@Bakustra: I almost completely agree with you. If you disagree with me after this post, at least one of us has misunderstood the other.
Simon_Jester wrote:weemadando wrote:Maybe people should visit Australia, Canada, Britain, France or another socialist helllhole and let us know how horribly tyrannical and corrupt our governments are.
I wouldn't even call those socialist countries- I'm trying to figure out whether Skgoa would.
I don't know enough about these countries to say, sorry. France does have some nice socialist "features" that I would like to see in Germany too, though.
Simon_Jester wrote:Skgoa wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:Socialism involves state control of the means of production, Skgoa; Europe is only very weakly socialist though there are functioning socialist parties in a number of the countries involved.
Erm, you do realize that e.g. the german governments*, both state and federal, have huge share-ownership of private industry and that the economy is in principle controled by the state? That direct influence is only taken up to the neccessary amount in reality is more due to that being the intelligent choice, "rar, markets must be free!" But in principle, the state has the constitutioal right to take an almost arbitrary amount of control in the economy.
From the point of view of someone 100 years ago, the "social market economy" is textbook socialism.
*scandinavian countries even more, but I don't know that many details about them.
I am going to wait for others to comment on this, as I simply do not know what to say.
If I understand you rightly, your point is that a system which constitutionally permits the state to take over industrial concerns is textbook socialism whether or not it actually does so?
Yes. Just because our politicians/civil servants aren't stupid enough to think a command economy (is that the right english term?) is preferable in every part of the economy - and thus they/we consciously decide to leverage the advantages of free markets where it is opportune to do so -, doesn't mean that at it's heart, the german economy isn't on a pretty strong leash. This leash tends to get longer with right/middle governments and shorter with middle/left governments in power, but overall the german government meddles quite a bid.
Our constitution has this to say on the matter:
Art 14 wrote: (2) Eigentum verpflichtet. Sein Gebrauch soll zugleich dem Wohle der Allgemeinheit dienen.
This translates to "Property obliges. It's utilization shall serve the prosperity of the general public."
Or to put it in franker* terms: In order to encourage commerce, productivity and innovation, you get to take home a portion of the wealth that has been created due to your contribution. Use it wisely,
or else. Now, this mostly expresses itself by high taxes and strict standards(for pollution etc.), but e.g. it also means labour rights are such that people employed by a company of sufficient size
get a significant say in how its run. Yes, in Germany the employees DO have control over the means of production.
* i.e. more german
Simon_Jester wrote:My argument is one of empiricism- socialism as empirically brought into existence is either the product of democratic transfers of power or of revolution. Revolutionary socialism leads predictably to revolutionary dictatorship; you can denounce it as unsocialist if you like but it happens every damn time, like clockwork. Socialism brought about by democratic means is a very different form of socialism, and generally one in which the hallmarks of 19th century socialists' goals occur in greatly attenuated form, if at all. Whether the state could nationalize the factories or not, it does not.
Yes, I agree. But the problem that remains is, that we still haven't seen a "true" communist country. Maybe its not even possible to achieve through revolution. (I agree with that notion.) We do see a great number of countries were the second path to socialism/communism has led to a huge portion of the socialist agenda having been put in place. My argument is that we simply compare the situation back when the labour/democracy movement started with the situation we have now. We - i.e. the Left - managed to cross so much of the list that things like "an "allowance" for every citizen payed by the state" is slowly making it's way up to federal level in several left parties here in Germany.
I do, however, disagree with your assumption that we should meassure the "socialist-ness" of a country only by how it structures it's economy. There is much more to socialism than economic theories, indeed many economic systems have been proposed for socialist societies. (StaMoKap comes to mind.) Just like "democracy" is a pretty loose term and there are many forms of democratic countries, in my oppinion a society that has as it's core values the tenets of socialism ARE socialist countries - its just that through hard lessons people learned what works and what doesn't and adapted accordingly.
Simon_Jester wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:Social democracy is a different question, since it can evolve naturally from democratic institutions without having to violently overthrow anything the society basic right (such as property ownership) at any point.
Um, social democracy DID have to overthrow basic rights of the people in power at some point. And it wasn't done by asking nicely.
Do you mean in the sense of "the Labour Party won the election," or are you referring to something else? My point here hinges on the matter of
violent overthrow, and how the absence of it greatly alters the character of socialism compared to the character it takes on in a revolutionary environment.
If "violence + regime change" is your metric, than no, I don't have an example.