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Talk:Dirigisme

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Posted by Will Beback 00:23, 17 April 2006 (UTC).

Is "Voluntarism" supposed to be volontarisme? -- Beland 00:20, 10 Apr 2005 (UTC)

You make a good point. I had the same thought, in fact, also that I've never seen either dirigisme or dirigiste ever used in English without surrounding quotations indicating that it is a foreign, i.e. French, term. Ditto for dirigism and dirigist spellings: never seen those at all.
I don't find any of these variants -- with or without the terminal "e" -- in my Webster's American Dictionary. They are in the OED Online, however: most of the examples there use surrounding quotations, but there are some which do not -- for both terminal "e" and non. Also "dirigistic".
So I guess we're stuck with the French term, in our ecumenical English / Américain. OK with me, as the phenomenon it describes is pretty common and I can't think of a better English term.
--Kessler 23:30, 10 October 2005 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] American System

Advocates of the American System have been adding links to that article in a number of unreleated articles. The three elements of the AS were high tariffs, infrastructure improvemtns, and a national bank. I see only one of those three elements in this article. Can proponents of the link please provide a noteworthy source who connects them? Thanks, -Will Beback 04:21, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

You seem to be committed to a reductionist approach in trying to understand these topics. The American System is not defined by components x, y, and z, but rather by an overarching idea that generates those components. If you look at the intro to Dirigisme, you will find that it says that "Dirigisme... is an economic term designating an economy where the government exerts strong directive influence.
While the term has been applied occasionally to centrally planned economies, where the government effectively controls production and allocation of resources (in particular, to certain socialist economies where the national government owns the means of production), it originally had neither of these meanings when applied to France, and generally designates a mainly capitalist economy with a strong economic participation by government."
This introduction could just as easily describe the American System, and it also makes clear that the term Dirigism may be used to describe economies other than that of France, answering an objection that you have made in other locations. Because of the obvious kinship of the ideas, it is perfectly legitimate to direct readers from one article to the other; the American System (economics) article references Colbert as one of the inspirations for the American System. And this article also refers readers to Mixed Economy, for similarly legitimate reasons. --HK 16:06, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
There's nothing in the American System about a planned economy. Communism and command economies would be a closer comparison. High tariffs and road-building are not at all the same as a planned economy. Again, do you have any legtitimate source for this linkage, or is it your own original research? -Will Beback 18:41, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

I also agree with Will Beback, this user has also been trying to spread "Left Gatekeeper" terms in articles of well-known leftists to spread Larouchite POV.--Jersey Devil 19:20, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

Dirigism was DeGaulle's economic plan to revitalize France. It's emphasis was quite similiar to American System as HK describes above. Are the two exact? No. Are they similiar and warrant SEE ALSO's? Yes. Just as someone reading about Communism would want to read further about the similiar socialism or democratic socialism. It is perfectly legitimate to provide additional links for the reader to understand similiar systems in history. Will Beback, would you not agree that the two systems are similiar enough to warrant linking? Mercantilism which predates both is also similiar in its philosophy, though there are differences. Adding American System to unrelated articles is wrong and was not done. Adding it to articles of similiar substance is right for educational purposes. Jersey Devil, you've been warned about violating the decorum of Wikipedia by bringing up unrelated material and 'opinion' on your part about HK. It is also inappropriate to bring another dispute relating to the Gatekeeper page and vote thereof, here. Please stop. We get nowhere if you post as you've done. Let us be reasonable here. --Northmeister 19:33, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

If Dirigisme and the American System are similar then I'm sure that a reliable source has made the comparison previously. I can't find such a comparison. On the face of it, they do not appear similar, as I've said above. One concerns a planned economy and state-owned enterprises, the other proposes high tariffs, road-building, and a national bank. We agree that adding links to AS to unrelated articles is wrong, and I wish it would stop. Regarding HK's editing actions, if he is doing the same thing here as on other articles then it is a problem, but discussions of editors should be held on other pages such as user talk pages. -Will Beback 21:02, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
Dirigisme is not a planned economy where the means of production are owned by the government, it is rather directed action toward national goals of economic expansion and technological achievement, quite similiar in how the American System encouraged American enterprise through its national banking, internal improvement to infrastructure, and tariff policies. DeGaulle did not want to embrace a command economy where the means of production were directly in the governments hands as in socialism or communism, thus Dirigisme. That is not to say some enterprises were not nationalized, but many were after DeGaulle. That said, not only should the reader be directed toward the American System (as similiar but not the same), but towards Mercantilism (in the same light), Mixed Economy (in the same light), Communism (as another economy belief), Laisse Faire (as the alternative). This is essentially an economic article about a policy DeGaulle embraced resulting from same gene's pool as American System (forgive my comparison), whereas Colbert of France etc. were the Adam's of that; that is the same as socialism belonging to the same gene pool or strain as Communism, whose Adam was Marxism. When a reader reads about Dirigisme for whatever purpose they may well wish to know of similiar systems that stimulated the national economy through various devices, such as the American System or the system of Japan today. We agree they are not the same. We agree that the American System should not be linked to a non-associated article. --Northmeister 21:14, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
Show me the source that links the two concepts and I'll cheerfully re-add the link myself. Since you assert there is a strong connection there must be someone who has noticed this similarity. -Will Beback 21:53, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
I think your overreaching here. I did the See Also over to include different economic systems, those similiar and different. Look them over and offer any suggestions on inclusion or deduction. The goal is to provide the reader with see also links for further economic study. --Northmeister 23:46, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
If that was the goal I'd have thought that those other links would have been added in the first place. -Will Beback 23:54, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
That should be the goal of any article (which is what I meant), to offer further links within or without wikipedia for further study that is related. I agree, the other links should of been added earlier and maybe you can offer improvement to them if you think I missed any proper links. --Northmeister 23:59, 13 March 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Jersey Devil Reverting

Jersey Devil, why did you revert without discussion here? I added the links and asked for discussion so we can work together on this. Why did you revert the links? Explain your reasoning? --Northmeister 00:02, 14 March 2006 (UTC)

Since Jersey Devil has decided not to discuss his reversion, I consider it an act of vandalism and have reverted his reversion for that reason. All I ask is a discussion on why he does not approve my latest edit and to join us in a civil discourse here. --Northmeister 01:08, 14 March 2006 (UTC)

Please do not falsely claim vandalism on page history summaries. In Wikipedia we have a very specific definition for the term vandalism (See Here). Thank you. As to why I reverted it is because it is POV pushing for a term used by Larouche which you and the other user are trying to promote which has nothing to do with French economics.--Jersey Devil 01:36, 14 March 2006 (UTC)

What in this is POV? To link to similiar sites is POV? Your arguments don't make any sense. Once again I am asking you to stop linking this historic American term to LaRouche alone. You are stalking (see here) and vandalising a page as well as harassing me (see here). Stop the VANDALISM (see here) do not disrupt this page to make a point and honor the policy of assuming good faith towards me (see here). Lastly I ask that you do not revert a page until consensus is reached by those editing at any given time as to what should be done. Simply reverting in that manner you have done considering your history is VANDALISM and not helpful to improving this article. --Northmeister 02:14, 14 March 2006 (UTC)

[edit] See Also

To avoid some sort of edit war over See Also in this article let's consider the Edit that Jersey Devil keeps deleting through reversion (thrice).

"State intervenes, private ownership of production:

State control of the means of production:

Corporations dictate policy, private ownership of production:

The intention is to offer links for the reader to further their studies of similiar and different economic systems. Dirigisme does not exist outside other systems...it's links are the same as the mixed economy/American System/German post-war Economy/Japanese Miracle economy going back to the original policies of Cameralism of Germany, Colbertism of France, and Mercantilism of England (Cromwell to Corn Law repeals). The emphasis is on government intervention such as the American System's Pacific Railway Acts, Cumberland Road, National Banking Act etc. in he economy to stimulate production and growth as opposed to the opposite school of thought whose roots start with Smith, Physiocrat's of France known as Laizee Faire, or hands off from government. The ideas of Marx form a third line of economics, that produced socialism, democratic socialism, communism, that called for government owenership of the means of production in a mild (democratic socialism) or excessive (communism in USSR) form. To deprive the reader of these alternatives and the associative roots of Dirigistic thought is wrong. What do others think. I will hear all sides on this. Let's work this out and come to consensus on this stuff rather than conduct constant reverts that make no sense. --Northmeister 04:18, 14 March 2006 (UTC)

Most of these links are available through the category system, which exists just so that related articles of this type can be found by interested readers. -Will Beback 05:48, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
I don't see them there. If you wish to add them to the category links, go ahead. Thanks. Also consider, 'See also' is meant to direct the reader to relevant articles here at wikipedia and is included in many articles across wikipedia. The ones above I think are relevant. --Northmeister 06:05, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
Added philosophic roots, similiar economic systems, and opposing systems for the reader to carry on their study of economics and related articles. --Northmeister 03:17, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
And of course it goes without saying that we have no sources fot these designations but are simply adding them based on our own original research. -Will Beback 05:56, 15 March 2006 (UTC)

These are in the See Also, for further study. They are not in the description of the article. They are found here at wikipedia and can be read. Original research? Give me a break! --Northmeister 07:44, 15 March 2006 (UTC)

It's not for us to say that Communism is opposed to Dirigisme. If you have a source which puts them in that category please provide it. -Will Beback 17:40, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
I'm not certain that the "See also" section needs links to opposing systems. But on the issue of similar systems, Northmeister is completely correct. You don't need a source to direct the reader's attention to a related article. You just need common sense. Please avoid contention for the sake of contention. --HK 21:30, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
Common sense = Original research. Please stop promoting LaRouche's American System. The ArbCom has asked the editors not edit war to place LaRouche theories in articles unrelated to him. -Will Beback 21:55, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
Although you have hinted at it elsewhere, this is the first time that you have openly espoused the belief that LaRouche invented the American System. Now, that is a clear example of original research, because I know of no reputable source that credits LaRouche with the capability of influencing American history more than a century before he was born. Did you actually intend to write what you just wrote? --HK 23:17, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
This is the problem here. The American System is America's historic economic philosophy that helped create the great American Way of Life with a large Middle Class Society. Just because LaRouche embraces this system and comments on it, does not make it HIS system. That would be like IBM embracing Microsoft DOS and supporting this system over Apple's system, and then someone saying that IBM owns the system not Microsoft. Then and therefore due to this, since IBM had a remarkable comraderie (team spirit) with their own team song they are a cult (must be right) and since they are a small slice of American enterprise and very pro-active about IBM, their employee's may not participate here at Wikipedia, nor can Microsoft DOS be written about or put in any article about Computer's unless it comes from non-IBM sources. To enforce this act, Apple employee's will block and ban any IBM employee's when they engage in these acts, even though Apple represents an even smaller slice of the pie of American enterprise. That's the mentality. Pure and simple, this system is not LaRouches. I learned about it in college...my major is Political Science and History, with particular concentration on American History, German History, and Russian History and America's political history. --Northmeister 00:37, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

I never said LaRouche invented the American System. But he is its sole modern proponent. I've never seen anyone else refer to it outside of 19th-century American history or a few mentions regarding some non-Americans. The idea that there is ongoing interest in the American System is a LaRouche-theme, and much of the material that has been added to that article can only be sourced to LaRouche-related publications. -Will Beback 01:42, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

That is wrong and you know it is wrong, which must make it a right? Your bringing discussion from one page onto another, highly discouraged here at Wikipedia. I'm beginning to think you don't understand American history or society at all. --Northmeister 03:04, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
"However, research that consists of collecting and organizing information from existing primary and/or secondary sources is, of course, strongly encouraged. All articles on Wikipedia should be based on information collected from published primary and secondary sources. This is not "original research"; it is "source-based research", and it is fundamental to writing an encyclopedia." Study this, learn this. --Northmeister 03:39, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
The discussion came here because the link came here. We can move it back to talk:American System (economics) if you like. Which source is your source-based research based upon? Who is it that calls Communism a system that is opposed to the American System? -Will Beback 03:47, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
The link came here because it is relevant like Communism and Socialism and Mercantilism are relevant, they are economic systems with different and similiar philosophies to Dirigisme. Are you seriously going to make an argument that Communism and America from 1861-1929 were the same? That is essentially the argument you are making above. --Northmeister 03:53, 16 March 2006 (UTC) P.S. Henry C. Carey, American economist and advisor of Honest Abe Lincoln. --Northmeister 03:55, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
May I suggest if Will Beback wishes to delete relevant material, that he state the reasons for doing so on the talk page, without accusations which are inherently false, personal attacks, assumptions on bad faith (calling an idea LaRouche or what not), and that he do so in regards to civility and respect of other editors. This editor continues to assert the above without Assuming Good Faith of other editors, launches into diatribes often referring to LaRouche when a point can not be made, wants citations for the SEE ALSO and RELATED links, when no such policy exists here at Wikipedia except for the body of a document and has been generally unreasonable. Consensus and verifiability are rules of engagement here at Wiki, not only is the information highly verifiable by readers, but consensus holds for inclusion of the Related and See Also section. Honest discussion does not resort to name calling or loose linking individuals or ideas. This user has consistently interrupted Wikipedia with allegations which are false and when proven false he continues to assert them. He often uses Original Research when Wikipedia clearly defines what this is and states that Source-Based Resource is highly regarded. Don't tell that to him however. Such a continued level of stalking and trolling, with no help to Wikipedia or its standards is not sufficient to even warrant responding any longer to his unreasonable requests. This user has been involved in several arbcom cases, where he was admonished for his tactics, and most recently in a complaint involving his troll like activity against other users. If Will BeBack has something useful to contribute do so. It seems he does not. He is a disruptor, which is being kind. This is to advise anyone else who may come across this for future reference. Look at his contribsfor indication of his disruption and stalking activities. --Northmeister 14:11, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
I've stated my reasons several times: there is no source which asserts that the American System is related to Dirigisme. "See also" sections are a part of the article, and original research is not welcome there any more than in other parts of the article. Please do not keep adding this link to articles. -Will Beback 23:21, 17 March 2006 (UTC)

Now in the edit summaries he is accusing me of "trolling and stalking". Seriously, do I have to put up with this nonsense?--Jersey Devil 01:19, 19 March 2006 (UTC)

I call them as I see them. It was referring to your better half however and not you. --Northmeister 01:22, 19 March 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Restoration of Links

The See Also links restored as were. The Japanese Miracle, German System, American System, all were economic systems with similar traits to Dirigisme. Mercantilism and Colbertism are the roots of all of these. These roots are "Government Intervention" rather than "Hands Off" or "Total Control" which sum up the other two philosophical wings of Economics each of which have many branches. The systems are not the same but are similar and warrant inclusion on that merit. We are trying to put together an Encylopedia of fact so that the reader can gather information. Linking to the above mentioned economic systems gives the reader the ability to study similar systems and compare and contrast them. --Northmeister 06:36, 21 March 2006 (UTC)

I agree with Northmeister's edit, and his rationale for it. If other editors disagree, I propose that the next step be a RfC, rather than edit warring. --HK 07:19, 21 March 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Order: what it is not before what it is.

Confused of England writes: This is a nice entry, but two points confuse me. Firstly, in the opening who do we explain what it is not before we explain what it is. Uses of Dirigisme that relate to socialistic planned economies seems pretty rare in my reading: I think it should start by saying that it's a style of leadership, and in particular of government leadership, associated with the French elite. Secondly, it seems a little narrow to locate it in economics only. Dirigisme, to me, is rooted deeply in the meritocratic model as much as in any French affection for autarky. It's about ENA-archs and others leaders knowing best, about the confidence in plannification and grand projects, about the one best way... all of this seems tightly bound to me. Any thoughts? --Duncan 17:30, 22 March 2006 (UTC)

It is unclear to me why the article is not called by the English name, Dirigism. Dirigism is most widely used as an economic term, connoting the opposite of another French expression, Laissez-faire. Maybe it is only just that both terms retain their French names. --HK 22:02, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
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