Office of Fmr. Governor Simfan34 (user search)
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Author Topic: Office of Fmr. Governor Simfan34  (Read 62709 times)
Napoleon
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« on: October 22, 2012, 12:11:26 AM »

Is that legal? Even if it is, it hardly exudes committment.

It's commitment to competition.
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Napoleon
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« Reply #1 on: November 18, 2012, 07:31:27 PM »

The president's intransigence is becoming increasingly frustrating.

I understand attacking me is very much the popular thing to do, but frankly, your recent actions in the Senate boil down to "I can't believe this is even an argument" when the Senate is pretty clearly divided on a bill, and "how dare we even look at the policies we have in place to see where we can improve."
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Napoleon
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« Reply #2 on: March 10, 2014, 08:27:14 PM »

The Creeping Menace of Syndicalism

Syndicalism, also called Anarcho-syndicalism, or Revolutionary Syndicalism, a movement that advocates direct action by the working class to abolish the capitalist order, including the state, and to establish in its place a social order based on workers organized in production units. The syndicalist movement flourished in France chiefly between 1900 and 1914 and had a considerable impact in Spain, Italy, England, the Latin-American countries, and elsewhere. It had ceased to be a strong, dynamic force by the end of World War I, but it remained a residual force in Europe until World War II.

The syndicalist, like the Marxist, was opposed to capitalism and looked forward to an ultimate class war from which the working class would emerge victorious. To the syndicalist, the state was by nature a tool of capitalist oppression and, in any event, was inevitably rendered inefficient and despotic by its bureaucratic structure. As an appendage of the capitalist order, then, the state could not be used for reform with peaceful means and must be abolished.

The structure of the ideal syndicalist community was generally envisioned somewhat as follows. The unit of organization would be the local syndicat, a free association of self-governing “producers.” It would be in touch with other groups through the local bourse du travail (“labour exchange”), which would function as a combination of employment and economic planning agency. When all the producers were thus linked together by the bourse, its administration—consisting of elected representatives of the members—would be able to estimate the capacities and necessities of the region, could coordinate production, and, being in touch through other bourses with the industrial system as a whole, could arrange for the necessary transfer of materials and commodities, inward and outward.

In the United States the Industrial Workers of the World embraced a form of syndicalism but aimed for a system based on large, centralized unions rather than on local associations.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/578407/syndicalism

The Labor Party is currently run by Syndicalist elements- the country is to be run by labor unions. Is this what you want?
Picking up right where the reporter left off huh?
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Napoleon
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« Reply #3 on: June 21, 2014, 04:27:05 PM »

Simfan, even the Federalist VP we had supported TNF.
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Napoleon
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« Reply #4 on: June 21, 2014, 04:35:35 PM »

I wasn't really aware of that... what race? Matt is in the NE and TNF is in the MW, no?

Dallasfan is in the NE too.
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