-----Original Message-----
From: miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, February 20, 2020 4:22 PM
To: 'Roger Loran Bailey' <rogerbailey81@xxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: [blind-democracy] Re: The Escalating Class War Against Bernie
Sanders
Roger,
I have a feeling that this is a discussion which, although we've had it many
times, will not be resolved.
First, and unrelated to the rest. People's usage of language is not precise.
It's often very inexact and it changes. Culture is fluid and language, as part
of culture, is also fluid. Another way to put it is that it's idiomatic. For
example, younger people use expressions that I never used when I was their age.
One new thing they've been saying when they make a mistake is, "My bad". In
their place, I would have said something like, "Oh, I made a mistake" or
perhaps, "I'm sorry. I got that wrong." People say, "It's me" when the correct
grammatical statement is, "It is I". So in that same way, all of these people
who are supporting Bernie Sanders, have adopted his mis characterization, as
Paul Krugman describes it, of his position, and regardless of what their
precise political views are, they say they are socialists. And my response is,
even though you disapprove of it because you think it hampers communication,
"labels aren't all that important". What is important to me is that they all
want things to change for the better. They are opposed to the extremes of
financial inequality that have been increasing in America for the past 40 or
more years. They are opposed to institutional racism. They want a more
democratic society.
Now for the next part. This is why you and I keep running up against a wall
that appears to divide us. I have no problem with the goal that you describe,
although I think that European Democratic Socialism might serve people equally
well. My problem is with the path that you describe, that people would need to
follow in order to achieve the goal because it is certainly true that the
powerful elites will not easily give up their power. So if revolutionaries
feel that they need to use physical force to take power from those who have it,
and then create an autocratic state in order to prevent the elites from taking
back the power, from my point of view, we, the people, have lost precisely what
it was that we were trying to get when force was used to overthrow the system.
We've seen this happen over and over again whenever people have a vision about
making life better and they wage war in order to make that vision reality. The
dream is corrupted, as are the people who use it. If we put democracy and
individual freedom and choice aside temporarily, in order to make things
better, we lose.
Miriam
-----Original Message-----
From: Roger Loran Bailey <rogerbailey81@xxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, February 20, 2020 3:45 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [blind-democracy] Re: The Escalating Class War Against Bernie
Sanders
If other people are not using words as precisely as I am then that is as if we
are speaking separate languages. That would mean that they are only receiving
vague impressions while I am talking about something specific and if I started
speaking only vaguely then I would not be communicating what I am trying to
communicate. I don't see what is so difficult about learning one's own language
including the vocabulary of that language. It is not even necessary to read
dictionaries. All you have to do is to pay attention to how words are used and
you learn the meanings of those words. That's how I do it. A major interest of
mine is socialism and communism and so I read about it. Sometimes I will read a
book with a glossary, but I rarely need it. I can tell by context what a word
means and when the context consistently shows the word to mean the same thing
every time I have learned what a word means. That means that when I come across
the word again I have no need to just interpret the word as a vague emotional
impression. It is really difficult for me to understand why other people do not
do the same thing. As for whether a socialist state is authoritarian or not,
that is something else that I have discussed on this list time and time again.
It depends on how the socialist state is achieved. As I have explained before,
we would prefer to just get our candidates elected and to change the
constitution and laws to legislate socialism. That is what the social democrats
started out to do, but there is an aphorism that when you try to change the
system from within the system it is not the system that gets changed. It is you
who will change. The social democrats are a perfect example of that. When you
give up trying to abolish capitalism in favor of just regulating capitalism
then you have given up being socialist. But when the capitalists get to feeling
really threatened they lash out violently and because of exercising the right
to self defense a civil war is likely to result. Once the capitalists are
overthrown then in order to keep them from walking right in and reestablishing
their capitalist state then the new socialist state has to be somewhat
authoritarian to survive. It should never be forgotten, however, that this is
only temporary until there is no chance that the capitalists can regain power.
Furthermore, any state is authoritarian. Again, the state is the apparatus by
which one class exercises power over other classes by violence or the threat of
violence. That is what police forces and standing armies are all about. Like it
or not, you are living in an authoritarian state. But once everyone in society
plays a role in maintaining society, that is, when classes have been abolished,
the state no longer has a reason to continue to exist. The state apparatus can
then be transformed into an administrator of things rather than people. That
is, there will still have to be some kind of coordination to get products
produced. Factory committees will still have to meet to make plans for how they
will produce products and then there will still have to be an organized way to
distribute the products. So imagine people working together to do all of this.
On a small scale imagine a barn raising. That is a practice from agrarian
cultures that refers to a barn needing to be built and so everyone in the
community comes together and build a barn without expectation of remuneration
other than that the next time they need a barn to be built the community will
come together an build that one too. Imagine a family that cooperates to bring
in a household income and to do the housework. The members of that family are
working for themselves, but not as individuals for their own personal needs.
They are working for the collective good of the family including themselves as
individuals. That is communism. Instead of being against human nature as it is
so often accused of, it is human nature. If you look around you then you will
see that mutual cooperation for mutual benefit is one of the most prominent
parts of human nature. I am sure that you have cooperated with others many
times throughout your lifetime in ways that benefited yourself and the others
too. Just imagine that on a large scale and with no one forcing you to do it
and you can imagine communism.
___
Sam Harris
“Tell a devout Christian that his wife is cheating on him, or that frozen
yogurt can make a man invisible, and he is likely to require as much evidence
as anyone else, and to be persuaded only to the extent that you give it. Tell
him that the book he keeps by his bed was written by an invisible deity who
will punish him with fire for eternity if he fails to accept its every
incredible claim about the universe, and he seems to require no evidence what
so ever.”
― Sam Harris,
On 2/19/2020 9:34 PM, miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
The problem is that most people are not using these words as precisely as you
are. Well, that's the first problem. You have a very sharp mind. You read a
lot and you use the abstract concepts that you read about, in order to
understand the world. And I'm sure that there are other people who do that
also. But the majority of us don't. I talked about the kind of world I'd
like to see. I was describing my values and I was talking about how I would
like life to be for people. I was not talking about which system I thought
would be best to arrive at my goal because honestly, I don't know which
system would be best and that's why I don't like labels. My feeling is that
human beings, with all their fallibility, their need for power, their fears,
the individual psychology that drives them, will most probably mess up any
system we adopt.
The idea of the public owning the means of production sounds benign, but it
depends on what that word, "public" means or I guess, how this is actually
put into practice. Does it mean an authoritarian state or does it mean that
workers own their workplaces and run them democratically. Somehow, it seems
like bureaucracies inevitably become rigid , unresponsive, and self
perpetuating. I don't think that this would be different under socialism than
it is under capitalism. But never having had first hand experience with
socialism, I don't know.
About Communism, you said:
Communism is the situation in which the state itself has been abolished.
That is, the state has turned from an apparatus that administers people into
an apparatus that administers things, things like commodities.
I honestly don't understand what that would look like in real life. I guess
it's too abstract for my brain, but I would appreciate it if you could give
me an example of what that might be like.
Miriam
-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of Roger Loran Bailey
(Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
Sent: Wednesday, February 19, 2020 9:06 PM
To: miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: The Escalating Class War Against Bernie
Sanders
Label is another name for noun. It is a part of speech and it is a major part
of speech. It lets you know what you are talking about. You can say I walked
across and picked up and took. But it makes a lot more sense to say I walked
across the floor and picked up a coffee cup and took a sip of coffee. If you
reject labels you cannot form a coherent sentence. In stead of saying that
you feel uncomfortable with labels try learning what they mean and then it
will be a lot easier to discuss things. Now, I do not mean communism when I
say socialism. If I meant communism I would say communism. Lenin described
socialism as the lowest form of communism, but it is low enough that the two
can be easily distinguished. Socialism is a form of state. It is the
situation in which the means of production is under the ownership and
democratic control of the public. If someone advocates this situation then he
or she is a socialist. If a person does not advocate that then no matter how
much he or she calls him or herself a socialist he or she is not a socialist.
Socialism simply is not regulated capitalism. Even the outright capitalists
accept some amount of regulation by their state.
Otherwise their profit system would collapse in the extreme competition that
would result without any restraint. If a capitalist who is consumed with
making profit accepts some regulation so as to not be eaten alive by his or
her competition then that does not make that capitalist a socialist.
Socialism is simply not any government regulation or program that happens to
exist. If you use socialism that way then you render the word socialism
completely meaningless. Communism, on the other hand, is the situation in
which the state itself has been abolished. That is, the state has turned from
an apparatus that administers people into an apparatus that administers
things, things like commodities. If you would just drop your aversion to
labels you would know that and you would not have to get the impression that
I am talking about anything when I use a word like socialism. You would
simply know what I am talking about. And I do not use words to give
impressions anyway. I use words to communicate and I use words to communicate
specific ideas.
___
Sam Harris
“Tell a devout Christian that his wife is cheating on him, or that frozen
yogurt can make a man invisible, and he is likely to require as much evidence
as anyone else, and to be persuaded only to the extent that you give it. Tell
him that the book he keeps by his bed was written by an invisible deity who
will punish him with fire for eternity if he fails to accept its every
incredible claim about the universe, and he seems to require no evidence what
so ever.”
― Sam Harris,
On 2/19/2020 9:16 AM, miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
I do have a lot of problems with all these labels, capitalism, socialism,
communism. I guess I don't care what you call it so long as everyone has a
comfortable home, good nutrition, good complete health care, access to as
much education as that person wants, and an opportunity to work if he or she
is willing and able. I think that the world should be run for the welfare of
people, not for profit, and I think that there should be a ceiling on the
income that any individual family should have. But I'm not bound to a
particular political philosophy. I don't care how we get there. I believe
that you are advocating communism when you use the word "socialist", but I'm
not sure and it doesn't matter a whole lot. I do know that when a lot of
other people use the word, "socialism, they mean a variety of things by it.
Miriam
-----Original Message-----
From: Roger Loran Bailey <rogerbailey81@xxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2020 11:28 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [blind-democracy] Re: The Escalating Class War Against
Bernie Sanders
It remains that the Scandinavian countries are capitalist and no social
democrat government in those countries have made a move to abolish
capitalism. If you think you can just regulate capitalism into being nice
capitalism you are a pretty poor socialist.
___
Sam Harris
“Tell a devout Christian that his wife is cheating on him, or that frozen
yogurt can make a man invisible, and he is likely to require as much
evidence as anyone else, and to be persuaded only to the extent that you
give it. Tell him that the book he keeps by his bed was written by an
invisible deity who will punish him with fire for eternity if he fails to
accept its every incredible claim about the universe, and he seems to
require no evidence what so ever.”
― Sam Harris,
On 2/18/2020 9:35 PM, miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
There is really a difference between how the Scandanavian countries
function and the way the US does. It has to do with the fact that citizens
of those countries pay a much higher tax rate and the money which those
taxes raise, are used to provide many benefits to families that Americans
don't have. Universal medical care, child care, paid family leave, a lot of
vacation time, all sorts of things that make life easier for working
people. That's the kind of thing that the Democratic Socialists here, or
whatever label you choose to assign to them want. In the US, the term,
"liberal", has come to mean progressive social values, as opposed to
conservative social values like being anti choice or anti gay. It isn't a
derogatory term. It's just that it doesn't necessarily mean that the people
whom you call liberal, understand the enormous exploitation of working
people and the incredible inequality. However, people who are working for
positive change, understand that you don't get it by dividing people. You
get it by showing them what they have in common and helping them find ways
to work together to reach goals. Calling people "liberals" as a derogatory
term, or "deplorables" or "the uneducated masses" separates them. It's the
kind of thing that Trump does, only he uses other words.
Miriam
-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of Roger Loran
Bailey (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2020 9:15 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx; Bob Hachey (Redacted sender
bhachey for DMARC) <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: The Escalating Class War Against
Bernie Sanders
I think your BC professors were referring to the social democrats, not
socialism. It is really hard to distinguish between a liberal and a social
democrat. So they may as well just say liberalism instead of socialism.
___
Sam Harris
“Tell a devout Christian that his wife is cheating on him, or that frozen
yogurt can make a man invisible, and he is likely to require as much
evidence as anyone else, and to be persuaded only to the extent that you
give it. Tell him that the book he keeps by his bed was written by an
invisible deity who will punish him with fire for eternity if he fails to
accept its every incredible claim about the universe, and he seems to
require no evidence what so ever.”
― Sam Harris,
On 2/18/2020 8:00 PM, Bob Hachey (Redacted sender bhachey for DMARC) wrote:
Hi Miriam,
Good article here. The more negative I see on Bernie, the more
likely I am to vote for him in the primary despite my fears that he
may not be electable. And, seems to me that more of the negativity
on Bernie now comes from the left rather than the right. What a mess and a
farce as well.
IF someone wants to argue that Bernie's policy positions may not be
supported by the majority of Americans I can live with that as a
possibly reasonable argument. What I hate most is the tired old
rant that "He's a socialist" and how awful that is. Also, many trot
out the lazy definition of socialism that appears on dictionary.com
which says socialism promotes ownership or regulation of the means of
production.
I was taught that it is communism that promotes ownership of the
means of production. Socialism promotes the regulation, not
ownership of the means of production according to my BC professors.
Bob Hachey
Bob Hachey
-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of ;
miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2020 3:16 PM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] The Escalating Class War Against Bernie
Sanders
The Escalating Class War Against Bernie Sanders By Norman Solomon,
Reader Supported News
18 February 20
More than ever, Bernie Sanders is public enemy number one for power
elites that thrive on economic injustice. The Bernie 2020 campaign
is a direct threat to the undemocratic leverage that extremely
wealthy individuals and huge corporations constantly exert on the
political process. No wonder we're now seeing so much anti-Bernie
rage from leading corporate Democrats - eagerly amplified by corporate
media.
In American politics, hell hath no fury like corporate power scorned.
Flagrant media biases against Sanders are routine in a wide range
of mainstream outlets. (The media watch group FAIR has long
documented the problem, illuminated by one piece after another
after another after another just this month.) In sharp contrast,
positivity toward Sanders in mass media spheres is scarce.
The pattern is enmeshed with the corporatism that the Sanders
campaign seeks to replace with genuine democracy - disempowering
great wealth and corporate heft while empowering everyday people to
participate in a truly democratic process.
Big media are continually amplifying the voices of well-paid
reporters and pundits whose jobs involve acceptance of corporate
power, including the prerogatives of corporate owners and sponsors.
And, in news coverage of politics, there's an inexhaustible supply
of former Democratic officeholders and appointees who've been
lucratively feeding from corporate troughs as lobbyists,
consultants and PR operatives. Their corporate ties usually go unmentioned.
An important media headquarters for hostility toward the Sanders
campaign is MSNBC, owned by Comcast - a notoriously anti-labor and
anti-consumer corporation. "People need to remember," I pointed out
on Democracy Now! last week, "that if you, for instance, don't
trust Comcast, why would you trust a network that is owned by Comcast?
These are class interests being worked out where the top strata of
ownership and investors hires the CEO, hires the managing editors,
hires the reporters. And so, what we're seeing, and not to be rhetorical
about it, but we really are seeing a class war underway."
Routinely, the talking heads and go-to sources for mainline news
outlets are far removed from the economic pressures besetting so
many Americans. And so, media professionals with the most clout and
largest megaphones are quite distant from the Sanders base.
Voting patterns in the New Hampshire primary reflected whose
economic interests the Sanders campaign is promising to serve. With
10 active candidates on the Democratic ballot, Sanders "won 4 in 10
of voters with household incomes under $50,000 and nearly 3 in 10
with incomes between
$50,00 and $99,000," The Washington Post reported.
Meanwhile, a trio of researchers associated with the Institute for
New Economic Thinking - Thomas Ferguson, Jie Chen and Paul
Jorgensen
- found that "the higher the town's income, the fewer votes cast" for
Sanders.
"Lower income towns in New Hampshire voted heavily for Sanders;
richer towns did the opposite."
The researchers saw in the data "further dramatic evidence of a
point we have made before: that the Democratic Party is now sharply
divided by social class."
It's a reality with media implications that are hidden in plain sight.
The often-vitriolic and sometimes preposterous attacks on Sanders
via powerful national media outlets are almost always coming from
affluent or outright wealthy people. Meanwhile, low-income
Americans have virtually zero access to the TV studios (other than
providing after-hours janitorial services).
With very few exceptions, the loudest voices to be heard from mass
media are coming from individuals with wealth far above the
financial vicinity of average Americans. Virtually none of the most
widely read, seen and heard journalists are on the low end of the nation's
extreme income inequality.
Viewed in that light - and keeping in mind that corporate ownership
and advertising dominate mainstream media - it shouldn't be
surprising that few prominent journalists have much good to say
about a presidential campaign fiercely aligned with the working class.
"If there is going to be class warfare in this country," Bernie
Sanders told the Iowa AFL-CIO convention last summer, "it's time
that the working class of this country won that war and not just the
corporate elite."
To the corporate elite, goals like that are unacceptable.