PeterZ wrote:gcomeau wrote:
I understand that you are arguing about quibbling little legalese distinctions that have absolutely no practical relevance whatsoever.
If in both countries the laws of the nation are implemented by their governments, and in both countries those governments are subject to the approval of the voting electorate, then you can argue technicalities of sovereignty until you pass out... what the hell does any of it have to do with your claim that socialism can't work in the United States?
Because socialism asserts the government owns the means of production. That means private citizens have to give up their ownership of those means of production and to any future means of production that might yet be invented. Since the government does not currently have that authority or power, we citizens have to give up that authority to own the means of production.
You get we're not talking about full on socialism right? But the degree of socialism practiced in, as we've been discussing this entire time, Europe?
(And even if we WERE discussing full blown 100% socialism, there is still nothing special about the US that makes it any more or less feasible than it would be in any other democratic nation. If the electorate decided they wanted to do it, they vote in the government to make it happen, and it happens.)
In societies that hold the government is sovereign, this is no great shakes. Government already has that power.
Hate to break it to you, but the government already has that power in the US too.
In the US, we citizens have to give up more of our liberty to allow government to own what has been until now private enterprises. We can argue the cost and benefits of public enterprises some other time.
If the federal government can own private enterprises...
Government owned enterprises are public by definition. The government cannot own
private enterprises in any nation..
I think you must mean "If the government can own enterprises."
Which it already can. Just as a single example, the US government nationalized all railroads in 1917. It was deemed important to do so for the war effort... so it was done. (And it still owns Amtrak)
After 9-11 the country nationalized airport security services.
Etc...
So to repeat, nothing special about the US on this matter.