@ReggieHere @ChrisMayLA6 @KimSJ @urlyman
@thegarbagebird
Ah yes - Singapore, the model small-state-free-market economy of the brexiteers - remember "Singapore on Thames" ? - Singapore, where almost all the land and 85% of housing are in public ownership, and nearly a quarter of national output is from state-owned enterprises...
I have what may be an unusual view of economic systems and how to replace them - which is not to worry about it. They change. All real economies, whatever they call themselves, are mixed - so the task of politics is to change the mix. For me, the core problem confronting us has two main aspects: inequality and climate-ecological breakdown - but at bottom these are the same problem: the over-exploitation (of people and environment) and overconsumption (by the relatively wealthy).
The remedy also has two main aspects: making tax fairer and making big business more socially and environmentally responsible. Pursuing these aims will in effect end capitalism (but not free enterprise - small business will be taxed and regulated differently, but in many ways stay as it is) - but we don't need to talk about ending capitalism, just about the harm that big business and billionaires are doing.