sandinista wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:The Mad Hatter wrote:The countries and the ideology he espouses tends to not to be too fond of the first amendement either.
That's what confuses me about sandinista - he has a serious beef with dictatorships and rightfully descries US support for dictatorships, but the guys he supports are dictators.

I guess two things here. What "dictators" do I "support"?
My impression is Castro and Chavez to name two. But, you get around it by claiming they are something other than dictators. If it squawks about socialism, you give it a pass. At least that's the impression I get. You can easily correct that misapprehension, if you so choose, with a clear statement to the contrary.
sandinista wrote:
Secondly, to me it is not a question of "dictator" as opposed to "something else". I think one person/party rule is much the same as two person/party rule when the two parties have the same ideology. I am not convinced that "elections" for representatives of the upper class is really a viable alternative or even that much different than one party rule.
So...just go to one party rule is your suggestion? Have done with it?
sandinista wrote:
If the one party is working for the betterment of his/her people then I see that as better than a two party/one ideology system working for the betterment of the upper classes.
One party has never been shown to work for the betterment of his/her people. They SAY they do. But, they don't. Betterment of the party BECOMES betterment of the people.
Many people in the US in the 1920s and 30s were convinced that the Soviet method was for the betterment of the people, and they were positive that the negative reports about poverty and oppression in Russia was western capitalist propaganda. They learned better. There aren't too many people who cling to the notion that Soviet Russia bettered the lives of the people in comparison to western Europe or North America.