I'm really trying to unravel this stuff.
Socialism does tend to weaken countries
Yeah, we haven't actually established that as fact. Russia, before WWI was known as "the sick man of Europe". It was economically backwards, hicksville. The USSR however turned it into the world's 2nd biggest superpower. Russia in fact became a dominant force in the world, all within the Soviet Era. China, similarly, was a broken down nation. It's now on track to exceed the USA's GDP at some point in a decade or two. India and China were economically similar around 1950 or so, India went all-in on the free market whereas China went all-in on a planned state economy. China now massively exceeds the power of India.
likewise the far right weakens countries too with their hatred of anyone that isn't white. Though India elected a far right president and they aren't white, so I'm not sure what that is about but I don't live anywhere near there.
The problem is you're trying to make sense of overseas politics based on only what's current where you live, which is clearly not the right analysis. Nazi germany
wasn't black-vs-white, because that dynamic didn't exist in Germany. Germany persecuted European Jews (who are pretty white) while allying with the Japanese (very non-white). Far-right
nationalism entirely depends on which nation you're in. A far-right person in Russia supports Russian Nationalism, a far-right person in India supports Indian Nationalism. A far-right person in Japan sees the Japanese as the supreme race. The far-right commonality is that there is an "in-group" and you have some "out-group", usually immigrants that is the target. Which in-group exists and white out-group existed is entirely dependent on where you live, so a Japanese far-right person will want Japan to have an empire again, and suppress all non-Japanese races.
As for the UK. Maybe the police state part is wrong use of words, but they do seem to arrest people for words far faster than if someone is committing pedophilia. To me that is the pinnacle of socialism, arresting people for words far faster before putting someone in prison for hurting a child.
Firstly, this doesn't fit any definition of socialism that I'm familiar with. We're at least free to completely disagree on the terminology, but when I say "socialism" i'm not talking about what you're talking about, and I disagree that it's the same thing.
for a good start on defining what a "police state" is, it's when there's a lack of separation of powers between the main political party and the law enforcement wing. The police become an instrument to ensure the rule of the party itself. Stuff police states do is like sending the police to beat up supporters of the opposition party, or the secret police secretly monitor which political party you support, or infiltrate opposition groups with moles designed to derail political campaigns. Making a law that says "don't insult gay people" for example, isn't really in the "police state" kind of realm.
In any case, not sure whats up with so many disliking Obama's legacy. Its really weird and makes no sense when he was the most popular US president in modern history and definitely must be in the top most popular US presidents.
My guess is there is a lot of far left people here, so me liking Biden and hating socialism seems to have angered people for some reason. When we should be united on getting trump out of the white house.
I think the bigger problem is that you're creating what is really a "straw man" version of socialism, attributing a lot of negative stuff to it, then assuming that's what anyone who mentions socialism is talking about. First up, I'd argue that there are a bunch of opinions on the Left, and
some of them are related to socialism, but not all of them. For example, identity politics, feminism etc, have
nothing to do with socialism. The term Socialism represents a number of different (some of which are mutually exclusive) economic theories. This has nothing to do with whether you support identity politics, political correctness or any of the "isms" that are popular on the left.