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Michael Martin's avatar

I have long noticed that Capitalism and Communism are two faces of the same coin. As Antony Sutton pointed out in his many books, the Bolshevik and Nazi revolutions were both financed by Wall Street.

I used to be involved in Libertarian politics in my younger years, mostly because, as an "Aspie", I empathized with outsiders and have always been strongly "civil libertarian" in my outlook.

However, my disenchantment started when I tried to read Ludwig von Mises" "Human Action" with its self-referential, circular philosophy of "praxeology." He states, "The incentive that impels a man to act is always some uneasiness." What a trivialization of the soul! I see here the "flatness of affect" that Lobaczewski talks about in schizoid intellectuals.

To put it another way, left-wing "Communism" and right-wing "Economism" share the same reductionist materialistic roots. I like that word "Economism." It "kinda sorta" SOUNDS like Communism because it "kinda sorta" IS like Communism!

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Ted's avatar

"As I stated above, I’m not an economist so I’m not suited to judge the merits of Khazin’s work. I’ll just add that as a ponerology enthusiast, I think that economics, like all human systems, cannot be abstracted or disconnected from psychology."

Perhaps you aren't entirely qualified to proofread the formulae employed by economists in supporting their prognostications, Mr. Koehli, but your assertion that economics and psychology are inseparable, is foundational to economics.

There is a place for your common sense approach amidst the obscurantism being proffered as a simulacrum of erudition.

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