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0 sats \ 2 replies \ @00 30 Nov 2022
Sustainability benefits, including free medical care, health care for the less fortunate, have all disappeared, making the recovery of the working class more or less inevitable. The economic recovery has failed, but people still live short and, if the economy does not recover, much of the real estate and investment that once made up the vast majority of the GDP can no longer support themselves. I see this as an economic collapse. I see it as a crisis of democracy itself. It is a system of democracy that has always been rooted in individual rights, the concept of individual rights. But the political structures have always collapsed because of the "democratic" forces of social change. That is why the working class has shown itself so strongly in opposition to capitalism.
But what about the anti-capitalist right wing? Have they lost in the aftermath of the failed economic recovery? It's more than clear that if capitalism succeeds against all its claims of democratic right, it does not succeed against all its accusations that they are socialists, communists, socialists, or not at all. What might be really happening now is that the left has, to paraphrase Lenin, "drowned in fear." What about the right? We need the next wave of left-wing populism and populism that we hope will unite all the left parties across the world, even if only slightly. This can only happen if it combines all the right-wing forces under one framework.
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1 sat \ 1 reply \ @Chillywater 30 Nov 2022
I agree with you that this system is broken. Natural social change in a gradual manner is inevitable. It’s the forced social change by way of social engineering whereby people are forced by law on matters of thinking and speech. I won’t even begin on the absurdities yet it’s all perpetrated by the left which you seem to think is some champion of individual rights.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Chillywater 30 Nov 2022
Even nations have cycles.
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