It varies from state to state, it’s usually been handled by some sort of state bureaucracy with all sorts of restrictions. Which I still think is a crappy, broken system, but less crappy and broken than the housing market. They still housed non-party members.
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Replying to @OhNoIts2016 @KEEMSTAR and
Without rule of law, a free press and democracy their are no checks to ensure the honesty of a bureaucracy or government. 2008 crisis Cause 1) deregulation of banking sector enacted by Bill Clinton 2) government backed lending to poor credit risks - NINJAS.
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Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and
Many Leninist states are more “democratic” than the United States (not China though), but I don’t recognize either as a fully legitimate form of democracy. They have de facto ruling classes. I’m strongly supportive of a free press, strongly opposed to banks & the housing market.
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Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and
2. In the UK the elite was primarily from a very small group - a few thousand families - when I was born. This has changed as the UK became more like a meritocracy under Thatcher (they hated her for that!) But further change is needed.
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Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and
Nothing about Thatcher’s reforms were meritocratic. She ruined the rail system and directly led to dozens of accidents.
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Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and
2. I can just remember pre Thatcher, power cuts massive inflation and a fear that the country was close to collapse. She was hated, after each election she won. You could never find anyone who had voted for her! She was a significant factor in ending the Soviet Union.
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Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and
I’m sure she was. She was also a significant factor in permanently weakening trade unions, sending homelessness rates on the rise, and prolonging the Troubles on false pretenses.
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Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and
The IRA did try to kill her in Brighton. They were more like Ireland's FARC, more interested in protecting their drug trade and protection rackets than insurgency. Personally I would have shown them what war is really like, having seen their handiwork first hand.
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Replying to @simon_enefer @KEEMSTAR and
But diplomacy ended up being the key all along. What I really take issue to is her using “we don’t negotiate with terrorists” as the excuse and criticizing others for it, while she herself was secretly negotiating with the IRA. And those wouldn’t be her last terrorist talks.
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Replying to @mediocre_danny @KEEMSTAR and
The West has forgotten a major lesson of WW2. You don't just need to militarily defeat an opponent, you need to humiliate them. The allies and Russians did this to Germany and Japan. Changing two of the most militaristic nations in history into pacifist states.
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The movement for Irish sovereignty should not have been treated as a military adversary, despite its insurgent elements. And those two just became economic imperialists— obviously better than the death cults they were, but still (Japan’s basically part of the US empire though)
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