When it comes on screen, simply "squeeze it down" with thumb and forefinger until it fits. Then, start squinting.would like to read your Nietzche link but it does not fit on my screen and I do not know how to resolve that problem — Athena
This is good for women, but in some senses bad for families. It is clearly good for the familial bottom-line, but I think the children suffer a loss of an important aspect of their formative years. Worse still, having the child significantly influenced by people, such as day care workers and teachers, who may not share the worldview, belief system, and values of the parents, has the potential of robbing the parents of having the child reflect themselves in favor of reflecting others in society. This I would strenuously avoid at all costs. I want my son to reflect myself and my wife, our worldview, our beliefs, our values and interests, rather than those of the day care worker, know what I mean? Ideally, In my perfect world, I would earn enough money myself, be married to an intelligent and educated woman (at least a master's from a tier two school minimum) who shares my worldview, beliefs, etc., and shares my ideas on education (the "Trivium" all the way, heavy on logic, rhetoric, critical thinking, philosophy as examplary thereof with critical analysis, math, languages/linguistics with Latin & Greek from very early on; computer architecture and programming concepts beginning g6; chem, bio, physics after g8; nix the generally bullshit history, the propagandistic civics and sociology crap, and other garbage which they will pick up simply in becoming well read people), who could home school the children (and perhaps any other neighborhood kids as the parents show interest), and so avoid the shit educational system we have in this country. In that way, we would shape and form the minds (where the mind goes, the body follows) of our children as we see fit, and make them into what we want them to be, without external interference. But, then I awaken, and there is, here is the reality...The difference in the focus of women's lives compared to the male focus concerns me and I am not sure this difference will be maintained as women leave their homes to have careers or work in factories. The meaning of being a good woman has changed and what might be the ramifications of this change? — Athena
Oh my, maybe you rather have a robot that can be programmed, for your child, rather than a human one that might disappoint you. Perhaps a robot for a wife too? — Athena
..I was really enjoying exchanging thoughts with James Riley until all of a sudden we had a dismisunderstanding that became very unpleasant. — Athena
I was told if I want a man in life, I must give up my books. — Athena
I think it is natural that we want our children to grow up appreciating the culture and values we teach them. This is very important to Jews, Christians, and others. This is a big issue with ethnically different people. When indigenous peoples' lives are severely disrupted by colonizers, it is very destructive to individuals and the tribe. Well-meaning missionaries destroyed tribes... — Athena
or easy to frustrate, and impatient. :cool: — James Riley
I don't think that's to be true in any absolute sense, but I will agree that being unopinionated does widen the field somewhat, perhaps substantially. To me, though, an unopinionated person is one of two types: either they are stupid, or they lack the courage of their convictions. To myself, both qualities are "disqualifatory", if you know what I mean. The first, because, from the genetic standpoint, I want my offspring to be "smart in relation", and the second because having a spouse who lacks axiologic ferocity simply poses a danger to my family and lineage. My advice: be true to your own self. Keep your books, and find "that guy".
I think it is natural that we want our children to grow up appreciating the culture and values we teach them. This is very important to Jews, Christians, and others. This is a big issue with ethnically different people. When indigenous peoples' lives are severely disrupted by colonizers, it is very destructive to individuals and the tribe. Well-meaning missionaries destroyed tribes...
— Athena
Ha, well said. My absolute favorite novel of all time, despite the relative simplicity of it's prose (I tend to appreciate complex erudition, such as that of George Eliot, which is why I love Cicero so much...he is the unequalled champion of complex erudition) is a slim volume entitled "Things Fall Apart", by a Nigerian author named Chinua Achebe. It contains a brilliantly exposed statement of the destructivity of cultural imperialism, particularly as an adjunct of colonialism. — Michael Zwingli
"Things Fall Apart", sounds like a great book to read. — Athena
The rate of abortions and divorces went up, and increasingly women and children fell below the level of poverty. It didn't take long to realize state-paid child care was essential to this economy. John Dewey an American education expert was dismissed as the USSR education advisor, in favor of education for communism and loyalty to the state. — Athena
I highly recommend it, especially as it is brief while being profound. One caveat for the potential female reader: traditional West African cultures, including the Igbo culture depicted by Achebe, were highly male-dominant and patriarchal...dare I say from the "Western" perspective, "male chauvanist verging on misogynistic"? The intended readers of Achebe, who was writing primarily for a West African audience, would have understood that, so the moral of Achebe's story would not have been obscured thereby. For a Westernized audience, though, the depiction of the cultural setting has the potential to shock the sensibilities of some, and so obscure Achebe's thesis. Even with this, though, it is definitely worth the read. — Michael Zwingli
Correct. Communist Russia’s population growth dropped by more than half from 1.8% a year in the 1950s to 0.8% in 1980-1981, due mostly to declining fertility.
The Soviet Union: population trends and dilemmas – NIH
A major cause was the abortion rate that was the highest in the world. The abortion rate in Capitalist America (and in the West in general) was much lower.
Abortion rate in the U.S. and Soviet Union 1970-1989
So, it seems that Socialism did have a major problem. In fact, the economic, cultural, and psychological impact of Socialism was so severe that former Socialist countries like Russia never recovered even decades after the collapse of Socialism. — Apollodorus
Well, your post was a pleasant surprise. That is the most supportive statement I have had in several years. Normally people attack what I am saying. It helps that you are working with information and just your opinion. — Athena
In the old days, we used to call the Soviet Union "Communist" not "Socialist." — James Riley
I think the main reason for this was cultural and political. Socialism was seen by some in the West as “acceptable” whereas communism – due to the East-West antagonism – was not. — Apollodorus
But the fact of the matter is that communism or Marxism-Leninism is a form of socialism. — Apollodorus
Communism was the utopian ideal to be achieved in the future. — Apollodorus
This is why so-called “communist” states like Russia officially called themselves “socialist”: they were ruled by an officially communist party, — Apollodorus
An education in the Political Sciences teaches one to not confuse what countries say about themselves with what they really are. — James Riley
One has to be able to parse or conflate (depending on their rhetorical goal) the economic from the political use of these terms, each of which can have cross-over. — James Riley
https://www.dictionary.com/e/socialism-vs-communism/Communism, on the other hand, is a branch of socialism
https://www.britannica.com/topic/communismCommunism is thus a form of socialism
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CommunismCommunism is a specific, yet distinct, form of socialism
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_KoreaAccording to Article 1 of the state constitution, North Korea is an "independent socialist state". It holds elections, though they have been described by independent observers as sham elections, as North Korea is a totalitarian dictatorship,
Yeah, apparently I am full of surprises, or so I am told! :grin:
I can't say I agree with everything you say, but I think you are making some valid points. Not everything in life is about things like advanced technology or “equality”.
Imperial Russia was backward in some ways, but it was a prosperous nation with a lot of potential. — Apollodorus
In contrast, though Socialism had some good points, we can imagine how disastrous its impact must have been on the Russian people to experience such extraordinary rates of corruption, alcoholism, divorce, abortion, low fertility, and rapidly declining population. We must also take into consideration that Russia has been kept alive by its large oil and gas reserves without which God only knows where it would be now.
That sure was true of Sparta! The first military socialist state.The way I see it, when a nation loses interest in having families and children, and is unperturbed by a falling population, i.e., its own slow but sure demise, then something must be fundamentally wrong with that nation.
That is why I bring the issue up. Athens imitated Sparta for military reasons when Prussia began invading but it never took care of its people as Sparta did. Athens' individualism went with its liberty. I ash is that important? Is that something we should consider, and exactly what does that look like? Dying our hair green and putting studs in our face? Or the stimulus of figuring out for ourselves how we will survive?In other words, the supporters of Socialism are too eager to stress what they see as positive outcomes of that system, and in the process, they ignore the negatives. In some ways it is like a religious belief system that blindly follows its own unverified claims.
Obviously, capitalist society is beginning to experience some of the problems seen by former socialist states. So, presumably, there are some shared causes somewhere. In any case, the future of the Western world doesn’t look very good at the moment and I don't think Socialism is in a position to offer any real solutions.
The cultural and political aspect is the conservative/capitalist mindset that wants to paint socialists with a Stalinist, Maoist, Pol Potist brush. It's no different than a liberal /socialist wanting to paint the conservative/capitalist as a fascist Nazi Hitler Musoliniest. It denotes a lack of education in intro to Political Science. — James Riley
We must avoid perfect agreement at all costs. What would we talk about if we agreed? And if we didn't argue with each other, our minds would not expand. That would be a terrible thing! — Athena
That is not the democracy we defended in two world wars. How about returning to education for democracy and well-rounded individuals? — Athena
Since individuals depend on the population of which they are a part, policies that are harmful to the wider population are ultimately harmful to the individuals within that population.
Therefore policies that are harmful to the wider population are unacceptable. — Apollodorus
That's hardly going to happen if people think that North Korea is "democratic", though, is it? If that's what the educated think, what can we expect from the uneducated? — Apollodorus
I think this encapsulates the socialist or socialistic problem. An ideology that aims to "socialize" a population out of existence or otherwise promotes policies with that result seems highly suspect to me. — Apollodorus
Socrates said something like that and he wanted us to be aware of each other. In the US textbooks prepare the young for life, not to be products for industry as it started doing in 1958. I think it is obvious that was not a good change in education. We have improved by eliminating the old prejudices but without shared values and principles we are in big trouble.
The breakdown of family comes with education for a technological society with unknown values and that worries me. I can see the benefits of weak families but I think the problems are much worse.
Thank you for acknowledging forcing women into the workforce takes away their right to be mothers, and caring daughters and granddaughters. :lol: If everyone were aware of what it is like to give birth to a child and get up several times during the night to feed the child, there might be greater acceptance of giving her time to be a mother. And I hear there is a reluctance to give family time off the care for older members or sick members of the family. Seriously? What are our values? Humans succeeded because of their willingness to care for each other and shouldn't a civilized society encourage that? It is not just an inconvenience to find someone to care for a family member, but it is anti-family to be put in the position of finding someone else to do caregiving.
We had family fidelity when women stayed home to care for their families and that is being destroyed as now they must have fidelity with their employer, and sorry family, you all must fend for yourselves. It is not gays destroying family values. I think, what you have suggested is socialism can strengthen the family instead of weakening it. Have I interpreted you correctly? I was not thinking of socialism in that way but I really like that idea. — Athena
Are you suggesting democracy is about being full human beings? Not just voting? I wish we all understood democracy as a way of life and an experience of being empowered to fully actualize ourselves. Government is one aspect of democracy. Individualism and family are other aspects of the democratic way of life, and if we replaced the autocratic model of industry with the democratic model, we could better manifest the democratic way of life. — Athena
I interpret that to mean you are opposed to socialism. I can see socialism going either way, supporting families or destroying them. What is the goal of socialism? Is it possible it can be harmful or beneficial depending on the determined goal? — Athena
However, I think the main goal of socialism is total state control over society, economy, and politics. And that isn't very democratic. — Apollodorus
But unless we revert to pre-capitalist or pre-industrial conditions, and seeing that socialism or communism is not an option, I think we are stuck with capitalism - until someone comes up with a better idea. :smile: — Apollodorus
Athens imitated Sparta for military reasons when Prussia began invading but it never took care of its people as Sparta did
This is astonishing to me. We use the term "New World Order" as though we in the US invented that idea. It is not our idea. It is a Prussian idea, developed before the first world war, and is what Eisenhower called the Military/Industrial Complex. It is what Hitler was about, and when the US adopted the German bureaucratic model that shifted power from the individual to the state, and replaced its liberal education with the German model of education for technology and military and industrial purpose, and replaced classical philosophy with German philosophy, it put itself on the same path Germany followed. Calling this a conspiracy is non sense. It is what the Prussians did when they took charge of the whole of Germany. They applied Prussian military bureaucracy to citizens, and focused education on technology for the rapid development of military technology. Industry is used to support the military and the military is used to defend a nation's economic interest.
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