Vic
Elite Member
This seems to be a prevailing but unspoken opinion here, that an economic collapse will lead to an end to corporatism and bring about socialist reforms. Generally, this opinion is backed up with a divisive attitude of pessimism and a claim that the Great Depression and the FDR administration did exactly that (when in fact that time brought about -- other than the small bone of Social Security thrown to the general public -- a huge surge in corporatism, followed by WWII, the military-industrial complex, a seemingly never-ending state of war and fear, the Red Scare/Cold War, etc., your typical corporo-fascist state).
So in light of all that, and the current global banking crisis (mistakenly thought of here as just being an American housing bubble, despite the banks collapsing in Europe), I'd like to see where people stand on this issue, and to have them back up their claims with genuine facts and intelligent opinion (read: take your trolling and/or your vacuous pompous rhetoric elsewhere).
My opinion BTW is that economics is more social science than mathematics, and that the intangible of confidence determines economic swings more than any other physical factor (despite perhaps geography, as Jared Diamond so eloquently reasoned in Guns, Germs, and Steel). As such, those with power and money are able to manipulate public confidence in such a way that a lack of confidence, and the corresponding economic downturn, can cause the public to run to them as a means of finding safety in uncertain times. For example, why did humanity subject itself to tyrant kings for thousands of years? Answer: because the kings made them feel safe. The old myth that we were subject to the kings because they already had the power was disproven by liberalism, which demonstrated that the power had been in the people all the time, and subsequently led to today's modern democracies.
In such fashion, and because the basic premise of liberalism is an optimistic view of humanity, it seems to me that this driving pessimism has its basis in forces seeking to reinstitute authoritarian control, particularly with the unknowingly help of those youthful idiots deluded enough to believe that it will bring about pro-common people socialist reforms, despite all the teachings of history proving otherwise.
Anyway, discuss.
So in light of all that, and the current global banking crisis (mistakenly thought of here as just being an American housing bubble, despite the banks collapsing in Europe), I'd like to see where people stand on this issue, and to have them back up their claims with genuine facts and intelligent opinion (read: take your trolling and/or your vacuous pompous rhetoric elsewhere).
My opinion BTW is that economics is more social science than mathematics, and that the intangible of confidence determines economic swings more than any other physical factor (despite perhaps geography, as Jared Diamond so eloquently reasoned in Guns, Germs, and Steel). As such, those with power and money are able to manipulate public confidence in such a way that a lack of confidence, and the corresponding economic downturn, can cause the public to run to them as a means of finding safety in uncertain times. For example, why did humanity subject itself to tyrant kings for thousands of years? Answer: because the kings made them feel safe. The old myth that we were subject to the kings because they already had the power was disproven by liberalism, which demonstrated that the power had been in the people all the time, and subsequently led to today's modern democracies.
In such fashion, and because the basic premise of liberalism is an optimistic view of humanity, it seems to me that this driving pessimism has its basis in forces seeking to reinstitute authoritarian control, particularly with the unknowingly help of those youthful idiots deluded enough to believe that it will bring about pro-common people socialist reforms, despite all the teachings of history proving otherwise.
Anyway, discuss.