
Those people are and were fascists, people who use liberal democracy to gain power and then completely abandon it once they get that power, that is how they operate. People have called me alarmist for years for calling Trump a fascist, but it’s clear to anyone with eyes NOWADAYS that it was a correct characterization.
Very easily, actually, since liberals always hate socialists more than fascists. The socialist hates to conceal his ideas. The fascist, on the other hand, is an adept liar. The fascist lies, says the socialists are the real threat, and the liberals go along with it. All of a sudden it’s criminal to oppose the regime (look up NPSM-7), and the liberals just keep going about their day because nothing is different FOR THEM
our economic system is the root of most of our stratification. things that are the fault of said stratification get blamed on other people (it’s their own fault, it’s the immigrants, etc) because it’s a simple answer. each attempt to solve issues that doesn’t address the underlying economic/material aspect only pushes people to further extremes. nazi germany didn’t come out of nowhere, they were in a dire economic crisis before the rise of the party.
I think the founders designed the system some what well… people will never agree on anything. ever. period. So a system with consent of the governed that allows for small incremental changes (generally, ofc not always) when there isn’t a clear consensus and swift changes (civil rights act) when there is… I think overall is a better system
Liberals, people who believe in the norms of our system, can never understand that I despise the entirety of the system. Conservatives play upon that by aiming at the people who NEED the system to change, but blaming their problems on people who had nothing to do with it. Both ways, the extremely wealthy people with the sway over the current system maintain their power.
I mean, I don’t 100% believe the system is bad in its entirety. We must learn from the current system to build something better, it can’t just start from scratch. But I think liberalism and capitalism have their fundamental flaws, and there is nothing wrong with acknowledging that.
I’m taking a Constitutional Law class right now about the rights of the individual, and I think a lot of the way the *objectively liberal* SCOTUS rules, a lot of what they’ve ruled in the past is GREAT! That being said, using the texts the current system is built on, it is quite easy to dismantle that system from the inside. I believe we need something smarter and stronger, to prevent the issues we see in modern American politics.
understand that marxism isn’t necessarily communism (unless you’re talking marxism-leninism) it’s a social/political theory that the economic and material realities we live in have a fundamental effect on everything else culturally. you can find lots of work that uses marxism while discussing things that aren’t communism (nowadays it’s more likely to be labeled some variation of critical theory)
That’s right, I first learned about Marxism as “Conflict Theory” within Sociology (I took Sociology my freshman year of HS, sophomore year was Econ, Marx is a founding father of Sociology in general) and it fundamentally made sense to me, which is probably why I view my academic pursuits through a Marxist lens to this day.
Marx did come up with Communism, and wrote the Communist Manifesto, but he was never actually in charge of a country. Marx-Leninism, the ideology of the Soviet Union, differs from what Marx had to say in a number of ways it’s too late at night for me to get into. So while MLs derive their ideology from Marxism, it is an evolution from 40 years after Marx died and not quite the same as what he wrote.
he did but bro has a huge body of work. marx was a political theorist, historian, philosopher, economist, and journalist too. the communist manifesto is a very small drop in the bucket when it comes to the entirety of his work (tho it is probably the most broadly known) tho his critique of capitalism is consistent. marxism typically has an element of praxis, or changing the system for the better, but that doesn’t mean communism for everyone.
Especially since Functionalism itself fits under the Marxist perception of Conflict Theory. Almost every argument for Functionalism is also an argument for Marxism. But that’s college senior level philosophy and sociology, which again, it is too late for me to get into the nitty gritty of.