I believe that some confuse the socialism, communism, and capitalism debate with the type of government that implements these economic systems.
The debate is often about totalitarianism versus various degrees of democracy. I fully agree with The E's comment about marketing ploys, and socialism variations.
All modern western democracies have economic systems that are varying blends of socialism and capitalism. While the USA leans more to capitalism than most, the amount of socialist programs would surprise politicians from a century ago.
Totalitarian countries like China nowadays have much more capitalism in their economies than would have been imagined to be possible a generation ago.
Classic communism has been proven to be a failure as modern systems are too complex to be detail managed centrally, and there is no incentive to excel. A supposedly true story of the communist Soviet Union was that chandelier factories were lumped in with other industries that were judged on the weight of their output, and thus produced impractical cast iron light fittings.
A somewhat obsession of mine is to point out that countries that have - full democracy, free press, a well regulated financial system, an encompassing welfare net, and capitalism that has many small businesses; are the most prosperous, resilient to shocks like the GFC, and are regularly rated as the best places to live by the UN, IMF, OECD, and others. Take a bow all of Scandinavia, New Zealand, Canada, and Australia. Germany, France, Japan and the UK get honourable mentions as well.
The E wrote:BrightSoul wrote:All that tells me is that the names weren't accurate.
The NSDAP's name was (in modern terms) a deliberate marketing ploy to use an already established brands' pull (namely, the Social-Democrats' and the Communists') with the worker class to get voters on board.
Socialism, as a PolSci term, is the overall umbrella term for all political ideologies that put the needs of the community above the needs of the individual; Communism (or, more accurately, stalinist and leninist socialism) is a particular branch of this general philosophy.
There are quite a few others.Also, what exactly are we supposed to discuss and debate here?