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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Did Bush lie? It doesn't matter any more.
Monday, August 23, 2004 5:04 AM
SIGNYM
I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.
Monday, August 23, 2004 7:03 AM
GEEZER
Keep the Shiny side up
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Because corporations (as synthetic persons) are treated favorably under the law, make the laws that govern corporations the same as laws that govern people. For example, equalize the laws regarding tax, theft, liability and criminality. Institute the equivalent of corporate jail time (the Board and exective officers get replaced en masse) and (if you believe in the death penalty) the corporate death penalty (forced liquidation).
Quote: Require corporations (and all business) to protect employee consitutional rights, such as the right of privacy and the right of free speech.
Quote:Eliminate the option of "publicly traded" businesses. Stock ownership creates a special distortion in business management that is tied to the quarterly report and stock price, leading to very short-term thinking and speculation. (Business can raise capital through bonds, loans, partnerships etc.)
Quote:Engineer trade agreements to recognize and reward responsible government. Place progressive tariffs on nations that don't (1) have universal, UN-recognised elections (2) allow the formation of national and international trade unions (3) have environmental protection laws that allow sustainable development.
Quote: Eliminate the notion of "intellectual property", which stifles rather than enhances technological development.
Quote:Eliminate the corporate business form completely. Replace it with cooperative business forms.
Quote:Place banking and currency exchange under national and international regulation, and remove it from speculation.
Quote:I have lots more ideas, some have more merit than others. The limit isn't "What we can do instead" but the will to engage in thinking and acting along these lines.
Monday, August 23, 2004 11:49 AM
RUE
I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!
Monday, August 23, 2004 3:01 PM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: Geezer, As you have not supported any of yours. Since you already blew me off once when I attempted to demonstrate the facts, how about you prove your claims? I'll be happy to demand, criticize, dismiss and ignore.
Monday, August 23, 2004 3:12 PM
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 2:41 AM
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 6:13 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: You can't prove it. It doesn't matter. I don't have time. -------------------------- Rue (with apologies to Geezer) but the above are/ were so easily disproved that they can only be seen as avoidance. Geezer can't approach the concept "Bush lied about WMD" with equanimity; it generates enough fear to make the topic off-limits.
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 8:27 AM
Quote:Even if they're just subsistence farming, they have to use some of the fruits of their efforts to buy new implements to farm with.
Quote:Maybe if the world population was half a billion or less. The current population requires massive investments in infrastructure to survive at all. Without capitalism, where does this come from?
Quote:When did I say that? The Depression was more a cautionary tale about the problems with speculation than with capitalism.
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 9:54 AM
SHEWOLF
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 10:34 AM
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 10:56 AM
SUCCATASH
Quote:Originally posted by SheWolf: Is the whole swift boat ordeal a lie, I would like to know. If it's not why doesn't he sue those men for slander, defamation of character or something.
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 2:07 PM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: Geezer, For capitalism to exist as we understand it, there has to be a formal monetary economy and ownership rules, and a government that regulates and enforces them. Another (inexplicit) aspect of capitalism is that one person (or corporation) owns the ‘means of production’ but does NOT provide the labor. The labor comes from those who don’t own the means of production and who depend on selling their labor for survival (the ‘wage slaves’).
Quote: Even today there are economies that don’t use (or understand) money, though they do barter. I propose they are not capitalist. Additionally, those societies where one "owns" the digging stick, bow and arrow, net, canoe etc, but also provides the labor are not capitalist. To have put in effort to get extra fish, and then to have used those extra fish to trade for cloth doesn’t make the means of survival capitalist. The person is merely exchanging some of the benefits of their labor (which they wholly own) for another thing they think will also benefit them. And finally, currently a minimum of 1 billion people do not live under systems that can be considered capitalist.
Quote:Historically there have been societies (not every society, but some) where a ruling elite claims the right to both resources and labor. The Egyptians, Aztecs, Chinese Empires, Romans, and even the recent European feudal system (serfs were specifically part of the land) did that. However, these systems were religious in authority, not economic.
Quote:One can only speculate about very early human groups, and further back to the proto-humans. But I think you will agree that if chimpanzees, orangutans and gorillas survive without capitalism, then in the vast interlude of millions of years between common ancestors and now, capitalism probably did not contribute to animal survival.
Quote: ...And let's also casually look at Africa, since it's come up already. Angola used to be self-sufficient for food - they met the 'survival' standard you propose. As happens in many African countries, small remote villages were stable. In the war (which the US fomented BTW specifically to ruin the economy and drive out the socialist government) men either joined the forces, fled or were killed. That left the old people, women and children in the remote villages vulnerable to attack. Most sought safety in the cities. Suddenly these self-sufficient people who didn't need either capitalists or government became dependent. (In England large land-holders threw tenants off the farms. These tenants ended up in cities where they became a captive labor force for industry. That was in the good old heyday of raw unregulated capitalism, work-houses and brutal poverty for most of England.) What would it take to restore Angolan self-sufficiency? Demining and a stable potable water supply (Jimmy Carter and former Treasury Secretary O'Neill both concluded that). These two infrastructure requirements don't need large capital investments, though they do require human investment. They are both low-technology. They need to rebuild homes (huts) that they previously did build and can rebuild with their own hands and local materials; simple bridges (we're not talking multibillion dollar spans here, just small stone and wood structures) and smoothing and clearing dirt roads. Experience in other developing nations shows that small investments made to men often go to drugs, alcohol and/or prostitutes, but investments made to women improve the lives of women and children. (And improved lives for women and children lead to the 'demographic transition'.) Two investments that could be made are donkeys (in Ethiopia called "the woman's friend" since without them the woman and girls are the beasts of burden), and bicycles. Culturally, bicycles are a prestigious way for men to move goods. An investment scheme that works well is the community-based direct loan. It's a 'pay-it-forward' loan scheme where, once you set up your business (with a treadle sewing machine for example) you actually owe your repayment to the next person seeking a loan. (You know that person, that person knows you, you both know how much is owed, and if you DON'T pay the money, you answer directly to them and their family.) None of this actually requires large-scale capital investment of the type you talk about. And what IS capital? It is human effort crystallized into money. But it is not a necessary cause of human effort. Human effort can be made without capital.
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 3:31 PM
Quote:It's not that monolithic a system.
Quote:and a large proportion of them live right at subsistence level
Quote:they keep 100% of the fruits of their efforts, not merely a portion.
Quote:Nope. Even if they're just subsistence farming, they have to use some of the fruits of their efforts to by new implements to farm with.
Quote:Authoritarian societies ... or Marxism ... but the sword is the authority. The authoritarian models admittedly don't work too good for anybody but the authorities.
Quote:The United Kingdom, on the other hand, is 244 people per square kilometer. They need the infrastructure that is best supported by a capitalist free-market system to live.
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 3:58 PM
Quote:Did Bush lie? That's a good question, my opinion is that he was mislead.
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 5:05 PM
Quote:MR. KAY: Senator Warner ... I believe that the effort that has been directed to this point has been sufficiently intense that it is highly unlikely that there were large stockpiles of deployed militarized chemical and biological weapons there..
Quote:SEN. LEVIN: Dr. Kay, on the question of stockpiles, you have stated, I believe, that in your opinion Iraq did not have large stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons in 2002. Is that correct? MR. KAY: That's correct, Senator. SEN. LEVIN: Do you have any evidence that they had any stockpiles, large or small, in 2002? MR. KAY: Simply have no evidence, Senator. SEN. LEVIN: You have not uncovered any evidence of small stockpiles? MR. KAY: We have not uncovered any small stockpiles, that's correct.
Quote:SEN. LEVIN: -- in your judgment, had Iraq reconstituted its nuclear weapon program, in the way you understand the word "reconstitute"? MR. KAY: It was in the early stages of renovating the program, building new buildings. It was not a reconstituted, full-blown nuclear program.
Quote:SEN. ALLARD: Did they use the aluminum tubes at that point in time to enrich their uranium? Do we know -- MR. KAY: No, they did not. They relied on different processes.
Quote:On October 4,2002, the NSC (Condoleezza Rice) sent a draft of a speech they were preparing for the President to deliver in Cincinnati, Ohio. It was draft six of the speech and contained the line, “and the regime has been caught attempting to purchase up to 500 metric tons of uranium oxide from Africa -an essential ingredient in the enrichment process.” On October 5,2002, the ADDI .. asked the analysts to bring forward any issues that they thought should be addressed with the NSC. The ADDI said an Iraq nuclear analyst raised concerns about the sourcing and some of the facts of the Niger reporting, specifically that the control of the mines in Niger would have made it very difficult to get yellowcake to Iraq. Based on the analyst’s comments, the ADDI drafted a memo for the NSC outlining the facts that the CIA believed needed to be changed, and faxed it to the Deputy National Security Advisor and the speech writers. Referring to the sentence on uranium from Africa the CIA said, “remove the sentence because the amount is in dispute and it is debatable whether it can be acquired from the source. We told Congress that the Brits have exaggerated this issue. Finally, the Iraqis already have 550 metric tons of uranium oxide in their inventory.” The NSC staff prepared draft seven of the Cincinnati speech which contained the line, “and the regime has been caught attempting to purchase substantial amounts of uranium oxide from sources in Africa.” Draft seven was sent to CIA for coordination. The DCI testified before the SSCI that he told the Deputy National Security Advisor that the “President should not be a fact witness on this issue,” because his analysts had told him the “reporting was weak.” The NSC then removed the uranium reference from the draft of the speech. Although the NSC had already removed the uranium reference from the speech, later on October 4,2002 the CIA sent a second fax to the White House which said, “more on why we recommend removing the sentence about procuring uranium oxide from Africa: Three points (1) The evidence is weak. One of the two mines cited by the source as the location of the uranium oxide is flooded. The other mine cited by the source is under the control of the French authorities. (2) The procurement is not particularly significant to Iraq’s nuclear ambitions because the Iraqis already have a large stock of uranium oxide in their inventory. And (3) we have shared points one and two with Congress, telling them that the Africa story is overblown and telling them this is one of the two issues where we differed with the British.”
Quote:The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 12:01 AM
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 1:34 AM
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 2:00 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: (I said)"It's not that monolithic a system." (You replied)Some people do 'find' alternatives within a limited range of choices, but people haven't (yet) restructured society to change the choices. It's still about finding a higher perch in the cage, or a more remote perch, or a more comfortable perch, but it's still a perch in the cage, and the cage is not under your control.
Quote:(I said)"and a large proportion of them live right at subsistence level" (You replied)But to address your point which you seem to have made in error...you are confusing the benefits of technology with capitalism. Even the most rudimentary economic and historic models distinguish the two. (most recently Jared Diamond "Guns, Germs and Steel")
Quote:Capitalism DOES enforce its rule with the sword, the bomber, missile, machine gun etc.
Quote:As to which systems 'work' better, when the USSR broke up and countries became capitalist, male lifespan across the board dropped by a third. Infant mortality more than doubled.
Quote:Countries with highly socialist governments (even at lower, and much lower technology levels) have longer average lifespans and lower infant mortality than the US. China's life expectancy is significantly higher than India's (69.4yrs/62.9 and 72.8/63.9) and its infant mortality roughly half that of India's (39 per thousand/68). Kerala, a highly socialist state in India has an infant mortality rate of 16, literacy rates of M94/F88%, and a life expectancy of 68 years. China of course is communist, while India is capitalist. Kerala as mentioned is highly socialist...The schemes you claim don't work do seem to work well for people where it counts - which is life and death.
Quote:This is another example of confusion between technology and economic system. The rest of the post rests on the false conflation of technology and capitalism.
Quote:Finally, the fact that YOU are personally comfortable, or that I am personally comfortable is not a valid measure of capitalism's 'success'. Africa is the other face of capitalism. We do well because others starve.
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 3:11 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Now, these nations also had formal elections and contain the intersection of both "capitalism" and "democracy". Clearly, neither capitalism by itself nor a combination of capitalism and democracy is "sufficient" to guarantee prosperity.
Quote:I can also point to nations that are more properous than the USA that are socialist democracies (Sweden #1, Denmark #2) and nations that are socialist authoritarian regimes (Cuba, China) that are relatively properous when compared to their capitalist counterparts. In fact, Cuba outranks Latin America with the exceptions of Costa Rica* and Chile. So it seems that "capitalism + democracy" is neither necessary nor sufficient for prosperity. Do you agree? Enough for now.
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 5:15 AM
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 7:06 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: It's a tennet of science that you can never prove a hypothesis, only disprove it. So if your hypothesis doesn't work in all cases, it must be modified. If you look at the poorest nations, you will also see that they are generally capitalist and often have elections as well. I propose a different hypothesis. I believe that I can show, both historically and geographically, that the introduction of capitalism invariably leads to greater disparity in wealth, which occurs both nationally and internationally. The USA, being the sole world superpower, has managed to export its poverty to other nations (like Peru, Nigeria, and Nicaragua) and therefor capitalism cannot serve as a basis for worldwide prosperity, only for localized prosperity.
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 9:39 AM
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 9:50 AM
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 12:20 PM
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 3:53 PM
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 5:39 PM
Thursday, August 26, 2004 3:09 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: While you're taking care of business, let me toss out some thoughts as idle speculation. Each one, unfortuantely, deserves a full discussion- something neither one of us probably has the time for.
Quote:My hypothesis is that "pure" capitalism progressively concentrates money into fewer and fewer hands. The wealth disparity inevitably creates poverty and unemployment, and by reducing aggregate demand eventually leads to an economic depression (which is distinct from stock market crash and other speculative failures).
Quote:Some say that unemployment, poverty, and cyclical economy is the cost of system that is extraordinarily good at creating technological progress and raising the standard of living overall. There are several lines of observation and theory that are generally called on to support this idea.
Quote:While acknowldeging brutality during industrialization- such as the slums of London- people often point to the USA, UK, EU, Japan, and the other developed nations as the "happy ending" of the capitalist story. Given time, all nations will be similarly prosperous.
Quote:The other aspect that is often pointed to is technological development- the discovery of electronics (for example) and the implementation of labor-saving devices which make production a thousand-fold (or more) efficient than production by hand.
Quote:The third aspect that people often point to is a more theoretical one. The difference between the aggregate value of goods produced and the aggregate demand (created mainly by "labor costs") is usually called "profit". However, any time you produce more than you consume, you could also call it "savings". It may be ENFORCED saving, but it's saving nonetheless. This is the power of capitalism.
Thursday, August 26, 2004 3:32 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: Geezer, I am against capitalism as a dead-end path that leads ultimately to planet-wide destruction. I'm not in favor of socialism per se, but I see it as an improvement over capitalism. I do favor sanity. In fact I have thought of a society which starts at the current technological level, makes use of its guarantees, but redirects economic (and social) goals.
Quote:"Even if you're the independent subsistence farmer, the cage isn't under your control." I take it you have not lived in another culture. This culture has conformed itself specifically to support the capitalist economic system, but the strictures go beyond economic. You can't choose certain things in the US, not because they are forbidden or too expensive, but because they don't exist.
Quote:"Capitalist democracies are generally the most technologically advanced countries." Let me refer you again to "Guns, Germs and Steel". Your impressions (they're too formless to be called ideas) are untenable. You don't take into account the military advantage of 1400's western technology, which led to advantage for western cultures in general; and to obliteration, conquest and colonization around the globe. You casually mention the history of colonization without seeming to realize that other countries were ravaged for centuries by the capitalist countries you continue to portray as benign.
Quote:"But lets look at this overall, instead of picking one country or area. Here's a link to a nice map of life expectancy by country." This is a crock, and so obvious it's an insult. Don't stoop so low, it doesn't become you.
Quote:Sub-Saharan Africa has only recently emerged from colonialism. I hope I don't need to enumerate the instability, social destruction, poverty, and lack of development left in the wake. They suffer from many things. But mostly, they suffer not from a lack of capitalism, but from an excess of being on the wrong end.
Quote:So it is more meaningful (and honest) to compare two non-western countries similar to each other that differ mainly in their economic system - China and India. They both have massive populations. Until recently they were both rural, uneducated, non-industrial countries. Which has the better lifespan? But if you wonder if genetic or other unknown differences account for China's advantage, Kerala, which is a socialist state IN India far outstrips the whole of India. Whether or not Russia has achieved capitalism, it certainly is no longer communist. And it was at the death of communism that lifespan dropped. Communism was better than whatever took its place.
Thursday, August 26, 2004 5:22 AM
Thursday, August 26, 2004 5:39 AM
Thursday, August 26, 2004 6:52 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: My Cliff Note responses! (more this weekend I hope!) "If there ever could be a "pure" capitalism, this would probably be true, but pure capitalism in a democratic system is as unlikely to exist as pure marxist socialism. Laws against some of the worse elements of capitalism (monoply, environmental damage, minimum wage, right of labor to organize, etc.) are forced by the voting populace." What you are saying is that democracies offer political feedback into the system, and that societies with feedback can't go too far astray from the welfare of the voting population. In theory I agree, but in practice I think there are too many OTHER forms of control, each one requires a feedback loop. In addition, the interference of money in the voting process has virtually negated democracy's effectiveness.
Quote:"I can't go back in time and resolve the brutality of industrialization, but conditions have improved remarkably for the workers in the industrialized countries you mention. Efforts are underway to improve conditions in countries we export jobs to, but admittedly more could be done." However, at the expense of jobs in the USA. The problem is that capitalism inevitably creates unemployment and economic polarization- it is an irreducible feature of the way the system works.
Quote:"And I tend to believe that the capitalist system supports this better than any other. It provides the incentive (profit)to invest capital in developing advances." Do you mean "discovering/ inventing" advances or "building/ implementing" advances? The first I would disagree with totally, the second I would disagree with partially. Most of the major discoveries that I can think of- starting with language, fire, pottery/ weaving, agriculture, alphabet on through the printing press, microbes and the internet were made without the profit motive. The intnert, for example, started with a military project (DARPA)... but you're an IT person so you know this.
Quote:If you mean that capitalism is good at IMPLEMENTING discoveries, I agree- but only where there is a significant potential profit involved. Schooling (the implementation of math, language, printing and science), roadways, sewage systems, public health, affordable housing are all significant implementations that have been shunned by capitalism. These services are typically good in socialist nations (or sub-regions, like Kerala) and poor in capitalist countries.
Quote:"I'd say profit is the excess of payment received for goods over the total cost of producing them but we're on the same page. I see profit as money that's either re-invested in the business to improve it, invested in some other enterprise, banked, in which case the bank invests it, or spent, giving someone else a profit." This is where "yes-but" comes in. Profit in capitalism is essentially directed three ways- (1) either reinvested to "improve" business which generally means to reduce labor costs. In the face of reduced demand, profit may also be used to (2) acquire other businesses, which generally leads to a net reduction in competition (monopolism) and (3) speculation, which is really based on the "bigger fool" theory. If you look at (1) and (2) you will see that they concentrate money.
Thursday, August 26, 2004 7:21 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: I'm going to insert myself into this conversation. As far as I can tell colonialism worked hand in glove with capitalism. In the case of modern colonial history, it was the extension of capitalism though military and poltical means. So I don't think you can exclude Africa... or India, Latin America, the Phillipines, the Mideast etc. for that matter- as special cases. They ARE part of the capitalist system, just the part that gets the shitty end of the stick.
Quote:As part of that, I would look at the USA's 800+ military installations around the world as part of our empire. Our "fight against Communism" was not to make to world safe for democracy (we crushed a number of ths along the way) but to make the world safe for capitalism.
Thursday, August 26, 2004 9:30 PM
Thursday, August 26, 2004 10:09 PM
Friday, August 27, 2004 2:57 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: ”If you can get everyone to agree with this, that would be fine.” People sign on to various religions. It can be done, though not necessarily by me.
Quote:What I get is: capitalism is essential for human survival in a crowded world, except for the people who manage without; that if not strictly necessary for survival it creates a better standard of living, except in those countries where it doesn't, and that authoritarian models don't work for the masses, except for the times when they do.
Quote:One small part of the thread was this: Some people do 'find' alternatives within a limited range of choices, but people haven't (yet) restructured society to change the choices. It's still about finding a higher perch in the cage, or a more remote perch, or a more comfortable perch, but it's still a perch in the cage, and the cage is not under your control. “I'm not sure what your response has to do with my point that every society has strictures on it.” And this does reduce the discussion to meaningless drivel. So, lets plow forward: There are obvious physical strictures on all societies – potable water, weather, agricultural diseases and pests etc. But they don't make the cage. Even in societies that you (you personally, not the generic ‘you’) would think of as marginal, the physical strictures DON’T drive economic forms.
Quote:( http://www.starbuilders.org/fft/articles/fairshare.html) “Initial results come from 15 small-scale societies located in 12 countries that span the globe. Participating groups consist of three hunting-and-foraging societies, six communities that rely primarily on slash-and-burn agriculture, four nomadic-herding groups, and two farm villages. Traditional economic theory assumes that basic human self-interest lies at the heart of commerce. However, a chief discovery of the project, Henrich says, is that nowhere do individuals behave out of pure self-interest. In economic games, members of societies that feature lots of bargaining and bartering gravitate toward dividing available goods equally. Communities in which families are isolated come closest to exhibiting the traditional economic model. 1) Each forest-dwelling Machiguenga family lives in near-isolation and subsists on slash-and-burn farming, hunting, foraging, and fishing. Machiguenga proposers displayed a greater streak of self-interest. Rules for fair behavior with nonfamily members have little chance to flourish among the Machiguenga, according to Henrich. 2) The Hadza hunter-gatherers treat meat and other food as public property if it's brought back to camp and others see it. The Hadza enforce extensive sharing through gossip and outright punishment of cheaters. Hadza proposers made offers almost as low as those of the Machiguenga. In turn, Hadza responders usually turned up their noses at offers. 3) Paraguay's Aché foragers provide an interesting contrast to the Hadza. Aché hunters often leave their killed prey outside of camp to be discovered by others, so as to avoid looking boastful. Game then gets distributed equally among all households. In ultimatum games, Aché proposers usually offered either 40 percent or 50 percent of a sizable sum. Many others offered as much as 70 percent. There were no rejected offers. 4) The whale-hunting Lamalera of Indonesia made the most generous offers of all in the ultimatum game. A majority of Lamalera proposers, who exchanged packs of cigarettes, offered half or more of their booty. Offers lower than 50 percent were frequently rejected. Because the cigarette account in Lamalera experiments represented 10 days' wages, making an offer was like dividing up a whale, Alvard says. Again, volunteers played the game with their daily interactions in mind. 5) Ultimatum exchanges take a radically different turn when players are accustomed to giving and getting gifts that come with strings attached. Unlike any other groups, the Au and Gnau speakers of Papua New Guinea's northern coast avidly rejected both stingy and generous offers. Like the Hadza, these foraging villages relentlessly enforce food sharing. Selfish offenders face physical attacks that can result in severe injury or death. Moreover, Au and Gnau frequently give gifts of food and other items to neighbors in order to cement local alliances and to create social debts that they can later collect on. 6) Unusual findings also occurred in Mongolia with two neighboring groups of nomadic herders, Mongols and Kazakhs. Proposers in both populations offered relatively high amounts—on average, 40 percent—although responders demonstrated a willingness to accept even extremely low offers. This pattern makes sense in light of the herders' great concern for nurturing a good personal reputation with others and smoothing over interpersonal conflicts. The cage is the social context in which you exist. Economic forms like capitalism are social arrangements. (I shouldn't have to say it, but some people think it's a universal law, like gravity.) You live in a social construct beyond 'your' (society's) control. (b/c one dollar = one vote) And it determines the context of your life, in ways that are beyond your awareness.
Friday, August 27, 2004 3:23 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: “I'm aware of the history of western arms and conquest, mostly done by monarchies, as I recall.” I realize you want to leave Africa out of the equation. I don’t. It provides a stellar example of colonialism within the last ~150 years, by countries whose governments varied but whose economies were capitalist. It's strange to me that most African countries are younger than I am.
Quote:Algeria In 1815 the United States (democracy) sent a naval squadron against the city (Algiers).
Quote: Angola is one of the few African countries to have been colonized by the Portuguese empire
Quote:Benin...became a French Colony in 1872.
Quote:Botswana...was taken under British protection in 1885, after all the principal chiefs complained that Boers, or Afrikaners, from the Transvaal region in what is now northern South Africa, were invading their territories.
Quote:Burkina Faso In 1896 the French set up a protectorate over the kingdom of Ouagadougou, and in 1904 the area became part of the colony of Haut-Sénégal-Niger.
Quote:Burundi Austrian explorer Oskar Baumann and German Count Gustav Adolf von Götzen arrived in the 1890s.
Quote:Cameroon British traders and missionaries were especially active in the area after 1845. The Germans and British began to explore inland after 1860, and in 1884 the former established a protectorate over the Douala area; the British, taken by surprise, offered no resistance to their claim.
Friday, August 27, 2004 5:43 PM
Friday, August 27, 2004 6:07 PM
Quote:Empires all
Quote:Capitalism, by Webster's definition, tends to exist in countries where it is allowed to function with a lesser level of state control. Such a country is usually either a Democratic Republic, or a Democratic Constitutional Monarchy.
Friday, August 27, 2004 8:42 PM
Quote:Not sure if the English, Germans, South Koreans, Japanese, Turks, Italians, etc. would agree about being part of our "empire". Afganistan and Iraq might feel that way, but I doubt we'll see much benefit from being there. Parts of the cold war weren't our best moments. but remember that the other side had already collected Eastern Europe and chunks of the Far East by less than savory means. I do tend to think that by making the world safe for democracy, you do make it safe for capitalism, but that democracy (or at least the Western form) was the main thing being "saved".
Saturday, August 28, 2004 5:39 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: Quote:Empires all 1688 is considered the date Britain became a constitutional monarchy.
Quote: Originally posted by SignyM: Germany and Austria at about that time (1860s). Both were constitutional monarchies, each with a Parliament.
Saturday, August 28, 2004 7:36 AM
Sunday, August 29, 2004 12:34 PM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: In your opinion, when did the United Sates become a democracy?
Monday, August 30, 2004 4:39 PM
Monday, August 30, 2004 5:25 PM
Tuesday, August 31, 2004 1:18 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: Don't forget the electoral college thing. Not only do people not directly vote for the president and vp, they don't indirectly vote for them. They don't vote for the people who will be selecting the executive branch. The electoral college is chosen in arcane and secretive ways, it doesn't have to follow the popular vote, and it's run by rules citizens haven't directly voted on - in other words, it's not under citizen control A weighting of the popular vote toward less populous states might be beneficial, but the electoral college goes far beyond that. It removes the real power of the vote from citizens. In other words, the popular vote is merely ceremonial. Is that democratic?
Tuesday, August 31, 2004 1:37 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Succatash: This is a very informative thread. I wish Bush and Kerry would talk and debate like this. "Gott kann dich nicht vor mir beschuetzen, weil ich nicht boese bin."
Saturday, September 4, 2004 9:23 AM
Sunday, May 14, 2006 5:46 AM
Monday, May 15, 2006 5:53 AM
JMB9039
Quote:Originally posted by CrevanReaver: Bush didn't lie, he was mislead. He had the United Nations, Bill Clinton, Vladimir Putin, George Tenet's CIA, and even the odd behavior of Saddam Hussein telling him that there were WMDs. After so much pressure, he had to believe that Iraq was an imminent threat.
Monday, May 15, 2006 6:01 AM
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