Marx and Obama
Posted by j_IR1776wg 10 years, 5 months ago to Government
Karl thought three phases would be needed to achieve Utopia. "...Marx described three necessary phases toward achieving his idea of utopia.
•Phase 1: A revolution must take place in order to overthrow the existing government. Marx emphasized the need for total destruction of the existing system in order to move on to Phase 2.
•Phase 2: A dictator or elite leader (or leaders) must gain absolute control over the proletariat. During this phase, the new government exerts absolute control over the common citizen's personal choices -- including his or her education, religion, employment and even marriage. Collectivization of property and wealth must also take place.
•Phase 3: Achievement of utopia. This phase has never been attained because it requires that all non-communists be destroyed in order for the Communist Party to achieve supreme equality. In a Marxist utopia, everyone would happily share property and wealth, free from the restrictions that class-based systems require. The government would control all means of production so that the one-class system would remain constant, with no possibility of any middle class citizens rising back to the top. (You can see the full text of the manifesto at this Web site.)..."
Which of the three phases do you think Obama would say we're in?
•Phase 1: A revolution must take place in order to overthrow the existing government. Marx emphasized the need for total destruction of the existing system in order to move on to Phase 2.
•Phase 2: A dictator or elite leader (or leaders) must gain absolute control over the proletariat. During this phase, the new government exerts absolute control over the common citizen's personal choices -- including his or her education, religion, employment and even marriage. Collectivization of property and wealth must also take place.
•Phase 3: Achievement of utopia. This phase has never been attained because it requires that all non-communists be destroyed in order for the Communist Party to achieve supreme equality. In a Marxist utopia, everyone would happily share property and wealth, free from the restrictions that class-based systems require. The government would control all means of production so that the one-class system would remain constant, with no possibility of any middle class citizens rising back to the top. (You can see the full text of the manifesto at this Web site.)..."
Which of the three phases do you think Obama would say we're in?
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http://www.thefreedictionary.com/tovaris...
I took the following excerpts from this site a while ago http://www.crossroad.to/Excerpts/chronol... but it seems to be longer on that server.
"...A quotation from “My Pedagogic Creed,” written by John Dewey in 1897, would indicate that, even at that early date, his ideas on education were radically opposed to those then current in the field of education:
• “The only true education comes through the stimulation of the child’s powers by the demands of the social situation in which he finds himself. Through these demands, he is stimulated to act as a member of a unity, to emerge from his original narrowness of action and feeling, and to conceive of himself from the standpoint of the welfare of the group to which he belongs....
• “We violate the child’s nature and render difficult the best ethical results by introducing the child too abruptly to a number of special studies, of reading, writing, geography, etc., out of relation to this social life.
• “The true center of correlation on the school subjects is not science, nor literature, nor history, nor geography, but the child’s own social activities....
"Thus, even at this early period in his teaching experience, John Dewey emphasized the predominance of the group over the individual..."
Joe
It made me wonder what was going on in 1848 that created the support of this manifesto? I suppose it was the large number of monarchies that were in power then. But I always have problems with the logic, which of course is replaced with emotion (hate, anger, self-pity) which justifies everything it seems. But how people can read Marx and not see that this is purely a power grab is beyond me. I see people today blindly supporting any Obama decision as if their lives depend on it. Socialists need and depend on sheep and how they can turn normally intelligent people into a galloping herd is beyond comprehension. I understand why the moochers follow, their lives truly do depend on it, but I'm talking about people that we all know who are highly "educated" otherwise intelligent people. They do all have one thing in common, though. They like to be right. They strive for power yet deny that they do.
I agree with you, but damn - groupthink is pervasive...and really nice (young) people do not seem to even notice that this is how they assume 'one behaves'. (And one of these guys won an award for an AS themed essay once...Since he graduated from college, it has all been about 'working with the group'.)
Jan
Joe
Discussions on AS have made me aware of the difference between 'top down' and 'bottom up' changes. We have inherited a system that represented the wishes of a society that lived 200 years ago, and there is sufficient inertia to that philosophy that it has not been totally destroyed. But if you ask young people today what they believe in, they will unhesitatingly endorse global warming, conservation, welfare, globalization and working in groups rather than as individuals. So we are growing our own 'bottom up' revolution to effect the destruction mentioned in Phase 1.
Let me segue a bit on the 'working in groups' theme because I think that this is root, and overlooked. Have y'all noticed that in grammar school, kids work on projects in groups, and there is a single output (paper, project) for which the entire group receives a grade (irrespective of their degree of contribution to the project)? This continues up through college, now. I think this is a crucial step in the erosion of the individual and that it lays the groundwork for the other social themes I mentioned (global warming, conservation, etc) because it emphasizes that the group is more important than the individual.
Jan
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