Psychoserenity wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
Oh, for the love of FSM. I was asking about the one HE'S advocating....
Well I'm sorry for posting on topic! If you're just interested in sandinista's vision of communism, why wasn't he mentioned in the OP?
You might have read the thread. He gave a similar evasive response as you did. He couldn't give me ONE example of true communism, because there are supposedly "various" types of communism. So, I said for him to just tell me the one he's talking about.
If you want to describe a version of true communism, please do. You don't have to describe them all. Just describe your favorite one.
Psychoserenity wrote:
But I don't see how you can expect him to answer you, any more than you'd answer me, if I started a thread asking "what would a right-wing libertarian society look like",
If I was advocating that we go to a "libertarian society" then I would bloody well expect that I'd be asked that question. I'm not. I'm not a libertarian, o.k.?
I can tell you what my idea of a capitalist society with a constitutionally limited republican government with popularly elected representatives would look like. I can answer all the questions I posed to him. Yes, we could rent a cottage out to someone and keep the profits. Yes, we could grow tomatoes in the garden and sell them. It would be up to the individual to determine if and when he or she wanted to work, what career or profession or job to take, etc. In my society, there would be laws made within certain expressly laid out powers of the government and which could not interfere with certain individual liberties, among which would be the freedoms of speech, religion, press, assembly, association, belief, privacy, and some others. Laws would be made by popular vote of elected representatives.
Answering my own questions:
1. Would there be a government? If so, how would the government be structured? Would there be elected leaders? What would they be empowered to do? Would the government be broken up into separate branches? If not, how would it be set up? - Yes, there would be a government. The government would be structured with at least 1 representative for every 150,000 citizens in accordance with the last census. I would only have one "house" of the legislature (no senate). The country would be divided up into districts of about 150,000 citizens each, and redistricting would occur every 10 years with a national census. So, yes there would be elected leaders, and they would be empowered to make laws provided those laws do not infringe on fundamental liberties set forth in the constitution. I would have four, not three, branches of government - there would be an executive branch for law enforcement and military, a legistlature as noted for making laws, a judiciary for court cases, and a fourth branch for the bureacracies (I would remove the bureaucracies from the Presidential control). That kid of thing.
2. Would there be any laws? If so, how would they be made? Who would enforce them? - Oh,yes, there would be laws. They would be made by popular vote of the elected legislature. The executive branch would enforce the laws, along with local police forces.
3. Would there be any private property rights? If so, what would they be like? If not, then how would buying/selling of real and personal property take place, if at all? - Yes, there would be private property rights, which would be protected as fundamental. The government would only be able to take property for a public purpose and with just compensation. Private business is just up to whatever people really want to do, within the law. They could make things, buy and sell them, and keep profits. Yes, buying and selling real and personal property would be allowed.
4. How would it be decided what an individual could do for a living? Who would decide? On what basis? - the individual would decide -t he state would have no power to force anyone to work, even if they were able.
5. Would there be an private business? If so, how would that work? Yes, there would be private businesses. People would be free to do anything they like, provided it is not specifically made unlawful by the legislature.
Psychoserenity wrote:
and then asked you to explain whether or not there'd be fractional-reserve banking in your vision of it, and how that would affect my loans.
I don't know what a "fractional reserve banking" is, and I haven't advocated that. Again, if that's something to do with this "right wing libertarian" society you think I advocate, then be clear on this: I don't.
But, if you are going to advocate communism or any other socio-economic system, you should damn well be able to articulate how it would work.