How bizarre that the author forgets to mention that probably the most "liberal", "socialist", etc societies in the West, e.g. Sweden, Norway, Denmark, are all doing just fine. More than fine, they seem to be kickin' ass and taking names, last I checked (and no, it's not the oil). Furthermore, I would have to guess that the author chooses to omit Germany and Switzerland for a similar reason. Finally, to suggest that the crisis in Ireland has the same root cause as the one in Greece is rather, shall we say, unenlightened. In fact, I expected that the author would hold Ireland up as a paragon of capitalist virtue, what with one of the lowest corporate tax rates and government expenditure/GDP ratios in the world.Quote from Trader666:
The Long Retreat of Liberalism
by Pat Buchanan
7/19/2011
Excerpt:
For, from Greece to Ireland to Portugal to Italy, from California to Wisconsin to New Jersey to New York, the crisis of the West is a crisis of liberalism.
Deficits and debts that threaten to wipe out bondholders and banks, destroy currencies, bring down governments and bankrupt nations are everywhere forcing reductions in government payrolls and rollbacks in government programs.
Across the West, the public sector is under siege.
And parties of the left, be they liberal, socialist or Marxist, depend on the public sector increasing its employees, increasing its beneficiaries, increasing its share of the national wealth.
That is what they do. That is how they grow. And that is how they reach and retain power.
Bottom line. Parties of the left are on this earth to grow the government. But the West has entered a period where its economic survival and the prevention of financial collapse mandate constant and deep cuts in the size and sweep of government.
For the left, this is going to be a long decade.
http://townhall.com/columnists/patbuchanan/2011/07/19/the_long_retreat_of_liberalism/page/full/
Quote from Martinghoul:
How bizarre that the author forgets to mention that probably the most "liberal", "socialist", etc societies in the West, e.g. Sweden, Norway, Denmark, are all doing just fine. More than fine, they seem to be kickin' ass and taking names, last I checked (and no, it's not the oil). Furthermore, I would have to guess that the author chooses to omit Germany and Switzerland for a similar reason. Finally, to suggest that the crisis in Ireland has the same root cause as the one in Greece is rather, shall we say, unenlightened. In fact, I expected that the author would hold Ireland up as a paragon of capitalist virtue, what with one of the lowest corporate tax rates and government expenditure/GDP ratios in the world.
I can't imagine why the author of such a well thought out and researched article would make such glaring omissions. Bizarre, indeed.
Good question... I don't know what it is, but then I didn't make any high-falutin' overly general assertions about "liberalism", "socialism" or any other such thing. Clearly, it's not about "liberalism" or it's not only about "liberalism".Quote from jem:
If it is not the oil what is it?
is it the people...
Is it the method of accounting...
I found this article on sweeden.
http://www.newgeography.com/content/001543-is-sweden-a-false-utopia
The old Sweden, in contrast, has not done as well in economic terms. In 1960 taxation stood at 30 percent of GDP, roughly where the US is today. As taxes rose, economic growth decreased, with Sweden dropping from being the 4th richest country in 1970 to being the 12th richest in 2008. Swedish GDP per capita is now $36,600, far below the $45,500 of the US, and even further behind the $56,900 of Swedes in America.
A Scandinavian economist once stated to Milton Friedman: "In Scandinavia we have no poverty." Milton Friedman replied, "That's interesting, because in America among Scandinavians, we have no poverty either." Indeed, the poverty rate for Americans with Swedish ancestry is only 6.7%, half the U.S average. Economists Geranda Notten and Chris de Neubourg have calculated the poverty rate in Sweden using the American poverty threshold, finding it to be an identical 6.7%.
I also recall a study which came out a few years ago which said that 40% of sweeden would be below the poverty line in the U.S.
Indeed, but isn't it curious that they're also the cream of the crop if you love your government to be solvent?Quote from Trader666:
If you love high taxes, they're the cream of the crop
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Quote from Martinghoul:
Indeed, but isn't it curious that they're also the cream of the crop if you love your government to be solvent?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sovereign_states_by_public_debt
Regardless, this doesn't change my point. The assertion that the author of the article makes is just not based on sound logic.