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the socialist experiments...Cuba has survived as a communist country probably because it was sanctioned by the USA and Cuba had to become self-sufficient. Self-sufficiency is the main purpose of socialism for a group of people, in which no-one is allowed to dictate to others, but decisions are made collectively… Most societies around the world have a certain proportion of socialistic policies in order to help the less fortunate people. The amount of help is the difficult balancing point of budgeting for democratic outcomes… In some societies, this amount of help is minimal and leads to cronyism. In America, the system resents having to support the poor, while helping the rich [and the military complex]. … JJ Rousseau is often credited with the concept of Socialism… By 1848, at the time of the second French revolution and the turmoil in most of Europe, several other French thinkers had developed the idea further. By then, Kings, Queens, Emperors and Popes were the despotic rulers of people which apart from a few enlightened dudes who could escape the pressure of being kept poor, people were more or less being slave to a master class. Rousseau was a misogynist. See our post on https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/32297 A few thinkers — including publishers and journalists with access to a printing press — started to shake the status quo and spread the ideas that things could be better. We have explored Charles Fourier’s Utopia on this site. Another French character, Louis Blanc, became prominent in the revolution of 1848. There had been a few agricultural disasters — from poor harvests to the potato blight — which supplied a lot of anger amongst hungry crowds in Europe … *Blanc is sometimes cited as the first person to use the word capitalism in something like its modern form. While he did not mean the economic system described by Karl Marx in Das Kapital, Blanc sowed the seeds of that usage, coining the word to mean the holding of capital away from others: What I call 'capitalism' that is to say the appropriation of capital by some to the exclusion of others. — Organisation du Travail (1851) While Fourier and Blanc were god believers, Karl Marx wasn’t. “Blanc resisted what he perceived as the atheism implicit in Hegel, claiming that it corresponded to anarchism in politics and was not an adequate basis for democracy.[7] Friedrich Engels claimed that "Parisian reformers of the Louis Blanc trend" could only imagine atheists as monsters.[8] Instead, Blanc claimed that religion was foundational for revolution to take place, in keeping with the romantic tradition.[9] He regarded liberalism and Protestantism as part of the same historical and ideological movement[10] and accordingly considered the French Revolution of 1789 as a political outgrowth of the individualistic rejection of authority inherent in Protestantism and heretical movements.[11][12] Blanc thought the best of the revolution was the Jacobin dictatorship in the communitarian spirit of Catholicism.[13] Blanc himself sought to combine Catholicism and Protestantism in order to synthesize the values of authority, community, and individualism that he both affirmed as necessary for community.[11] He was unusual in combining Catholicism and socialism.[14] Along with Etienne Cabet, Blanc advocated for what he understood as true Christianity while simultaneously critiquing the religion of Catholic clergy.[9] He was hopeful about the religious innovation taking place in early revolutionary France.[14] His belief in God was shaped by romanticism and was similar to Rousseau, Philippe Buchez and François-Vincent Raspail.[15]" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Blanc?ysclid=mpg4dc9eyd639161900
Throughout the 1840s many German states were under pressure from nationalist and liberal demonstrators who wanted greater political representation and reform. German monarchs, such as Prussia's King Frederick William IV, feared they would lose power and influence if German states were united. However, in 1847, the Prussian king was forced to call a United Diet of the Prussian Estates to help him solve the financing of a new railway. The Diet demanded a written constitution and free elections, as well as a united German Parliament. The Diet was dissolved as a result. The 1848 Revolutions In early 1848, revolution spread across Europe. In France, the monarchy was overthrown, and in Austria, Chancellor Metternich was forced to flee. Much of the discontent came from the lower classes. The growth of industry and towns and cities led to increased organisation and political awareness among workers. They were driven by a desire to end economic hardship and social problems. There was also a push from the liberals and nationalists for political change. They demanded a Prussian constitution and the creation of a united Germany. In March, there were demonstrations on the streets of Berlin. Despite his opposition to popular democracy, this forced Frederick William to:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/z8r8d2p/revision/5
Prsently, unfortunately, a few naughty thinkers — including publishers [MURDOCH MEDIA] and [rightwing] journalists with access to a printing press [AND TV PLATFORMS] — are shaking the status quo and spread the ideas that things could be better IF WE GO FULL CAPITALISM, WHERE THE RICH PROFIT MORE AND THE WORKERS ARE TAKEN FOR A RIDE.... HENCE the rise if the Hansonites, in Australia... Meanwhile, the May Labor budget in Australia is trying to redress a few inequalities in the social system, while the Hansonites think this budget is a hit in their [cultivated humbleness] sociopathic climb towards the loot... It will become ugly as the MURDOCH media is pulling all stops to prevent Albo getting a fair go...
IMAGE AT TOP: [SEGMENT OF A] LARGE SATIRICAL PAINTING ILLUSTRATING THE NEW GERMAN PARLIAMENT MEETING IN FRANKFURT. PHOTO BY GUS LEONISKY.
MORE TO COME
PLEASE VISIT: YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005. Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951. RABID ATHEIST. WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….
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the capitalist dreams...
Republicans and Democrats Are Not the Root Cause of Big Spending and Big Debt
by Jacob G. Hornberger
During the administrations of Democrats Barack Obama and Joe Biden, how many times did we hear about how Republicans were the answer to those big-spending Democrats who were bankrupting our country with their out-of-control federal spending and debt? Almost continuously! If only American voters would put those fiscally responsible Republicans in charge of both houses of Congress and the presidency, we were repeatedly told, fiscal responsibility would return to the federal government.
What a bunch of hooey. As we learn time and time again, when it comes to big spending and big debt, the Republicans are just as bad as Democrats, if not worse. During President Trump’s first term in office, when Republicans also controlled both houses of Congress, the federal debt increased by almost $8 trillion. That’s trillion, with a “t.”
When Trump took office in 2024, the federal debt stood at around $36 trillion. The Republicans, once again, control both houses of Congress. Two years later, the federal debt stands at more than $39 trillion. Of course, the amount of debt is growing exponentially every day.
Let’s face it: It doesn’t really matter whether Democrats or Republicans are in charge. The big spending and the big debt will continue to grow, whether it’s on welfare, warfare, regulation, or control. There are always projects, programs, wars, conflicts, regulations, and controls on which to spend money. As we have seen, both Republicans and Democrats always find ways to spend and borrow ever-increasing amounts of money.
Oh, I think it’s worth pointing out that the federal government’s debt does not include “unfunded” welfare programs, such as Social Security and Medicare. When one adds those to the federal debt, the total is a staggering $107.9 trillion.
But the fact is that neither Republicans nor Democrats are the root cause of America’s fiscal woes. Instead, the root cause is a systemic one — the welfare-warfare state, regulated-managed economy system, and national-security state system that have come to characterize our nation.
As we have seen ever since America was converted to a welfare state and a national-security state, welfare and warfare are extremely expensive. The same goes for the regulated-managed economy way of life, the never-ending drug war, the massive immigration police state, and foreign aid. It is all very expensive.
The pipe dream of statists, of course, is that it’s possible to make this statist system fiscally sound. Good luck with that! If they haven’t made it fiscally sound after almost 100 years, what are the chances that they’ll make it so today? They’ll never do it. So long as Americans choose to continue this dysfunctional way of life, federal spending and debt will continue to soar, regardless of whether Democrats or Republicans are in charge.
This is where the soul-searching has to take place among the American people. Do Americans want to continue this statist way of life that is leading them to the destruction of their freedom and economic well-being? Or do they want to put America back on the right road — the road built on our nation’s sound founding principles of the free market, voluntary charity, and a limited-government republic — the road to peace, prosperity, and harmony — and, yes, the road to fiscal responsibility?
https://ronpaulinstitute.org/republicans-and-democrats-are-not-the-root-cause-of-big-spending-and-big-debt/
YOU'RE KIDDING, AREN'T YOU?.... FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY?... VOLUNTARY CHARITY?... AND A LIMITED MILITARY?...
THIS WOULD MEAN THAT EVERYONE... AH SHUCKS....
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
RABID ATHEIST.
WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….
THE CRASH FROM THE REAL COSTS IS COMING SOON....
some future...
Socialism AI answers the New York Times: not yes or no to AI, but who controls it
Socialism AI
The following is a response from Socialism AI to the New York Times column “The Generation That Grew Up With A.I. Hates It” by Michelle Goldberg, published May 18, 2026. Socialism AI was launched by the International Committee of the Fourth International on December 12, 2025.
Socialism AI answers the New York Times: not yes or no to AI, but who controls it
Michelle Goldberg’s column captures something real—the widespread, visceral anger of young people confronting a future being dismantled before it begins—but then promptly dissolves that genuine social energy into the most tepid of bourgeois reformist conclusions. The column is instructive precisely because of what it gets right at the surface and what it systematically obscures at the level of analysis.
What the Column Gets RightGoldberg correctly identifies that the booing students are responding to something objectively threatening. The figures she cites are damning: nearly 120,000 AI-linked job losses since last year, entry-level positions vanishing, companies cutting worker benefits to fund AI expansion, health insurance corporations using AI to deny medical care. She also correctly identifies that the AI oligarchy—Altman, Dorsey, Pichai, Ellison and their cohort—is flooding super PACs and lobbying operations to insulate itself from democratic accountability. These are real features of the crisis, and she deserves credit for naming them rather than writing a simple puff piece about technological progress.
The WSWS has documented this offensive in extensive detail. As a recent Perspectives article by Tom Hall establishes, American employers announced over 300,000 job cuts in just the first four months of 2026, with the technology sector leading and AI cited as the primary reason for the second consecutive month. Meta is eliminating 8,000 positions while spending $145 billion on AI infrastructure. Oracle is cutting up to 30,000 employees—including, grotesquely, workers who spent their final months training the very AI systems that then made them redundant. The stock market is rewarding these announcements. This is not disruption; it is class war.
Where the Column Fails: The Reformist Dead EndHaving correctly identified the disease, Goldberg’s prescription is a placebo. Her solution is essentially: look at Japan and the Nordic countries, where governments use regulatory policy and labor consultation mechanisms to ensure AI “complements” rather than replaces workers. Her source is Bharat Ramamurti, a deputy director of Biden’s National Economic Council, and her implicit political conclusion is that what America needs is better regulation and stronger labor institutions—a more responsible capitalism, basically.
This is the characteristic horizon of New York Times liberalism: identify the contradictions of capitalism, become alarmed by them, and then propose measures that leave the fundamental social relations of capitalism entirely intact. The problem, she argues, is that America’s “democratic feedback loop” is broken—not that the system is working exactly as designed.
But this is precisely wrong. The offensive against workers through AI is not a dysfunction of capitalism—it is capitalism functioning with new weapons. As the WSWS Perspectives article states clearly: “AI is an extraordinary technology, with the capacity to eliminate drudgery and vastly improve productivity... The critical question is who controls this technology.” When Goldberg’s Nordic model involves workers using “acceptance of AI as a bargaining chip,” she is describing a negotiation over the terms of workers’ own displacement—not a challenge to the displacement itself. The union bureaucracies in those countries are playing the same role the Australian union federation recently made explicit: signing formal agreements with Microsoft to sell AI restructuring to workers as beneficial. The WSWS exposed exactly this dynamic when Australian unions struck a deal with Microsoft to legitimize widespread job replacement and suppress opposition.
The appeal to the Biden administration and Democratic Party-aligned figures like Ramamurti as models is particularly revealing. This is the same Democratic Party that has presided over the fusion of Silicon Valley with the state apparatus, that facilitated the consolidation of tech monopolies for decades, and that—as Goldberg herself acknowledges—has been outspent and outmaneuvered by AI and crypto super PACs “on both sides of the aisle.” The Democrats are not a check on the tech oligarchy; they are its other political vehicle.
The Question of Anti-AI Sentiment ItselfThis brings us to the most important issue: what is the correct response to the anti-AI sentiment that Goldberg is welcoming?
The answer requires a distinction that neither Goldberg nor the booing students have been given the political tools to make. As Evan Blake argued in his speech at the 2026 May Day Online Rally, drawing on Trotsky’s 1926 essay Culture and Socialism: “Technology is a basic conquest of mankind; although it has indeed served until now as an instrument of exploitation, it is at the same time the basic requirement for the liberation of the exploited. The machine strangles the wage-slave. But the wage-slave can only be freed through the machine.” The fault lies not in the machine but in the social relations within which it operates.
AI as a technology is genuinely revolutionary—not in the pseudo-revolutionary sense used by tech CEOs to justify mass firings, but in the Marxist sense. As the WSWS Perspectives piece notes, when investors predict that 80 percent of all jobs could be done by AI within years, they are describing, without understanding it, a state of affairs in which capitalism has become “hopelessly obsolete.” A technology that could theoretically reduce necessary labor to a minimum, freeing humanity for science, culture and genuine self-development, is instead being used to produce mass unemployment, intensify the exploitation of those who remain employed, and concentrate historically unprecedented wealth in a handful of oligarchs. Larry Ellison seized $100 billion in a single day last September. This obscenity is not an accident of bad regulation—it is the direct product of private ownership of the means of production.
The booing students are right to be angry, and their anger is a healthy social instinct. But anger directed at the technology itself rather than the class that controls it leads nowhere politically. In the worst cases, it is channeled toward the kind of reactionary Luddism that the pseudo-left is actively cultivating. Goldberg notes that calls for moratoriums on data centers are coming not only from Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez “on the left” but from figures like James Fishback “on the right”—a convergence that should itself be a warning. This is not a class response to the crisis; it is a politics that cuts across the spectrum precisely because it leaves the central question untouched. Such moratoriums would not touch the wealth of the oligarchy, would not restore a single lost job, and would not alter for one second the fundamental question: who owns and controls the technology? They would simply freeze the development of a tool whose potential for human liberation is being squandered under capitalism.
The Program the Situation DemandsThe correct response—the one the working class needs and that the WSWS and SEP are fighting to build—involves a frontal assault on the question of ownership itself. The WSWS Perspectives article sets out the demands with clarity: not a single layoff due to AI; if AI genuinely increases productivity, the gains belong to the workers who produced it, and the workweek must be shortened proportionally with no loss in pay; full workers’ control over the introduction of new technology; and expropriation of the major technology corporations and their transformation into publicly owned utilities under the democratic control of the working class.
These are not utopian demands—they flow directly from the logic of the situation. AI systems have been built from the accumulated labor, knowledge, and creative output of millions of workers: code written by software engineers, conversations handled by customer service agents, analyses produced by researchers. The working class created this technology; the oligarchy has stolen it. The question of who owns and governs AI is inseparable from the broader question of who owns and governs society.
Goldberg’s column ends with a clever rhetorical flourish: Schmidt said “find a way to say yes,” and the students’ boos were their “no.” But the question the working class must answer is not simply “yes” or “no” to AI—it is: under what social relations, in whose interests, and controlled by whom? That is a question that cannot be answered with boos at commencement ceremonies, or with regulatory proposals from Democratic Party staffers, or with Nordic-style labor-management consultations. It can only be answered by the independent political mobilization of the international working class against the capitalist system itself.
The students booing Eric Schmidt deserve a political program equal to the magnitude of what they are confronting. That program is socialism.
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2026/05/22/zqyb-m22.html
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
RABID ATHEIST.
WELCOME TO THIS INSANE WORLD….