steve7150 wrote:
Socialist countries one by one are learning they have uncompetitive economies in a competitive world. You can't have nanny states and expect to maintain your standard of living except by borrowing debt and then hiding the debt. The game is up and the socialist house of cards is collapsing. There are a few socialist success stories if a country happens to have abundant natural resources already in place, but if a socialist country actually has to manufacture and produce it's own goods it can't do it competitively. The unions are to strong, the pension plans are to lucrative, the retirement ages to young, the birth rates to low and a general anti business sentiment.

A decent country, that treats its workers and its citizens well, may find it hard to match prices head-to-head with indecent countries that exploit their workers and their citizens. And so it behooves decent countries to develop strategies that take this into account:
e.g., maximizing their capacities to meet the needs of their citizens internally; positioning their industries shrewdly to address areas of demand that are not easily met by exploitative societies; forming trade alliances with other like-minded societies; and of course, working to expand the influence of their social philosophies, so that there might be fewer and fewer competitors who are willing and/or able to exploit their own people.

I emphatically support unions as a counterweight to imperial employers. But it must be recognized that unions can exploit the economic system, just like any other player in the system who acquires too much leverage over against its competitors.
It seems desirable to develop an economic construct where labor and shareholders are not in competition with each other; when laborers comprise a major portion of the shareholders in a company, then they are more naturally poised to embrace balanced priorities, and not just apply themselves to a perpetual push for higher wages and more generous benefits.
steve7150 wrote:Of course the opposite end of the spectrum with unrestrained capitalism leaves to many workers in misery, so some form of responsible capitalism may strike the best balance. I like our form of government which dissipates centralized power from the executive branch although it often produces inaction and gridlock. I think resisting centralized power is worth the price of an apparently slow moving government.

It might be hard to manage a form of responsible capitalism, without meeting a certain threshold of centralized power to pose against irresponsible capitalists.

I am not a purist: I am open to considering and trying out different policies that are not utterly socialist. For example, I could support a system of corporate development that is somewhat similar to our patent system: the entrepreneurial shareholders are entitled to profits from a start-up for
x number of years; after that period, the corporation is surrendered to the ownership of its employees (and/or, perhaps, to the state).