RE: Life in East Germany under Uncle Joe!!
Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2013 9:20 pm
well...you forgot 'fascist'...
What's your Strategy?
https://forums.matrixgames.com:443/
Poland.ORIGINAL: Sarge
I’m sure , but now I’m really wondering where the hell does Perturabo live if Obama looks like a neocon ?ORIGINAL: cohimbra
World is a courios place: you call 'socialist' a party that we (in Italy,
but I think also around Europe) consider moderate right...
[:D]
No, he ends up in the centre economically and in extreme authoritarianism. Stalin ends up on extreme left and a little bit less authoritarian than Hitler.ORIGINAL: Sarge
Perturabo obviously hasn’t a clue what the hell he’s talking about, that’s why I drop his first “observation” ……… it’s like calling Hitler far left “progressive” …………[:D]
very cool , we have a lot of warsaw “area” immigrants here in the Midwest . Great group of people, my grandfather fought with some polish units during the war in holland , he would tell these stories that would have your side splitting about how they treated the limmies….………..ORIGINAL: Perturabo
Poland.

ORIGINAL: Zap
ORIGINAL: parusski
ORIGINAL: Terl
Well played [8D][:)]
These exchanges don't happen very much now that I live in Wyoming, but it still occurs.[:(][:(][:(][:(]
The most interesting aberration is the socialist, communist, Marxist, calling themselves Christians.(like the current President). No way you can be one of the above and claim to be Christian. Their attempt to alter the commandments to fit their ideology is nothing more than Diabolic.
Wyoming, I'll be delivering a load of liquid to Cody, Wy. Saturday. I deliver to The Gypsum plant there occasionally. Are you anywhere near there? Abundant wildlife, Nice open country. Cody has the nice Buffalo Bill Cody Museum. Great collection of Civil War, WWI, WWII, rifle, machine guns, handguns.

ORIGINAL: danlongman
The political spectrum of mainstream politics in the USA is not very wide at all
and sits rather far to the right of what the rest of the civilised world is
suffering under... or enjoying depending on your point of view. When I hear Obama called
a "socialist" it just shows how narrow that political viewpoint is. You may huff and puff
all you like but it is a very limited spectrum indeed.
ORIGINAL: wodin
The we are all equal and everyone should have the same amount of money and lifestyle is a Utopia that goes against our innate nature, it just wont happen and wont work. Great idea esp if we were all equal and wealthy;). The Human being is to greedy and selfish for it to work.
warspite1ORIGINAL: stockwellpete
ORIGINAL: wodin
The we are all equal and everyone should have the same amount of money and lifestyle is a Utopia that goes against our innate nature, it just wont happen and wont work. Great idea esp if we were all equal and wealthy;). The Human being is to greedy and selfish for it to work.
I don't think that is true, actually. If you look at histories and anthropologies of the earliest human societies around the world you will find that they were egalitarian and did not have social stratification at all. The reason for this was that those societies operated at subsistence level and did not produce economic surpluses. Everything was shared and there was no private property; women were not second class citizens as they still are today. These societies had a very slow rate of technological change and lasted for tens of thousands of years, far longer than any other subsequent social system such as feudalism or capitalism.
It was only when economic and technological development reached the stage of allowing surpluses to be produced (e.g. extra food being the most important, also clothes and ornaments) that social differentiation started to take place. Granaries to store the food meant that certain people were needed to defend that surplus (warriors), certain people were needed to control and distribute it (e.g. chiefs, or priests and other administrators). And it is also the case that these surpluses often provided the motive for warfare (if some groups crops had failed then they would raid their "neighbours"). Also, as the population increased, warfare also occurred over hunting grounds and trading rights (e.g. American Indians were fighting each other long before the Europeans turned up).
So, given that the first human societies were egalitarian and lasted longer than any other social system, then if it is true that we have an "innate human nature"it must surely be the case that we are a co-operative species that is "socially programmed" to share everything. This would help to explain why capitalism makes so many of us unhappy and ill. [:)]But I don't actually think there is such a thing as "innate human nature". I think we all learn our behaviours from the world that we live in (i.e. from our environment, from the people around us, school, TV etc). And because modern capitalism emphasises competition and materialism (buying and owning stuff), most of us grow up thinking this is normal and it has always really been the case - and socialist ideas sound either highly undesirable or completely unattainable to most people.
ORIGINAL: stockwellpete
So, given that the first human societies were egalitarian and lasted longer than any other social system, then if it is true that we have an "innate human nature"it must surely be the case that we are a co-operative species that is "socially programmed" to share everything.
ORIGINAL: warspite1
warspite1ORIGINAL: stockwellpete
ORIGINAL: wodin
The we are all equal and everyone should have the same amount of money and lifestyle is a Utopia that goes against our innate nature, it just wont happen and wont work. Great idea esp if we were all equal and wealthy;). The Human being is to greedy and selfish for it to work.
I don't think that is true, actually. If you look at histories and anthropologies of the earliest human societies around the world you will find that they were egalitarian and did not have social stratification at all. The reason for this was that those societies operated at subsistence level and did not produce economic surpluses. Everything was shared and there was no private property; women were not second class citizens as they still are today. These societies had a very slow rate of technological change and lasted for tens of thousands of years, far longer than any other subsequent social system such as feudalism or capitalism.
It was only when economic and technological development reached the stage of allowing surpluses to be produced (e.g. extra food being the most important, also clothes and ornaments) that social differentiation started to take place. Granaries to store the food meant that certain people were needed to defend that surplus (warriors), certain people were needed to control and distribute it (e.g. chiefs, or priests and other administrators). And it is also the case that these surpluses often provided the motive for warfare (if some groups crops had failed then they would raid their "neighbours"). Also, as the population increased, warfare also occurred over hunting grounds and trading rights (e.g. American Indians were fighting each other long before the Europeans turned up).
So, given that the first human societies were egalitarian and lasted longer than any other social system, then if it is true that we have an "innate human nature"it must surely be the case that we are a co-operative species that is "socially programmed" to share everything. This would help to explain why capitalism makes so many of us unhappy and ill. [:)]But I don't actually think there is such a thing as "innate human nature". I think we all learn our behaviours from the world that we live in (i.e. from our environment, from the people around us, school, TV etc). And because modern capitalism emphasises competition and materialism (buying and owning stuff), most of us grow up thinking this is normal and it has always really been the case - and socialist ideas sound either highly undesirable or completely unattainable to most people.
I'm 100% with wodin on this.
ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
ORIGINAL: stockwellpete
So, given that the first human societies were egalitarian and lasted longer than any other social system, then if it is true that we have an "innate human nature"it must surely be the case that we are a co-operative species that is "socially programmed" to share everything.
If I believed in this bucolic summary of yours as a faithful re-creation of early life, I'd be overlooking the fact that life then was nasty, short and brutish more often than not. Infant mortality, youth mortality, hell-adult mortality-was astronomically high by today's standards. Average life expectancy was less than 30 years of age for many of these subsistence hunter gatherers.
You'd also be overlooking the fact that the most 'innate human nature' is to war. Plato was right-only the dead have seen the end of it. So, we 'shared' this quite readily in the past too. No thanks.
I'm also not buying the 'no caste system existed' argument for these older civilizations. Caste systems have been around for thousands of years in East Asia that predate much of the subsistence hunter-gather activity you've described.
Like it or not, life today for much of the "Western" world is as good as it's ever been historically. Fewer people die from warfare now than have died in the preceding centuries, especially on a per capita basis. We are living longer, healthier and more fruitful lives largely devoid of the grinding physical toil and stifling drudgery of our forefathers just a few generations ago. I consider myself incredibly fortunate to be alive today and wouldn't trade it for life in the past under any circumstances.
True. Marx was commissioned by RothSchild Order agent & provocateur, Moses Hess to concoct a scheme that would trigger civil wars, subvert aristocracies & annihilate Christians. Fortunately God has other plans & the Reds will not escape justice for their heinous crimes.Our distaste for Socialism , Marxism, Communism, Fascism, Totalitarianism. isn't based on how wide or small of a political spectrum we or the world live in presently.
Its based on the false and warped rationalism that feed these ideologies. So, being a just at the beginning level or more deeply warped as the world is. In either case, this is very disturbing. Knowing, how these ideologies discount the human person. Also, more disturbing still is how these negate God and attack his followers.
Rothschilds
Conduct 'Red Symphony'
The 20th Century Unveiled
By Henry Makow PhD
11-9-3
Incredible and bizarre as it sounds, humanity is indeed the victim of a diabolical conspiracy.
War, depression and genocide in the past century were not accidental or inevitable but the result of a malevolent design.
Shocking evidence is a 1938 Stalinist police (NKVD) interrogation of a founder of the Communist International, Christian G. Rakovsky, 65, who was facing the firing squad for plotting to overthrow Stalin.
The 50-page transcript of his interrogation, dubbed "The Red Symphony," was not meant to become public. It confirms that the Rothschild-Illuminati planned to use Communism to establish a world dictatorship of the super rich.
This is perhaps the most explosive political document in modern history. It reveals why the Illuminati financed Hitler and then tried to destroy him, and why Stalin made a pact with Hitler in 1939.
Christian Rakovsky was a veteran Communist insider. Born Chaim Rakeover in 1873, he studied medicine in France before becoming a revolutionary. He was the leader of a terror group that attacked government officials. http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/RUSrakovsky.htm
In 1919, Lenin put him in charge of the Soviet Ukraine government. He successfully kept the area for the Bolsheviks during the Civil War. Stalin appointed him Russian ambassador to Paris in 1925,
Rakovsky belonged to the powerful Trotskyite faction that took their orders from the Rothschilds. Many of this group were shot in Stalin's 1937 Communist Party purge.
MIDNIGHT INTERROGATION
Thus, the circumstances of the midnight interrogation Jan. 26, 1938 were very dramatic.
What could Rakovsky say that would save his life?
Rakovsky appears to use the tactic of "deceiving with the truth." He wins trust by revealing the truth but leaves some of it out. He tries to impress Kus'min that he and Trotsky represent an invincible power he calls the "Capitalist-Communist Financial International."
He confirms that the "revolutionary movement" was designed to enlist support by pretending to serve mankind's moral and collective ideals. The real aim, however, is to divide society, undermine established authority and create totalitarian rule.
"Revolution" really means, "overturning" Western civilization.
"Christianity is our only real enemy since all the political and economic phenomena of the bourgeois states are only its consequences," Rakovsky says. (Griffin, p. 264)
Peace is "counter-revolutionary" since it is war that paves the way for revolution.
Rakovsky refers to the Illuminati as "they" or "them." He claims he does not know them but I suspect he does.
He explains that the "Illuminati" is a Masonic secret society dedicated to Communism. Significantly, its founder Adam Weishaupt took the name from "the second anti-Christian conspiracy of that era, gn
osticism." (249)
HOW THIS GRIPPING ACCOUNT SURFACED
The interrogator was one of Stalin's cleverest agents, Gavriil Kus'min known as "Gabriel."
Apart from him and a hidden sound technician, a doctor Jose Landowsky was the only other person present.
Conscripted by the NKVD to help "loosen the tongues of detainees," Dr. Landowsky was sickened by the many tortures he witnessed.
The interrogation of Rakovsky, however, was cordial. Dr. Landowsky doubts if the mild euphoric he put in Rakovsky's drink had much effect.
The interrogation, conducted in French lasted from midnight until 7 a.m. After, Kus'min ordered Landowsky to translate the interview into Russian and make two copies.
The content was so mind boggling that Landowsky made an additional carbon for himself. "I am not sorry that I had the courage for this," he wrote. (279) (The Bolsheviks had shot Landowsky's father, a Tsarist colonel, during the 1917 revolution.)
A Spanish volunteer later found the manuscript on Landowsky's dead body in a hut on the Petrograd front during World War Two. He took it back to Spain where it was published as "Sinfonia en Rojo Mayo." in 1949.
A person with the nickname "Yamaguchi" has posted the first half of "Red Symphony" on the Internet at http://yamaguchy.netfirms.com/symphony/red1.html
The whole transcript was published in English in 1968 as "The Red Symphony: X-Ray of Revolution." You can find it in Des Griffin's "Fourth Reich of the Rich." (1988) I recommend this book.
REVELATIONS
Rakovsky gives his interrogator an astonishing inside view of modern history in order to prove that his sponsors control the world.
"Money is the basis of power," Rakovsky says, and the Rothschilds manufacture it thanks to the banking system.
The "Revolutionary Movement" was an attempt by Meyer Rothschild and his allies to protect and extend this monopoly by establishing a New World Order using the "revolutionary movement."
According to Rakovsky, "The Rothschilds were not the treasurers, but the chiefs of that first secret Communism...Marx and the highest chiefs of the First International ... were controlled by Baron Lionel Rothschild, [1808-1878] whose revolutionary portrait was done by Disraeli the English Premier, who was also his creature, and has been left to us [in Disraeli's novel 'Coningsby.']" (250)
Lionel's son Nathaniel (1840-1915) needed to overthrow the Christian Romanoff Dynasty. Through his agents Jacob Schiff and the Warburg brothers, he financed the Japanese side in the Russo Japanese War, and an unsuccessful insurrection in Moscow in 1905. Then he instigated the First World War, and financed the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. Rakovsky says he was personally involved in the transfer the funds in Stockholm. (251-252)
(CONT)
ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
You'd also be overlooking the fact that the most 'innate human nature' is to war.
I'm also not buying the 'no caste system existed' argument for these older civilizations. Caste systems have been around for thousands of years in East Asia that predate much of the subsistence hunter-gather activity you've described.
ORIGINAL: stockwellpete
ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
You'd also be overlooking the fact that the most 'innate human nature' is to war.
No, it is not a "fact", it is just your opinion.
ORIGINAL: rogo727
100% disagree. I didn't have much so I worked damn hard for everything I got. I had nothing but achieved great success. Could I do this under any other system other than the free world I think not. Frankly it makes me sick from people who have the "poor me" attitude. You are what you make of yourself.
ORIGINAL: warspite1
warspite1ORIGINAL: stockwellpete
I don't think that is true, actually. If you look at histories and anthropologies of the earliest human societies around the world you will find that they were egalitarian and did not have social stratification at all. The reason for this was that those societies operated at subsistence level and did not produce economic surpluses. Everything was shared and there was no private property; women were not second class citizens as they still are today. These societies had a very slow rate of technological change and lasted for tens of thousands of years, far longer than any other subsequent social system such as feudalism or capitalism.
It was only when economic and technological development reached the stage of allowing surpluses to be produced (e.g. extra food being the most important, also clothes and ornaments) that social differentiation started to take place. Granaries to store the food meant that certain people were needed to defend that surplus (warriors), certain people were needed to control and distribute it (e.g. chiefs, or priests and other administrators). And it is also the case that these surpluses often provided the motive for warfare (if some groups crops had failed then they would raid their "neighbours"). Also, as the population increased, warfare also occurred over hunting grounds and trading rights (e.g. American Indians were fighting each other long before the Europeans turned up).
So, given that the first human societies were egalitarian and lasted longer than any other social system, then if it is true that we have an "innate human nature"it must surely be the case that we are a co-operative species that is "socially programmed" to share everything. This would help to explain why capitalism makes so many of us unhappy and ill. [:)]But I don't actually think there is such a thing as "innate human nature". I think we all learn our behaviours from the world that we live in (i.e. from our environment, from the people around us, school, TV etc). And because modern capitalism emphasises competition and materialism (buying and owning stuff), most of us grow up thinking this is normal and it has always really been the case - and socialist ideas sound either highly undesirable or completely unattainable to most people.
I'm 100% with wodin on this.
ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
No more so than your overly broad allegations about human inherent tendencies that are socially programmed to share everything. Utter rubbish. If we can share the good in ourselves, then we can certainly share the bad in equal parcels.