being of everyone in the economy, not merely the bonuses earned by individual factory managers for “overfulfilling” their assigned objectives. The problem was that the plan specified outputs in physical terms. One consequence was that managers maximized yardages or tonnages of output, not its quality. A famous cartoon in the satirical magazine Krokodil showed a factory manager proudly displaying his record output, a single gigantic nail suspended from a crane.

As the economic flow became increasingly clogged and clotted, production took the form of “stormings” at the end of each quarter or year, when every resource was pressed into use to meet preassigned targets. The same rigid system soon produced expediters, or tolkachi, to arrange shipments to harassed managers who needed unplanned—and therefore unobtainable—inputs to achieve their production goals. Worse, lacking the right to buy their own supplies or to hire or fire their own workers, factories set up fabricating shops, then commissaries, and finally their own worker housing to maintain control over their own small bailiwicks.

It is not surprising that this increasingly Byzantine system began to create serious dysfunctions beneath the overall statistics of growth. During the 1960s the Soviet Union became the first industrial country in history to suffer a prolonged peacetime fall in average life expectancy, a symptom of its disastrous misallocation of resources. Military research facilities could get whatever they needed, but hospitals were low on the priority list. By the 1970s the figures clearly indicated a slowing of overall production. By the 1980s the Soviet Union officially acknowledged a near end to growth that was, in reality, an unofficial decline. In 1987 the first official law embodying perestroika—restructuring—was put into effect. President Mikhail Gorbachev announced his intention to revamp the economy from top to bottom by introducing the market, reestablishing private ownership, and opening the system to free economic interchange with the West. Seventy years of socialist rise had come to an end.

Socialist Planning in Western Eyes

Understanding of the difficulties of central planning was slow to emerge. In the mid-1930s, while the Russian industrialization drive was at full tilt, few raised their voices about its problems. Among those few were Ludwig von Mises, an articulate and exceedingly argumentative free-market economist, and Friedrich Hayek, of much more contemplative temperament, later to be awarded a Nobel Prize for his work in monetary theory. Together, Mises and Hayek launched an attack on the feasibility of socialism that seemed at the time unconvincing in its argument as to the functional problems of a planned economy. Mises in particular contended that a socialist system was impossible because there was no way for the planners to acquire the information (see Information and Prices)—“produce this, not that”—needed for a coherent economy. This information, Hayek emphasized, emerged spontaneously in a market system from the rise and fall of prices. A planning system was bound to fail precisely because it lacked such a signaling mechanism.

The Mises-Hayek argument met its most formidable counterargument in two brilliant articles by Oskar Lange, a young economist who would become Poland’s first ambassador to the United States after World War II. Lange set out to show that the planners would, in fact, have precisely the same information as that which guided a market economy. The information would be revealed as inventories of goods rose and fell, signaling either that supply was greater than demand or demand was greater than supply. Thus, as planners watched inventory levels, they were also learning which of their administered (i.e., state-dictated) prices were too high and which too low. It only remained, therefore, to adjust prices so that supply and demand balanced, exactly as in the marketplace.

Lange’s answer was so simple and clear that many believed the Mises-Hayek argument had been demolished. In fact, we now know that their argument was all too prescient. Ironically, though, Mises and Hayek were right for a reason they did not foresee as clearly as Lange himself. “The real danger of socialism,” Lange wrote, in italics, “is that of a bureaucratization of economic life.” But he took away the force of the remark by adding, without italics, “Unfortunately, we do not see how the same or even greater danger can be averted under monopolistic capitalism” (Lange and Taylor 1938, pp. 109–110).

The effects of the “bureaucratization of economic life” are dramatically related in The Turning Point, a scathing attack on the realities of socialist economic planning by two Soviet economists, Nikolai Smelev and Vladimir Popov, that gives examples of the planning process in actual operation. In 1982, to stimulate the production of gloves from moleskins, the Soviet government raised the price it was willing to pay for moleskins from twenty to fifty kopecks per pelt. Smelev and Popov noted:

“State purchases increased, and now all the distribution centers are filled with these pelts. Industry is unable to use them all, and they often rot in warehouses before they can be processed. The Ministry of Light Industry has already requested Goskomtsen [the State Committee on Prices] twice to lower prices, but “the question has not been decided” yet. This is not surprising. Its members are too busy to decide. They have no time: besides setting prices on these pelts, they have to keep track of another 24 million prices. And how can they possibly know how much to lower the price today, so they won’t have to raise it tomorrow?”

This story speaks volumes about the problem of a centrally planned system. The crucial missing element is not so much “information,” as Mises and Hayek argued, as it is the motivation to act on information. After all, the inventories of moleskins did tell the planners that their production was at first too low and then too high. What was missing was the willingness—better yet, the necessity—to respond to the signals of changing inventories. A capitalist firm responds to changing prices because failure to do so will cause it to lose money. A socialist ministry ignores changing inventories because bureaucrats learn that doing something is more likely to get them in trouble than doing nothing, unless doing nothing results in absolute disaster.

In the late 1980s, absolute economic disaster arrived in the Soviet Union and its Eastern former satellites, and those countries are still trying to construct some form of economic structure that will no longer display the deadly inertia and indifference that have come to be the hallmarks of socialism. It is too early to predict whether these efforts will succeed. The main obstacle to real perestroika is the impossibility of creating a working market system without a firm basis of private ownership, and it is clear that the creation of such a basis encounters the opposition of the former state bureaucracy and the hostility of ordinary people who have long been trained to be suspicious of the pursuit of wealth. In the face of such uncertainties, all predictions are foolhardy save one: no quick or easy transition from socialism to some form of nonsocialism is possible. Transformations of such magnitude are historic convulsions, not mere changes in policy. Their completion must be measured in decades or generations, not years.

The fact of the matter is that a careful review of historical detail reveals that the current US Federal Administrative State and its primary political supporter, the Democrat party, is in fact, Fascist/Corporatist/Socialist. And the center-right populist movements and leaders are not Fascists as the media so often shouts. Still, rather it is the corporatist “mainstream media” allies that so gleefully parrot State-promoted narratives that are Fascist/Corporatist.

The road to our current hell has been abundantly paved with naive good intentions. If you seek to “feed the world” you will get more humans that are dependent on handouts. The best laid plans often go awry, despite the fact that the Secretary General of the United Nations calmly assures all that will listen that the UN Agenda 2030 and their “Pact for the Future” has “the best plans.”

It is long past time to force the US Federal State back into the limited box that was originally designed for it. I do not know how this can be accomplished, but I do know that we have to try

Crafty_Dog

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VDH: Prog Fascism
« Reply #785 on: November 02, 2024, 12:43:12 PM »
Mirror, mirror: Debunking Harris’ farcical ‘fascist’ charge vs. Trump
By Victor Davis Hanson
Published Nov. 2, 2024, 6:02 a.m. ET


In the last two weeks, Vice President Kamala Harris has been trying to revive her stagnant campaign by smearing Trump as being Hitlerian and a fascist.

She claims Trump is planning to put his enemies in encampments.

Yet in the modern era, it was not Trump who put large numbers of US residents and citizens into “relocation camps,” but liberal Democrat President Franklin D. Roosevelt who sent Japanese-American citizens and residents into them.

Why cry 'fascist' vs. Trump?
If Harris refers to Trump’s supposed fascist policies during his prior four-year tenure, there is no such evidence.

Nonetheless, the once “joyful” Harris is ending her campaign by trafficking in lies and smears reminiscent of the Joe McCarthy era.

Recall that fascists hijack law enforcement and the military to suspend constitutional rights and punish enemies.

But Trump did neither.

Expert issues warning over the ‘elephant in the room’ that Harris has been quiet about
Instead, in 2016, a corrupt FBI went after Trump himself during the Obama administration with the bogus Steele dossier.

The FBI, which in 2016 had hired the faker Steele, in 2020 fused with social media to suppress accurate news reporting of the embarrassing Hunter Biden laptop scandal.

A number of former FBI directors and intelligence officials — John Brennan, James Clapper, James Comey, Andrew McCabe — who openly sought to destroy Trump had a long history of either lying or feigning amnesia under oath.

Fascists try to warp the legal system.

But Trump’s own Justice Department selected an independent special counsel to investigate the invented Russian collusion accusations against him.

In vast contrast, the Biden Justice Department coordinated with Georgia prosecutors Fani Willis and Nathan Wade, special counsel Jack Smith, Manhattan prosecutor Alvin Bragg and New York Attorney General Letitia James to prosecute Trump, bankrupt him and keep off the campaign trail.

Fascists use their governments to destroy their enemies.

During Trump’s term, for the first time in history, the House of Representatives impeached a first-term president twice.

And in another first, the Senate tried Trump as a private citizen.

A self-styled “anonymous” federal official bragged openly of deliberately, and likely unlawfully, leading a bureaucratic cabal to sabotage Trump’s lawful executive orders.

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, in collusion with other bureaucrats, deliberately leaked a classified presidential phone call in an effort to ensure that Trump was impeached.

Fascists seek to change existing laws to destroy opponents and illegally consolidate power.

Currently, it is only the Democrats who seek to pack the court, destroy the Electoral College, end the Senate filibuster, and create two new states and thus gain four left-wing senators.

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In key states, they radically changed voting laws.

As a result, roughly 70% of voters in 2020 did not cast their ballots in person on Election Day — even as the traditional rejection rates for fraudulent ballots mysteriously dived amid the influx.

Fascists arbitrarily nullify any laws they feel do not aid their agendas.

Biden-Harris destroyed immigration law in order to bring in more than 12 million illegal aliens and gain new constituencies.

They also protected sanctuary cities, as some 600 such jurisdictions illegally and with impunity nullified federal immigration laws in neo-Confederate fashion.

Fascists seek to politicize the military.

But in Trump’s case, his former chairman of the Joint Chiefs, General Mark Milley, brazenly violated the Uniform Code of Military Justice by libeling Trump as a fascist.

Worse still, Milley sabotaged the chain of command by ordering theater commanders to report directly to him in times of serious crises.

And in near-treasonous fashion, Milley contacted his Chinese communist counterpart in the People’s Liberation Army to assure him that he would warn the Chinese military before carrying out any Trump order he felt existentially dangerous.

Some of the most prominent retired four-star military officers — again in violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice — publicly smeared Trump as a coward, liar, fascist, Hitler-like, a Mussolini, a creator of Auschwitz-like death camps, and worthy of being removed “the sooner the better.”

Fascists seek to control and weaponize the media.

So Facebook and Twitter both conspired with the FBI to censure news accounts favorable to Trump.

The major newspapers, social media corporations, television networks and public broadcasting systematically and continually attacked Trump, censured his supporters and fused with his opponents.

Why then the charges of Trump the fascist and Hitler reincarnation?

Simple. Harris’s personal negatives are rising, her polls inert.


She has abandoned her prior run-out-the-clock avoidance of the media and her smiley “joy” campaign, and instead now embraces the big lie, while President Joe Biden writes off Trump supporters as “garbage.”

Harris is now confirming to voters that she really can neither think nor speak well and has no consistent agenda that appeals to the middle class.

So, in final desperation, Harris is smearing Trump as a fascist, even though ironically he has been the target of fascist machinations from her own party and supporters for nearly a decade.

Victor Davis Hanson is a distinguished fellow of the Center for American Greatness.