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Mr Khan said:
sc94597 said:
Socialism is not foreign to America. In colonial times there were many socialist experiments. They all failed, of course. Nevertheless, socialism (at least most forms of it) is antithetical to individualism, and individualism is much more ingrained in American culture. That is why you see such opposition. For the first 300 years of American history, the political landscape was split between individual anarchists, and classical liberals. It only makes sense that the progressivism of the last 100 years has had a hard time to drastically alter such a landscape (honestly it has been more effective than what one would predict beforehand.)

 

Individualism falls apart as an ideology for those who are made to live their lives as little better than machinery with organs.

Yet it was the conclusions of individualism which brought individuals to prosper in the enlightnement and afterwards, and only collectivism which has reversed the process, since. The opportunity for individuals to have the freedom to act, within the constraints of their rights, has led to prosperity, while the forceful reduction of these rights has led people back to destitution (note: all applications of total socialism: from the U.S.S.R to modern day Venezuela.) Individualism succeeds for these people as well, because it enables them to traverse economic and social strata.