peebo wrote:
workers of the world unite
What is a worker? Is the head of IBM a worker? How about the white collar people who work at desks? Do you have to be a member of a union? Can I decline to be a member of the union? If a decline to be a member, should I be forced to lose my job?
The problem with socialism is it has been tried and it has failed repeatedly. In Europe it is failing at this very moment. In Scandinavia it has failed (with the possible exception of Norway because of vast oil reserves that Norwegians actually tap unlike the United States). In Asia it has failed, in South America it has failed, and in Africa it has failed.
It has failed everywhere. It does not work.
The attempt to massively intervene in the economy is the enemy of the working people. It makes then poor and miserable. Perhaps equally so but only that. It gives rise to massive government departments, whose administrations became the largest supporters of socialist programs. Not because they are efficient, but because it gives them a job. Soon, it is ensured they, and all the people below them, cannot be fired. This means these government departments are even more inefficient compared to the private sector that have replaced.
There are too many of certain items, and not enough of others because nothing is based on the market only on government requirements. Government officials cannot adjust fast enough and the politics pales in comparison to anything in the corporate world.
The people may even support some, or most of it because people want a guaranteed job, or income, or the love to tax the hated rich but it will all come back to bite them.
As Europe's economy stagnates, and corrupt dictator's populations African starve you will forgive me if I do not join in on the effort with those who unite in the name of the workers but only in the end will bring about their ruin.
ADDENDUM: A useful volume that traces socialism from it's roots to today is Joshua Muravchik's
The Rise and Fall of Socialism. It is not an "angry polemic," but rather a scholarly review.