Confessions of a former Republican

SEVERUSMAX

Benevolent Master
Joined
Apr 1, 2004
Posts
28,995
Yes, I was once a Republican, seems like a lifetime ago. Back then, I believed that prosperity would reach us all, eventually, once the "engine" of private enterprise got really going and businesses would start hiring in large numbers, full employment would be around the corner, people could voluntarily spread the wealth once the government got off their backs with all of their Nanny State regulations.

Well, now, we've seen the "engine" of Koch Brothers-style, Ayn Rand, objectivist, Rothbardite anarcho-libertarian capitalism unleashed, and the results are revealing indeed: growing poverty, so much so that the UN is reporting on Third World conditions and the return of Third World, preventable conditions, traditionally linked to abject poverty, hunger, and malnourishment, such as ringworm, in places like Alabama and Mississippi.

Far from lifting all boats, as I once believed in my Jack Kemp-style optimism, the rising tide has drowned many of us in poverty, misery, a shrinking middle class, growing ranks of working poor who must work two or three jobs per person in the household just to pay bills. The only reason that my bills aren't more crushing is that I don't own a car and have the accompanying expenses of that. I walk to work, which in the Arizona summer heat can threaten heatstroke, but is otherwise quite bearable.

So, yeah, I recant all of my past confidence in unregulated, "pure market" capitalism and openly endorse social democracy, or as Bernie Sanders likes to call it, "democratic socialism" here in good ol' America. It seems that the Norman Thomases, Upton Sinclairs, Eugene Debses, etc. of the American socialist tradition were onto something, weren't they?
 
Yep, the point of Republican Party economics is that the riches don't go any lower than the CEO's office.
 
I know this is only slightly related but since it's mostly republicans who support deregulation I think this is relevant to post.

It will always amaze me how a huge proportion of Americans support mass dismantling of economic regulations, like they can't wrap their head around a regulation or why they exist.

"Yeah, let's get rid of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau so they can't investigate enormous banking oligarchs for debt relief scams/identity protection scams/doing casino-capitalism by investing our own money into risky volatile stocks/etc against us powerless consumers which we know they attempt all the time! That'll show BIG GUBMINT who's boss!"

https://i.redd.it/yro4sbwviy201.jpg
 
It will always amaze me how a huge proportion of Americans support mass dismantling of economic regulations, like they can't wrap their head around a regulation or why they exist.

"Yeah, let's get rid of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau so they can't investigate enormous banking oligarchs for debt relief scams/identity protection scams/doing casino-capitalism by investing our own money into risky volatile stocks/etc against us powerless consumers which we know they attempt all the time! That'll show BIG GUBMINT who's boss!"

https://i.redd.it/yro4sbwviy201.jpg

We were sold a bill of goods. The notion of "market forces" solving all social ills, only held back by that evil "gumment." The only difference is that I finally sniffed the snake oil and realized what it was.
 
There's no system that will ever make the world fair. The world is naturally unfair, some people are more gifted that others, and no matter how hard you try, there will always be people with more than everyone else. Most people's biggest mistake is thinking that there must be some perfect system that will make everyone happy. There isn't and there never will be.

Some systems might make things look a little nicer, but at the end of the day, there's always going to be someone on top taking the biggest slice of the pie.
 
We were sold a bill of goods. The notion of "market forces" solving all social ills, only held back by that evil "gumment." The only difference is that I finally sniffed the snake oil and realized what it was.

And yet, when those market forces acted, what was the result? Over $4 trillion spent propping up the failed banks and Wall Street firms, not to mention paying their bonuses.

The same with the stock market. Collars were implemented so market forces can't take hold to the downside.

When one looks with an objective eye, it is Republicans who consistently do the most damage to this country and who are against the very ideals they supposedly stand for.
 
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