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Wall Street Journal OP Obama's Radicalism Is Killing the
Message
From
12/03/2009 22:56:08
 
 
To
12/03/2009 15:31:28
Dragan Nedeljkovich (Online)
Now officially retired
Zrenjanin, Serbia
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01386150
Message ID:
01387578
Views:
56
>>>Like a lot of conservatives, you mistake individual economic greed for quality of life.
>>>
>>>And like a lot of liberals, you want to punish success. I believe that people have a right to enjoy what they have worked so hard to achieve.
>>
>>Being part of the society at large and the more able paying a higher portion of the bill are not new concepts, nor are they punishment.
>>
>>I sense in you the same thing I do in Jake -- that you look at everything in economic terms. When that's the case I'm sure it's easy to disregard other things and look at society in a Darwinian way. I don't remember exactly how Jake put it yesterday but he basically said for the system to be strong, the weak have to be allowed to fail. That's it, they fall by the wayside, end of story. Well, I don't agree.
>
>Speaking of the so-called "social Darwinism" (or the repackaged rat race), it's not even a nice abstraction, because it's simply inaccurate. It neglects the development of social services, safety nets (and all other "bleedin heart librul" or whatever terms were used to disparage these ideas) are a social mechanisms evolved exactly to counterbalance the niceties of the initial accumulation and capitalism as survival of the greediest. Evolved, i.e. part of the same social Darwinism, if you want. They were invented, and have taken root, because they satisfy a social need. Had the need not been there, the invention wouldn't have happened, or would have been an evolutionary dead end.
>
>Of course, with good propaganda you can convince people that they don't need milk, they need Coke, or that redistribution is just when you take from the poor to give to the rich, but unjust when it's in the other direction.
>
>OTOH, I have to agree with Marcia in one point - any system that's supposed to catch the thieves and give the loot back to the people usually ends up rewarding the thieves and punishing those who live well because they work a lot (soft or hard, can't say, being biased towards software) and have results that satisfy a need, which brings money. This has happened on both three sides of the rusty curtain, and just shows that no system is immune to corruption. Which does not mean we shouldn't try to do it right - take back from the thieves, and reward the diligent.

The only thing I am confused about is how it came to be assumed that everyone who is successful is a thief?
.·*´¨)
.·`TCH
(..·*

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"When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the loser." - Socrates
Vita contingit, Vive cum eo. (Life Happens, Live With it.)
"Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away." -- author unknown
"De omnibus dubitandum"
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