It's a Mean Girls reference.Yes, I get that, but I don't know what the image is meant to portray; why's Obama a fake blonde? I assume it's some sort of screen grab of a movie?
And with that, I spat my iced tea upon my monitor. I hope you're proud of yourself.
Yeah, because we tried to make it more like communism
Even that is ludicrous. "Everything we feared about Communism..." has come true in the United States? "Forced to labour eternally for meagre wages..." - allow me use the height of argument: come on. Remind me about all those bread lines, all the gulags, and the disappearance of political dissenters whose bodies will never be found. Show me how those who criticize the government are silenced, and not making media appearances; how the government even denies such dissent exists among the happy populace! Let me see your Potemkin villages! The massively rigged elections showing 99% support! Yes, all of those things are clearly true; our fears of Communism are realized in that hellscape known as capitalism/the United States of America, pick whichever one.I saw the puffin meme and thought solely that the words "under Capitalism" should have been replaced with "In the United States."
I don't see the current situation as the result of Capitalism. I see it as the result of the actions of People Who Can Never Have Enough.
So many of these economic philosophies don't fail because of their tenets, they fail because they don't have checks preventing individuals from abusing the rules to their own benefit at the cost of others'.
--Patrick
You're right.Remind me about all those bread lines, all the gulags, and the disappearance of political dissenters whose bodies will never be found. Show me how those who criticize the government are silenced, and not making media appearances; how the government even denies such dissent exists among the happy populace! Let me see your Potemkin villages! The massively rigged elections showing 99% support!
I don't entirely agree with this, but it's besides the point. Whether communism or capitalism are accurately assessed isn't the issue: his claim that our way of life has become like another way of life is. Nothing that is happening in the life of the average American, and certainly the creator of that image, is even comparable to life under communism. "Everything" has not come to pass, certainly, but not even "most" or "many" or "some." It's entirely stupid.You're right.
I should have specified that none of the "bad" things are directly attributable to Communism, either.
Communism wasn't to blame, it was the method of implementation that caused all the problems...mainly due to the lack of checks to the possibility of the system being perverted towards the interest(s) of a few.
--Patrick
I would say it's more situational, the same way that a peon might hate a King even though his living conditions are actually the direct result of the actions of his Lord rather than his King.Did you know that in English, "Fuck capitalism," translates to "I don't know much about economic systems, but I sure resent rich people."
I guess I don't understand what you're driving at in this conversation. First you're saying the meme is accurate, but it should just be the US, not all capitalist systems. Then you say that neither capitalism nor communism are the direct cause of suffering in those systems - a debatable, but unrelated point. Now you're saying that not only is it indirect, but systems have always been criticized unfairly for indirect failings - again not related to the question at hand: is the modern US suffering the woes of a system they historically fear. We've gone so far past the point, which to me is: what, exactly, about the meme is correct or agreeable? It's just such underthought puerile crap that appeals to a certain lazy, kneejerk sensibility.I would say it's more situational, the same way that a peon might hate a King even though his living conditions are actually the direct result of the actions of his Lord rather than his King.
But you're not entirely wrong in that assumption.
--Patrick
Sure, but even if that's what they meant to say, how can you conscionably agree with the meme? I guess I'm saying your assumptions don't seem to make any more sense of the claim. If you're saying the person who made it did so just to troll, then why bother to correct their statement? Surely a troll is more effective with a broad target like capitalism than a limited one like the US; but also does it make any sense to 'clarify' a troll? What is there to gain from agreeing with the sentiment of the meme if you want to deconstruct it partially (to US instead of capitalism), but not wholly? If people think they're making a political point and it's utter nonsense, it merits pointing out, surely, in whole -not half- measures.I make certain assumptions. I am assuming that the person who made the meme (out of cherry-picked "facts") is probably a disenfranchised American, and I know what he probably meant to say ("USA" v. "Capitalism"). Either that or he is trying to raise the specter of Communism again with that sort of "I knew them Russkies always had it in for us!" attitude. If we're going to seriously deconstruct the meme, it's going to fall apart in pretty short order (which I think it did), but I doubt whoever posted it was actually interested in having meaningful discourse, they were probably just trying to troll.
Well, at least we had some meaningful discourse. I'm actually open to discussion on economic theory or the like. I actually want to know how all this stuff works, and not because I have some Jokeresque plan in store, either (in case you were worried).
--Patrick
I suppose not (especially since the author will probably never see my commentary), but I have this habit of wanting to "tighten" stuff. For better or worse, I tend to act a lot like the engineer at the execution. I view the accuracy/seriousness of this particular meme with the same level of faith/trust that I view most memes, or comments made by Dave Barry, Lewis Black, or David Sedaris (or even Jon Stewart), or like how I view the whole "fire engines are red" thing. I know it's a false equivalency, but I appreciate the cleverness of the constructed message. I'm just saying that if I had made it, I would've substituted US to give it that "down home" sort of appeal rather than referring to nebulous "Capitalism."If you're saying the person who made it did so just to troll, then why bother to correct their statement? Surely a troll is more effective with a broad target like capitalism than a limited one like the US; but also does it make any sense to 'clarify' a troll?
Sure, but those things are ripe for some funny jokes!Woah wait a minute...I think I just realized something:
Something complex like economic systems or politics...can't easily be summarized or dismissed in a meme
:O
You can put as much info on a meme as in a 7-second sound byte, and those have been good enough to explain all policy in the last 5 years, so hah!Woah wait a minute...I think I just realized something:
Something complex like economic systems or politics...can't easily be summarized or dismissed in a meme
:O