pastafarian
Well-known member
I know Russell Brand wants an end to capitalism in all its forms but can someone please explain to me what economic system Russell Brand has put forward as a replacement for capitalism.
cheers!
cheers!
I know Russell Brand wants an end to capitalism in all its forms but can someone please explain to me what economic system Russell Brand has put forward as a replacement for capitalism.
cheers!
i can't speak for mr. brand, but how about regulating capitalism as a start point,
like they used to in the old days
i can't speak for mr. brand, but how about regulating capitalism as a start point,
like they used to in the old days
Ok, but i would prefer to know what Brand is advocating as a replacement to capitalism.
The latest wheeze is to identify trades as they are made and using even faster connections to arbitrage them before they are completed to make very small gains, which are multiplied millions of times. Ker-ching
According to Brand the proceeds "will go to creating social enterprises that are not for profit" and that "represent an alternative to some of the systems that we currently labour under".
Make of that what you will.
From what I gather he supports anarcho-syndicalism and a resource based economy.
From what I gather he supports anarcho-syndicalism and a resource based economy.
That makes an interesting read,totally hatstand but interesting anyway.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anarcho-syndicalism
if this is Russell Brands great revolution plan with an end goal of abolishing the wage system i am out........not that i was ever in really.
He's got a book to publicise and is giving the proceeds to worthy causes?
its not bankers per se, that is the issue but the environment and culture that banks operate in, i.e a rich powerful very small section of society that acts in ways that only benefit themselves at the expense of the vast majority of others.
So in that regard politicians are largely helpless, they rely on the backing of this section, without it they aren't going anywhere. If you attack that as obviously as Brand you get the full smear and FUD campaign.
Oh come on. I expect a bit better from you. I do not like world hunger but this does not mean I have to hand over the contents of my fridge.
Interesting view you have there.........
So, just to recap.
Gordon Brown advocated light touch regulation, and in 2007 (in his Mansion House speech) he stated that he resisted regulatory crackdowns following financial failures in the US.
In the parliamentary report into the failure of RBS it states.......
"This acknowledgement of the culpability of senior FSA management is mitigated, however, by the argument that a good deal of blame for the failure of regulation should be put at the door of the prevailing global regulatory framework, ideological assumptions about the efficiency of markets, and political pressures placed on the FSA.
The Report argues that FSA senior management and the Board that oversaw them “made decisions within the context of a widely held, but erroneous, view about the inherent stability of the global financial system, and of political pressure to maintain a ‘light touch’ regulatory regime to support the competitiveness of the UK financial sector.”
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201213/cmselect/cmtreasy/640/640.pdf
Note the references to "political pressures" placed on the FCA generally and to maintain a light touch regulatory regime.
Do you think it might be possible that Sir Fred Goodwin had a line into the Treasury (or to Gordon himself) when he wanted RBS to (say) take over ABN AMRO without having taken sufficient due diligence?
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/revealed-gordon-brown-entertained-shamed-1031168
Your view is also contrary to Labour's own admissions of failure of course......
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-14888933
I agree with your point about a small powerful group of people who are in control, however that includes the politicians.
Brand is missing this point, and it's even more relevant to how decisions are made by the EU.
Missing this dynamic means Brand is not very anti establishment at all...........he's a patsy.
so your point is financial regulation = socialism
as you're au fait with these matters, a little advice please,
what is the minimum amount i need to blag to avoid any legal recourse?
I'd love to be custard cousins with Russel Brand and sling one up Katy Perry.
Jemima Khan too? Then you could also be a custard cousin of Imran, without doubt the best bowler I've ever seen for Sussex. I faced him for four balls in the nets once, never saw it once, and was castled three times.
You can begin to see why so many people take pot-shots at him. It's envy.
Jemima Khan too? Then you could also be a custard cousin of Imran, without doubt the best bowler I've ever seen for Sussex. I faced him for four balls in the nets once, never saw it once, and was castled three times.