Oh but it does. The same corporations you think are out for "free market capitalism" and so on, aren't. They lobby for regulation when it suits them and when it doesn't, they lobby for deregulation. A corporation can be formed by anyone of course, but you will find that, without the right connections to the existing social hierarchy, you will seldom get anywhere with it. And so, back to work you go! So much for "individualism" right?Domino wrote:You see you don't have to a gigantic corporation. You say "you would have to work for" is incorrect. Nobody is pointing a gun to you saying you must work for one. Doesn't work that way.
Even if we start from scratch under your proposed "individualism" system, you will find that the same order we live in now will reformulate itself. All you need to realise (as you do, but selectively) this is that people aren't equal.
You misunderstood what I was saying. I was pointing out how your passage can only make sense if the above were true.Domino wrote:This is now a matter of two viewpoints where your viewpoint states a corporation can be outside of the system while mine said it can't.
That's essentially what the terms used to mean, the origin was from the seating position parliament in France before the revolution. Those seated on the right of the chamber were the nobles while those on the left were those representing the rabble. To be "left-winged" back then, was to oppose the status-quo and ironically, to believe in many of the policies that people would consider "right-winged" today. Essentially, it's about ceasing power from an existing social hierarchy along with the promotion of an ideology which protects your new position. So even with the old meanings, the two terms are clearly redundant.neorichieb1971 wrote:I thought left wing was giving the power to the people, where as right wing is giving the power to the rich.