Your OP was a whistle to the local dogs, who are now barking at nothing. — Banno
No one's opinions should be censored in our constitutional republic. PERIOD!!!!!! — charles ferraro
Most of The Left do not want the mere reforms you've listed, we want to change, that is, replace "the system" – governmental & economic – completely. — 180 Proof
Specifically, we want to change the game from shareholder control to stakeholder control and not just change the rules which perpetuate "the status quo" (i.e. shareholder control). The latter are "liberals" at most, many are "conservatives" too and not what The Left consider "left", whereas the former are (radical) Leftists — 180 Proof
That's how I see things and, to the extent we disagree, Xtrix, I suspect it's more of a matter of semantics than substance, and not worth quibbling over definitions & labels for me to get my point across when I say "the Left, as far as the Anerican electorate is concerned, are outnumbered (approximately?) 10:1" IMO. If you still disagree, then let's agree to disagree on the precise ratio, but I don't suspect we disagree that to a significant degree The Left is outnumbered by, let's call them, the Center-Right + Right in the US. Or do we disagree even on that? — 180 Proof
The very idea of there being an uprising is skipping steps, there isn't any other option than hard work by organizers and taking over local governments and councils, which accelerated due to the Sanders campaign. It's difficult to keep track of the work being done because we live in a continent sized country but it's there if you've been following your state politics, just don't expect to overturn the country in the next few years. — Saphsin
America has long been a majority center-right country and the left (which isn't by any stretch a monolith) is outnumbered, I hazard to guess, by a ratio of at least 10-to-1. — 180 Proof
What exactly are you implying by "accept"?
— Xtrix
You accept the party when you just hope that the party would change it's course as an internal event. Or think that it's meaningless to vote for any other party however disappointed you are in the party: that your vote would be then "lost". — ssu
Socialism is like talking about "god" -- it can mean almost anything you want. If universal health care and free public education is socialism, fine. If not, that's fine too. Who cares. — Xtrix
One should care what parties are in favor of them. It's not actually socialism, you know. Many right-wing parties at least in Europe are for them. Good example is Sweden. Put often to be an example of socialism, the country is quite capitalistic and "capitalism friendly". Modern Social Democracy isn't totally against capitalism. — ssu
Right, because you're doing so much to change it by complaining about it on the internet.
— Xtrix
It really isn't my thing as a foreigner to do that. I'm still quite happy at politics in my country. The US-type polarization hasn't yet landed here. Hopefully the bullying never reaches these shores. — ssu
What I'm saying is that many people have these illusions on how much power the current political parties have and assume that the landscape is totally fixed. It isn't. In the US example a third party could rise to oppose the duopoly if it would have the strategy to start from the grass roots level, from communal and state level. Not thinking that a rapid dash of a third contender in the Presidential elections would do the job. It won't. To improve (or restore) democracy, one first has to believe in it. — ssu
Well, if you accept the two party system, then don't be surprised when nothing really changes. — ssu
Besides, a lot of younger Americans don't actually want socialism in the classic sense. — ssu
So you both will uphold the two party system. — ssu
I must be too stupid to understand why a big ball of molten rock - 4000 miles deep and 26,000 miles around, isn't a viable source of energy — counterpunch
Cool, but if you break it down by country, you can see fertility rate vs CO2 footprint. — frank
And getting worse. But really because of the greed of only a few countries. Otherwise we could sustain our population for a while.
Still, to outright say "it's not a thing" is just more buffoonery. Much like the super-discovery of magma energy by an internet troll. — Xtrix
Over population is a real and horrible thing. — James Riley
I can't explain why again, because I tried twice. Then again, they say third time's a charm. — counterpunch
If you still don't get it, there's no need to contradict me again. — counterpunch
Bernie is more like the lure for those young Americans who basically are for social democracy (or that kind of stuff), yet Bernie will bow down to the party machine once the actual decision time comes. Bernie is all too happy to be "the second runner up" to what the party leaders want. And if he gets some legislation through, some success in moving the party to left, that is all he wants. — ssu
You see, the Democratic Party isn't a social democratic party. Hence it simply won't go for universal health care or workers rights as a fully fledged social democratic party would do. In the US you have a centrist and a right-wing party. Simple as that. — ssu
And the idea, implied by others here, that philosophy, whether on or offline, has hitherto been--or should be--free of accolades, status indicators, social pressure, and so on, strikes me as naive. — jamalrob
If that's magma, fine. I've got no truck with your magma gospel. Get out there and get it done. — James Riley
I long for the day when utterly selfish profit-seeking homosexuals can get filthy rich selling weed.
Republicans in particular, quite recently, are turning their back on capitalism (economic freedom). — Kasperanza
You're an extremely angry person. — frank
Evidence, to show what? What exactly is it that you want me to prove? What is it that you can't google for yourself? — counterpunch
If I recommended a book, what are you going to do? Run out and buy it? Read it so we can discuss it? What the point? — counterpunch
All the rest of it e.g. low taxes, small government, strong military defense, prayer in schools, pro-life, family values, second amendment rights, "America First", reverse discrimination, "Law & Order", "War on Drugs", etc are just window-dressing and bloody chum tossed out to lure sufficient numbers of unwitting, know-nothing/opportunistic centrists to their "cause" in order to cobble together electoral majorities as needed. — 180 Proof
It started in the 1980s. Read David Harvey's Brief History of Neoliberalism — frank
The Republicans just look more insane for you. Here it should be good to take a few steps back a glance at the politics from another viewpoint. — ssu
Yet I think many Americans still are in the center. — ssu
The Republican party exists to line the pockets of their friends and sponsors (and their own as well, of course); to assure that the wealthy and large corporations are predominant in politics; to maintain the status quo socially and culturally; and finally, to convince those who are less fortunate that they should remain so because that is in their own interest and that of the United States. — Ciceronianus the White
Is it that - having me point out a possible, but seemingly unlikely means of securing a sustainable future implies horrors too terrible to contemplate? Because, if that's why you would rather not hear from me - I'd counter that's exactly why you need to listen. — counterpunch
Sustainability is the biggest philosophical question we have ever faced, and your cowardly viciousness doesn't alter the fact I've been thinking about this, reading about it, and worrying for over 25 years. I know what I think about the most important philosophical question of our time, and what I think is at least interesting, but if you're not interested please feel free to go fuck yourself elsewhere! — counterpunch
magma is potentially, a high grade source of limitless base load power.
— counterpunch
So is absolutely any source whatsoever according to your current usage of 'potentially', which seems to include anything anyone reckons. — Isaac
Capitalism works. Capitalism has the knowledge, technology and skills to develop and apply the technology. — counterpunch
It is the prevailing economic paradigm — counterpunch
I wasn't closely following the debate with the crackpot, — SophistiCat
I'm saying a left wing anti-capitalist green commie approach to sustainability is wrong — counterpunch
Wind and solar are weak and inconstant, while magma energy can give us vast, constant base load power. — counterpunch
What I propose hasn't been done. As far as I'm aware, the research doesn't exist. There is other research that is relevant in some respect, a piece of technology here, a geological fact there, but as far as I'm aware, there are no significant plans to plug into the planet at scale. — counterpunch
But gathering a weak and inconstant form of energy from 225,000 square miles - just to meet current global energy demand; the staggering ongoing costs of constructing and maintaining such an array, and the question of recycling and replacing those panels after 25 years, to say nothing of the facilities required to store that energy, we be locked in and bankrupted, and have no more energy to spend than before. — counterpunch
You given nothing to indicate the underlined. Everything you say might be nonsense for all we know because you refuse to cite anything. — Isaac
That some industry is subsidized or, well, basically the whole government is running on money printed by the Central bank, doesn't change either the Democrats or the Republicans having their differences. — ssu
ell, if the Republicans are a political party, then presumably there is a political position somewhere like conservatism, capitalism, anti-socialism, etc. — Apollodorus
Usually parties would have an official webpage where this information would be easy to find. — ssu
When you look at that above, it actually does say what modern GOP is all about. — ssu
A free enterprise society unencumbered by government interference or subsidies.
I feel the only way to escape this paradox is to say that we are designed by some higher truth in the universe. — Franz Liszt
I think this is one piece of a larger picture of wealth transfer.
— Xtrix
It's roughly 700 Billion a year literally by the government to the military suppliers. What larger one did you have in mind? — Cheshire
what do they stand for, at bottom?
— Xtrix
Fear.
Donald Trump.
Some Republicans are on board with their base.
Some Republicans disagree with their base on principle, but subordinate that disagreement with a desire to keep the base.
Some Republicans disagree with their base and would not subordinate their disagreement with their base but they are under threat of physical violence or extortion from their base.
Fear. — James Riley
They maintain the economic dynamic of an economy that relies on wealth transfer to weapons manufacturing in order to sustain a manufacturing base. — Cheshire
It would be difficult to distill a consistent Republican philosophy from Nixon to Reagan to Bush Sr., to GW, to Trump, domestically or in foreign policy.
Today, it's a party of cult, with absolute allegiance to Trump required.
When not in power, it's an opposition party with little affirmative plans. — Hanover
Geothermal energy is an existent facet of energy science and engineering. There are already thousands of experts in the field. It's what they believe that is of relevance. — Isaac
There's a famous saying that fusion has been 5 years away for the past 30 years. And that was 20 years ago. It's still five years away. I'm not optimistic. Drilling for magma energy seems a lot more certain, and a less complicated source of energy. — counterpunch
Of course, it will be difficult to do - a complex engineering challenge, but it is at least conceivably feasible. There is a vast source of energy there; large enough to make sense of our response to climate change. We need that energy. Are you saying it is technologically impossible to harness the heat energy of the planet on a large scale? I think otherwise. — counterpunch
A disinterested view of the science seems to recommend we harness the massive heat energy of magma to produce limitless electrical power - to sustain civilisations carbon free, and to capture carbon, produce hydrogen fuel, desalinate and irrigate, and recycle — counterpunch
You keep saying I want to comfort myself by not calling it an existential threat, but that was never my intention. At every opportunity I said it was going to be very bad... but not an existential threat. I agree that we shouldn't be comforting ourselves by underestimating the risk or ignoring small risks with grave consequences, but at the same time we shouldn't overstate how bad it's going to be either, because really it's bad enough as it is. — ChatteringMonkey
Anyway I think we actually agree for the most part, just not on the way we want to communicate the issue. I think you lose credibility by overstating the case and people get desensitized by continual doomsaying (i.e. the boy cried wolf), while you seem to think we need to spur people into action by putting it into the strongest of terms. — ChatteringMonkey
And I think accurate assessment of risks matters, for the kind of measures we are willing to take. If it really were an impending existential threat or even "just" a civilization collapsing threat, a la a large asteroid about to impact, we should we willing to contemplate the most drastic of measure, like shutting down all fossil fuels and slaughtering all livestock overnight, pumping aerosols into the atmosphere, declaring war on nations that aren't complying with zero-emissions etc... Some measure would be more or less disruptive for our societies. That's the question for me.... not should we do something about it, but how far and how fast should we be willing to go? How much disruption to current societies do the risks warrant? — ChatteringMonkey
It's kind of obvious that you don't know much about this and other features of climate change. — frank
You looked at decline. I said shutdown. — frank
So the earth will cool down is what you "think", eh?
— Xtrix
Guess what happens if the AMOC shuts down. — frank
Earth cooling down is what I think'll happen. — TheMadFool
It's not an existential threat, not even close.
— ChatteringMonkey
Really? It certainly is for some people and some nations. Killed some, and soon will make some uninhabitable. Of course, those aren't the important people, so voila, no existential threat! — tim wood
