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  • Who is Cindy Milstein

    A tiktok came up about anarchism and a bunch of the comments were telling people to read Cindy Milstein’s work. I’ve seen posts on here about anarchism and the literature but I haven’t seen any about Cindy Milstein and was hoping to learn more.

    Here is the tiktok for reference. I don’t follow this person but I have seen and liked their videos about “leftists vs liberals.” There were other authors mentioned but Milstein seemed to come up the most. If you have any information on her or even the anarchism talked about in the video please share.

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  • What are your thoughts on China promoting peace talks in Palestine?
    web.archive.org China's security vision for advancing peace to give play as Abbas visits

    Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas arrived in Beijing on Tuesday to start a three-day state visit.This is Abbas' fifth visit to China. He is also the first Arab head of state to be hosted by China this year.Following a positive trend in the Middle East

    It is an interesting development, to be sure. On the one hand, I am glad to see that US influence in the middle east is weakening, and after seeing China negotiate peace between KSA and Iran I am relatively optimistic about China being able to use their growing influence for good.

    On the other hand China seems to be aiming for a "two state solution" in Palestine, which I fear will legitimize Israel and harm Palestine in the long run.

    What are your thoughts/opinions on this? Is there anything I am missing and should know about?

    20
  • Why against multipolarity

    Why against multipolarity despite many socialist state arise after ww1 and even more after ww2 end? I ask this question because I see many people in r/communism view multipolarity negatively.

    60
  • How will decolonization work?

    I thought about it but I couldn't think of a proper answer.

    I guess it would make the most sense to let the colonized decide what to do with the colonizers, since they are the victims.

    And what would happen with the people that were brought in as slaves by the colonizers?

    I hope someone smarter than me can explain 🙏🥺

    29
  • Where do you get your news from?

    I watched a couple videos from BT News on Youtube and it seems pretty good. I was wondering if there are other good news sources for staying informed about current events.

    So where you comrades get your news from?

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  • papers.ssrn.com The Maidan Massacre Trial and Investigation Revelations: Implications for the Ukraine-Russia War and Relations

    This study analyzes revelations from the trial and investigation in Ukraine concerning the mass killing that took place in Kyiv on 20 February 2014. This Maidan

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  • Reading with comrades: Clara Zetkin on the question of the intellectuals (Part I)

    How I got here:

    spoiler

    As some of you might remember, a couple weeks ago I made a post asking for resources on the role of the students in class struggle. I didn't get much, because, as I found out in further research, though there surely is a whole lot of material on it, most of it probably isn't digitized. So I asked some studied older comrades irl. That yielded some results. One of them suggested a lecture by Clara Zetkin from 1924 on the question of the intellectuals. I actually found this almost forgotten speech somewhere in a corner of the web. Great, I thought, let's translate it - doesn't seem that long, should be available for the English speaking comrades and makes me read the text much more deeply. And I did start...

    until I realized, a good few hours in, I still wasn't even half way done. Well, turns out this 'fairly short speech' actually is over 13k words long.

    I'll still finish it, but I thought it would be much more engaging to just do it and share it piecemeal with the comrades online.

    What's the text about:

    As the title says, it's a historical materialist analysis of the role of the intellectuals in class struggle. But it is so thorough, it too develops or at least formulates a very early commentary on the just emerging fascism, on imperialism, on the question of women and much more. It's long for a speech, but it's incredibly insightful, comprehensive, is a highly interesting snapshot of the discussions in the communist world movement in 1924 and a very good example of how to conduct historical materialist analysis.

    Clara Zetkin today is, unfortunately, a mostly forgotten figure outside of the German far left, even though she was one of the most important members of the German communist movement, of the KPD, an incredibly important figure for the women's movement and all round absolute giga chad who should be remembered at least as much as Rosa. I strongly urge everyone to at least read her wikipedia article. The woman had a theory of fascism as a distinct phenomenon less than 2 years after Mussolini seized power.

    How's this gonna work:

    I'll release the text in (probably) 4 parts, every 2-3 days from now. I'll make a new thread for each part. Whoever feels compelled to read and discuss along can just use the thread for the part. I'll try to be as active and to answer as many questions about it as I can, though I'm using this as an opportunity to really study Zetkin for the first time myself.

    The translations are works in progress. I wont post total beta versions, but they will not be 100% refined

    So without further ado

    Part I:

    spoiler

    Clara Zetkin: The intellectual's question

    (7th July 1924, Lecture before the V. Congress of the Communist Internationale)

    CLARA ZETKIN: Comrades! Sadly I have to begin my lecture with an appeal for apologies. I'm momentarily not very healthy and therefore forced to leave out some of what I'd have to say in my lecture. You will therefore percieve gaps, but I hope to be able to fill these in later.

    Today the intellectual's question is starting at us from tens and tens of thousands of hungry eyes. It's also screaming at us from the distress of tens and tens of thousands, who in the needs of life, in the needs of this time lost the previous ideal, a supporting internal power are not able to understand their personal experience and suffering in connection with the grand historical developments and to derive energy from it. But in addition to the misery of the intellectuals, which has heightened to the intellectual's crisis, we see another phenomenon: The crumbling face of bourgeois cultur in its death throes. The crisis of the intellectuals too is the crisis of mental labour in bourgeois society. The intellectual's crisis is facing us today in all the capitalist countries, to differing extents of course, with differing force, but is in the historical sense and the direction of development the same everywhere. We too see it in the socialist Soviet states, because there capitalism has been toppled politically, but the transformations of society towards communism are still in their infancy, and on top of that under the greatest difficulties.

    The intellectuals' question shows itself ultimately as the crisis of mental labour and the culture of bourgeois society itself. It announces to us that bourgeois society is no longer able to be the keeper, developer of its own culture. And with this the intellectuals' question stops being a question of merely the intellectuals or of bourgeois society. It becomes a question of the proletariat, for it is its historical mission to develop all forces of production, of culture beyond the limits set by bourgeois society. If the proletariat wants to fulfill this task, it is faced with another: It has to give account to itself about the relation between the basic forces of historical becoming. On this later.

    The intellectuals' crisis and the crisis of mental labour are a symptom of the deep and incurable disruption of the capitalist economy and the state based on it, the society it supports. The crisis of mental labour doesn't just show itself as a symptom of the nearing end of capitalism, but as part of the crisis of capitalism itself. In the Soviet states it is an expression of the remaining large gap between the political power conquered by the proletariat and the ramifications of this power via the dictatorship of the proletariat in the transformation of production and the ideological construction of society towards communism. All in all the crisis of mental labour and the intellectuals' crisis proves that there's a strong tension between the already far advanced process of disruption and dissolution of the bourgeois order and the process of the construction of communist production and culture.

    The intellectuals' crisis reveals that it is not the social contradiction between manual and mental labour which determines the economic condition and social standing of the intellectuals. To many it seems that it is defining for the lot of the intellectuals, the class position of the proletariat seems to prove it. But this assumption is faulty. The social contradiction between mental and manual labour, between intellectuals and proletarians has its roots in the fact that mental labour can't be replaced by a machine, that the mental labourer requires a longer period of vocational training. The mental labourer can thus not be drilled, "trained" as quickly for the exploitation-relations of capitalism as the manual labourer.

    But the social contrast, which results from this for the intellectuals to the proletariat, is only of secondary and temporary character. It steps back behind the defining fact which is the real basis for the social contradiction between manual and mental labour. That is the contradiction between property and human, between capital and labour, framed socially: the contradiction between rich and poor, between exploiters and the exploited, that social contradiction which found its classic historical expression in the class antagonism between bourgeoisie and proletariat. The fate of the mental labourer is by no means defined by strong talents or the acquired knowledge and skill in slow, tedious study, but ultimately by the contradiction between capital and labour. The intellectual finds himself in the society of capitalist commodity production, he is subject to its written and unwritten laws. In it he got transformed from a producer of cultural-values into either a seller of "commodities", similar to an artisan, so called as "freelancer" or he enters the market as "salary reciever" like the proletarian, as seller of his own commodity, the commodity labour, to devote to bourgeois culture in service of capitalists, in service of the state. Whether the intellectual is a seller of his produce or seller of his commodity labour, no matter whether as petty bourgeois or as proletarian, he is dominated by the contradictions of the capitalist market. In the "Communist Manifesto" Marx already pointed to this in shining sentences with all sharpness, that the scholar, the artist today is nothing but a trader, a commodity-seller.

    The mental labourers find themselves, as consequence of their economic relation to capital, not, as they often tell themselves, in an irreconcilable contradiction to the proletariat, they are not at all solidly and intimately connected to the bourgeoisie in social terms. The opposite is true. The intellectual is in reality connected to the proletarian via his opposition to capital; he is irreconcilably divided from the bourgeoisie by his role as small commodity seller or seller of his commodity labour. In whatever form he enters the market as seller, he will be subjugated, the large capitalist will triumph over him. The worry about a piece of bread makes him as unfree as the proletarian of manual labour. The exploitation, the bondage he experiences is nothing but a particular form of the exploitation and bondage of every form of labour by capital. As a consequence the exploitation and bondage of mental labour can only be destroyed when the power of capital is broken, the private ownership of the means of production is done away with and replaced by collective ownership. Only through proletarian revolution can the intellectual, like the manual labourer, gain his freedom. His higher interest demands that he fights on the side of the proletariat the struggle for the overcoming of capitalist production and bourgeois class-domination.

    Generally this is not the case. On the contrary. The intellectuals fell strongly and solidly connected to bourgeois society. This is explained by the development of the intellectuals as a separate social class, the type of the one-sidedly trained professional, as he fits the conditions of capitalist production with its division of labour and the atomized structure of bourgeois society with its division of social functions. The emergence of the mental labourers as a separate social class is intimately tied to the development of capitalist production and bourgeois class-society. At the beginning of capitalist production stand the achievements of science, of technology, of the great seafarers. Without the discovering and inventing scholar and technologist, without the organizing, scientifically calculating merchant, without the daring seafarer the development of capitalist production is unthinkable. But as science and technology, as organizing and administering were crucial factors for the emergence of capitalist production, inverse capitalist production had the greatest influence on the funding and development of the sciences, namely the natural sciences. Chemistry you can downright call a science of capitalist production. Thanks to that it developed from the phantastical gold-seeking of the medieval ages to a transformative science. The same is true for electrical engineering and other technical disciplines. The bourgeoisie couldn't have lifted production above the limits of feudal science without the most extensive and crucial participation of the mental labourers.

    Only the bourgeoisie needed the intellectuals for the purpose of its political and social domination. Only with their aid did it become possible, on the basis of the developing new relations of production, to transform the ideological superstructure of feudal society into bourgeois society. The bourgeoisie as a property owning class was able to, even in the frame of the feudal order, ascend to a culture that surpassed the one of the old ruling powers and bound the intellectuals solidly to it. Those became its vanguard, its pioneers in the fight against the ideological space of feudal society and its privileged classes: Church, nobility and absolutist principality. The intellectuals forged and wielded the mental weapons for the overthrow of these bonding and exploiting powers. Their spokespeople in their struggle first reached back for the bible, to the sciences and arts of antiquity; later the primary weapon became English rationalism and especially the philosophy of the encyclopaedists. Intellectuals stood as pioneers, as leaders at the forefront of all reform-movements and revolutionary movements that transformed feudal society into the bourgeois order.

    Likewise intellectuals were leaders of the most important social-revolutionary sects and peasants movements. The fight of the intellectuals liberated science, art, culture from the chains of feudal society and transformed them from servants of the ruling classes of that order into servants of the bourgeoisie, in transformative forces of bourgeois society. Art and science were "effeminated". The work of the intellectuals for the development of the capitalist economy, for the emancipation and the class domination of the bourgeoisie became ever more significant, the more the bourgeoisie strengthened due to capitalist production, and the more its position of domination solidified even in the frame of feudal society, till it finally emerged as the ruling class through revolutionary struggle. Thus grew the tasks and the importance of the intellectuals for the development of the economy. But so too grew the pressing powers for the transformation of the ideological superstructure, for the creation of a political power-apparatus which the bourgeoisie needed to push through and consolidate as the ruling class. The mental labourers were not only organizers and directors of the capitalist mode of production, they too provided the bourgeoisie for its state and its organs the necessary forces for its legislation, its administration: for all the areas and institutions affected by the bourgeoisie's need for domination over the not and little owning classes and especially over the proletariat.

    But the bourgeoisie did not reward the intellectuals according to the measure of their historic significance for class domination. It too forgot that it was the intellectuals who created the ideology of bourgeois liberalism and bourgeois democracy, which so long chained and deceived the workers. The bourgeoisie has at every time only valued the intellectuals in so far as they produced immediate surplus. The intellectuals that didn't, the ones performing other societal functions, to the bourgeoisie count as "unproductive workers'', as futile eaters. Especially the great national-economists of the emerging bourgeoisie, Adam Smith and Ricardo, left no doubt that in the eyes of the bourgeoisie productive work is achieved by those who live to increase capital, but not those who live off of the income from capital. Adam Smith eg explained:

    "Very respectable classes of society achieve as little productive work as the served." And as such "respectable classes of society", which his equated with the served, he listed: The landlords, the officers of the army and navy, the entire army-apparatus, the lawyers, the doctors, other scholars too, finally even opera-singers, actors, poets and ballet-dancers. From this described standpoint has the bourgeoisie looked down upon the mental labourers as an inferior class of futile eaters. Only once the surplus value, which the bourgeoisie extorted from the proletariat, became extraordinarily significant, it allowed itself the luxury of tossing crumbs of its wealth to the "unproductive" intellectuals, who were not immediately involved in the service of production. The low assessment of the intellectuals by the bourgeoisie got its historical expression in that the mental labourers, who created the ideological superstructure of bourgeois society, the ruling ideology, often hungered and lacked. They had to put themselves under the protection of small princes and princelets; they were forced to accept meager, often churchly, positions, despite their free-spiritedness; they bore the servitude of house-teachers, they had to flee to the salons of aristocrats. The history of the bourgeoisie and its fight for emancipation or more accurately of its emancipation fighters in England, France, Germany proves this.

    The intellectuals did not draw the necessary consequences from this significant disregard of their achievements. They did not feel divorced from the bourgeoisie, but as part of the bourgeoisie itself. They lived in the delusion, that as "free"lancers they represented "free" science, "free" art, a "free" culture. And many of them still do. How can this be explained? Within the intellectuals a social stratification took place that is much more important than the usual superficial tripartition: in privately employed and private clerks, employees and clerks in service of the state, in public service, and freelancers. The uppermost strata of intellectuals got close to the bourgeoisie or originated from it. A minority had worked up into or had "strived up into" the bourgeoisie from outstanding positions in the production-process, in the state, in various areas of cultural life. Beneath these privileged stratas spread a broad class of intellectual existences, who lived in traditional petty bourgeois complacency, but also in petty bourgeois constriction, in economic as well as cultural relations. Beneath both of these stratas there was a third group of mental labourers, who had neither luck nor fortune, who permanently teetered on the border of the lumpenproletariat and often sank down into it. Because this is characteristic for the lot of the intellectuals: If he can't assert himself in a mere or privileged position in proximity to the bourgeoisie, he doesn't fall down into the working proletariat, but the lumpenproletariat. At least the intellectuals had in bourgeois society - compared to the living conditions, to the social position of the working-class - a privileged position. As a result they felt divorced from the proletariat.

    The interest of the bourgeoisie in profit and accumulation, the interest of domination of the bourgeoisie in state and society could very well not accommodate a privileged position of the mental labourers in the long term. After its historical being it had to strive to break the privileged position of the intellectuals. And it did break it. It did break it by creating the equilibrium between the supply of mental labour and the demand for it.

    It had contributed to the better social position of the intellectuals, that the development of construction of culture in general was suffering from the chains and limits of feudal society even long after the political emancipation of the bourgeoisie.

    The number of intellectuals available to the bourgeoisie for the purpose of production and its rule wasn't large. The bourgeoisie requires a larger staff of scientists and engineers, who dedicated their strength to the blossoming of production; it requires a higher culture to command over all kinds of mental state-slaves to justify and underpin its rule ideologically. It needed to have a surplus of mental labourers. A period of foundings, of blossoming of higher educational institutions began, the elementary school-system too had been lifted. The consequence was an overproduction of mental forces, meaning a relative overproduction. Overproduction only existed insofar as more intellectuals emerged from the educational institutions than the bourgeoisie needed for the interests of its profits and rule. There was nothing less than overproduction when thinking about the enormous demand for culture of the broad masses. The bourgeoisie now had the required reserve-army to bring down the pay of the mental labourers, to worsen its conditions. It took full advantage of that.

    The social tripartition of the intellectuals, which I mentioned earlier, had become sharpened, the differences deepened. The number of mental labourers sharing in the bourgeoisie's splendor, glory and luxury became relatively fewer and fewer, though growing in absolute terms. To what extent the ratio of the second and third group changed isn't statistically measurable. The gentlemen reformists, with Bernstein at the head, in the pre-war period concluded from the strong growth of the intellectuals in economy and state the development of a "new middle-class", which would form a new rampart of the bourgeoisie against the proletariat. According to this theory numerous mental labourers would move up socially. The correctness of this opinion hasn't been proven by all statistical figures. Not the lowness or height of salary or wage alone determine the social condition of the different stratas of the intellectuals. Something else adds to it: The accustomed to standard of living, the share in material and cultural opportunities which the intellectual can afford for his wage. From the standpoint one has to conclude the worsening condition of the intellectuals in all the regions and in different countries.

    The intellectuals' question arose. For bourgeois society it was Medusas' head. It announced that this society had become unable to secure the mental labourers a social standing according to its professional occupation, one that matched its former "befitting" standard of living. The first characteristic mass-phenomenon emerged as proof of the intellectuals' question having arisen in bourgeois society. It was the tedious, passionate fight of the mental labourers against the higher education and employment of women. What was behind the ideological platitudes of the professors, doctors and other fools who took the field against women's emancipation? Primarily nothing but fear of competition. The fight for education and employment of women showed two things: First, that bourgeois society was unable to secure the intellectuals an income allowing to uphold the old "befitting" familial relations. The family in these circles could no longer grant women their livelihoods, nor a serious, dutiful purpose in life. Second, that the mental labourers shied away from the opinion that higher education and employment of women would worsen their own social condition. Facts prove this. In old Russia e.g. the fight for higher education and employment for women hadn't been - as in Western Europe - between men and women, but a fight between different generations, between fathers and sons, between the old ideology of the feudal, despotic order and that liberal ideology of rising bourgeois society. Now, that the intellectuals' crisis reached an unexpected height, the fight against employment of women, in the years before the war almost dormant, has broken out again with highest intensity not only in the "beaten" states, but also in the victorious countries, eg in the US, where the fight for equality for women celebrated its first big victories. Today in some circles there is a rather large counter-tendency against the spread of employment of women dominates certain circles (teachers etc). It is said:

    "Each step forward for women is a step backwards for men."

    But another mass-phenomenon proves the development of an intellectuals' question in bourgeois society. Since about the 80s of the past century social reformists of various kinds emerge - like an epidemic illness: podium socialists, land reformers, pacifists, ethicists, Neo-Malthusians, sexual reformers etc. What's characteristic of these social-reformist tendencies? The one shared trait is that most reformers suddenly are discovering the social question and with it the giant shape of the fighting proletariat beginning to move revolutionarily. The position of the intellectuals between the classes, its hybrid position between the two big classes of society, which are gearing up for a general resolution between labour and capital, lets the reformists act as preachers of class-reconciliation. They're urging the bourgeoisie and the proletariat to make peace. That's new and characteristic. Apart from exceptions, earlier societal-reformers mostly just hoped for insight and contemplation of the owners and rulers.

    The reformers reject class-struggle, they reject above all revolution. They expect everything from reason, as much on the side of the exploiting bourgeoisie as on the side of the exploited and desiring proletariat. The reformist tendencies, which the intellectuals' question affects, get their characteristic expression in Germany, country of "theory", of podium socialism and its manyfold scientific and dilettantic varieties. In France, country of "politics", they affect the increasing trend to dress bourgeois-radical parties in more or less social decorations. Bourgeois parties emerge calling themselves democratic-socialist, radical-socialist or however, the main thing is the word "socialist" has to be in there. The most shining representative of this tendency in France was our comrade Jaurés. He developed from it continuously into a socialist. The vestiges of bourgeois democracy, bourgeois ideology he could still never fully shake off. In England the classic expression of the reformist movements, which developed in connection with the intellectuals' question, is the Fabian Society, so called constructive socialism, as is represented in the Labour Party, especially by intellectuals in it. In every capitalist country the intellectual social-reformers influence the labour aristocracy and its most radical offshoots had their ideas in the opportunism and reformism of the workers-movement.

    Whatever program these reform-enthusiastic intellectuals developed, they agreed not to touch the foundations of the bourgeois order, not to abolish private ownership and thus not class domination and class antagonism, for whose alleviation they gushed. But the gentlemen needed a basis to make the implementation of their reforms possible. A straight line of development leads from the social-reformers to imperialism. On imperialism Cecil Rhodes, the famous English imperialist, made a characteristic statement: "Imperialism or revolution!" Indeed, that's the way things were. Bourgeois reformers, who wanted to carry out their social reforms to ban revolution, but not at the expense of the holy profits, the domination-basis of the bourgeoisie, had to look for a different economic basis for reforms. They found it outside of their home-countries, in the exploitation of the colonial and semi-colonial peoples, whose ruthless, inhuman plundering and servitude brought supernormal profits, from which the capitalists paid the crumbs of union concessions and social reform they carried out for the "Volksgenossen" [lit. "peoples-comrades", nationalist term for compatriots] in the mothercountry. But another motive was essential for the social reformers to become champions of imperialism. That was the concern for their own existence. In the fatherland many mental labourers no longer found profitable employment, an existence befitting their station. The colonies offered them the perspective of a shining, respected career, for a safe, high income, for adventure and glory. No wonder, as things were, that imperialism found its most passionate advocates right among the intellectuals. From the night watchman to the minister, from the village-school principal to the university professor, from the unknown reporter of a daily paper to the scholarly researcher, everyone discovered imperialism and descended as its champion "down to the people".

    As the intellectuals earlier were the creators of bourgeois, national ideology, now their younger generation provided the creators of the ideology of imperialism, advocates of dilettantic race-theories, justifying all the contradictions and atrocities of colonial politics; intellectuals became the most fanatical agitators and organizers of imperialism, the most cruel practical representatives of the exploitation and servitude of the peoples in capitalist colonies and half-colonies. Intellectuals proved that in the plundering and enslavement of the colonial peoples they were able to combine the entire hideous brutality of the conquistadores from the time of primal accumulation of capital with the whole refinement of modern cultural- and gentle-men.

    The intellectuals together with the heavy and finance capitalists in every country bear the highest responsibility for the arms race, for the breakout and the length of the world war. If there are people, beside the grand bourgeois, beside the reformist social-traitors, drenched from top to bottom in the blood of 4 years of slaughter, it's the intellectuals who preached the "greater fatherland". As carriers of the imperialist thought they caused that mass-exhortation, that mass-deception that allowed the arms race of all the so called culture-nations. They created that fateful mass-psychosis under the influence of which the war could be endured for years. It is a historical nemesis that there's hardly a social class who's been hit harder by the consequences of the world war as the class of intellectuals. Because none of the various powers, for whose triumph they prayed and cursed, remained as victor of the world war. The only victor was the grand bourgeoisie of all the countries, the vanquished in truth and deed were, in the victorious and beaten states, the proletariat and petty bourgeoisie and with them too the mental labourers. For their economic condition the expropriation of the petty and middle bourgeoisie by the grand bourgeoisie intertwined with the pauperisation by it.

    Part 2 will expand on the crisis of the intellectuals, their worsening material conditions and how that leads to fascism

    Hope this is helpful to someone, if not at least there's an English version of it online.

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  • sputnikglobe.com Pepe Escobar: US Empire of Debt Headed for Collapse

    Prof. Michael Hudson’s new book, The Collapse of Antiquity: Greece and Rome as Civilization’s Oligarchic Turning Point” is a seminal event in this Year of Living Dangerously when, to paraphrase Gramsci, the old geopolitical and geoeconomic...

    Pepe Escobar: US Empire of Debt Headed for Collapse

    Prof. Hudson’s main thesis is absolutely devastating: he sets out to prove that economic/financial practices in Ancient Greece and Rome – the pillars of Western Civilization – set the stage for what is happening today right in front of our eyes: an empire reduced to a rentier economy, collapsing from within.

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  • Opinion on Engels’ position that the distinction between rural and urban should be abolished?

    I could see removing smaller buildings and replacing them with more greenery, and maybe building some sort of self sufficient sky scrapers in a wilderness of food forests that used to be monoculture. However, I don’t think it’s practical or necessary to remove existing urban infrastructure and build vastly more across all wilderness. In addition vertical farms and forests can be made in cities, so again not exactly necessary. Obviously we should make sure rural people have everything they need within biking distance, but we don’t need to take it to the absolute extreme.

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  • Looking for more reading recommendations regarding imperialism

    Hello beloved comrades,

    I recently finished reading Lenin's book on imperialism, but I feel like I still have a very loose understanding of what imperialism is. Are there any more books/articles I can read that cover this topic?

    Thanks in advance!

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  • The Shock of Recognition by J Sakai

    I just read this piece by J Sakai of Settlers fame (or infamy if you're a kkkrakkker). It's an analysis of fascism that rejects many of the common positions on fascism, including the view that fascists are simply puppets of the haute bourgeoisie. Instead, Sakai contends that fascism is a mass revolutionary movement that tries to appeal to many of the anticapitalist attitudes that left wing movements do.

    Some clarification to avoid misunderstanding: regarding fascism being revolutionary, Sakai is careful to point out that this is meant only in the simple meaning of the term referring to the overthrow of the existing state and restructuring of society, not that fascists intend to build socialism. Regarding fascism being a mass movement, it isn't one that has the working classes as its base. Rather, the class interests of fascism are those of the lower end petite bourgeoisie and labor aristocracy as well as those who are declassed.

    Here are some quotes from the text to givev people an idea of what Sakai is getting at:

    > Fascism is a revolutionary movement of the right against both the bourgeoisie and the left, of middle class and declassed men, that arises in zones of protracted crisis. Fascism grows out of the masses of men from classes that are abandoned on the sidelines of history. By transforming men from these classes and criminal elements into a distorted type of radical force, fascism changes the balance of power. It intervenes to try and seize capitalist State power – not to save the old bourgeois order or even the generals, but to gut and violently reorganize society for itself asnew parasitic State classes. Capitalism is restabilized but the bourgeoisie pays the price of temporarily no longer ruling the capitalist State. That is, there is a capitalist state but bourgeois rule is interrupted. As Hamerquist understands, the old left theory that fascism is only a “tool of the bourgeoisie” led to disasters because it way underestimated the radical power of fascism as a mass force. Fascism not only has a distinctive class base but it has a class agenda. That is, its revolution does not leave society or the class relations of production unchanged.

    > The truth here is startling and it isn’t in the least bit vague. The new fascism is, in effect, “anti-imperialist” right now. It is opposed to the big imperialist bourgeoisie (unlike Mussolini and Hitler earlier, who wanted even stronger, bigger Western imperialism), to the transnational corporations and banks, and their world-spanning “multicultural” bourgeois culture. Fascism really wants to bring down the World Bank, WTO and NATO, and even America the Superpower. As in destroy. That is, it is anti-bourgeois but not anti-capitalist. Because it is based on fundamentally pro-capitalist classes.

    > All during the rise of euro-fascism in the 1920s and 1930s, the left dissed & dismissed them as pawns of the capitalist class. Whether in the brilliant German Communist photomontage posters of the artist Heartfield or the pronouncement from Moscow that “fascism is the terroristic dictatorship of the big bourgeoisie”, there was a constant message that Italian fascism and German Nazism were only puppets for the big capitalist class. This has some parts of the truth, but is fatally off-center and produces an actually disarming picture. Not that no leftists saw the problem, of course. In 1922 one German communist writer warned of a “Fascist Danger in South Germany”, and even analyzed the Nazi Party as a highly militarized anti-semitic sect that was based in the petty bourgeoisie but was agitating against big business. These assessments on the ground were soon swept away by dismissive theories from the big left uberheadquarters in Berlin and Moscow.

    > Much of the standard old left analysis of the Hitler regime as essentially acting for big business is based on a vulgar Marxism, and is a fundamental misreading of fascism’s character. This pseudo-materialist line of thinking says: the biggest German corporations got bigger and richer, so the big capitalists must have been running the show. How simple politics is to those bound and determined to be simple-minded. While Nazism could be thought a “tool” of the bourgeoisie in the sense that big business took advantage of it and supported it, it was out of their control – in other words, not a “tool” in the usual meaning of the word. Picture a type of power saw that you hoped would cut down the tree stump in your backyard, but that not only did that but also went off in its own directions and escaped your control.

    I'm curious about others' thoughts on this. For anyone interested, its a short read at only 40 pages.

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  • Good sources on Chinese democracy?

    i've watched the new geopolitcal economy report interview about China and i'm interest in their different from the west form of democracy, can somebody give me sources to study? thank you very much.

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  • How accurate is this North Korea tour video?

    I've been trying to find genuine North Korea tour videos on YouTube but they're all clickbaity.

    On a side question, what tour groups do you recommend for going to NK and do they include going to the rural parts? The only one I know of is Koryo Tours.

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  • Looking for informed critiques and discussions of these articles by comrades with knowledge of WW2 military history
    bigserge.substack.com Apocalypse: Operation Barbarossa

    The History of Battle: Maneuver, Part 11

    Apocalypse: Operation Barbarossa

    https://bigserge.substack.com/p/soviet-operational-art-troubled-beginnings

    These two essays appear well researched and there is a lot that they get right, but they are clearly written from an anti-communist point of view, and the author especially seems to have it out for Stalin.

    First off the positives, they sort of debunk a few popular myths about the Great Patriotic War that are widespread in western historiography. One being that Stalin was not expecting the war and was totally surprised by the invasion (though the author still tries to have it both ways and say Stalin still prepared insufficiently or inadequately). Another being that the Germans only lost due to the Russian winter and Hitler's meddling.

    However, even while doing that the author reinforces a number of other myths such as the claim that the "Stalinist" purges were responsible for the poor performance of the Red Army at the start of the war, implying that a reason behind some of the more notable defeats of the Red Army was that Stalin placed incompetent sycophants in charge, and the notion that the Marxist-Leninist ideology of the Bolsheviks got in the way of military expediency.

    In particular, as is usually the case with anti-communist military historians, this author seems to idolize Tukhachevsky (and as with all who are infatuated with Prussian military prowess they compare him to another of their idols, Moltke) almost to the point of worship and completely discounts the possibility that the accusations against him were legitimate. This even though in almost the same sentence he admits that the officer class due to its historical upper class makeup was a breeding ground for counter-revolutionary sentiments and activity.

    Without going into too much detail my main issue here is that the author criticizes certain Soviet generals or the political leadership for "mistakes" that are only really visible as such with the benefit of hindsight. It is easy to say what someone should have done when you know how things turned out. It is easy to claim that someone else would have or could have done better, but we don't know that do we? To give two examples from the articles:

    Firstly the criticism of Stalin insufficiently preparing for the German invasion: The author correctly points out how outmatched the Soviets were initially and how the Germans intended primarily to completely destroy the Soviet armies. Yet he still criticizes the fact that the Red Army was not deployed in sufficient force right at the border. But if the Soviets had really mobilized all their forces and deployed them in full readiness along the border, one, would that not have been used by the Nazis as justification for attacking, claiming that the Soviets were themselves preparing to attack, and two, would that not just have resulted in more of the Soviet forces being wiped out in the initial attack?

    Was it not arguably better to keep the forces more dispersed in the interior to be able to draw the enemy deeper in while bleeding them, taking advantage of the size of the Soviet Union like Russia did against Napoleon?

    Secondly the way Timoshenko's defeat at Kharkov is treated: Here again it is explained clearly beforehand that there was insufficient information and that the planning of the operation was rational but that it just so happened that the Germans were also preparing their own operation around the same time and place. The author contrasts the "indecisiveness" of the Soviet general with the supposed decisive aggressiveness of the Germans. But really the deciding factor was poor timing. If the timing had been reversed and the Germans had attacked first who is to say they would not have been also caught in a blunder by the Soviet forces preparing their own attack.

    What is the point of all this "would've, could've, should've" (or monday-morning-quarterbacking as the Americans say) when we don't know whether someone else would have done any better or if it would have gone differently were the situation reversed? Is it only to once again portray someone who was close to Stalin as incompetent and claim that someone who was removed in the purges would have done better?

    I am not saying that no mistakes at all were made or that Stalin was perfect, but i do find it very annoying to see such poor logic in otherwise fairly objective and historically accurate texts. It is ironic that someone who recognizes that the German military had the tendency of blaming their own mistakes (and crimes of course with the "clean Wehrmacht" myth) on the political leadership, that the same person can't see how the Russian side is doing the same by trying to blame Stalin and communism for all the various problems and stumbles during the war.

    It is also shocking how completely the possibility of fascist collaborators and counter-revolutionary factions in the higher ranks of the Red Army is discounted. You know what's worse than having an inexperienced officer corps at the beginning of a major war? Having an officer corps that is riddled with fifth columnists who for political reasons will sabotage the war effort, surrender when they should fight, or even side with the enemy instead.

    I won't get into the nonsense the author spouts about how the Soviet collective farms were supposedly so bad that if the Nazis had abolished them they would have won the support of the population, or other anti-communist garbage like calling Stalin a dictator, portraying the the Soviet regime as totalitarian or the NKVD as able to completely tyrannize the entire population into submission, etc. We all know that's bullshit. I want this to mainly be a discussion about the military history.

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  • V.I. Lenin - "Imperialism and the Split in Socialism"

    A highly relevant text still to this day that teaches us firstly what imperialism is and what it is not, secondly how it is used to bribe the imperial core's proletariat, and thirdly, how opportunists support a pro-imperialist agenda "from the left".

    Keep these lessons in mind as the imperial core heightens its belligerence against Russia and China while the opportunist elements of the western left spread false narratives about the supposed "imperialism" of these countries.

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  • redsails.org Masses, Elites, and Rebels: The Theory of “Brainwashing”

    I’ve become very skeptical of the concept of “brainwashing.” Over the past few months this skepticism has boiled over into open and explicit disagreement with even well-meaning pushers within the Marxist-Leninist corner. I often find it difficult to explain concisely why it is…

    Masses, Elites, and Rebels: The Theory of “Brainwashing”
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  • Why does Maoism have a following in the third world?

    cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/598073

    > I heard Maoism is popular in India. Why? What is so appealing about committing terrorism in the name of left-deviationism?

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  • Why are arms neigh impossible to own in China?

    China is a dictatorship of the proleariat, shouldnt the dictators be armed?

    on a more serious note, Marx and many theorists after him talked about how the proletariat being armed is a necessity, why does China has such gun laws?

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  • Interview with Gorbachev from 1993 reveals what a truly delusional idiot he was, but also how he planned on betraying and destroying socialism already back in 1985

    Here are some of the kinds of things this traitor dared to say openly once the crime was committed:

    If you take my statements, then you will realize that my political sympathies belong to Social Democracy and the idea of ​​a welfare state on the lines of the Federal Republic of Germany. [...] With a fundamental commitment to liberalism, the German state actively intervenes in social life and in the economy, I think that's right.

    Even among the conservatives there are people who should be taken seriously and who do not shirk responsibility for the country. There is a wide spectrum to draw on.

    Don't let the surface fool you. There are demagogic attacks from both the extreme right and the extreme left, but neither one nor the other can mobilize real forces on a large scale. The center must prevail here.

    Note how he refers to himself in the third person:

    And Gorbachev had to steer the ship of perestroika through the cliffs. It was not yet possible to announce things for which the people were not yet ready. [...] One had to be patient until the party bureaucracy was so disempowered that it could no longer turn back the wheel of history.

    Then he spews a bunch of crap about "Stalin's atrocities", repeats a few of the usual anti-communist myths relating to WW2, and he rehashes a Khrushchevite lie about the start of the war. Too boring to quote, we've heard this stuff a thousand times.

    In general he peddles the same liberal bullshit talking points about the USSR:

    Anyone who believes that they can get the problems under control by returning to totalitarianism or by using authoritarian power, like some in our leadership, is making a dangerous misjudgment.

    The former Soviet Union is dead and there is no point in trying to revive it.

    About Russians left behind in the other republics and facing persecution:

    I categorically rule out the use of force to protect Russian citizens [...]

    He is so far removed from reality he thinks he can compare himself to Deng Xiaoping:

    I could of course take on a political function. But it also works without an official office, as you can see with China's Deng Xiaoping. He exerts his influence without a leadership position. If there were signals from society that Gorbachev should take on greater responsibility, I would not evade it.

    And of course this gem: The Gorbachev era is not over, it is only just beginning. Lol.

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  • Tex Talks - An Overview of Marx's Capital (All three volumes)

    Tex Talks has done an amazing overview of Capital which helped me understand how the different concepts relate and also to get a grasp of the actual maths involved.

    In the series we are presented with the dynamics of the reproduction scheme (as interactive graphs!) and what troubles these dynamics spell for the "pure capitalist utopia" conjured up by the classical economists of history.

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  • How do modern day monarchies function within a capitalist economy?

    When bourgeois revolutions happened and replaced feudalism, in many countries republics also replaced monarchies. But in some places like the UK there are still monarchies in place, even though economically these places are most certainly capitalist and not feudalist.

    I have a few questions regarding monarchies today:

    How does the royalty function within capitalism, while taking class into account? Previously the bourgeoisie seemed to be at irreconcilable odds with the nobility, while today it doesn't seem to be the case. Is the royalty even still considered to be a different class? Or are they just bourgeoisie with more bells and whistles?

    What role do monarchies still play in politics today? Also how does royalty in different countries differ in their role? Does the royal family in Saudi Arabia play a more significant role than the monarchy in Britain, for example?

    Thank you very much for your answers, you are all very helpful!

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  • Resources on inflation

    Sup comrades,

    Looking to do a deep dive into current price hikes and inflation with some comrades and looking for resources to explain, critique and solve the problem form a marxist perspective.

    The term inflation famously doesn't really come up explicitly in Marx, only "money devaluation" afaik, but still if you got relevant material/articles/books/whatever on the topic, I'd love to go through them

    Cheers

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  • Unbiaesd / biased on the good side documentaries about the Russian revolution and or the Russian civil War?

    I'm a fan of history and looking about getting into theese topics, what documentaries can u comrades suggest?

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  • simplicius76.substack.com How the USSR's Fall Unleashed a Neocon Goldrush to the Heartland

    The dissolution of the USSR kicked off immediate plans to seize the most vaunted corridor in history, one that would rupture the prized World Island.

    How the USSR's Fall Unleashed a Neocon Goldrush to the Heartland

    What would you criticize about this article, if anything? It is too conspiratorially inclined or is it mostly correct? I have always been somewhat skeptical of the "heartland" theory, and i am wary when it comes to analyses by non-Marxists, especially when the focus is on individuals and shadowy groups rather than systems. Something here bothers me... but i can't quite put my finger on it.

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  • Y'all know anything about Myanmar?

    This really good (but not explicitly Marxist) environmental org I follow posts about it a lot, sympathizing anti-government protesters and saying the government is really bad. But when I try to research it, mainstream media seems to have really liberal talking points supporting sanctions and regime change, etc. Can anyone help me understand the situation over there from a Marxist point of view? I really like the org in question, but because they don't follow an explicitly Marxist framework they do occasionally fall into liberal mindsets sometimes. But I also know that situations like this can be very complicated and its not as simple as "one side = good, other side = bad"

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  • Material reason for the 2003 invasion of Iraq?

    I am aware that a few years before the invasion, Iraq started selling oil in Euros instead of dollars, and I understand that the preservation of the petrodollar was a reason for the destruction of Libya. Also, there must have been a reason to go to war with Iraq the first time in 1990 and to then wage economic warfare against Iraq.

    I've heard some stuff about the war being really against Iran, but that doesn't really make much sense because Iraq under Saddam Hussein was a counterweight against Iran in the region (and in fact the imperialists sponsored an Iraqi invasion of Iran during the 1980s).

    Of course, the WMD lie and attempts to link the Iraqi government of the time to al-Qaeda (which seems to just be an imperialist asset anyway) and 9/11 was just a way to find an excuse for the invasion.

    The weapons manufacturers, private military corporations, and many other corporations profited greatly from the war, but there must have been a reason that Iraq specifically was targeted.

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  • What do you think of this essay? For me personally on the one hand i can see it contains a lot of idealism and is not exactly written from a Marxist materialist perspective, but on the other hand i think there is a lot there that westerners, especially liberals and ultra-leftists, would do well to start thinking about more.

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  • Information about School of the Americas (WHINSEC)?

    So I heard about this institute in a YouTube video where it was brought up to contextualize violence in Latin America. How many dictators and cartel members graduated from the school.

    I’m wondering if anyone here knows more about countries that were directly affected by the School of the Americas, I’m thinking about using one of those countries in my research paper about “failed states” but I’m having trouble picking which one. I’ve chosen Libya as one state to write about but I just need one more.

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  • How come Russia wasn't "decommunized" as much as other eastern bloc countries?

    Countries like Ukraine and Poland banned Communist parties and Communist symbols, while Russia didn't. Ukraine demolished statues of Lenin, while Russia still keeps him preserved at his mausoleum.

    Is there a reason why anti-communist sentiment is (or at least seems to be) much stronger in other former socialist countries compared to Russia?

    Did Russian Communists manage to still remain powerful enough to force concessions?

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  • How do I keep tabs on the Russia-Ukraine War from the Russian side without any socially reactionary nonsense?

    I don't mind the occassional memes dunking on Al-Ukraina and the Imperialist West and the occassional snippets calling out western hypocrisy and showing the barbarianism Ukrainian Civilians are facing from their own military forces; but I'm not interested in hearing about your oh-so-hot-takes on LGBT issues and using it as a way to flex your "morality" to the world. I'm sick of it already.

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