socialism in all ts forms and varieties is PURE SHIT.  NOTHING MORE, NOTHING
LESS.  JUST PURE S H I T.

On Wed, Oct 15, 2008 at 6:09 PM, Lone Wolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> This post is particilarly foolish.
>
> The claim that the Wall Street bailout is a socialist measure is
> absurd on its face. Paulson, the former CEO of Goldman Sachs, who has
> an estimated personal fortune of $700 million and is a member of the
> most right-wing administration in US history, has authored a bill that
> will ultimately divert trillions of dollars to the coffers of the
> biggest banks in the land. This is socialist?
>
> Such claims display a combination of stupidity and deceit. Those who
> make them rely on the low level of historical knowledge and political
> understanding among the American people, for which the population is
> not to blame. It is the product of the decades-long promotion of
> political reaction and celebration of the most backward ideologies and
> conceptions—including hostility toward science—along with the gutting
> of public education.
>
> A central component of this debasement of political and intellectual
> life has been the promotion of anti-communism, based largely on the
> false identification of socialism and Marxism with their political
> opposite, Stalinism.
>
> The Socialist Equality Party, at its recent founding congress,
> explained concisely what socialism is in its Statement of Principles.
>
> "Socialism portends the greatest and most progressive transformation
> of the form of man's social organization in world history—the ending
> of society based on classes and, therefore, of the exploitation of
> human beings by other human beings."
>
> "The key industrial, financial, technological and natural resources
> must be taken out of the sphere of the capitalist market and private
> ownership, transferred to society and placed under the democratic
> supervision and control of the working class. The organization of
> economic life, on the basis of the capitalist law of value, must be
> replaced with its socialist reorganization on the basis of democratic
> economic planning, whose purpose is the fulfillment of social needs.
>
> "New forms and structures of genuine participatory democracy—arising
> in the course of revolutionary mass struggles and representative of
> the working class majority of the population- must be developed as the
> foundations of a workers' government; that is, a government of the
> workers, for the workers, and by the workers. The policy of such a
> government, as it introduces those measures essential for the
> socialist transformation of economic life, would be to encourage and
> actively promote a vast expansion of the democratic working class'
> participation in, and control over, decision-making processes."
>
> The bailout measures are being enacted not by the working people, but
> are being imposed behind the backs of the people by the most powerful
> bankers, through their political representatives in both parties.
> Ownership and control of the financial levers of economic life remain
> entirely in the private hands of the richest people in the country.
> Those who have presided over the failure of private firms are
> dictating the terms of their own rescue at the expense of the people.
>
> The social interests that are being defended are determined by the
> class nature of the state power that is formulating and enacting the
> measures. The events of the past month have demonstrated as never
> before that the American government and the US two-party system are
> political instruments not of the people, but rather of a financial
> oligarchy.
>
> For their part, the right-wing Republicans initially opposed the
> bailout from the standpoint of "free market" capitalism. They are not
> against government intervention into the market per se. Rather, they
> oppose government action that in any way constrains the activities of
> the most powerful sections of finance capital.
>
> They label as "socialism" any government measure that limits the
> ability of the major banks and corporations to maximize their profits,
> including such things as the minimum wage, restrictions on hours of
> work, health and safety regulations, environmental regulations, etc.
> They oppose tax increases for the wealthy and denounce as "big
> government" any and all government-run social programs.
>
> Because the Democrats, along with their presidential candidate, Barack
> Obama, served as the bailout's most enthusiastic supporters and its
> principal legislative midwives, Republicans were able to make a
> demagogic pretense of opposing Wall Street. What this shows is not
> that the Republicans have converted themselves into the unlikely
> defenders of the common man, but how far to the right the US political
> establishment as a whole has moved. The Democratic Party, having long
> since repudiated any policy of social reform, has openly identified
> itself with the financial aristocracy.
>
> What would a socialist approach to the financial crisis look like?
> Emergency measures would be taken to transform the great banks, hedge
> funds, insurance companies and financial houses into public utilities.
> They would be placed under the democratic control of the working
> class, with safeguards for the savings of small depositors. Their
> resources would be used for productive and socially useful purposes
> and to alleviate the suffering of the population.
>
> Trillions of dollars would be allocated to rebuild the infrastructure,
> provide new and high-quality housing, improve education, provide
> universal health care and access to higher education, and clean up the
> environment. Everyone would be guaranteed a job and a decent wage. The
> workweek would be reduced, with no loss in pay, and wages would be
> fully indexed to account for inflation.
>
> The tax burden would be shifted from the working class to the richest
> 10 percent of the population.
>
> There would be a full and public investigation into the activities of
> the banks and financial firms and the books of all major corporations
> would be opened to public inspection.
>
> The wealth of financial industry executives and large stockholders
> would be appropriated, and they, along with their servants among the
> political elite, would face criminal investigation for the plundering
> of the economy that has led to the current crisis.
>
> In order to fight for this socialist perspective, working people must
> break with the two parties of big business and build an independent
> political party that has, as its primary aim, the reorganization of
> the economy to meet social needs, rather than the profit interests of
> the financial elite. In the November election, only the Socialist
> Equality Party and its presidential and vice presidential candidates,
> Jerry White and Bill Van Auken, are advancing this socialist
> alternative. We urge readers of the World Socialist Web Site to
> support our campaign, vote for Jerry White and Bill Van Auken, and
> join the SEP.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Oct 16, 6:41 am, Cold Water <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Sent to you by CW via Google Reader:
> >
> > Mass. gov. set to make layoffs, budget cuts (Socialism at work)
> >
> > Mass. gov. set to make layoffs, budget cuts
> >
> > Worcester Telegram & Gazette By GLEN JOHNSON AP Political WriterOctober
> 15, 2008
> >
> > BOSTONâ€" Key players in the state's criminal justice system stepped
> forward with a series of budget cuts on Wednesday, just hours before Gov.
> Deval Patrick was to announce up to $800 million of cuts in other parts of
> the state budget to offset lagging tax collections.
> >
> > The chief of the state's court system and the attorney general announced
> reductions in the budgets they control, while three of the state's 11
> district attorneys traveled to the Statehouse to offer voluntary cuts they
> hoped would stave off even deeper ones for prosecutors.
> >
> > They said the economic downturn sparking the cuts would likely trigger an
> increase in crime.
> >
> > The governor planned a news conference timed to the start of the 5 p.m.
> local newscasts to reveal the size of the state's projected revenue
> shortfall and the cuts to offset it. Various estimates have pegged the
> shortfall between $800 million and $1.5 billion. Either is a sizable chunk
> in a $28.1 billion state budget.
> >
> > Some 90 minutes beforehand, the governor was to huddle with senior
> government leaders at the Statehouse to outline his decisions.
> >
> > "His cuts are deep, and his cuts are going to be painful," House Speaker
> Salvatore DiMasi, who met with Gov. Deval Patrick late Tuesday, said
> Wednesday.
> >
> > Margaret Marshall, who oversees the court system as chief justice of the
> Supreme Judicial Court, said in a statement that her preliminary plan
> includes a hiring freeze effective this week, cancellation of departmental
> conferences, restriction of in-state travel and the elimination of
> out-of-state travel. No furloughs or layoffs are planned.
> >
> > Marshall said further cuts would be challenging.
> >
> > "Unlike state agencies which have an array of programs, the court system
> has a single core mission - the delivery of justice. We are committed to
> reducing our expenses to the most spare and essential functions necessary to
> maintain our mission and constitutional obligations," the chief justice
> wrote.
> >
> > Article Link  http://www.telegram.com/article/20081015/APN/810151223
> >
> > COMMENTS:
> >
> > Obammy's America ... take a long look, folks. Slap some of the droolers
> in the back to wake them up.
> >
> > That said, I'm sure these government monkeys about to be laid off will
> find a way to blame Bush.
> >
>


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