It’s a confirmed fact, people have in the past left the poorest regions of North Korea, ascribed to spreading the narratives South Korea spouts, then gone back to North Korea after realizing they hated their quality of life in South Korea. I’m not even joking, it happens. I’m not saying it doesn’t happen with people fleeing to capitalist nations, I’m saying people are drawn to better material conditions, and those conditions are changed by whoever holds the most power. The US and Europe hold the most capital and power, meaning tbe have the highest quality of material conditions available if they use it to its maximum potential. The US doesn’t do this, so people are liable to flee elsewhere, sometimes to communist nations.
I’ve actually known several friends who lean more physically male by appearance (nonetheless intersex) who have been able to be self impregnated by lab-assisted processes.
Those amendments are extremely unlikely to pass in the United States and it doesn’t even begin to fix the issues of capitalism itself. Austerity measures will still be prevalent, jobs will still be exported to poorer nations in a situation where everyone loses, and the regulation of these companies with the goal of revitalizing an economy will inevitably turn out to sacrifice all social services people would hope to gain due to the structure of the economy and its incompatibility with government policy in a “free market” environment. The social policies will shred themselves, and privatization will not even begin to save you.
Deregulating the private sector while separating it from government is also just generally impossible due to indirect coercion being committed by the private sector into the government. The two are intertwined, separating the two fully is impossible, and believe me, it doesn’t fix anything. Social democracy looks appealing to the average person, but you dramatically increase suffering and poor wages elsewhere since the cost of labor for a citizen of a social democracy increases, motivating companies to make more profit by using cheap labor from outside.
In which case, that will ruin all development of cheap-labor nations due to companies breaching laws (regardless of governments doing anything about it, it’ll happen all the same, don’t even try to deny that fact) to politically pressure those nations to reinforce higher austerity measures. You’ll cost the world trillions for a lifestyle made to keep the workers of richer nations under capitalism’s thumb, and in the process, suffering will only ramp up further. Europe knows this, america knows this, and yet the money for the rich keeps rising as is in the very nature of capitalism itself.
Smaller companies won’t even begin to save you, and at no point in history has enforcing anti-monopoly measures fixed the problem in a permanent manner. The larger companies will simply become more elusive, break laws in easier ways, and reattach themselves to the government. There’s not a solution for capitalism’s problems using government to co-opt the problem away. It’s institutional, it’s inherent, and it can’t be killed. You can make it better, but you’ll be more likely to slide to fascism than to actually fix the problem, since regardless, the state and corporate sectors will merge more the more you try and separate them.
You don’t get to fly to most any other country without permission, you’re talking about the walls in the Soviet Union, which were both anomalous and rare in socialist history, and had absolutely nothing to do with Marxism itself. No group has ever stood against the slavers more than the Marxists, you wish to speak of slavers? Talk about your entire global economy, talk about where it gets its cheap labor, how america made Libya so broken that open air slave trade came back, talk about that ever so often. People have risked EVERYTHING fleeing capitalist countries with fascist regimes in place, Nazi germany was fascist and capitalist, people have been trying to go BACK to North Korea for employment, people have CHOSEN Cuba, China, the USSR, and many more over capitalist nations, don’t speak to me of risking everything.