• jol@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 hours ago

    I am more conservative in the sense that I see things with more nuance. I understand societies are very complex systems in a fragile equilibrium and that my naive solutions to the world’s problems are not feasible.

    And yet, each day I’m more convinced we need to eat the rich.

  • BilboBargains@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Maybe we become more extreme in our existing beliefs. My political compass position drifted right from bottom left as I hit my thirties. After the Iraq invasion of 2003 and recessions following 2008 it swung back towards Ghandi. I became convinced that conservative politics isn’t working in my late forties and that has only been reinforced as I try to access the creaking UK healthcare system.

  • perestroika@lemm.ee
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    2 hours ago

    If conservative means “cautious and wary of unexpected results”, “disillusioned with methods that we tried and failed with” or maybe even “equipped with experience of successful and failed cooperation with various sorts of people”, then yes. Already before age 50, I’m spoiled with various good and bad experiences. I cannot exclude that as my tendency to explore decreases (psychology tends to affirm this trend), I may get prejudiced too. I may have to figure out something to counter it.

    But if conservative means that I suddenly don’t want a society with equality and without hierarchy, then - nope.

  • Krauerking@lemy.lol
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    3 hours ago

    Yeah I think they misunderstood what was happening cause they were getting wealthier as they got older.

    Honestly, you just become more protective of your stuff and things you consider yours as you get older.

    There are plenty of nerds that are super conservative about their fandoms and what is allowed to happen with them and same for all kinds of niches but the idea we would get more conservative with money really assumed we would accumulate more of it and assets. But what people do have is their apps and thoughts and those… Those people will be just as conservative as the boomers are about their money as they get older.

  • zeppo@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    The people who told me that were 100% boomers. There’s that idiotic saying “if you’re not liberal* when you’re 20, you have no heart. If you’re not conservative when you’re 40 you have no brains” ok boomer.

    Note this is using the US meaning of liberal, not to mean “capitalist”.

      • zeppo@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        To the point at least. The impression I always got was that it was meant to imply you’d have money by then and not want to pay taxes.

  • Lad@reddthat.com
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    8 hours ago

    I don’t know what it’s like to live under communism, but I do know what it’s like to live under capitalism and it’s grip tightens more and more with every passing year.

    • Funkytom467@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      I don’t think anyone knows what it’s like, was there any communist country which wasn’t also both a dictatorship and poor?

      Pretty hard seeing the good and bad of communism when it’s always alongside the two worse things that can happen to a country.

      P.S. Wait, actually not the two worse things… there’s also war, and that applies to most of them too.

      • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        7 hours ago

        I don’t think anyone knows what it’s like, was there any communist country which wasn’t also both a dictatorship and poor?

        Most steadily improved their material conditions and did not have dictatorships.

        Pretty hard seeing the good and bad of communism when it’s always alongside the two worse things that can happen to a country.

        Explain, please.

        P.S. Wait, actually not the two worse things… there’s also war, and that applies to most of them too.

        Are you saying most Communist countries intentionally started wars?

        • Funkytom467@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          Most didn’t? Can you give a few exemples then?

          You don’t start a war unintentionally… but i didn’t say start, just being in a war.

          Also i don’t imply it was because of communism, my point is that, how can we judge communism if other devastating sociological factors are involved.

          Now, i don’t have a point if you say most of them were better for it, but i don’t know any who did so i’d love to educate myself…

          • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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            6 hours ago

            A few examples include the USSR, Cuba, PRC, etc. Life standards dramatically improved, life expectancy doubled in the USSR and PRC and jumped around half in Cuba, literacy rates jumped to 99%+ from less than 50% prior, education access, healthcare access, food access, housing access, all dramatically improved. Wealth inequality also fell down dramatically.

            Here’s an example of wealth inequality over time in Russia:

            And how the Soviet Democratic process functioned:

            • Funkytom467@lemmy.world
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              6 hours ago

              So USSR was a dictatorship, the country was in ruin after WW2

              The 3 factor i mentioned are there.

              The data shows what everyone knows, capitalism increase inequality. But what it doesn’t show is how communism made the country improve, because it didn’t.

              What i’m saying is, it couldn’t help because of the war and Stalin. We don’t know if it would’ve otherwise.

              Cuba again is a dictatorship, and wasn’t rich.

              The PRC is a dictatorship, China went on a horrible famine with Mao. Nowadays getting richer only because of how their economy is now fully capitalist.

              So let’s say you had significant data that showed it improved some things socially. And let say you somehow managed to prove its causal and not coincidence.

              I would still rather not say dictatorships like USSR or PRC are good to live under.

              That’s my point, even if communism was good, dictatorship is a plague that makes any system a nightmare.

              • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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                5 hours ago

                So USSR was a dictatorship

                No, not even the CIA thought the USSR was a dictatorship. You can’t just make unsourced blanket claims based on your emotions.

                the country was in ruin after WW2

                Yes, they did around 4/5ths of the fighting against the Nazis in totality.

                The 3 factor i mentioned are there.

                If you conjure them into existence from your imagination, sure.

                The data shows what everyone knows, capitalism increase inequality. But what it doesn’t show is how communism made the country improve, because it didn’t.

                GDP per capita rose dramatically, wealth inequality dropped massively, life expectancy doubled, literacy rates trippled. The USSR had free healthcare and education, and guaranteed housing and employment. They ended famine, and made it to space from being a semi-feudal semi-industrialized nation 50 years prior. They democratized the government structure. Life absolutely improved not only under Communism, but because of it.

                What i’m saying is, it couldn’t help because of the war and Stalin. We don’t know if it would’ve otherwise.

                What on Earth are you trying to say? Of course the USSR had to focus on its military to survive, which impeded consumer good production, but life absolutely improved.

                Cuba again is a dictatorship, and wasn’t rich.

                Cuba is richer than under Batista despite a cruel embargo, and isn’t a dictatorship. You keep throwing out unsourced opinions as though they are facts.

                The PRC is a dictatorship, China went on a horrible famine with Mao. Nowadays getting richer only because of how their economy is now fully capitalist.

                The PRC practices whole-process people’s democracy, the famine under Mao was the last famine in China’s history of frequent famines, and China is Socialist, it has a Socialist Market Economy based on Socialism With Chinese Characteristics.

                So let’s say you had significant data that showed it improved some things socially. And let say you somehow managed to prove its causal and not coincidence.

                I have.

                I would still rather not say dictatorships like USSR or PRC are good to live under.

                You would have sided with the Tsars? The Kuomintang? The Russian Federation? What on Earth are you talking about, here? You’d rather live in societies with less freedom and lower quality of life metrics?

                That’s my point, even if communism was good, dictatorship is a plague that makes any system a nightmare.

                You have no point, only vibes and a firehose of falsehood. Read Blackshirts and Reds.

                • Funkytom467@lemmy.world
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                  4 hours ago

                  Sorry i’m harsh Cuba isn’t quite a dictatorship i give you that one (Although not quite democratic either), maybe that could be a good study.

                  But saying Stalin or Mao are not dictatorships is just delusional.

                  The CIA as a source is pretty funny though.

                  I get it Stalin didn’t quite have all powers, like that’s what it took to classify a government a dictatorship. As if one-party system couldn’t be complex.

                  (And yes socialist market economy, that really makes a world of difference from capitalist market)

                  Also to make things clear i wouldn’t have sided with tsar or anyone else than Lenin. I do believe in communism.

                  Now some improvements may be from communism, i hope so, but don’t pretend you can prove it more than i. It’s not like life expectancy, literacy rate or other factors alike couldn’t rise with another system. It’s not like you could eliminate the possibility of third factors in a time with so much change in all areas of life.

                  But i sure wouldn’t have followed Stalin in his totalitarian regime. I sure hope if communism was a solution today it would be democratic.

  • Ash@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    I was slightly conservative when I was young. Now I don’t know what political orientation I have

  • Resol van Lemmy@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I’m pretty old. Not very old, but old enough to be a legal adult. And I’m possibly the most liberal person in my family. I’ve been this way for years.

  • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    “You will be more conservative as you grow older” is not a truth, but a threat. If you don’t become a conservative under their regime, you won’t become old.

  • beebarfbadger@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Honestly, if your goals include conserving an inhabitable environment for the human race in the future, conserving a semblance of wealth for everyone but the top, like, dozen people on Earth, conserving the rights of workers and consumers against an overwhelming opposition, conserving democracy for future generations (and all that against the best efforts of a supposedly “conservative” party), your parents may have been right.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      What if my goals include family values, such as opportunity for my kids to earn a good living, live a long and healthy life, enjoy the environment, in a world better than the one I had?

      • Juice@midwest.social
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        8 hours ago

        Then you have to join in the fight for those things and educate yourself. This world is not getting better, and the reason for that is the productive political economic system in which we live.

        I have the same values and I am a Marxist communist. That means I work for political struggle with the systems that oppress and exploit to for improving conditions for all, and also work to try and educate workers about the class dynamics of this struggle, and the revolutionary potential of the working class.