My apologies for the formatting, apparently Marxists aren't very conscientious, and really I just don't give two shits about their wanton behaviors. 1. Abolition
of private property in land and application of all rents of land to public
purpose.
The courts have
interpreted the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution (1868) to give the
government far more "eminent domain" power than was originally intended, Under
the rubric of "eminent domain" and various zoning regulations, land use
regulations by the Bureau of Land Managementproperty taxes, and "environmental"
excuses, private property rights have become very diluted and private property
in landis, vehicles, and other forms are seized almost every day in this country
under the "forfeiture" provisions of the RICO statutes and the so-called War on
Drugs..
2. A heavy progressive or graduated
income tax.
The 16th Amendment of
the U.S. Constitution, 1913 (which some scholars maintain was never properly
ratified), and various State income taxes, established this major Marxist coup
in the United States many decades ago. These taxes continue to drain the
lifeblood out of the American economy and greatly reduce the accumulation of
desperately needed capital for future growth, business starts, job creation, and
salary increases.
3. Abolition
of all rights of inheritance.
Another Marxian attack
on private property rights is in the form of Federal & State estate taxes
and other inheritance taxes, which have abolished or at least greatly diluted
the right of private property owners to determine the disposition and
distribution of their estates upon their death. Instead, government bureaucrats
get their greedy hands involved .
4.
Confiscation of the property of all emigrants and
rebels.
We call it government
seizures, tax liens, "forfeiture" Public "law" 99-570 (1986); Executive order
11490, sections 1205, 2002 which gives private land to the Department of Urban
Development; the imprisonment of "terrorists" and those who speak out or write
against the "government" (1997 Crime/Terrorist Bill); or the IRS confiscation of
property without due process.
5.
Centralization of credit in the hands of the state, by means of a national bank
with state capital and an exclusive monopoly.
The Federal Reserve System, created by the
Federal Reserve Act of Congress in 1913, is indeed such a "national bank" and it
politically manipulates interest rates and holds a monopoly on legal
counterfeiting in the United States. This is exactly what Marx had in mind and
completely fulfills this plank, another major socialist objective. Yet, most
Americans naively believe the U.S. of A. is far from a Marxist or socialist
nation.
6.
Centralization of the means of communication and transportation in the hands of
the state.
In the U.S.,
communication and transportation are controlled and regulated by the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) established by the Communications Act of 1934
and the Department of Transportation and the Interstate Commerce Commission
(established by Congress in 1887), and the Federal Aviation Administration as
well as Executive orders 11490, 10999 -- not to mention various state
bureaucracies and regulations. There is also the federal postal monopoly, AMTRAK
and CONRAIL -- outright socialist (government-owned) enterprises. Instead of
free-market private enteprrise in these important industries, these fields in
America are semi-cartelized through the government's regulatory-industiral
complex.
7. Extension
of factories and instruments of production owned by the state; the bringing into
cultivation of waste lands, and the improvement of the soil generally in
accordance with a common plan.
While the U.S. does not
have vast "collective farms" (which failed so miserably in the Soviet Union), we
nevertheless do have a significant degree of government involvement in
agriculture in the form of price support subsidies and acreage alotments and
land-use controls. The Desert Entry Act and The Department of Agriculture. As
well as the Department of Commerce and Labor, Department of Interior, the
Evironmental Protection Agency, Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of
Reclamation, Bureau of Mines, National Park Service, and the IRS control of
business through corporate regulations.
8. Equal
obligation of all to work. Establishment of Industrial armies, especially for
agriculture.
We call it the Social
Security Administration and The Department of Labor. The National debt and
inflation caused by the communal bank has caused the need for a two "income"
family. Woman in the workplace since the 1920's, the 19th amendment of the U.S.
Constitution, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, assorted Socialist Unions,
affirmative action, the Federal Public Works Program and of course Executive
order 11000. And I almost forgot...The Equal Rights Amendment means that women
should do all work that men do including the military and since passage it would
make women subject to the draft.
9.
Combination of agriculture with manufacturing industries; gradual abolition of
the distinction between town and country by a more equable distribution of the
population over the country.
We call it the Planning Reorganization Act
of 1949 , zoning (Title 17 1910-1990) and Super Corporate Farms, as well as
Executive orders 11647, 11731 (ten regions) and Public "law"
89-136.
10. Free
education for all children in government schools. Abolition of children's
factory labor in its present form. Combination of education with industrial
production, etc. etc.
People are being taxed
to support what we call 'public' schools, which train the young to work for the
communal debt system. We also call it the Department of Education, the NEA and
Outcome Based "Education" .
So, is the U.S. a "free country" today? Hardly! Not compared to what it
once was. Yet, very few Americans today challenge these Marxist institutions,
and there are virtually no politicians calling for their repeal or even gradual
phase-out. While the United States of America may still have more freedoms
than most other countries, we have nonetheless lost many crucial liberties and
have accepted the major socialist attacks on freedom and private property as
normal parts of our way of life. The nation, whose founders included such
individualists as Thomas Jefferson, George Mason, James Madison, John Adams and
Patrick Henry, has gradually turned away from the principles of individual
rights, limited constitutional government, private property, and free markets
and instead we increasingly have embraced the failed ideas and nostrums of
socialism and fascism. We should hang our heads in shame for having allowed
this to happen.
But, it is not too late to reverse these pernicious burdens and instead
enact pro-freedom reforms to put our nation back on track again. It can be
done.
In some ways the Left has a head start over us on the pro-freedom Right.
The enemies of American freedom do admittedly dominate the entertainment
industry, television news media, and academia -- but we have the tremendous
strategic advantage that reality (including man's nature) is on our side; so,
unlike the socialists and "liberals" (welfare-state fascists), we are not in the
position of having to advocate a system which constantly tries to "make water to
go uphill" -- or force human beings into a rigid utopian staitjacket based on
the whims of some clique of central planning bureaucrats. We know that
individual freedom for peaceful people within a constitutional republic works in
practice; our country's history demonstrates that. The piecemeal abandonment of
those principles and institutions which once made America great has proved to be
a a dead-end road to failure. That is why I tend to be a long-term optimist
even though things often look pretty glum in the meantime. Just as Prohibition
was eventually repealed, I feel encouraged that such key statist achievements as
the income tax, government schools, fiat money/central banking (the Federal
Reserve), "environmentalist" regulations, property forfeiture laws, and other
Marxist planks and leftist institutions can be rolled back and repealed
altogether, although it may take several decades.
Those who would carry forward the ideas and principles of self-ownership,
private property, free markets, laissez faire, the rule of law, and
constitutionalism which informed America's founders must become more active on
the key ideological battle fronts. We need more influence not just in politics,
but in areas of entertainment, academia, journalism, think tanks, churches (we
need our own individualist Walter Rauschenbushes), literature, art, and other
venues of expression and activism.
Marxism and socialism have proved to be colossal failures all over the
world. As Frederic Bastiat wrote in his classic The Law just prior to
his death, "let us now try liberty"!
Take it how it's written, that's what we do with the 'Good Book'!!!
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