Most of us clearly agree that any socio-political or socio-economic system can be corrupted and transformed by lack of oversight, transparency, and regulation; Allowing for the unrestrained influences of greed, hatred or even simple apathy and lack of compassion, violence, secrecy, and disregard for the rule of law to transform any society into a fascist dictatorship...
...All while the architects, leaders, and maintainers of the transformation continue to call their newly-minted (and eventually perhaps decades old or older) fascist dictatorship a "socialist" or "communist" or "democratic" state....even though in practical real-world terms, it really is not truly socialist or communist or democratic anymore.
The "in name only" phenomenon that has created the incredibly misleading and very ironic definition of "socialism" I think some use...It's a perfect example of "doublespeak" from George Orwell's novel 1984 come to life....
...The basic story elements that make up the sociopolitical world that is the setting in 1984, with all specific details and characters stripped away, had already come to life over and over in the real world before the novel was ever written.
@Matthias
Pure socialism (and communism) place fundamental emphasis on and ideologically prioritize both individual and collective responsibility for both individual and collective human welfare;
They both emphasize collective ownership of shared resources and the means of production by the ordinary people -- not authoritarian dictators.
Please note: capitalism and socialism are
not systems of governance. They are both socio-political and socio-economic
value systems.
Systems of governance describe:
Who has the power to make decisions about laws and regulations, and to create public institutions.
How and why the decision-makers are given the power they have, and how they exercise that power. Also how it can be taken away.
They do not determine what kinds of decisions are made.
They do not determine what kinds (if any) of public institutions and services exist, besides goverment itself -- nor necessarily how they are run.
They do not decide a society's values/morals and priorities.
These last three things are what socio-political and socio-economic value systems or ideologies describe.
A certain ideology can exist in more than one type of system of governance.
And as
@Mary Terry pointed out, more than one type of ideology can be used in a single system of governance.
Ideology and system of governance are not the same thing.
In other words, socialism is the exact opposite of freedom and capitalism because it takes away people's rights to make their own decisions in favor of government control by a chosen few.
Capitalism doesn't mean anarchy. Regulations to prevent monopolies or individuals cornering the market are an important part of capitalism.
So much of what you say is just...so inaccurate ...
...your political knowledge seems to consist entirely of misinformation and propaganda.
Have you ever taken a political science class at any level of education?
Or read books from the 17-1800's written by early promoters of capitalism -- people like Adam Smith?
Or read books written by promoters of democratic socialism? Or any other ideology? Whether from centuries past or modern times?
Have you ever dared to read and seriously consider the words of anyone you disagree with and whose ideas offend you?
I have done all of the above.
If you have not, I strongly recommend you do....given you have such strong opinions about socio-political matters...
...you'd be in a much better position to make valid arguments if you educated yourself more thoroughly and actually understood any political viewpoint and philosophy besides just your own.
Socialism has failed wherever it has been tried. Without propaganda, no one would support it.
Nope - wrong again. Canada (where I was born and raised and intend to live until I die) is a socialist democracy. We always have been. (So were many of the indigenous nations in Canada before colonization.)
The UK is also a socialist democracy and has been for a very, very long time.
Both Canada and the UK embrace elements of capitalism as well as socialism. As do many, many other truly democratic nations all over the world.
Political ideology does not have to be all or nothing... this is both a positive and negative:
Positive because it allows a society to take the best parts of an ideology with both good and bad ideas and make good use of the good ideas;
Negative because it allows people to do the doublespeak thing where they take terrible ideas and try to mix them with superficial aspects of an otherwise reasonable philosophy and create a misleading and inaccurately named atrocity. (Like whatever it is you think "socialism" is, that is probably in reality accurately and honestly called "fascist plutocratic/autocratic dictatorship".)
Under socialism, a big, centralized government would control the healthcare system. The government would hire doctors, set their salary, and determine how much people pay for their services, without individuals having any freedom or input into the process.
No. That is misinformation.
First of all, Canada's government is not actually more centralized than the USA's government is.
Second, there are many ways that public healthcare can be implemented.
In Canada doctors still own private practices and even the occasional private specialty hospital -- but they bill the provincial or federal government.
The vast majority of hospitals are public, but only some clinics are public -- most regular doctors' offices are privately owned. Yet thise private clinic owning doctors are still paid mostly or entirely by a public healthcare system.
Doctors (and other types of healthcare provider) are allowed to charge people for services that are not paid for by public health insurance.
Doctors, nurses, physiotherapists, psychologists, dentists, pharmacists, etc are also largely self-regulated by their own professional colleges. For the most part, they decide what practice standards they follow, although the public gets input too -- both via public surveys and direct feedback, and through our elected representatives in goverment that create laws about healthcare provision.
Healthcare providers also have unions and professional associations and they negotiate their pay with reasonable governments (and as citizens in Canada's socialist
DEMOCRACY, they and their friends, families, neighbours and patients tend to vote out unreasonable governments that misuse their power and refuse to negotiate in good fairh along with the rest of us ordinary citizens.)