Kibbutzim, open-source software, syndicalist communes, some Buddhist communities, not to mention the innumerable communist elements within a supposedly capitalist society. It is not a clear cut thing.
I agree with this too.
Yep, these things exist, and have been, to some degree, successful, or at least self sustaining.
The problem is that these things are not economic systems, and it shows quite clearly that while the communist ideal works at the micro level, it is not scalable or sustainable.
Good little. Bad big.
That's been demonstrated time and time again, and I'm sorry Reds, I'm not buying into the excuse-driven arguments.
Until and unless you get a success under your belts at the national level, why on EARTH should we who espouse a currently thriving, working system, chuck it all to chase your globalized communistic utopia that has NEVER BEEN PROVED to be anything other than a train wreck?
-=Vel=-
I agree with this too.
Yep, these things exist, and have been, to some degree, successful, or at least self sustaining.
The problem is that these things are not economic systems, and it shows quite clearly that while the communist ideal works at the micro level, it is not scalable or sustainable.
Good little. Bad big.
That's been demonstrated time and time again, and I'm sorry Reds, I'm not buying into the excuse-driven arguments.
Until and unless you get a success under your belts at the national level, why on EARTH should we who espouse a currently thriving, working system, chuck it all to chase your globalized communistic utopia that has NEVER BEEN PROVED to be anything other than a train wreck?
-=Vel=-
Comment