Saturday, October 08, 2011

The problem is globalism not capitalism


The richest 1% in America finance political candidates, and then Congress casts votes to the wishes of their wealthiest constitutes. Even the Tea Party is financed by billionaires promoting globalism. The poor and the middle class can't finance candidates to that degree.

The top 1% have become rich through globalism at the expense of the poor and the middle class. The top 1% invested globally, not nationally, and they kept all the profits for themselves, destroying manufacturing jobs in America in the process, and creating very few jobs in America.

This sort of frustration happened in the past, which led to the Great Depression, and that led to Stalin, Hitler and FDR, and none of them had the best solution. It is globalism not capitalism that is the problem.

All nations became prosperous through economic nationalism and they all declined with economic globalism, including the United States. We need smaller government involvement in the lives of the people, but the government does need to be involved in setting up tariffs, or a value added tax, on foreign imports, and perhaps put a tax on consumption, adjusted for the poor. With this fair tax system, taxes can be lowered on Americans and on American businessmen, which will get this great country going again.

The forced, unnatural egalitarianism of internatioinal socialism may again rise, and perhaps also ethnic supremacy and imperialism, but the true battle is between globalism and economic nationalism, with globalism now holding all the power, and with economic nationalism having all the righteous passion.  
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