Wednesday 12 May 2010

Conservatism, Socialism, and Coercive, Immoral, and Unethical Interference and State-control

I am a sort of Socialist, although I am also in the process of creating a brand new political ideology, which is fairly moderate, and which is completely different and separate from all the other pre-existing political ideologies, but which is not communist, fascist, nor anarchist either.

I also don’t in any way romanticise or idealise Socialism, and I won’t romanticise or idealise Conservatism either. The thing I don’t like about Socialism, is the state-control and other types of psychologically and socially harmful forms of coercion, and the fact that Socialism can very easily flip over into Fascism.

Whilst many genuine and sincere Socialists. realise this about Socialism, and want to get better types of Socialism, many Socialists - including The Labour Party - are just quite frankly very naive, about this tendency of Socialism to very easily flip over into Fascism. Many BNP/all-white-Britain-racist/Fascist political party voters, are ex-Labour voters, many of whom still consider themselves as very pro-working class Socialists, and many Socialists in the Labour Party and the Trade Unions, still hold very racist views.

On the very important matter of the class-system, since Karl Marx, which is overall outdated on this matter, and which was written many, many, years ago and which does not apply to our modern times (including the sociologist Durkheim who is also now outdated about the political, social, and psychological nature of the different so-called classes), there hasn’t been a very realistic, much better, and new political, social, and psychological knowledge and understanding of the different classes, in our modern or present times, but I will very soon write an article or two about this.

Conservatism, tends to very ostentatiously protest about, and claim that it is opposed to too much state-interference in people’s lives, and that it is opposed to state-control, and whilst this is very true in some of their ideas and thinking, this is often an excuse not to encourage, practise, and create some mutual communitarian and interpersonal sharing within society.

The Conservatives’ partial and fragmented opposition to state-power, isn’t truly ethical nor moral in the complete sense at present, because it tends to go along with self-denial of social and material love, extreme-ignorance and lies about poverty and the social and psychological nature of the modern class-system - which neither they nor any other present political parties know absolutely nothing about - and it is very much motivated by and goes along with psychological, social, and sexual coldness and cruelty, and emotional self-repression and denial

In other ways, the Conservatives are very pro state-control and state-interference in people’s lives, but where they do have at least some genuine self-authenticity, conscience and morality against these things, then they should have some courage, authenticity, and decency to themselves and others, by putting their somewhat repressed and fragmented, libertarian feelings, ideas, and thoughts, into policy and practise for everyone.

The vast amount of Conservative Party voter, parents, and The British Teachers Association, all say that they are in favour of children’s learning centres being created in society - as The Labour Party claimed to have done, lied about, and did not deliver - and which is a possible and potential complimentary system, for wider learning, along with the schools system, and which will give teachers more jobs and opportunities, to be free from the state-control of the national curriculum - and to be able to put their own teaching methods into practise, within some democratic and governmental rules, of ethical and educational codes of practise and conduct.

The Conservative Party, have consistently said that they agree with the principles of this policy of children's learning centres, and as most of their voters also agree and want this, along with freedom of information, parental rights and some participation, in both the schools and potential and possible children's learning centres system. In which case, the Conservative Party should and must at least make some kind of national statement on all this, to say where they stand on the matter; and they must say whether they will keep their promises to create these principles and policies, which they consistently tell us all they so genuinely and sincerely believe in.

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