Gomer
Well-Known Member
I am a capitalist at heart. But all system’s require some balance to keep away abuse. And all systems are equally susceptible to the abuses of the greedy and power hungry. Communism as a pure governmental philosophy is based in equality. It’s a nice ideal that doesn’t work in reality. In the real world it is corrupted by those who crave money and power and turned into the historical governments that people hate so much. But I don’t blame communism for Stalin or Castro any more than I blame capitalism for slavery. Both systems created the environment for horrific abuses to occur, but in the end it was those power hungry and greedy people who corrupted the systems and it is those people that should be vilified.
To bring it somewhat back on topic. Big Companies are inherently greedy. That is how they became big in the first place. Left unhindered a truly free market, they will abuse and exploit their workers as we saw in our own country back in the days of monopolies and robber barons. Socialist programs like social security, medicare, educational funding, and minimum wage help keep those companies in check. Without that balance they have too much power over the system and that power ends up disenfranchising and keeping down the lowest economic rungs of the society.
I respect that you use your personal observations to determine the efficacy of our economic system. No one should allow others to tell them how to think. But the inherent problem in using only your own observations is that they are both subjective and localized. My direct observations contradict your direct observations as to the ability for anyone to work their way up. I have seen the direct opposite in fact. I have seen a system that favors those who already have money and inhibits those who don’t. Does that make either one of our experiences wrong? No. But it does mean that neither of us has the complete picture based on direct experience alone.
To bring it somewhat back on topic. Big Companies are inherently greedy. That is how they became big in the first place. Left unhindered a truly free market, they will abuse and exploit their workers as we saw in our own country back in the days of monopolies and robber barons. Socialist programs like social security, medicare, educational funding, and minimum wage help keep those companies in check. Without that balance they have too much power over the system and that power ends up disenfranchising and keeping down the lowest economic rungs of the society.
I respect that you use your personal observations to determine the efficacy of our economic system. No one should allow others to tell them how to think. But the inherent problem in using only your own observations is that they are both subjective and localized. My direct observations contradict your direct observations as to the ability for anyone to work their way up. I have seen the direct opposite in fact. I have seen a system that favors those who already have money and inhibits those who don’t. Does that make either one of our experiences wrong? No. But it does mean that neither of us has the complete picture based on direct experience alone.