This page is no longer updated, and is the old forum. For new topics visit the New HOL forum.
Register | Edit Profile | Subscriptions | Forum Rules | Log In
EverybodyDannsNow SE19 02 Feb 23 9.53am | |
---|---|
Originally posted by Stirlingsays
I would say that the societies that have succeeded in history and end up being admired have allowed the most freedoms and encourage meritocracy and have created high trust and competent institutions because of that .....we have seen that eroded over the last few decades. Communism and its various forms never succeeded in creating a society that masses wanted to live under. I think the principle reason for that lies at the heart of the left's problem....it's refusal to acknowledge the legitimacy of normal human nature. When people are compelled to all believe the same things you essentially create a society that lies. Instead of wishing to work with it there is a never ending striving to 'correct' it. To force people to be 'good', whatever that is....instead of creating inducements via meritocracy it enforces the myth of equality onto people.....it talks about better societies but ends up downgrading them and creating the fear to disagree. Edited by Stirlingsays (01 Feb 2023 10.30pm) I think supporters of genuine, all-out socialism are few and far between and that's why a lot of the narrative around this topic is just silly - we've already had Thatcher and Mao covered in the first 10 posts on the topic which says it all. We've always functioned best as a capitalist society with some socialist ideas and policies interwoven within that - my argument (and I believe a lot of the left) is that we have let capitalism run a little too wild over the course of the current government and that is why we have seen such economic inequality take root to the extent it has. To want our society to move further to the left and shift that scale towards some more state interventions and socialist ideas does not mean you want to live in a socialist state or that you're jealous of successful people or any of that other lazy nonsense. As a broader point, I think the 'human nature' stuff is not as straightforward as you present it, and whilst it's important to recognise and accept those sort of innate attributes, it does not mean you have to succumb to them or base all decisions around the worst case scenario - what is the point in trying to build society if not to at least try to overcome our base desires and instincts. It's a little watery, but to me, that should at least be the ambition. There are many, many ways human nature has 'changed' over the centuries and so the idea that it is a fixed constant I find difficult to accept.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
EverybodyDannsNow SE19 02 Feb 23 9.57am | |
---|---|
Originally posted by HKOwen
Labour have a sense of entitlement to northern votes from the " working class ". When the Red Wall collapsed the Corbynista cohort, particularly Long-Bailey and her ilk, basically said the voters were too thick to understand what was good for them. I agree Labour aren't very good, and neither are the Conservatives. The problem is how get of out of the partisan political mess we are in. The first past the post system has IMO become unfit for purpose. Perhaps coalitions would force a direction less steered by ideology. All a bit depressing really, very little to choose between Labour and Conservative now. The country has no more tax to give, the dog whistles of non dom status and " bankers " would do little in reality in terms of new revenue. Indeed, these assumptions assume the earnings all remain in UK to be taxed which is unlikely. We need to look at non essential spending on vanity projects whether its a train line or a project to decolonise an author's work etc We need a long spell of common sense in govt spending which I admit is very unlikely. I understand the broader point, but I don't think Lee Anderson is a moron because he's northern or working class. I think he's a moron because he's demonstrated that he is on many occasions. I would've thought it's also fairly obvious that me posting on a messageboard is not representative of 'Labours attitude' towards anything, even more so when I'm not a labour fan or voter. Agree re FPTP. Disagree re 'no more tax to give', as you probably expected
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
EverybodyDannsNow SE19 02 Feb 23 10.00am | |
---|---|
Originally posted by cryrst
socialism and effects go hand in hand with all labour parties. "you just chose to ignore them all, stick your fingers in your ears, and continue parroting decade-old clichés."
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Stirlingsays 02 Feb 23 11.36am | |
---|---|
Originally posted by EverybodyDannsNow
There are many, many ways human nature has 'changed' over the centuries and so the idea that it is a fixed constant I find difficult to accept. Do you have an example? I think this point is one of the key aspects that the left, and indeed many on the right, get wrong and the damage and human misery it has caused is incalculable. Edited by Stirlingsays (02 Feb 2023 11.37am)
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Teddy Eagle 02 Feb 23 11.56am | |
---|---|
Originally posted by EverybodyDannsNow
I think supporters of genuine, all-out socialism are few and far between and that's why a lot of the narrative around this topic is just silly - we've already had Thatcher and Mao covered in the first 10 posts on the topic which says it all. We've always functioned best as a capitalist society with some socialist ideas and policies interwoven within that - my argument (and I believe a lot of the left) is that we have let capitalism run a little too wild over the course of the current government and that is why we have seen such economic inequality take root to the extent it has. To want our society to move further to the left and shift that scale towards some more state interventions and socialist ideas does not mean you want to live in a socialist state or that you're jealous of successful people or any of that other lazy nonsense. As a broader point, I think the 'human nature' stuff is not as straightforward as you present it, and whilst it's important to recognise and accept those sort of innate attributes, it does not mean you have to succumb to them or base all decisions around the worst case scenario - what is the point in trying to build society if not to at least try to overcome our base desires and instincts. It's a little watery, but to me, that should at least be the ambition. There are many, many ways human nature has 'changed' over the centuries and so the idea that it is a fixed constant I find difficult to accept. The Mao comment was in response to I would agree that human nature has changed to some extent even in the last 50 years. Whether those changes have been for the better is another matter.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
steeleye20 Croydon 02 Feb 23 12.25pm | |
---|---|
Every day a fresh disaster, now the probation service pressured by government is releasing high risk offenders to cut costs, resulting in a murder every week. The tories could leave office with honour but its hardly likely. They are to blame they have had far too long in office there is nothing better than it was 13 years ago, the outlook for the country is wholly negative. Even Russia at war has a better economic outlook. Off with the old, a new brighter generation may emerge but we are not holding our breath.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
EverybodyDannsNow SE19 02 Feb 23 1.37pm | |
---|---|
Originally posted by Stirlingsays
Do you have an example? I think this point is one of the key aspects that the left, and indeed many on the right, get wrong and the damage and human misery it has caused is incalculable. Edited by Stirlingsays (02 Feb 2023 11.37am) I think it's a discussion which would first need an agreed definition on what we mean by 'human nature' and what traits it encompasses. It's difficult to define whether I think 'human nature' itself can change, or whether we can educate ourselves to a point that we can ignore/overcome it, but I think the end result is the same.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
The Dolphin 02 Feb 23 2.32pm | |
---|---|
Originally posted by steeleye20
Every day a fresh disaster, now the probation service pressured by government is releasing high risk offenders to cut costs, resulting in a murder every week. The tories could leave office with honour but its hardly likely. They are to blame they have had far too long in office there is nothing better than it was 13 years ago, the outlook for the country is wholly negative. Even Russia at war has a better economic outlook. Off with the old, a new brighter generation may emerge but we are not holding our breath.
Again - why is it always the Government's fault?
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
The Dolphin 02 Feb 23 2.35pm | |
---|---|
We've always functioned best as a capitalist society with some socialist ideas and policies interwoven within that - my argument (and I believe a lot of the left) is that we have let capitalism run a little too wild over the course of the current government and that is why we have seen such economic inequality take root to the extent it has.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Glazier#1 02 Feb 23 3.21pm | |
---|---|
Originally posted by The Dolphin
Again - why is it always the Government's fault? What caused it to happen is that, as usual, the service was hit by staff cuts and underfunding, causing the operatives to have caseloads that were too many to cope with, staff overworked and stressed out, unachievable targets... this is what causes mistakes in the service which had consequently become not fit for purpose. So yes, the workers saw the person released when they shouldn't have been but it is through governmental decisions that this happened. So the government becomes culpable. So, so wrong to call out the public service workers themselves. The service(s) become not fit for purpose through governmental decisions. Many public workers workers work their socks off with a background as described above. All in the name of 'efficiency'. Lol Edited by Glazier#1 (02 Feb 2023 3.24pm)
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Glazier#1 02 Feb 23 3.25pm | |
---|---|
Originally posted by The Dolphin
We've always functioned best as a capitalist society with some socialist ideas and policies interwoven within that - my argument (and I believe a lot of the left) is that we have let capitalism run a little too wild over the course of the current government and that is why we have seen such economic inequality take root to the extent it has. Agree.
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
steeleye20 Croydon 02 Feb 23 3.32pm | |
---|---|
Originally posted by Glazier#1
What caused it to happen is that, as usual, the service was hit by staff cuts and underfunding, causing the operatives to have caseloads that were too many to cope with, staff overworked and stressed out, unachievable targets... this is what causes mistakes in the service which had consequently become not fit for purpose. So yes, the workers saw the person released when they shouldn't have been but it is through governmental decisions that this happened. So the government becomes culpable. So, so wrong to call out the public service workers themselves. The service(s) become not fit for purpose through governmental decisions. Many public workers workers work their socks off with a background as described above. All in the name of 'efficiency'. Lol Edited by Glazier#1 (02 Feb 2023 3.24pm) This was also a tory privatisation remember 'Failing Grayling'
|
|
Alert a moderator to this post |
Registration is now on our new message board
To login with your existing username you will need to convert your account over to the new message board.
All images and text on this site are copyright © 1999-2024 The Holmesdale Online, unless otherwise stated.
Web Design by Guntrisoft Ltd.