A federal appeals court blocked a racist Florida law that restricts Chinese citizens from buying land from being enforced against the two people who sued the state. The court did not, however, block the law entirely; it's still in effect for everyone else. One of the judges, Nancy Abudu, agreed that this was a blatant violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, and the ACLU of Florida intends to continue fighting to prevent this law from being enforced more broadly.
This fight isn't over, but this decision certainly acknowledges the discriminatory nature of this law and is a big win.
Roosevelt was able to regulate capitalism because capitalism wasn't working under Hoover for the people (alot more than usual). Also a communist country was starting to thrive and industrialize. This inspired many communists to unionize their workplaces. Many of the leadership were communists in all of the unions. These unions had political power. Roosevelt was very popular among the American proletariat. He saved capitalism through his negotiations with the borgiosie and meeting the needs of the American workers. Furthermore due to the large oceans protecting the North American continent, the ravages of World War 2 left the United States mostly unscathed. Industrial workers were able to produce goods for higher prices temporarily because they were the only ones able to manufacture complex goods. As other countries were able to bring their industry back up online over time, this competitive edge waned in relevance. The capitalists were making less profits from industrial production so they leaned into rent seeking and finance. They offshored the jobs of the former industrial centers. They made it harder to unionize and strike. The generations after have noticed capital taking power back from the people. Now we are in neoliberalism. Letting the borgiosie have political power is the problem. They will always make things worse.
What part of capitalism is worth preserving? The "good times" of America were brought by stealing land from native Americans, enslaving Africans, exploitative working conditions of immagrants, the luck of geography, and the severely exploitative system of the Breton Woods system. https://yewtu.be/watch?v=M0Ef_hbNsBs&listen=false
All of which if you are a decent person would recognize that these are bad. All of these are the conditions that bring wealth to the United States. That's the bathwater. Where is the baby?
China sees no need to do exploitation in this manner and is offering better trade deals and seeking to engage in countries as equals rather than dominate them like the Breton Woods system. They have capitalists, but they have no political power. Why not try to reform the United States to crack down of these parasitic capitalists like China does for the good of the people? We have much to learn from China. But our leaders won't listen. China encounters problems and they solve them. America encoutners problems and they fester with everything else.
That is why there is so much demonization of trans people, ethnic minorities, and foreign nations to distract people from the fact that capitalism is not meeting the American people's needs.
"America" historically as a concept has been mostly an institution of exploitation. To get rid of the exploitative systems is to destroy what makes it "America". Thus the death of America is the means of saving the people by giving them the power to determine their destiny, not controlled by the greedy capitalists.
That is far too long to dive into properly as I'm about to crash, but I will say that the baby is the US; you know democracy. At least its supposed to be even though it's an oligarchy at this point, but it can be fixed if we get our shit together. Capitalism is the bathwater, and once again, communism is not the answer either. And if you really want fix these things, it's much better to present it as such and not "the death of America". Union leaders being communist isn't a surprise, and I'm very much pro-union. Hell, one of my favorite folk singers was communist, but he wasn't a tankie, and I doubt those union bosses were, either. They just had faith in an economic system that doesn't work, just like capitalists.
Why isn’t communism the answer? What kind of answer do you have? Anything but agreeing with a “tankie.” I don’t expect you to respond seriously, so you even take yourself seriously?