NeantHumain wrote:
Well, yes, but British Labour wrote advocating socialism out of their charter decades ago. Socialism and communism are broad terms, but I wouldn't consider a capitalist society with some business regulations and social welfare socialist by any stretch. Tea Partiers obviously do. To me, socialism is in contrast with capitalism; one is not simply government service and the other privately held business that can mix and match. A capitalist society will still have a government, but that government is promoting capitalism (as in the case of the United States).Tea Partiers disagree on aspects of the relationship, but that doesn't make it not capitalism, and it doesn't make it socialism.
a considered point, however i would argue that the british labour party never advocated real socialism anyway. it is worth noting that its origins lie in the fabian society.
what is largely considered socialism is in fact state capitalism, where the state owns the means of production. it can be argued, i suppose, that in this scenario the state operates as the beneficiary of the proletariat, but even this is incongruous with the spirit of socialism. the soviet union, the eastern block, north korea, cuba, venezuela, all operate, or operated, under a state capitalist model.
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?Civil government, so far as it is instituted for the security of property, is in reality instituted for the defense of the rich against the poor, or of those who have some property against those who have none at all.?
Adam Smith