So which party do you follow in the country you live in?
I don't follow or support any party here.
So which party do you follow in the country you live in?
Ah, I see....think I will start supporting Bayern Munich.I don't follow or support any party here.
Definition of nationalise from the Oxford English Dictionary: Transfer (a major branch of industry or commerce) from private to state ownership or control.
The German government owns and controls DB AG. It doesn't mean it isn't, just because it isn't set up in the way your rigid and anachronistic beliefs believe it should be set up.
Ah, I see....think I will start supporting Bayern Munich.
Why don't you you look up the definition of state socialism, then ask yourself the following......
Would a state socialist controlled railway have "investments" in other nations railways like DB AG has with Arriva?
Would a state socialist controlled railway have an "investors page" on its website like DB AG has?
Would a state socialist controlled railway collaborate on projects with other capitalist concerns like DB AG does with Hong Kong's MTR Corporation?
Would a state socialist controlled railway issue bonds that are listed on a stock market?
http://www1.deutschebahn.com/ecm2-db-en/ir/bonds_rating/bonds.html
Would a state socialist controlled railway consider privatising aspects of its business like DB AG is doing?
A socialist minded individual would know the answer........
Why should I look up state socialism? I've no real interest in this and have never advocated it.
But yet why do you say you support Corbyn and Benn.
do you not follow?I support the Labour Party. This does not mean I support EVERYTHING and EVERYONE connected to Labour. And as a democratic socialist it doesn't mean I agree with everything this prescribes either.
Which bit of
do you not follow?
It would appear I do not fit your rigid old fashioned definition of what a socialist is. Look up democratic socialist and social democracy, things might be clearer for you then. But even then I do not follow every last morsel of these beliefs, to do so would be weird.
I support state ownership of the railways. The German rail system is state owned and state run. I'm happy with this and yes they might run it as a regular business but in 2015 I have no issue with this whatsoever. It does not seem to fit your definition of what a socialist is....so be it.
Let's agree to disagree as we seem to be arguing about different things here.
You are dead right we arguing about different things........by your own admission you are a neo liberal, a Blairite, a wet Tory.
You support the capitalist economic model, that why you support the EU.
That's why your political man for all seasons routine is so absurd. Just like you cannot be a little bit pregnant, you cannot be a little bit socialist.
If you support Corbyn or Benn, (as you have on this thread) you are rejecting the capitalist model that defines your social democratic ideology.
You are rejecting the EU, you are rejecting the DB AG ownership structure, you are rejecting private ownership of state assets.........a state owned nationalised railway would not be a SHAREHOLDER.
This difference is the new political battlefront within the Labour Party you say you are a member of; it was opened by Blairites in 93 with the rejection of clause IV (you know what that is right?)
Now we have it again with rise of Corbyn........politically you are either with him (a socialist) or against him (a neo liberal).
You can't have it both ways no matter how hard you try.
It would appear Labour really ARE trying to prevent Corbyn from winning - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-34060453 - talk about corruption. The identikit candidates clearly want to win at any cost.
I think the bolded section explains everything. You somehow can't seem to grasp there is a fairly large piece of ground between these two definitions. Either with, or against......
Us two repeating the same arguments must be as utterly boring for you as it is for everyone else. Let's end it.
No, I do, on one side is socialism and on the other capitalism.
A socialised capitalism is still capitalism.....saying it's different is like putting cherries on a dog turd and saying it's not a dog turd......
Which brings me to people like you that gladly jumped on Tony Blairs neo liberal bandwagon in 93 which consigned the Labour Party's socialist ideology to the wilderness. You are so committed to Blairism you still define yourself by it.
Now Corbyn has arisen from the wilderness and got mainstream oxygen because the failure of neo liberalism you now want to jump on his socialist bandwagon.........like some shithead JCL.
That's why you are worse than Tories, people like you supported the ideology that almost killed socialism in the Labour Party and reduced committed socialists like Benn and Corbyn to eccentric cranks.
I don't care if it's boring or repetitive socialists have waited over 20 years to have a party leader with the balls to stand up to capitalists and its supporters (people like you Toynbee, Cooprr et al).
pro/anti austerity is just new clothing for very old ideas of how much state funding and direction of the population is a good idea. the left like to spend lots, the right would rather not. by the next election i think we'll all be bored of "austerity" and be back to the old concepts and arguments.
This.It would appear Labour really ARE trying to prevent Corbyn from winning - http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-34060453 - talk about corruption. The identikit candidates clearly want to win at any cost.
This is a simplistic and plain wrong statement. It is true that the left believe in spending the public's money as a means to achieve their political objectives. However so do the right. In July of 2011 the national debt was £940 billion or 68% of GDP. By the end of 2013 it was £1,254 billion or 75.7% of GDP. By the first quarter of 2015 it was £1,560 billion or 81.6% of GDP. All of these years are under a pro austerity tory led right wing government. Quite simply the Tories increased the amount of money we owed by £600 billion.
you are correct in this, and it doesnt contradict anything i said. those spending plans are what were inherited and without a root and branch retrenchment of the spending Labour brought in, we wont see the deficit go down very quickly. there hasnt been any real austerity, the rate of increase has been constrained to allow the economy to recover and catch up, over taking slowly. all that debt has gone into the great re-distribution of wealth that you support, defered on the never, never.
where you are quite wrong is the notion that there is any politcally directed transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich. the taxes levied on the richer and more wealthy are greatly more than those on the poor. the rich dont get hand outs - fyi a tax cut is not a payment to anyone, it is less money from the person to the government. the vast amounts of tax collected are redistributed for all, most non-means tested, to everyones benefit.