Everyone is guaranteed a job that earns enough to afford a modest home and car. Everyone is gets free medical. Everyone gets free life insurance based on income levels. No one is homeless or uncared for unless they want to be, but no one has to be. And in every domestic sanctuary (AKA "The projects") there are uncorrupted federal police to ensure no gangs, prostitutes, drugs, or booming drive-bys (not by guns or stereo systems). No fear.
In exchange: everyone must be employed who is under sixty-five and not disabled. One parent raising children would be considered employment.
The state would own the major means of production and private enterprise would be limited to the size of "mom and pop" shops--no matter what that was, book publishing or gas stations.
Individual debt would have a mandatory ceiling, and it would be a pretty low one. Drug addictions could require mandatory incarceration or hospitalization until cured. The death penalty would be expanded to various henous crimes and only one appeal allowed.
College would be guaranteed, but only to those who score sufficiently for the college programs they want to go into. But everyone would receive training for a job, and they could apply for retraining if they wanted to switch.
Doe this all sound harsh? Get used to it. Freedom--American Style--doesn't work with the population of our country or the world. Capitalism doesn't work in the information age. If you want to keep the good 'ol constitution, then you're going to have to go back to 70% of people owning farms, no central bank, and about ten million Americans. Then you have to have freedom--the government wouldn't be powerful enough to take care of anyone.
I say it's time to learn from past mistakes in capitalism, socialism, and communism and build something new that works. Something that's good for people individually and for the state of people generally.
In exchange: everyone must be employed who is under sixty-five and not disabled. One parent raising children would be considered employment.
The state would own the major means of production and private enterprise would be limited to the size of "mom and pop" shops--no matter what that was, book publishing or gas stations.
Individual debt would have a mandatory ceiling, and it would be a pretty low one. Drug addictions could require mandatory incarceration or hospitalization until cured. The death penalty would be expanded to various henous crimes and only one appeal allowed.
College would be guaranteed, but only to those who score sufficiently for the college programs they want to go into. But everyone would receive training for a job, and they could apply for retraining if they wanted to switch.
Doe this all sound harsh? Get used to it. Freedom--American Style--doesn't work with the population of our country or the world. Capitalism doesn't work in the information age. If you want to keep the good 'ol constitution, then you're going to have to go back to 70% of people owning farms, no central bank, and about ten million Americans. Then you have to have freedom--the government wouldn't be powerful enough to take care of anyone.
I say it's time to learn from past mistakes in capitalism, socialism, and communism and build something new that works. Something that's good for people individually and for the state of people generally.
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