Surprise primary victories by "democratic socialists" in New York and Pennsylvania have created a buzz about millennials and socialism. Bernie Sanders was the prophet of this movement, attracting strong support among young people for his ideas about democratic socialism in the 2016 presidential campaign. Still, people were surprised when a YouGov poll showed that young people (under 30) preferred socialism to capitalism 43 to 32 percent. With these recent political wins, some wonder whether the Democratic Party will undergo a socialist realignment, just as Donald Trump led a populist reinvention of the Republican Party.
To all of this I say: Not so fast. First, there is a widespread misunderstanding of what democratic socialism means and what millennials really want. Socialism is an economic system that involves collective (especially governmental) ownership of the means of production and distribution. It stands in contrast to a capitalist, market-regulated ownership of business. When you add the word “democratic” to it — which is presumably done to soften the impact of an historically unpopular term in the U.S. — you are essentially saying the system is chosen democratically, not imposed by some kind of totalitarian regime as in Russia or Venezuela.
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3 comments:
There is no such thing as a free lunch! someone is going to pay for it!
Where, oh where, is logic?
You mean Venezuela, the country we deliberately sabotaged with oil tariffs to ensure socialism was not seen as being successful because capitalism allows the same rich idiots who have been in power to stay in power?
I still dont understand why we fight so hard to stay controlled by the 1%
Venezuela screwed itself with socialism. Don't blame anyone else.
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