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What's your generation and how would you change your government?
#24
(03-19-2022, 09:06 AM)David Horn Wrote: We don't have any need to look back for demons. They're here today. Today's rich and powerful have played the role of Svengali to a tee. In response, our first step: convince the victims that they are, in fact, victims. The second step: reclaim what has been stolen.

lumping all the rich and powerful into a single group is ideologically lazy at best. alas, "2 easy steps" is not how wealth redistribution works, regardless of whether of the means thereof are political or violent. Arms dealers, politicians, doctors, private business owners, lobbyists and savvy investors are all rich, but neither their methods, their personalities nor the honesty of their dealings are all that comparable.

Quote:Now, you seem to support the argument that, "This is mine, I stole it fair and square." And yes, the powerful have used the tools intended to restrain them to restrain us and maximize benefits to themselves. Here's the question: is turnabout fair play? I say yes in spades.
Don't get me wrong, I will shoot anyone in the head who tries to break onto my property and steal what belongs to me. This; however, is not the main thrust of my argument because that isn't something I expect you to care much about.
1) Socialist rebellions have a poor track record of success, and an even poorer track record of maintaining civil liberties or quality of life even when they do, whether that's the USSR, Maoist China, Allende's Chile, Venezuela or, perhaps most gruesomely, The Khmer Rouge in Cambodia.
2) millennials aren't that much more fiscally liberal than their Gen X and boomer elders. certainly not enough to rally behind a leader of that ilk
3) you would need to get most of the military on your side, and they definitely aren't socialist
4) take way property rights and people have little incentive to work (unless you're going luddite with it and want to start an agricultural commune. those can have reasonable success, but even then usually only for like 20 years tops. most don't last 1)

Quote:The GIs, including my own parents, maximized benefits to them and theirs, and limited who got to be part of the tribe for reasons unrelated to their own actions. They were still 19th century thinkers. Let's not laud them for being wise in that regard, but let's agree that shared responsibility, including burden sharing, is no longer optional. Let's make the burden and the benefits more broadly shared, certainly. But let's not give the rapacious a free pass to keep their ill gotten gains either.
keep in mind they built the highways and put in the dues to ensure your generation could attend university far more easily than my own (I had the privilege of going myself, for which I am grateful, but I chose a route that did not require a degree).
ammosexual
reluctant millennial
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RE: What's your generation and how would you change your government? - by JasonBlack - 03-19-2022, 09:01 PM

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