@Senter
I really am trying to understand your position. As you can easily see, I read your posts & question the content.
In the 1st paragraph in response to my
"Your post seems to indicate that conversion is happening now."
you wrote this.
Quote
" Socialism has been reduced to a very small fraction of what it once was and is beginning to rebuild due to the conditions we're all facing."
Questions
1. Why has socialism been reduced to a very small fraction of what it once was?
2. In your perception. What conditions are we all facing?
Good questions.
1. In the early 1900s there was a very large and powerful communist party as well as a socialist party. And as hard times were developing and public outcry was increasing, the government began attacking labor unions, the socialist and communists and turning the Pinkertons loose to launch armed attacks on them. The communist party, and probably the socialist party as well, were infiltrated by government agents with orders to gain leadership and then basically disable the party. Gus Hall, in particular, has been named as a government and FBI agent. Under his "leadership" CPUSA shrank to a shadow of what it had been.
Propaganda was continuously developed and spread, then the threat of Soviet communism showed up and propaganda increased. Propaganda regarding socialism has so confused the American people as to effectively disarm them and turn most into propaganda centers for anyone daring to mention the subject. Few people know what socialism is today. Then in August of 1971 former Justice Powell wrote the now "famous" Powell Memorandum which laid out the "plan" for countering the left, overwhelming them with propaganda, think tanks, etc. etc. etc. It's quite an eye-opener and I recommend looking it up and reading as much as is available about it.
During that time an enormous amount has been done to discourage union membership, causing membership to fall from about 25% of the workforce to 7%. And with all these combined efforts and much more, politics of interest to the working class have been rendered a confused tangle of anti-left propaganda.
2. Conditions we're facing creating an interest in rebuilding consideration for socialism:
We've had a series of worsening economic and other crises that more and more people are finding to be entirely resistant to efforts by "the powers that be" to correct them. They include an increasing share of national income going to the top 1%, out-of-control wealth and income disparity, healthcare being twice as expensive as in the next most expensive country, highest drug prices, education in decline, more incarcerations per capita than any other country, global warming, polarizing media, racism/white supremacy/Nazism, mindless gun proliferation including assault-style weapons designed specifically to kill people, privatization of prisons, privatization of the USPS, homelessness, crippling student debt and college costs, irrational campaign finance laws, unpopular abortion laws, out-of-control defense spending, destructive use of social media, etc. etc. etc.
Quote
"When the working class is mentioned, so people worry about the rest of the population who doesn't work. Sometimes they're worried that the elderly will be killed off or ignored, and similar for the disabled."
Thats a pretty broad statement. Is there a reliable non biased factual report/article available to read?
I was referring to my own experience in getting replies and objections when I have mentioned "the working class" and having some people think I was only interested in, and concerned for, people who have a job. So I was "preempting" such a possible concern.
This last paragraph.
Quote
"In one of his videos Dr. Richard Wolff talks about Marx having never gotten around to developing the role of the state before he died, and so as Wolff says, the role must be sorted out and the absence of such a developed analysis significantly contributed to the downfall of previous attempts to establish socialism as we saw in the USSR and China."
Why do you think major population countries haven't been successful in implementing fully socialized country's
Please don't refer me to articles, I'd like your thoughts on that.
Ok. But I have to reflect my past investigations, readings, inquiries, etc. because that's where my views on it come from.
So in reality I believe you have all the knowledge to see and know the answer but you just haven't put it together. That, I believe, is true for most people. So I'd like to see if I can remind you of things you know to sort of lead you to your own conclusions, if you don't mind.
First, relying on common sense and logic, I think we can all understand that with a change so grand and sweeping as one that eliminates an economy based on producing personal income or profit, whether it is making a living from farming, or owning a business, and replacing it with a completely different kind of economy based on collective work for the benefit of the collective with a ban on private profit, and with all the laws that would be needed and the transformation of agencies and government structure needed, it would require a well-developed insight in to what it all needs to become, how to proceed, which issues to address first, and how to keep it all on track and would take time. It couldn't and shouldn't be done "overnight". And keep in mind that there are always plenty of people who secretly want to stop the progress and turn it all around to some form of privatization of the system for personal gain: reactionaries. And they already have extensive experience in a functioning society that the socialist are trying to eliminate by replacing it with something unknown, undeveloped, or they want to create a similar but more "modern" such society of private personal opportunities.
Add to that the difficulties of sorting out an effective process of creating socialism among sincere socialist, each with different concerns and ideas of what would work best when what's being created has never existed, there's no guide for it, and conditions to be addressed are specific to the one country you're living in. So it's all uncharted territory. And there are immediate serious issues needing to be addressed yesterday.
Capitalism took about 300 years to go from the first privately-owned blacksmith shop in town with an employee, to the first nation whose economy was based on private ownership of business for private profit. This is because of all the things, some of which I just listed, that need to be sorted out and resolved and codified and mastered.
Socialism has been attempted in some form for a little over 100 years I believe. And like capitalism, it is a "trial-and-error" process. The role of the state in organizing the transformation and in running the economy afterward has not yet been worked out sufficiently to allow us to say a plan or description has been roughed out. So with that summary, your question was why the implementation of socialism hasn't been successful yet.
In Russia, Lenin noted that the country was largely agrarian and backward..... --undeveloped in terms of industry. So in his "New Economic Program" he recommended that the new state machinery take ownership of existing activities, both farming and industrial, and run them by means of government managers overseeing them. He noted that since this would not change the relationship of worker to boss, employer to employee, it wouldn't actually be socialism. He called it "state capitalism" and said that the downside would be that at some time in the future after Russia was developed industrially and technology was sufficiently advanced, there would have to be another revolution to make the transition to socialism.
As this process proceeded over the years, mistakes were made and opportunists gained control and pushed the USSR into increasing private ownership of business, resulting in the wealthy oligarchs they have today. So now Russia has reverted to capitalism and will need a full, new revolution one day.
In China, under Mao, the Gang of Four emerged and began working to drift from the socialist path and create capitalism, and they succeeded.
Marx actually said the country that would be developed to the point of being ripe for transition to socialism would be the industrial giant of the USA. The idea of an agrarian economy skipping the developmental stage of capitalism and jumping straight into socialism was unreasonable in Marx's mind, though he said that after a few industrialized countries made the change first and successfully, agrarian economies could then make the leap because of the successful examples available for all to learn from.
WHEW!!! I didn't know this post would be so long! Sorry! But you asked and I wanted to give more than talking points and sound bytes.