It's a little on the wordy side, but the core principles seem to be:
a) democraticisation of the economy b) social welfare through public industry c) global perspective
Obviously, I don't disagree with any of these. But the author is a little heavy on the adjectives and light on the verbs.
The constitutional framing is, of course, the sort of the thing that idealists can spend a lot of time and energy on, when perhaps they could look at some of the "great constitutions" in history for comparison first. Also, I do worry a little about the mind that becomes obsessive on affixes in words to the point that they must be highlighted and italicised.
no subject
a) democraticisation of the economy
b) social welfare through public industry
c) global perspective
Obviously, I don't disagree with any of these. But the author is a little heavy on the adjectives and light on the verbs.
The constitutional framing is, of course, the sort of the thing that idealists can spend a lot of time and energy on, when perhaps they could look at some of the "great constitutions" in history for comparison first. Also, I do worry a little about the mind that becomes obsessive on affixes in words to the point that they must be highlighted and italicised.