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58 8

Are you in favour of a revolution?

I don't think many of us are happy with our current governments, and most seem like myself to see the problem exists in the system itself. No talking bloody coup or anything, but say by a show of hands. who would want to see the political system in their country rebuilt from the ground up? And in what ways?

Whilst I personally am in favour of a benevolent dictator we would probably end up with another democracy. But perhaps a better one. Not allowing people to be in politics for more than 10 years in their lifetime sounds a good start. Any thoughts?

Rugglesby 8 Feb 27
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32

Our political systems are just a symptom of far bigger issues that reign our species. Top level corporations and the world banks are the true demigods of our world. Capitalism requires debt to function. Corporations need the banks to feed us our loans, creating a HUGE population of middle class with debt. Financial slavery is the means of control that keep us in submission to the system.

So the real culprit is unbridled global capitalism that is as corrupt as the day is long. Politicians are in their back pockets.

Nailed it!

@TheInterlooper

Well okay, it's not capitalism itself that requires debt to exist, but rather the BANKS which are a component of the capitalist economy that need it to survive.

Printing money NOT based on gold only creates a house of cards that will fall, as the monetary system is no longer based on anything valuable. Call in the debts (based on fractional reserves), and the economy collapses. That's the trouble with any fiat based system - it's only as good as the government that backs it. Just a big chess game. So again... we all know who is really in control.

@TheInterlooper - You make me chuckle. I do believe you just proved my original point in your last sentence. Anyway, to differentiate cronyism from capitalism is no different than separating greed from ambition. (The slight difference between the two is infered)
I'm a critic and a cynic; I don't have answers. It all stinks.

Just one last thought: the more we base our economy on the perceived value of our money, the more susceptible we become to failure by any slight anomalous occurrence. I point you to the Canadian stock market being devastated by the collapse of Nortel. Look it up. It affected the NASDAQ hugely. All fake money. But with real repercussions cuz of commitments to pension funds.

Damn you for keeping me awake.

I agree that fractional reserve banking is the problem. Maybe I am optimistic but I believe cronyism can be quelled in a capitalist society.

Such a society would - by necessity - require checks and balances. Cuz we know what happens when there's no rules.

I have no faith in human nature, and I would like proof why you should.

@Fanburger - there used to be when it wasn't fiat based, and backed by a commodity.

@TheInterlooper - while you're at it (writing new rules for the post-revolution democracy), banks should be non-profit utility companies. And - take a look at what happened in... where was it... Greenland? Norway? They re-wrote their constitution, jailed their bankers, and are debt-free. I wouldn't even call it a bloodless coup - they just voted everyone out and started from scratch.

@Hominid, it was iceland, & good for them!
[huffingtonpost.com]

@walklightly - Thanks babe. (Sorry, on my third glass of wine...)

@Fanburger - Then apparently your wisdom and expertise is wasted on us. Shame.

LOL! @Hominid

@Hominid I think it was Iceland, ground zero for the start of the financial implosion back in 07.

Sorry, just wanted to state I agree with your comment!@Jackolope74

8

Of course revolution and violence never solve anything, and reason and logic are the keys to a better tomorrow, and lots of meetings where people say things like, "Well, I see where you're coming from, now let me tell you where I'm coming from" and in this way we progress to a peaceful prosperous future.........

Oh Jeez, who the F do I think I'm fooling....

Look, this is how I think it will roughly go. Western civilisation is broadly in decline, with the age Age of Liberal Democracies, like our countries, part of that decline. The growth of a global economic aristocracy, which will continue its destructive concentration of wealth and power, together with the progress of the industrial revolution away from the west, along with the AI transformation of societies and economies (and let's throw in climate change which will start to be so obvious even reactionary conservatives won't be able to deny) will produce a crunch time, I'd say around the 2030 -2040 mark. When that happens, and the contradictions of Capitalism can no longer be ignored, due to mass inequality and political alienation, people will no longer believe the one thing that makes the system hold together. Ideology. My guess is the S will really hit the fan, and it won't be nice and it won't be pretty. All the ingredients for revolution. Collapse into chaos, civil wars, internal terrorism, right wing fundamentalism and dictatorship, or, transformation towards a social, economic democracy, with new patterns of work, income distribution and equity and participation? Frankly, I have no earthly idea. But the truth is for most of human history people have lived in tyranny, of varying degrees. For the powerful, it's their default setting.

It took to 1914 for the contradictions and historical forces of the 19th Century to collapse in the 20th Century. My guess is that the contradictions and forces of the 20th Century will take a little longer to implode in this century. But the third or fourth decade should do it. For those around then, hold on to your hats boys and girls. It's gonna be a bumpy ride.

Spot on. I have a constant battle with myself because I do want my kids to see a different world but I know the “growing pains” of real change will be brutal.

7

I think the benevolent dictator idea has a lot going for it. Provided it's me.

hahaha

6

Nah, revolution is revolting. Too many people end up dying, and then shit is up for grabs and it doesn't always end up better.

Better to refine the system.

well revolution is simply overthrowing the established system. re our politicians, I don't advocate anything more violent than giving them all atomic wedgies.

@VictoriaNotes That's because they didn't give them wedgies. No, I don't call that a revolution, the system remained. I see it just as another example of the system failing.

5

he only thing wrong with our current system is that the Kock brothers (and others) buy our politicians and stack the deck against democracy. If we could eliminate this big money factor we could get rid of the greed that controls Congress. I'm not for outright revolution, but one way of doing this would be Democratic Socialism. All you need do is look at the countries in which this is working. Greed is doing our current system in.

5

Our government has become unsustainably corrupt, so a rebellion is needed soon or there will be nothing American about it and nothing worth saving.

Though I voted for Bernie (write-in), I did prefer the election of Glupyy Trump over Corrupt Hillary. The reason was I view Hillary and her ilk as a cancer...quietly destroying our Democracy, legally, from within. I knew Trump would be like the festering, stinking, gangrenous wound that would be prominently obvious and could not be ignored. It is my hope that we, can through intense public pressure and what is left of our right to vote, mount a rebellion and bring back America.

very interesting to read your response, one of my crew and myself were at odds with the rest, saying we would feel a bit safer if trump got in, because at least everybody would be watching and criticizing him, we trusted neither.

It begins to look like your concept is working. Lets hope we get it right before fascism sets in.

The only salvation to having Trump in office is that Mueller is hot on his heels. I also wanted Bernie. I could never have ticked a box for Trump.

@RobAnybody

I am disheartened that it is needed.

4

The less than 35% of the country that is white and Christian is VERY scared that there are only 35% of them in this country. They long for the days it was much closer to 100%. I think the shit is about to get deep up in here.

4

Personally I think wehere in the U.S are quickly approaching another civil war over religious hatered of the inevitable secularization of our society..sadly I think it's needed..

You do realize that the people with the guns who live widely spread in the rural areas where the food grows are going to beat the people who are tightly gathered into cities where they can be killed in great numbers by bombs and have their supply lines cut.

I think we desperately need another civil war. But the way the deck is stacked the stupid and unethical bad guys would easily win.

You're right @MarqG - though I doubt it will ever get to that. I'm hoping the current insanity will subside. Although - it's mostly an insanity fed to us by the media that want to sell newspapers. We're living in the (statistically) safest time in history. Look it up.

@MarqG I had a similar conversation with another user about that.

I asked: "When put on paper, how can a 'militia' truly stack up against the U.S. military."
He made a good point: "An armed militia is a deterrent."

Although, it didn't directly answer my question, I accepted it as true because I believe it as true. The U.S. government will not be stupid enough to literally march their defense forces against its citizens.

But, to ask my question again: how do YOU think a well armed and regulated militia would stack-up against the U.S. military - in regards to manpower, armaments, technology, logistics, etc.

@SamKerry You do realize that the Commander In Chief of the military you speak of is on the side of the militia don't you?

Also have you heard about the "Oath Keepers"? That's a group of military and police who sign an oath not to violate the Constitution. One of the things they say they will not do is seal up cities making them into prison camps. Which tells me that they are thinking about such things. That it is a realistic strategy but one that they currently oppose. So what happens when they change their minds about using that strategy?

I don't think Anything is beneath them. These are people who hit bottom in 2008 and just keep digging, And I wouldn't look for the HRC supporting corporate Democrats to be much of a deterrent either.

@MarqG I could have misunderstood you. I apologise if I did and if my comments don't make sense which you can attribute to that misunderstanding

1: If "the Commander In Chief of the military you speak of is on the side of the militia", why is it that you feel the need for a militia? If you already have the state "on your side", what exactly would a militia be for in regards to "...A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State..."?

Also, I didn't speak of the President. I spoke of the U.S. government. But that's a different discussion. For this discussion, I'll give you that point.

2: And who are these "...stupid and unethical bad guys..." who have their "decks stacked against you" that they would win easily?

3: As for Hedges...
I didn't want to watch the full hour of the video. I only watched about the first 7 minutes. And you posting it suggest that you may have misunderstood what he meant by "empire", who he means by the "elite", and which "side" he is actually on

This really should be a different discussion but...now's better than any time. Here is Hedge's view of the current White House administration:

"...This is an ethics-free administration. There's not even a pretense of ethical rules, so you have what's going to become a naked kleptocracy… they're going to loot the country. But they're also inept, which is a very bad combination. And as that ineptitude becomes more pronounced and more understood, they are going to have to become more ideologically rigid. It's going to look like a Christianized fascism. It's going to be the fusion of the American flag with the Christian cross,"

@SamKerry Yup you're misreading me. I don't feel a need for a militia. I feel a need for a revolution. But I fear we're more likely to get a civil war. Like Hedges I think this nation is going to sink into fascism. What is needed is what every other industrialized nation has to some degree - socialism.That's why they have affordable health care and we have wage slavery.

The 2A is outdated. It was designed to compensate for not having a standing army. We have a standing Army. We also have the National Guard which is the state militia. If you really want to understand the 2A you need to read the Militia Acts of 1792 [en.wikipedia.org] which were written by the same Congress that wrote the 2A.

The stupid and unethical bad guys are the idiot conservatives who own the vast majority of the guns. The good guys are the unarmed liberals. Not NEOliberals like the Clintons and Obama. I'm talking about the Bernie Sanders supporters. We were robbed of our rightful nomination. And that might have been America's last hope to avoid an economic melt down. It was FDR who built the middle class in this country. But it may already be too late. Americans are too fucking stupid at this point. So stupid in fact that they (Trump supporters and even HRC supporters) actually believe billionaires are deeply concerned about their well being.

You ought to watch Hedges. He lays out a well reasoned argument for exactly how this country is going to melt down over the next 20 years. I would think that information would be worth an hour of your time.

@MarqG Shit! I certainly misunderstood your post. I thought you were celebrating Trump being on your side. Hahaha! Sorry, about that.

And, yeah, I'm a Hedges fan. I like his stance against the corporate elites and the systems that they support. He doesn't only have credibility from his experiences as a journalist both domestic and international, but also he backs up his views with action - peaceful action. I remember him stating that he as anti-violence and believes that the strongest form of action an individual can make is through activism. I have seen bits and pieces of his Sanctuary talk but not all of that 1hr. I'll put i on the background.

Again, sorry for mistaking the message behind your comments.

@SamKerry That's cool. But did you really think a Trump supporter posted that Chris Hedges video?

@MarqG I was very surprised. Now I know why.

3

A real democracy would be nice, not some disgusting rich people dictating how we live based of how much money they get from other rich people.

However I'm totally in favor of taking over the entire world and ruling it as the terrifying yet kind empress I am.

I think we are on the same page. I always say when I am dictator, we will fix that. When I am elected I will contact you.

@dalefvictor I like to think I'd lead a hostile takeover but it'd probably more be like a passive aggressive takeover

3

Great post, Rugglesby. One of my heroes is Thomas Paine whose very existence seems rooted in revolution. I live in the US. We're a republic, not a democracy. There's nothing more beautiful than our Constitution. But, because it's a fluid document, open to interpretation, when self-serving idiots get into office, we get pushed to the point of upheaval. The millenials in our country are stirring, they're bright, articulate, driven by high ideals. I think they are empowering themselves towards action and I think it will lead to revolution. I HOPE we keep our Constitution and I hope we keep our forms of government. But, there's signs that through revolution there may be enlightenment. WHO WILL WIN OUT? The forces of Evil? Or Youth? 🙂 Do we choose revolution? Or is it part of the ebb and flow of our species?

wow, thank you, I just learned something I never knew, I never studied history at all, I was always under the impression that the USA was a democracy. Your comment made me look into it. But then in Oz we are not a true democracy either, we elect the clowns, and they do what they like. Lets be honest, technology is well past the point where we could have citizens decide on matters every day and have far fewer politicians.

@Rugglesby Correct. We are a republic. Democracy does not work. It's one step away from anarchy. That's the irony of America. We idealize Jeffersonian Democracy to the point we really believe in it.

3

Life time limits a definite. Revolution not so much. They've a nasty habit of empowering real bastards with little check on their proclivities. A steady continuation of the disempowerment of the two majors would suit well. For mine the most effective parliament Australia has had since Whitlam was the hung parliament Gillard ran.

hmmm

2

History is just loaded with benevolent dictators and unicorns

King Jigme Singye Wangchuck of Bhutan
Cincinatus was a 2 time Roman dictator, both times giving the powers up after the situation was resolved. Once in 458 B.C. and the other in 439 B.C.
Ataturk, Deng Xiaoping, Lee Kwan Yew accepted pretty universally as benevolent and autocratic
afraid Noah did the unicorns in.

@Rugglesby 4 to 0...benevolent dictators vs. unicorns. I will stick with democracy.

2

I studied Political Philosophy when in college. I do not recommend a revolution as we could not be sure who would win or how many people would die. History tells us this can be quite bloody and not result in the solution hoped for. It seems to me that the best way to get what you want politically is to work through the chaos, educate, learn, be peaceful and help others. This takes longer perhaps, but kills far fewer people and everyone gets to learn why they have the result they now have. Do not get me wrong, I enjoy hearing of the folly of our current mess, as soon as people realize there is no way this is going to work they will get over it, but to shove it down their throats just pisses them off and makes then do even stupider things.

I can only look at the world from the outside, and believe 1/2 of what I read in the press.
So the USA is set in its ways, China, Russia, North Korea, Syria and all in theirs. If they all continue, one day there will be more international conflict, and eventually some will be forced to change. I have no answer, I hate being a flea on a dog about to get into a fight.

2

Don't worry. It will all end in tears i when the next and final world war will solve all our problems. The war that is destined to happen, not over political disagreements but the one about natural resources, clean air, potable water, energy and food. The one fought by a coalition of African nations, Asian nations and South American nations who all want to live and achieve some measure of success and hope for survival .
Capitalism will collapse and wither away, and nations who have built their system on it will have to change or die. Revolution does not sound so bad now, doesn't it?

Water will hit first.

2

The problems with revolutions, is that the new peopel in power usually resorrt to the old ways of governing. Kind of like the end of the song Don't Get Fooled Again by The Who,, where the last line is "Say hello to the new boos. Same as the old boss."

Real and lasting change happens slowly.

People may argue that the Americna revolution was successful in making great changes, but originally only the rich land owners got a vote or a say in who represented them. Non property owners had no say at all. Just like the rich and property owners ruled before the revolution. The main difference was that after the revolution it was local property owners who ruled. That ws the first change. The constitution didn't come about until several years after the revolution was over. After the revolution the country went through changes much faster than is normal for a society to change. The revolution may have made those changes more possible, but the revolution itself only moved power from one set of hands to another. The changes didn't happen over night.

The changes we take for granted today happened very slowly over a long period of time.

We in the U.S. need changes, but if we get changes for he better they wont' happen over night.

2

Here's a thought. The reason we have so much poverty is because we keep giving the money to the wrong people. Trickle down is a lie the Republicans can't stop telling, because some people believe it. Wanna fix it? A guaranteed amount of money going to the poor each month. So they can pay the rent, and feed their children. Money flows up. The rich would still be too rich to spend all their money. The drop in petty crime and drug use would go a long way to paying for this guaranteed wage

2

Until there is revolution in people's hearts--toward love and compassion--and in people's minds--toward critical thinking and away from anti-intellectualism--it won't matter. Those are the revolutions I want to see.

2

Yes. But only if it’s bloodless. That being said I think any revolution that will happen in our lifetime in this country, will have to be in degrees. Despite the fact, that would I’m about to say has Direct implications on a persons longevity and quality-of-life, the fact is… There will be no revolution. Because, as long as you can scrounge up enough loose change Day to day (to the tune of about four or five dollars), you can get enough shitty food at a place like McDonald’s to give you the illusion that you are not hungry anymore. It doesn’t matter that in the long run you’ll get something like diabetes or heart disease because of that activity. True revolutions only happen when massive amounts of people are starving. Really starving. That doesn’t happen in industrialized nations. Is there abject poverty And hunger? Without any question. But we just don’t have the numbers for an all out revolution until we eliminate the garbage fast food.

yes I agree it would need to be bloodless. But I would love the people in my country to totally dump all of our current politicians and political parties or have a government where neither of our major parties had any power.

Anything that happens in the US has to be peaceful. If not everyone has a gun, there will be a lot of death, not necessarily guaranteeing the right people win.

2

The 'not electing a long term politician' experiment is failing and failing badly in the US. Nobody wants a 'bloody coup' as you say, but is the US really going to be able to vote its way out of this given Congressional parasites are so invested in 'The US is for sale to the highest bidder' concept? One thing is for sure, unless the lobbyists' millions are kept out of the halls of Congress and the corporate fellators that walk them, its Groundhog Day for the middle class.

2

I will believe in any Revolution that grants Freedom. So I, believer of the Independence of the Caribbean Island of Puerto Rico. I believe in such Revolution for My Island.

2

Yeah, we should all vote for Barnaby in the next election. 🙂

no no no no please no

@Rugglesby it's OK mate, it was just a joke. 😀

@Whathappensnow I know, as is Barnaby. But just the thought.

We should continue the campaign to make the response to "Ow ya goin" always be "Better than Barnaby". In time it could overtake Buckley in the vernacular.

@Rugglesby barnaby had hot chick but girls explode.I wonder if his ex played with stray cocks

@RobAnybody sounds pretty awesome to me, I am going to try it.

1

Although, upon reflection, I accept your nomination for the post of Nearly-Benevolent Dictator. Technically, I will run the nation as a democracy- one man, one vote. I will be The Man, and I will have The Vote. (Yes, I stole that whole cloth from Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels. In a fantasy world, it works.)

1

Oh Yes! but the revolution would have to unlock all those offshore piggy banks that people have amassed. I think benevolent dictators mostly start out ok and then get so up themselves they become like Franco. I'd say do parliament like Jury duty 12 good people adn true just from the ranks. Well maybe a few more but you get the drift - I remember someone oce asking about democracy and it was deemed 'a good idea' but nobody has bothered to try it yet!

I hope that with increased use of technology we may one day get closer to a real democracy. What we have does NOT work. I am sick of fighting trying to get our "elected" officials to do the right thing.

1

"Total destruction, the only solution." - Bob Marley

1

I disagree with your idea about a ten year limit to a persons time in politics -
think that if someone is making worthwhile contributions it is self defeating to make them move on as their time is up.

Revolutions - (the forcible removal of one political elite in place of another) are by there nature bloody messy things - I am not in favour of suvh things - democracy is the best system we have - we can throw out a government if we are dissatisfied with their progress or lack of it etc etc -

I am surpirsed anyone is in favour of revolution - I suspect those in favour are not truly aware of the ramifications of such an event -

regards

Dommy Level 3 Mar 18, 2018

I did consider that as well, we could be shooting ourselves in the foot by restricting a great politician, but the odds are it would be more beneficial overall. I cannot remember any politician in Oz that I would favour staying longer. We don't throw out Governments here, each party is the same as the other, we have a duopoly.

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