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Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by Anian
(Post 11632653)
Today I learned that Bernie Sanders is Hitler in disguise.
Originally Posted by zargof
(Post 11632659)
Well the Muslim Obama was Hitler, so it makes sense that the Jewish Sanders is also Hitler.
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Re: 2016 Election
Godwin's Law doesn't apply here. I never invoked Hitler or Nazism. I actually had Fascism in mind. Mussolini was one of Europe's leading socialists before he and his movement seized power. He and Lenin followed different paths to socialism. And his model was followed in Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Spain, and Germany in the 1930s (very seriously considered here at that time) and Argentina in the 1940s.
I'm simply questioning why and how moving America as far to the left as so many here seem to advocate would make America a "world power again." Aren't we a world power now? If not, how far left is enough to earn us a coveted "world power" slot, and how does that happen? Do you all trust American socialists/liberals/progressives to stop "transforming America" when they reach the Scandinavian model? My fear is that they would move on the the DDR model (which, by the way, always had CDU MPs in its Volksrat) so that those dastardly Republicans could never reverse their legacy. Socialism does provide those tools and I fear our left-wingers are doctrinaire enough not to be trusted with them. If you don't understand the precedents being set by Obama, you don't understand this system. |
Re: 2016 Election
Any attempt to compare US left/right politics to European left/right politics and apply the same labels is doomed to failure. For example the Democrats are about as left wing as the Tory party.
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Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by sir_eccles
(Post 11632889)
Any attempt to compare US left/right politics to European left/right politics and apply the same labels is doomed to failure. For example the Democrats are about as left wing as the Tory party.
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Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by sir_eccles
(Post 11632889)
Any attempt to compare US left/right politics to European left/right politics and apply the same labels is doomed to failure. For example the Democrats are about as left wing as the Tory party.
It's a very different spectrum here, not least with regards to the 'socialism' label, which has been specifically demonised for years here (not withstanding the fact that not many people seem to understand what true socialism is). We're comparing apples with oranges. |
Re: 2016 Election
This
Originally Posted by FlaviusAetius
(Post 11632511)
Now if the end result of a massive move to the left, while keeping America as the focus (National Socialism) is the idea, sort of like the path certain nations took in the 1930s
Originally Posted by FlaviusAetius
(Post 11632873)
I never invoked [...] Nazism.
The rest of your post is so full of frothing loonery that it's not really worthy of comment. If you honestly, truly, think that the aim of the US Democrats is to govern America through a system modelled on the DDR, then there is no hope for you in the real world. |
Re: 2016 Election
I'm going to regret this, but hey ho ...
OK, for the single, solitary person in this forum who couldn't understand what I was talking about, I know the USA is already a world power, which is why I said they need to get their arses in gear. For example, should a world power, such as we are, have a population with such a high rate of poverty? Such poor delivery of their healthcare? Such a poor social safety net for those in need, or such a crumbling infrastructure? Is a man who actually cares about the American people, who wants to create jobs, fix infrastructure, get healthcare provision on track and is willing to take on the current oligarchy really someone who has the same goals as Stalin, or Mussolini, or 'he who shall not be named'? All that crap about East Germany was complete nonsense, and that's putting it nicely. The whole 'moving as far to the left as possible' was a bit disturbing too, if you think a moderate centre-lefter, with a modern European style, is somehow a far-left future fascist. We have people on the conservative right who publicly state their desire to turn the US into some kind of fascist theocracy where people have marginally less freedom than North Koreans and yet someone who wants to introduce just a bit of progressive social democratic reform and who supports egalitarianism and a fair society for the American worker is the bad guy here. Mind is boggled. And I'm done. |
Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by Oakvillian
(Post 11633351)
The rest of your post is so full of frothing loonery that it's not really worthy of comment.
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Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by SultanOfSwing
(Post 11633364)
I'm going to regret this, but hey ho ...
OK, for the single, solitary person in this forum who couldn't understand what I was talking about, I know the USA is already a world power, which is why I said they need to get their arses in gear. For example, should a world power, such as we are, have a population with such a high rate of poverty? Such poor delivery of their healthcare? Such a poor social safety net for those in need, or such a crumbling infrastructure? Is a man who actually cares about the American people, who wants to create jobs, fix infrastructure, get healthcare provision on track and is willing to take on the current oligarchy really someone who has the same goals as Stalin, or Mussolini, or 'he who shall not be named'? All that crap about East Germany was complete nonsense, and that's putting it nicely. The whole 'moving as far to the left as possible' was a bit disturbing too, if you think a moderate centre-lefter, with a modern European style, is somehow a far-left future fascist. We have people on the conservative right who publicly state their desire to turn the US into some kind of fascist theocracy where people have marginally less freedom than North Koreans and yet someone who wants to introduce just a bit of progressive social democratic reform and who supports egalitarianism and a fair society for the American worker is the bad guy here. Mind is boggled. And I'm done. |
Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by RoadWarriorFromLP
(Post 11633796)
In Europe, the nutters usually join some sort of identifiable fringe party such as the BNP or Front National. In the US, they become Republicans.
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Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by RoadWarriorFromLP
(Post 11633796)
In Europe, the nutters usually join some sort of identifiable fringe party such as the BNP or Front National. In the US, they become Republicans.
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Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by SultanOfSwing
(Post 11633364)
I'm going to regret this, but hey ho ...
... Mind is boggled. And I'm done. |
Re: 2016 Election
If you're all running a bit short of clever new ad hominem attacks, take a few moments to compare the Labour and Conservative manifestos with the Republican and Democrat platforms and the recent statements of Elizabeth Warren - who is probably the most engaging political thinker of the moment - and honestly state to the world that there is a huge difference amongst the parties. None of them want to tear down the capitalist system, and all of them support social programs, some to a greater extent than others, but it is a matter mostly of degree. The left-right parties in both countries talk about how they would improve existing programs, approaching them from different points.
Interestingly, Labour is tougher on immigration than that right-wing extremist, Marco Rubio. Labour and the Tories are both offering what they consider improvements to NHS. The Republicans want to repeal Obamacare (ACA to you purists), but will replace it with what they consider to be a better system, although they're still trying to come up with something they can all agree on. Most likely they will end up simply renaming and tinkering with the ACA, just as the UK has been tinkering with NHS ever since 1948. Consider what those "nutter" Republicans have been up to. They got the Interstate Highway system funded and started, they provided the Senate votes necessary to pass the 1964 Civil Rights Act, Nixon got the EPA passed, George HW Bush got the Americans With Disabilities Act signed, the Republicans got welfare reform and NAFTA passed, which Bill Clinton touted as his major legislative contributions and which also helped him to balance the budget, George W. Bush signed Medicare Part D to help the poor and elderly pay for their prescriptions. Finally, much to the frustration of some on the right, the Republicans have NEVER ended any major social programs enacted by the Democrats when they've been in power, nor are they likely to. |
Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by FlaviusAetius
(Post 11634315)
If you're all running a bit short of clever new ad hominem attacks,
Water off a duck's back and all that.
Originally Posted by FlaviusAetius
(Post 11634315)
... that there is a huge difference amongst the parties.
I'd like Elizabeth Warren to put her name forward too, to be honest. What I want isn't necessarily President Sanders but for enough progressive voices to speak up so the Democratic mainstream takes notice.
Originally Posted by FlaviusAetius
(Post 11634315)
Consider what those "nutter" Republicans have been up to ...
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Re: 2016 Election
Originally Posted by sir_eccles
(Post 11632889)
Any attempt to compare US left/right politics to European left/right politics and apply the same labels is doomed to failure. For example the Democrats are about as left wing as the Tory party.
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