The Senate has rejected legislation to extend Affordable Care Act tax credits, essentially guaranteeing that millions of Americans will see a steep rise in costs at the beginning of the year.
I have solutions, but they are not officially sanctioned by the US government.
All I know is what isn’t a solution… voting. You can’t force a long-gone and corrupt government to fix itself by voting and saying “please stop”.
I’ve been voting for a very long time, and for some reason they still listen to corporations instead of millions of voters. It’s almost as if they are financed and controlled by business in some way. It’s a great mystery.
I don’t know, I’ve never lived under a socialist/communist government, I’ve only lived in a plutocracy.
Union membership is down to 10% (from 35% peak in 1950s, our “glory days”) perhaps if we get it down to 0% they will reward us with medical care and lots of free cookies? Worth a shot.
There’s so much to read, currently on “The Creature from Jekyll Island”, a book about the Fed and banking by Griffin (politically I would say it’s libertarian-capitalist flavored).
I’m more interested in results and history than theory. Would you consider the Nordic model to be the best example of practical socialism in action?
I worry if unions were to become that powerful, they would just take the place of ownership. However, you can’t argue with the results, higher wages and better quality of life.
It seems in politics and business everything must be tempered and competitive to keep it above board, just like you need government to restrain corporations, you need business to restrain government; you need owners to restrain unions, and you need unions to restrain owners.
I was not familiar with term, apologies, after looking it up I think a Nordic state or three practice this (unions+government) and avoid the entire “minimum wage” issue. It seems to work very well, and for decades.
That’s what we should emulate, a solid system that employs proven methods of increasing lifespan and standard of living. If something else comes along that is even better, do that.
Our 50 states with “states rights” would be a perfect platform for this adaptability and to try different competing systems, but we are going in the opposite direction.
I have solutions, but they are not officially sanctioned by the US government.
All I know is what isn’t a solution… voting. You can’t force a long-gone and corrupt government to fix itself by voting and saying “please stop”.
I’ve been voting for a very long time, and for some reason they still listen to corporations instead of millions of voters. It’s almost as if they are financed and controlled by business in some way. It’s a great mystery.
what about socialism? if this were a socialist/communist society, would healthcare be free and public?
I don’t know, I’ve never lived under a socialist/communist government, I’ve only lived in a plutocracy.
Union membership is down to 10% (from 35% peak in 1950s, our “glory days”) perhaps if we get it down to 0% they will reward us with medical care and lots of free cookies? Worth a shot.
are you studying socialist theory? if NOT, you really should. seriously!
There’s so much to read, currently on “The Creature from Jekyll Island”, a book about the Fed and banking by Griffin (politically I would say it’s libertarian-capitalist flavored).
I’m more interested in results and history than theory. Would you consider the Nordic model to be the best example of practical socialism in action?
like can we get it to around 90%?
I worry if unions were to become that powerful, they would just take the place of ownership. However, you can’t argue with the results, higher wages and better quality of life.
It seems in politics and business everything must be tempered and competitive to keep it above board, just like you need government to restrain corporations, you need business to restrain government; you need owners to restrain unions, and you need unions to restrain owners.
Just a theory.
do you think that political parties should work with unions in government (like in de leonism)?
I was not familiar with term, apologies, after looking it up I think a Nordic state or three practice this (unions+government) and avoid the entire “minimum wage” issue. It seems to work very well, and for decades.
That’s what we should emulate, a solid system that employs proven methods of increasing lifespan and standard of living. If something else comes along that is even better, do that.
Our 50 states with “states rights” would be a perfect platform for this adaptability and to try different competing systems, but we are going in the opposite direction.