Dr Kynes
Well-Known Member
no. it's not.Anywhere outside the U.S. if you call yourself a libertarian people will think you're a socialist. The Americans made a perversion of the word. It's basically Anarchism and socialism or syndicalism.
you are making the same assumptions as abandonconflict does.
socialism anarchy libertarianism liberalism and capitalism have VERY specific meanings. these meaning do not change from nation to nation or language to language any more than math changes.
the words are used differently by populists and demagogues in various countries and languages because in some regions some words come with more baggage, but each of these words themselves have a specific meaning and that meaning is not up for debate.
in any university in the world these things hold true
Socialism
In Socialist systems, all property, capital and infrastructure (the means of production and distribution) are owned by the state, and administered by the state. Each person in the nation receives what the state believes he deserves based on his needs.
It is NOT intended to be fair or equitable. Marx imagined Socialism as a stepping stone, a halfway point where the proletariat (the peoples) would be instilled with zeal for communist theory, and eventually the state would naturally evolve into a communist state.
Communism
envisioned by Marx as the ultimate form of society, in which all capital, property, and infrastructure would be "held in common" (owned by no-one, and administered by the people without the need for direction) and every person would take whatever he required from the common resources and no more (again without government direction) and contribute to the common resources whatever he could produce by his labours (again without government direction) Under a perfect communist society, government's internal role would be largely advisory, and externally, it would act as the main arm of efforts to share the ideology of communism with any non-communist societies, while protecting the security of the state from external threats.
Capitalism
a system of economic action whereby property, capital, resources and infrastructure are owned by individual entities (natural and corporate) and operated for a profit at the discretion of the owner
Laissez Faire
from the french, literally allow to act. An economic system whereby the actions of entities which own capital property and infrastructure are unrestrained and unregulated, they may operate in whatever manner they wish. An absolutely free market
Democracy
A political form whereby actions of government are solely decided by popular vote
Republic
a political system in which individuals are selected by popular vote to represent the electorate, and in some cases appoint representatives to act on the electorate's behalf in a larger body
Constitution
a form of legal and governmental establishment whereby a body of foundational principles or precedents are established as a framework for governance or organization
Dictatorship
A form of government wherein a single person holds absolute unquestioned authority
Monarchy
A form of government which places extensive, or total authority in the hands of a single family lineage
Oligarchy
a form of government where authority is concentrated in the hands of a few powerful individuals
Plutocracy
A governmental form wherein power is controlled by the wealthy
Anarchy
a complete lack of all social structure from the Greek, Literally: No Rules
Fascism
A secondary form of socialism wherein ownership of capital property and infrastructure may be privately owned, and operated for a profit, but the method of operation is dictated by the state.
Nazism
A secondary form of socialism only superficially distinct from Fascism
Marxism
Pertaining to the theories of Karl Marx Predominantly his theories of Communism Socialism and Proletarian Revolution.
Maoism
A secondary form of Socialism focusing on agrarian uprising, and radical reformation of society based on agrarian priorities, rather than that of urban and industrial workers.
Left Wing
Parties, coalitions and political pressure groups primarily concerned with issues of social change, social justice/injustice, unions, collectivism, and Marxist theory (also called Progressives and Liberals)
Right Wing
Parties, coalitions and political pressure groups primarily concerned with capitalist theory, social stability, tradition and rejection of change (also called Conservative)