― fcussen (Burger), Saturday, 24 July 2004 21:09 (nineteen years ago) link
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 24 July 2004 21:15 (nineteen years ago) link
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 24 July 2004 21:16 (nineteen years ago) link
http://snow.prohosting.com/~batgrrl/LeninGorki1957.jpg
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 24 July 2004 21:17 (nineteen years ago) link
― fcussen (Burger), Saturday, 24 July 2004 21:20 (nineteen years ago) link
― fcussen (Burger), Saturday, 24 July 2004 22:24 (nineteen years ago) link
My Russian at this time was halting, but Lenin declared that though he had lived in Europe for many years he had not learned to speak foreign languages: the conversation would therefore have to be carried on in Russian. At once he launched into a eulogy of our speeches in court. "What a splendid opportunity for propaganda," he said; "it is worth going to prison, if the courts can so successfully be turned into a forum." I felt his steady cold gaze upon me, penetrating my very being, as if he were reflecting upon the use I might be put to. Presently he asked what I would want to do. I told him I would like to repay America what it had done for Russia. I spoke of the Society of the Friends of Russian Freedom, organized thirty years ago by George Kennan and later reorganized by Alice Stone Blackwell and other liberal Americans. I briefly sketched the splendid work they had done to arouse interest in the struggle for Russian freedom, and the great moral and financial aid the Society had given through all those years. To organize a Russian society for American freedom was my plan. Lenin appeared enthusiastic. "That is a great idea, and you shall have all the help you want. But, of course, it will be under the auspices of the Third International. Prepare your plan in writing and send it to me."
I broached the subject of the Anarchists in Russia. I showed him a letter I had received from Martens, the Soviet representative in America, shortly before my deportation. Martens asserted that the Anarchists in Russia enjoyed full freedom of speech and Press. Since my arrival I found scores of Anarchists in prison and their Press suppressed. I explained that I could not think of working with the Soviet Government so long as my comrades were in prison for opinion's sake. I also told him of the resolutions of the Moscow Anarchist Conference. He listened patiently and promised to bring the matter to the attention of his party. "But as to free speech," he remarked, "that is, of course, a bourgeois notion. There can be no free speech in a revolutionary period. We have the peasantry against us because we can give them nothing in return for their bread. We will have them on our side when we have something to exchange. Then you can have all the free speech you want--but not now. Recently we needed peasants to cart some wood into the city. They demanded salt. We thought we had no salt, but then we discovered seventy poods in Moscow in one of our warehouses. At once the peasants were willing to cart the wood. Your comrades must wait until we can meet the needs of the peasants. Meanwhile, they should work with us. Look at William Shatov, for instance, who has helped save Petrograd from Yudenitch. He works with us and we appreciate his services. Shatov was among the first to receive the order of the Red Banner."
Free speech, free Press, the spiritual achievements of centuries, what were they to this man? A Puritan, he was sure his scheme alone could redeem Russia. Those who served his plans were right, the others could not be tolerated.
A shrewd Asiatic, this Lenin. He knows how to play on the weak sides of men by flattery, rewards, medals. I left convinced that his approach to people was purely utilitarian, for the use he could get out of them for his scheme. And his scheme--was it the Revolution?
And here she is on him in 1925 (in an essay on Samuel Gompers):
The last fifteen years are replete with examples of what the leaders of men have done to the peoples of the world. The Lenins, Clemenceaus, the Lloyd Georges and Wilson, have all posed as great leaders. Yet they have brought misery, destruction and death. They have led the masses away from the promised goal.
Pious Communists will no doubt consider it heresy to speak of Lenin in the same breath with the other statesmen, diplomats and generals who have led the people to slaughter and half of the world to ruin. To be sure, Lenin was the greatest of them all. He at least had a new vision, he had daring, he faced fire and death, which is more than can be said for the others. Yet it remains a tragic fact that even Lenin brought havoc to Russia. It was his leadership which emasculated the Russian revolution and stifled the aspirations of the Russian people.
― spittle (spittle), Sunday, 25 July 2004 02:32 (nineteen years ago) link
― spittle (spittle), Sunday, 25 July 2004 02:33 (nineteen years ago) link
― Slim Pickens, Sunday, 25 July 2004 03:10 (nineteen years ago) link
― Masked Gazza, Sunday, 25 July 2004 03:32 (nineteen years ago) link
― Masked Gazza, Sunday, 25 July 2004 03:34 (nineteen years ago) link
The USSR was relevant, and important - as an utterly ruinous failure. Sidney and Beatrice Webb, Fabian (not Utopian, alas) Socialists, published the second edition of "Soviet Communism: A New Civilization?" in 1937, choosing to make the book even more of a Stalinist blowjob by dropping the question mark. 1937, as you may say with perfect accuracy, was a very exciting time for Soviet Russia. Historians don't blame them for thinking the USSR was interesting, they blame them for idealizing it beyond all reasonable bounds.
The Webbs weren't wrong about the relevance of Russia, just the relevance of communism to the construction of "a new civilization." The only thing new about the USSR was the level of physical harm and less noticeable but equally horrible social upheavals brought about for the amoral purpose of reshaping "human material" into the "new Soviet man."
― Slim Pickens, Sunday, 25 July 2004 07:01 (nineteen years ago) link
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Sunday, 25 July 2004 12:18 (nineteen years ago) link
Blame them? That was just the mood of the times. It must have seemed, at the time, like a beacon for the way forward for humanity. People were joining the CP in droves. A perfectly natural response following the extraordinary waste of life in WW1, economic crises/mass unemployment in the 1920s-30s, and the gloom over the rise of fascism. Who at that time was really lifting the lid on what was really going on in the Soviet Union? I don't think it was at all visible, was it?
― David (David), Sunday, 25 July 2004 13:02 (nineteen years ago) link
As any good communist leader, Lenin saw history as more important than the fate of thousands, or millions of people. There was no question in his mind that sacrifices would have to be made. Lenin's legacy was to leave in place a system for Stalin to exploit. It was nowhere near as brutal and all-encompassing as Stalin's, but the basic ingridients were there: a doctrine arbitrarily defined and redefined by an infallible leader; an overwhelming tradition of conforming to dictates from the top; a hapless quest to build a classless society (hampered by the peasantry and bourgeoisie, which refused to fulfill their historical roles of dying off); little or no hesitation in using brutal measures to preserve Bolshevik authority; failure to provide for orderly succession of leaders (Lenin's "testamnet" warned not only of Stalin's ambition but took potshots at every other prominent Bolshevik. It's basically "nobody does it better" rather than "hey, watch out for this guy!")
There were many people lifting the lid on what was going on in the Soviet Union, and not all of them were right-wing nuts. Anarchists like Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman documented the slaughter of dissident sailors in the Kronstadt fortress as early as 1921, and after Trotsky was exiled he turned at least partially on the USSR. The show trials were blatantly transparent even to observers at the time. Western reporters were left with the choice of supressing the truth in order to propagate the dream of a just communist society, or, you know, writing what happened. Very few of them did. Maxim Gorky visited one of the first Gulag camps and was in tears by the end of his tour. He wrote about seeing happy workers being rehabilitated into new Soviet men.
These are the problems that communism has left for people to deal with to this day: the enduring myth of a "good Lenin" who warned of Stalin's lust for power, the trickle of anti-Soviet evidence that became a flood after World War Two but was ignored by "true believers" who thought that it was either false or that a few sacrifices in the name of "a new civilization" were nothing to cry about.
― Slim Pickens, Sunday, 25 July 2004 15:25 (nineteen years ago) link
― t\'\'t (t\'\'t), Sunday, 25 July 2004 16:06 (nineteen years ago) link
― Masked Gazza, Sunday, 25 July 2004 16:23 (nineteen years ago) link
― t\'\'t (t\'\'t), Sunday, 25 July 2004 16:25 (nineteen years ago) link
― Masked Gazza, Sunday, 25 July 2004 16:26 (nineteen years ago) link
no, the shortcut does work, and the standard setup does not. someone communicated this badly.
― gabbneb (gabbneb), Sunday, 25 July 2004 16:32 (nineteen years ago) link
― caitlin (caitlin), Sunday, 25 July 2004 16:34 (nineteen years ago) link
― fcussen (Burger), Sunday, 25 July 2004 17:32 (nineteen years ago) link
― rasheed wallace (rasheed wallace), Sunday, 25 July 2004 17:34 (nineteen years ago) link
As an example, Chernyshevski would encourage the killing of efficient and popular tsarist bureaucrats instead of corrupt and greedy ones. The reason for this was that the sooner the country was run by greedy morons, the sooner it would rise up against them. Lenin used similar reasoning when, during an 1890s famine, he actually demanded that the peasants on his estate provide him with the usual amount of taxes and grain, in effect starving them.
This was ok with Lenin because, as every good Marxist knows, increased "immiseration of the proletariat" will only make the inevitable socialist revolution come faster. Quite a humanitarian, our Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov.
As a dictator who paved the way for an utter monster and founded a party that helped keep much of Asia and half of Europe in poverty for much of the 20th century? Classic.
― Slim Pickens, Sunday, 25 July 2004 22:25 (nineteen years ago) link
― Girolamo Savonarola, Monday, 26 July 2004 00:18 (nineteen years ago) link
― Eisbär (llamasfur), Monday, 26 July 2004 00:28 (nineteen years ago) link
:-)
― Eisbär (llamasfur), Monday, 26 July 2004 00:30 (nineteen years ago) link
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 26 July 2004 00:30 (nineteen years ago) link
YOU MOTHERFUCKERS SHOULD THANK ME THAT ALL Y'ALL AIN'T SPEAKIN' RUSSIAN AND POSTIN' FROM SOME STALINIST GULAG SHITHOLE RIGHT NOW.
I don't know, I'd like to see some of those threads:
"Tattoo connections: they take me to the Motherland!"
"The all new 'how emaciated do you look NOW?' thread 2004!"
"Misha stealink my balalaika and drinking my vodka AGAIN, classic or dud?"
― Slim Pickens, Monday, 26 July 2004 01:56 (nineteen years ago) link
― amateur!st (amateurist), Monday, 26 July 2004 02:29 (nineteen years ago) link
― Slim Pickens, Monday, 26 July 2004 02:44 (nineteen years ago) link
you have heard of the polish-russian war of 1919-1920, yes? the red army's plan (under trotsky) was to cross poland and hook up w/ the german communists thereby fomenting more communist revolutions throughout europe. at least that was the plan ... whether it would've worked is an open question. at any rate, pilsudski and the poles stopped the red army and turned them back -- it was seen at the time as leaving a lot of egg on the faces of trotsky (understandably enough) and lenin himself (who signed off on the idea).
― Eisbär (llamasfur), Monday, 26 July 2004 03:04 (nineteen years ago) link
But yeah, the Poles stopped Trotsky in '20 and that's great. Lenin and Stalin make Pilsudski look like Mother Teresa.
― Slim Pickens, Monday, 26 July 2004 03:21 (nineteen years ago) link
(its the 'notebook' part that made me think otherwise)
― Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 30 June 2005 10:54 (eighteen years ago) link
d, fuck this guy and his tomb imo.
― special guest stars mark bronson, Monday, 5 January 2009 12:21 (fifteen years ago) link
a bold stance
― 8====D ------ ㋡ (max), Monday, 5 January 2009 13:25 (fifteen years ago) link
http://leninology.blogspot.com/
^^seriously, wot a wanker.
― special guest stars mark bronson, Monday, 5 January 2009 13:26 (fifteen years ago) link
i'm more interested in the fact that our one-time resident Stalinist Bethune never discovered this thread ... o_O
― Mad Vigorish (Eisbaer), Monday, 5 January 2009 13:41 (fifteen years ago) link
Russia was so absolutely, completely and horribly fucked up that any direction it took was going to lead to disaster. V.I. Lenin just happened to be the most determined and ruthless of the candidates for leading Russia to disaster, so he was able to impose his own personal stamp on the course Russia took while going to hell.
Lenin's fingerprints and teeth marks are all over the deaths of several million people by violence, pestilence and famine. Have to say: dud.
― Aimless, Monday, 5 January 2009 18:53 (fifteen years ago) link
i don't really agree with that, aimless -- had kerensky decided to pull the country out of WWI in 1917 i think there's a strong chance the provisional government would have survived, and that makes an enormous difference.
christopher hitchens wrote a notably stupid article once arguing that the bolsheviks were the best of all possible options because any other path for russia would have ended in fascism. of course, hitch also thinks lenin "a great man" and trotsky a "saintly" sort, so there you go.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 5 January 2009 21:15 (fifteen years ago) link
The provisonal government would have had most of the same problems the tsarist government had, among them the power of the bolsheviks and the complacent idiocy of the aristocracy. There weren't enough liberals to run the country. Not nearly enough.
So, imo the Kerensky government would have been a paper tiger, passing laws it could not enforce and enunciating policies it could not implement, which is how it was during the time it existed.
― Aimless, Tuesday, 6 January 2009 02:25 (fifteen years ago) link
when i saw him he was wearing a suit that looked very contemporary, like something you could get off the rack at men's wearhouse.
― Treeship, Monday, 4 August 2014 02:22 (nine years ago) link
u sure that was lenin treesh
― Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Monday, 4 August 2014 02:25 (nine years ago) link
he was laying in the coffin at the lenin mausoleum. it better have been.
― Treeship, Monday, 4 August 2014 02:30 (nine years ago) link
did he look 'dapper'
― Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Monday, 4 August 2014 02:35 (nine years ago) link
he just looked like a dead guy. had a dead expression on his face. nothing of the frankness and intensity you see in the photos and paintings.
― Treeship, Monday, 4 August 2014 02:38 (nine years ago) link
seeing his body was very moving though, in a complicated way.
― Treeship, Monday, 4 August 2014 02:57 (nine years ago) link
so jell treesh, #1 thing i want to see before either i die or they finally shut it down. certain members of the Committee for the Immortalization of the Memory of V.I. Ulyanov (leonid krasin, COMMISSAR OF ENLIGHTENMENT anatoly lunacharsky) were into a late-19c mystic futurist who preached the necessity of interstellar colonization to acquire living space for all the billions of history's dead whom science was shortly to unanimously resurrect (thus destroying the final and most tyrannical class division) and while i don't think the funeral committee was anticipating that particular eschaton anytime soon i do suspect they thought lenin'd be up and walking by now. instead he's only immortal like the pirates of the caribbean.
― difficult listening hour, Monday, 4 August 2014 03:24 (nine years ago) link
it is sad to me. i am torn between wanting him to find peace, cuz you know he hates it in there, and wanting this artifact to be there forever, because of the strangeness of seeing it.
― difficult listening hour, Monday, 4 August 2014 03:28 (nine years ago) link
i'm pretty jell of your knowledge of russian history, dll. i just googled leonid krasin... that is wild.
an interesting thing i found in moscow is that a bunch of people who had lived there their whole lives had never once visited lenin's tomb, which is open to the public nearly every day.
― Treeship, Monday, 4 August 2014 03:42 (nine years ago) link
well yknow like the empire state building.
― difficult listening hour, Monday, 4 August 2014 03:45 (nine years ago) link
locals always too cool for the sights.
― difficult listening hour, Monday, 4 August 2014 03:48 (nine years ago) link
At least there are no wax rumours about the Stalin cadaver that overshadow Mao's so much. 100% embalmed husk of genocidal piece of shit.
― xelab, Monday, 4 August 2014 23:42 (nine years ago) link
sorry i meant Lenin
― xelab, Monday, 4 August 2014 23:43 (nine years ago) link
Lenin often committed accidental genocide, just by accidentally initialising a few thousand names.
― xelab, Monday, 4 August 2014 23:50 (nine years ago) link
― Treeship
first line of your memoir
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 4 August 2014 23:59 (nine years ago) link
He looked pretty waxy to me when I saw him fwiw
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 00:25 (nine years ago) link
what feelings did you guys have while gazing at his corpse?
― ogmor, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 00:43 (nine years ago) link
Tumescence.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 00:44 (nine years ago) link
surely no one could quibble w/ v i lenin's corpse as a solid ws of shame
― ogmor, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 00:46 (nine years ago) link
I was a teenager and found the whole thing bewildering
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 01:14 (nine years ago) link
― ogmor, Monday, August 4, 2014 8:43 PM (3 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
reading about lenin -- a guy with boundless intellectual energy and no personal vanity, who subordinated everything he had to the movement for something like thirty-five years before gaining power -- he sounds kind of mythical, more like socrates or something than any political figure i can think of. maybe intention doesn't matter, but i do think he felt that everything he did was "historically necessary" and in the long term interests of mankind. the fact that what was actually accomplished was a society that embodied the absolute opposite of all of his ideals is probably the great historical irony of all time.
― Treeship, Thursday, 7 August 2014 15:20 (nine years ago) link
i mean, it's his own fault. there were organic socialist developments at the time he took over -- going by chomsky via rosa luxemburg -- that he brutally crushed, due to his believe that the conditions weren't yet right for that kind of thing.
― Treeship, Thursday, 7 August 2014 15:24 (nine years ago) link
otoh there was one development he did believe in, the one opportunity he drove his party to take...which did result in, well, just the rest of the century.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 8 August 2014 10:00 (nine years ago) link
yup this is very good.
I once read that when McDonalds opened in Moscow (this was the eighties probably) it already attracted lots more visitors than Lenin's mausoleum.
― Ludo, Friday, 8 August 2014 11:03 (nine years ago) link
thanks.
i'm thinking about my post yesterday and i'm not sure i even agree with it. was it possible to give "all power to the soviets" during an emerging civil war or would this have just ensured the defeat of the nascent revolution? i don't know much about the atrocities he is said to have committed during this period, but from what i know of the history things were going to be bad in russia no matter who was in charge. i guess to evaluate lenin you have to decide what things would have been like under the provisional government, or even if they would have been able to exist for too long without being overthrown by some other kind of coup, possibly a right wing anti-semitic one.
i would like to hear difficult listening hour's take.
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 13:23 (nine years ago) link
reading lenin, it's easy to be disgusted with his ruthless pursuit of class warfare by any means necessary from our standpoint, but the class divisions in russia at that time were very extreme and i'm sure they seemed insurmountable except by radical means at that time, especially in the wake of the nightmare that was the eastern front of wwi.
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 13:33 (nine years ago) link
Yes, I wonder if Kerensky would have held the dissolving autocracy together. I tend to think not.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 8 August 2014 13:35 (nine years ago) link
main thing that impresses me abt lenin is his timing: until he takes power at least, he is always right, never wrong. his strategic calls during the climactic summer of 1917 especially, between the revolutions, come down to choices between wednesday and friday that are also choices between victory and setback; and no one around him, not even trotsky, is as perceptive. stalin later executes another impeccable rise, but it's through the cloistered ranks of an incumbent bureaucracy, and his strategy is mostly to sit quietly in the back while cleverer people outreach themselves; lenin is dealing with the chaos of a country simultaneously at war and in revolution, and his decisions, even if you think he is a self-serving psychopath, which he pretty clearly isn't, are by necessity driven by actual popular desires. (even of course as they reshape popular desire.) "mythical" is the right word because this man happened to embody and for a time apparently resolve the spooky marxist irreconcilability between the inevitable will of history and the free will of the free actor: it was impossible to tell the difference between his pushing and being pushed. his personality cult (especially after his death) was very different from stalin's. stalin was the father-genius-godhead-phallus; soviet folktales (an inseparable syncresis of "authenticity"+propaganda) talk about lenin almost like anansi. the trickster, the uncatchable, the god of the story. even his death is a trick, a tactic: "he is sleeping in red square, but he will awaken soon. what a joy that will be!" underneath this stuff is an unsayable uncertainty: even when you respect and love the trickster for his stories you won't know if they're true until it's too late.
so meanwhile: he recrafted his party into a ruthless hierarchical gang that was probably structurally incompatible with its own ideals even before the civil war taught it that when it came to getting control of people "political education" didn't work nearly as well as mercilessness. in doing so he opened the door, knowingly and slowly, to stalin and his ism. it is hard to tell what he thought would keep stalin from power after his death, unless the answer is just trotsky; but really all of lenin's last-years scrambling to install trotsky in some firmly counterbalancing position (like herding a single, suicidally arrogant cat), his much-ballyhooed too-little-too-late last testament where he calls stalin "crude" or whatever, his grappling with the growth of the bureaucracy blah blah: none of this ever had any chance of coming to anything, because the soul of bolshevism had been a stalinist soul at core since at least kronstadt if not the menshevik split. if he had killed stalin (which he wouldn't have done, because he never stopped needing him) another gangster would have found the ladder. (i actually don't know much about kirov, whom stalin probably killed and who otherwise might have had quite a career, but i bet he was an asshole.) so it is Lenin's Fault. stalin reveals either the falseness of the idea of lenin as historical avatar or something worse: that history is even crueller than you thought. that lenin really was taking us where we were going, and this is it. otm: i do think he felt that everything he did was "historically necessary" ... the fact that what was actually accomplished was a society that embodied the absolute opposite of all of his ideals is probably the great historical irony of all time. that is the magic thing about him for me, that he must have made terrible mistake after terrible mistake, but he is never a man whose reasons are not compelling. the choice always seems really to be between lenin's plan and autocracy: and then at the end of lenin's plan we find autocracy. if you are an orthodox marxist (like, more of one than marx) i guess his original sin is trying to leapfrog russia's bourgeois phase, to drag the whole feudal mass of russia into The Future behind the tiny specks of its industrialized cities--after that he is out of sync with the universe, doomed to mere tyranny--but that isn't it i think, or not all of it. nor is it just some liberal sanctimony about ruthlessness and coercion: listing deaths while a highminded disgust occludes all description of the place and time they happened. it's some deeper failure to do the most important thing he had promised to do: to cut the knot intrinsicate of power. a failure he sinks into slowly, eyes open, along with the rest of his hopeful country. it's very sad. "a people's tragedy" like the figes book i haven't read calls it.
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 8 August 2014 22:25 (nine years ago) link
rereading that everything looks like a vague cliche. (this is a problem for me in general these days.) idk. my thoughts are evolving or whatever.
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 8 August 2014 22:29 (nine years ago) link
that is a gorgeous post, dlh
― i'm elf-ein lusophonic (imago), Friday, 8 August 2014 22:34 (nine years ago) link
his personality cult (especially after his death) was very different from stalin's. stalin was the father-genius-godhead-phallus; soviet folktales (an inseparable syncresis of "authenticity"+propaganda) talk about lenin almost like anansi. the trickster, the uncatchable, the god of the story. even his death is a trick, a tactic: "he is sleeping in red square, but he will awaken soon. what a joy that will be!" underneath this stuff is an unsayable uncertainty: even when you respect and love the trickster for his stories you won't know if they're true until it's too late.
goddamn, man. i would totally read an entire book by you about this. can we start a kickstarter for that?
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 8 August 2014 22:38 (nine years ago) link
srsly some of the more pynchonian prose i've read of late
― i'm elf-ein lusophonic (imago), Friday, 8 August 2014 22:41 (nine years ago) link
daphne carr bought me a drink once xp
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 8 August 2014 22:42 (nine years ago) link
Lenin's mistake was dragging Russia into communism before it was historically ready. And that mistake made communism in the west nearly impossible to achive, seeing as communism was now an autocratic boogeyman to the east. And of course, since communism in Russia wasn't historically inevitable yet, when Lenin made it happen, we will have to blame the development on Lenin's reading of Marx. And it therefore follows that the worldwide failure of marxism is first and foremost atributable to Karl Marx writing his books way too early.
― Frederik B, Friday, 8 August 2014 22:47 (nine years ago) link
this consideration of idealism, moment and pragmatism is all very relevant to my interests - whether the british left is to have a moment in any way comparable to lenin's is highly doubtful but fostering a commonality of purpose is surely central to the mission
― i'm elf-ein lusophonic (imago), Friday, 8 August 2014 22:48 (nine years ago) link
is any country historically ready for Communism? srs question
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 8 August 2014 22:55 (nine years ago) link
socialism however
that mistake made communism in the west nearly impossible to achive
If Marx is to be believed, the dictatorship of the proletariat is an historical necessity, and therefore not just possible to achieve, but inevitable. I tend to think he was a bit too presumptuous. Analysis of the past is easier than prophecy.
― dustups delivered to your door (Aimless), Friday, 8 August 2014 23:03 (nine years ago) link
"he is sleeping in red square, but he will awaken soon. what a joy that will be!"
realized on checking my source for this that i omitted the key fucking word: it's "he will probably awaken soon." chills!
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 9 August 2014 00:50 (nine years ago) link
Yes I thought there was a book on this.
poll with following options: (1) "is any country historically ready for Communism?", (2) "is (x) African country/'failed state' ready for democracy?", (3) "none of your fucking business".
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 9 August 2014 09:14 (nine years ago) link
some ruthless quotes from a secret letter to the Politburo 19th March 1922, when Lenin was sensing the famine was a good opportunity to break the power of the Orthodox Church.
It is precisely now and only now, when in the starving regions people are eating human flesh, and hundreds if not thousands of corpses are littering the roads, that we can (and therefore must) carry out the confiscation of church valuables with the most savage and merciless energy.... a very large number of local clergyman and bourgeois must be arrested and put on trail. The trail must end in no other way than execution by firing squad of the most influential and dangerous Black Hundreds in Shuya, and to the extent possible, not only in that city but also in Moscow and several other clerical centers.... the greater the number of representatives of the reactionary clergy and reactionary bourgeoisie we succeed in executing for this reason, the better. We must teach these people a lesson right now, so that they will not dare even to think of any resistance for several decades.
... a very large number of local clergyman and bourgeois must be arrested and put on trail. The trail must end in no other way than execution by firing squad of the most influential and dangerous Black Hundreds in Shuya, and to the extent possible, not only in that city but also in Moscow and several other clerical centers.... the greater the number of representatives of the reactionary clergy and reactionary bourgeoisie we succeed in executing for this reason, the better. We must teach these people a lesson right now, so that they will not dare even to think of any resistance for several decades.
I was thinking of that Giles Fraser piece in the Graun the other week and cheering every bit of Lenin's murderous intent here. I'm probably not right in the head, but that is what a Catholic upbringing does to one!
― calzino, Tuesday, 11 October 2016 08:56 (seven years ago) link
Jesus
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 11 October 2016 09:10 (seven years ago) link
I think it was in Richard Pipes' The Unknown Lenin, first published in 1996, that the quote above first appeared in English.
― Freedom, Tuesday, 11 October 2016 10:22 (seven years ago) link
I quoted it (with my typo) from the excellent Sheila Fitzpatrick Russian Revolution book. I'm guessing it was probably added to it on the last couple of revisions.
― calzino, Tuesday, 11 October 2016 10:36 (seven years ago) link
None of this young revolutionary claptrap. This is less than two years before he died. Real lesson for us all.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 11 October 2016 17:19 (seven years ago) link
This guy changed his mind about the proper strategy for the Bolsheviks like 4 times between April and October 1917, startling the Central Committee with calls for direct action and then frustrating them with orders to cool off "adventurism" on the part of workers and soldiers.... then swinging left again. Through it all he denounced in the strongest possible terms every idiot who dared read the situation differently from him, though they were actually in Petersburg and he spent much of that year hiding in Finland.
Classic infuriating pedant.
― Treeship, Monday, 14 August 2017 22:29 (six years ago) link
Lenin is out-polling the president of the United States among Millennials. I'm gonna try and log off for the day now. pic.twitter.com/puehAYQ4r6— Malcolm Harris (@BigMeanInternet) August 16, 2017
It will go higher.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 18:36 (six years ago) link
I'm literally reading State and Revolution rn
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 18:38 (six years ago) link
have you got to the bit where the state withers away yet? that's the best part
― -_- (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 19:01 (six years ago) link
that's my shit right there
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 19:02 (six years ago) link
the idea that even 25% of millennials actually know enough about lenin to make any kind of judgment is pretty funny
maybe we should poll the kids on whether trump is more popular than hammurabi
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 20:57 (six years ago) link
John Lenin maybe?
― Wewlay Bewlay (Tom D.), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:23 (six years ago) link
Oh yes and if they only knew enough about him they'd go back to Hilary. That's funny too.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:38 (six years ago) link
Obv its an iffy poll, but its totally in line with younger ppl's enthusiasm for socialism in general.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:42 (six years ago) link
how do i shot getting young folks to read polanyi ?
― -_- (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:43 (six years ago) link
can't wait to see the kids lining up to volunteer for the cheka so they can execute some kulaks of their own
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:48 (six years ago) link
Fabisnism? Dude get yourself a copy of Lenin's Philosophical Notebooks (no.38 in the Complete works set iirc), that's all the philosophy you will need. xp = the body count will go higher, too.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:50 (six years ago) link
wonder what millennials think of pol pot, i bet he would agree w/ their stance that hipsters are annoying
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 21:52 (six years ago) link
J.D. and hipster pals at the riot
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 22:17 (six years ago) link
Condemning Lenin might be appropriate and necessary but I don't think comparing him to Pol Pot is very edifying xp.
There was a massive power vaccuum in 1917 and the Bolsheviks were one of the few groups that had enough support on the ground to plausibly seize power. The provisional government wasn't going to hold on, and the soviets would have been crushed if they waited until the military took power -- crushed by monstrous, genocidal right wing forces.
It was only in this context that Lenin's radical proposal to leap across history to redistribute land and give the working class and peasantry direct power made sense. The nation had lost its taste for moderation during the war.
Obviously, the end result of this audacity was a disaster. The country became like one massive gulag. And the repression and murder Lenin authorized during the civil war is certainly not something I'm interested in excusing. BUT it was quite clearly never his intent to establish a dictatorship. He's a tragic figure imo more than a monster. (He was also, personally, a huge jerk as I mentioned above.)
― Treeship, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 22:33 (six years ago) link
In any case difficult listening hour to the thread. He knows a million times more about this than me.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 22:34 (six years ago) link
There were also earlier atrocities he was involved with like the Tiflis bank robbery. I don't think he was a good guy who had a positive impact on history, but the "meaning" of his life is more than just its outcome, Stalinist repression.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 22:37 (six years ago) link
Anyone read China Mieville's _October_ yet?
― Jackson Galactic Brain Meme (kingfish), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 22:50 (six years ago) link
No, but I'm very glad you mentioned it tho.
― calzino, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 23:02 (six years ago) link
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, August 16, 2017 9:38 PM (one hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Lenin never had any trouble with his e-mails iirc, so this is probably wishful thinking.
― Le Bateau Ivre, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 23:11 (six years ago) link
his letter caused stalin some issues tho
― -_- (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 23:20 (six years ago) link
it was honestly just a joke treeship, i don't think that lenin was in the same league as pol pot. though tbh even a non-joke version of that line strikes me as far less offensive than xyzzzz's half-comprehensible pro-soviet apologist shit on this and other threads.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 23:35 (six years ago) link
xp You mean the testament? I stand corrected :)
― Le Bateau Ivre, Wednesday, 16 August 2017 23:49 (six years ago) link
Yes. I liked it quite a lot.
― Eallach mhór an duine leisg (dowd), Wednesday, 16 August 2017 23:52 (six years ago) link
Oh good. I picked it up on sale from Verso earlier this year and its on the bookshelf.
Also, this:
when you want to destroy a statue of the hated communist but the destruction of property is the ultimate sin pic.twitter.com/1oNT1Ac4VS— Goth Ms. Frizzle (@spookperson) August 16, 2017
― Jackson Galactic Brain Meme (kingfish), Thursday, 17 August 2017 03:40 (six years ago) link
― Wewlay Bewlay (Tom D.), Wednesday, August 16, 2017 5:23 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHyGCCZzG2o
― Neanderthal, Thursday, 17 August 2017 03:42 (six years ago) link
Yes my half-apologetics (they are more than half though) are way more offensive than J.D. being patronising to people who are mostly of voting range (18-34 so actually possibly your age range even?), who could possibly already be engaged enough to know a bit more than what you think they know. A figure in a poll won't give us the nuance.
Please keep flying the Kerensky flag tho'.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 17 August 2017 07:03 (six years ago) link
i said half-comprehensible, you stalinist fuckwit, and that's giving you too much credit
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 17 August 2017 07:22 (six years ago) link
LOL dude chill a bit, just because some Trot screamed at you in college there is no need to lay the trauma on us every week.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 17 August 2017 07:50 (six years ago) link
eh i'm plenty chill, yr genuinely strange shtick is more amusing than infuriating
ftr i would've been delighted to talk to a trotskyist in college now and then, would've been a break from all those libertarians
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 17 August 2017 08:06 (six years ago) link
I live to amuse!
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 17 August 2017 08:24 (six years ago) link
How have I not noticed this ilx feud before?
― Treeship, Thursday, 17 August 2017 15:36 (six years ago) link
The internet gives so much every single day
― Jackson Galactic Brain Meme (kingfish), Thursday, 17 August 2017 18:59 (six years ago) link
"Let's Build a Zeppelin Fleet Named After Lenin! Not Individual Zeppelins, But a Whole Lenin Fleet of Zeppelins-This Is What The USSR Needs" pic.twitter.com/zdlyABTJwp— Soviet Visuals (@sovietvisuals) October 20, 2016
― calzino, Saturday, 19 August 2017 08:50 (six years ago) link
I just got into China Mieville's October and it is excellent. Reading a well written + concise narrative history is a good way of recalling shit you have already read in more nebulous + ungainly accounts, and putting it all back together in your mind. And there is so much that gets lost in the mix, to a fuckwit like me in other books. I'm ill as fuck r/n with a cold and suffering from insomnia, so perfect bedtime reading, again.
― calzino, Saturday, 2 September 2017 00:48 (six years ago) link
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/nov/06/lenins-disguise-little-seen-photos-of-soviet-leader-go-on-show
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 6 November 2017 22:31 (six years ago) link
In that recent China Mieville narrative history of red october, it was revealed that his disguise wasn't very good iirc.
― calzino, Monday, 6 November 2017 22:36 (six years ago) link
https://marxistleninist.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/trotsky.jpg?w=500
unconvincing
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Friday, 8 December 2017 15:57 (six years ago) link
The Russian Revolution, a lot more tits than you probably would expect:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/russian-revolution-centenary-leon-trotsky-biopic-channel-one-ussr-bolshevik-marxist-joseph-stalin-a8002636.html
― Action of Boyle Man Prompts Visitor to Stay (Tom D.), Friday, 8 December 2017 17:20 (six years ago) link
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/03/07/indias-modi-warns-against-statue-vandalism-crowds-topple-lenin/
― Buff Jeckley (Tom D.), Wednesday, 7 March 2018 13:46 (six years ago) link
https://newsocialist.org.uk/the-bolsheviks-dared-interview-with-lars-t-lih-on-lenin/
^^^this is a deep dive into the pre-revolutionary technicalities of bolshevik debate in the actual context they faced but lars t lih is probably the leading living non-sectarian lenin scholar and i think always interesting
(also he's a professor of music history at mcgill which is… unexpected)
― mark s, Wednesday, 7 March 2018 14:15 (six years ago) link
Everybody need a side hustle nowadays
― Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Wednesday, 7 March 2018 16:51 (six years ago) link
this is still the most famous guy i've ever seen in person.
― treeship., Wednesday, 27 November 2019 03:03 (four years ago) link
the most famous guy corpse
― A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 03:54 (four years ago) link
thank you for clearing that up
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 04:03 (four years ago) link
In my second grade classroom I won more gold stars than Karen Karpen, who was my toughest competitor.
― A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 04:05 (four years ago) link
responsible for tankies and trots. so d
― #FBPIRA (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 17:53 (four years ago) link
That's like blaming ABBA for the Brotherhood of Man.
― 'Skills' Wallace (Tom D.), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 18:06 (four years ago) link
Revolutions podcast has reached Lenin’s appearance on the scene.
― Bidh boladh a' mhairbh de 'n láimh fhalaimh (dowd), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 18:07 (four years ago) link
xp. could also say this about marx wrt lenin
― #FBPIRA (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 19:17 (four years ago) link
could also say this about marx wrt lenin
otm. We should blame engels.
― A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 19:21 (four years ago) link
I'm blaming Engels instead
― Frederik B, Wednesday, 27 November 2019 19:22 (four years ago) link
A LOL from Fred, that's something you don't see every day.
― 'Skills' Wallace (Tom D.), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 19:36 (four years ago) link
I'm thanking Engels instead.
― Simon H., Wednesday, 27 November 2019 19:38 (four years ago) link
― A victim managed to capture evidence of the gimp (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 20:32 (four years ago) link
More classic as the world gets shittier to live in.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 27 November 2019 22:17 (four years ago) link
kind of ironic how revisionist and rightist the NEP was. his followers would have put him in the gulag
― #FBPIRA (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 27 November 2019 22:20 (four years ago) link
happy 150th, old fellow
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 08:42 (four years ago) link
"Communism and no malarkey" -- Uncle "Joe" Biden
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 22 April 2020 09:39 (four years ago) link
this guy killed the revolution, leftists need to stop copying his shit theory and his pompous pedantic writing style
― fuck it (Left), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 13:02 (four years ago) link
there are weeks where decades happen, and also weeks where it's your birthday!
― k*r*n koltrane (Simon H.), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 13:07 (four years ago) link
there would be no tankies or trots without this man
― COVID and the Gang (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 16:56 (four years ago) link
saved capitalism & turned anti capitalism into a joke, what a legacy
― fuck it (Left), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 17:07 (four years ago) link
Tankies or trots are things to troll ilx libs, nothing else.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 22 April 2020 18:14 (four years ago) link
Today we celebrate 150 years since the birth of revolutionary and theorist, Lenin. His legacy and the legacy of the Russian revolution still inspires millions around the world to fight. For peace and socialism! pic.twitter.com/6YEArZ13U1— London Young Labour (@LDNYoungLabour) April 22, 2020
Lol hope us where you find it
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 22 April 2020 18:39 (four years ago) link
lol
You don't need to be a Communist or even a Socialist to recognise the positives as well as the evils in Lenin's rule. Not least, his New Economic Policy established pragmatic market socialism which eventually succeeded in Deng's #China https://t.co/p5ue5pIca8— Vince Cable (@vincecable) April 22, 2020
― fuck it (Left), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 18:58 (four years ago) link
fuck me
― COVID and the Gang (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 18:59 (four years ago) link
tankies & trots are still a real problem in some circles even if liberals tend to identify anyone left of gordon brown as one
― fuck it (Left), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 18:59 (four years ago) link
many twitter "marxist leninist maoists" agree with comrade vince here including the deng bit
― fuck it (Left), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 19:01 (four years ago) link
Russia was such a dire mess by late 1916 that a collapse into some form of chaotic violence was more or less inevitable. It was a "failed state" as we now use the term. Lenin happened to be the head of the best organized and most ruthless faction and was able to seize the reins of power. The fanatically ideological basis of the new government was of huge value, not just in creating the cadres who drove the revolution, but in acquiring the consent of the governed and restabilizing society. China's revolution also arose out of a failed state collapsing during a World War. It's harder to fault Lenin and Mao when you grasp out of what chaotic conditions they forcibly created governance.
― A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 20:14 (four years ago) link
I'm a bit of a melt when it comes to NEP (not that I agree with Laying Cable). It was a new state and frail from the ravages of civil war and rife with starvation, cannibalism etc.. I think Lenin wanted it to run for much longer than he managed to live, but I think you had to be there or something!
― calzino, Wednesday, 22 April 2020 20:32 (four years ago) link
he's no V.I. Warshawski
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 20:36 (four years ago) link
it’s easy to fault lenin & co for not abolishing capitalism
― fuck it (Left), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 20:44 (four years ago) link
An open goal, how could they miss.
― The Corbynite Maneuver (Tom D.), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 20:46 (four years ago) link
i know no human is singularly responsible for all the bullshit but he comes across as such a dickhead in his writings & actions I blame him anyway
― fuck it (Left), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 20:46 (four years ago) link
the bolshevik revolution could be more fairly described as a coup. the majority of the toiling masses of the Russian empire were peasants, they supported the SRs. the bolsheviks had their support in the cities, and that won them the day. Lenin (and Trotsky's) response to the anarchists, the SRs, the worker's opposition, the Kronstadt sailors etc. give you the absolute measure of them both.
― COVID and the Gang (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 20:47 (four years ago) link
all power to the soviets just kidding lol
― fuck it (Left), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 20:47 (four years ago) link
tbf Lenin & co were pretty busy abolishing people
― Ira Einhorn (dandydonweiner), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 20:55 (four years ago) link
he didn't really care about the proletariat except as an "agent of historical change." that is, he cared about them as a class; not about the lives of individual workers. and if anything he was negatively disposed toward russia, calling it a backwards peasant country and things like that. there is no way to see the world that is more alienating than how lenin saw it.
there is still something fascinating about the bolsheviks though, and the way they bent theory self-survingly while still being pedantic dogmatists. the debates they had, read today, seem like those of medieval theologians. so deep in an insular discourse.
― treeship., Wednesday, 22 April 2020 21:00 (four years ago) link
Whomst among us has not referred to Russia as a backward peasant country, tbf
― Greta Van Show Feets BB (milo z), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 21:02 (four years ago) link
Seems like fair comment in 1917, no?
― The Corbynite Maneuver (Tom D.), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 21:04 (four years ago) link
Trotsky's attention to and love for literature helped him position theoretically how Bolshevism was intrinsic and inevitable in the nation of Pushkin, Gogol, and Dostoyevsky. It didn't make him any less dogmatic or malevolent.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 21:05 (four years ago) link
it's too bad orwell has been appropriated by conservatives because he essentially had it right. the icy, inhuman way people like lenin wrote about the world wasn't just a quirk, it was a hint at the underlying brutality, or capacity for brutality. bertrand russell saw the same thing when he went over to the ussr in 1920 or thereabouts.
however, if i was a russian factory worker when lenin swung into town in 1915, i would likely have joined the bolsheviks. by that point, the soviets were de facto controlling petersburg anyway. kerensky's government had no real authority except through the soviets and they were threatened all the time by deeply reactionary forces such as the black hundreds. "all power to the soviets," in that moment wasn't really an abstract experiment. it was already happening, why not formalize it?
but then, yeah, the soviets didn't end up actually being allowed to govern.
― treeship., Wednesday, 22 April 2020 21:07 (four years ago) link
treeship, you write so crisply here. I could keep reading you in this and the Shelley threads. Please follow this lead in the politics threads!
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 21:11 (four years ago) link
It is precisely now and only now, when in the starving regions people are eating human flesh, and hundreds if not thousands of corpses are littering the roads, that we can (and therefore must) carry out the confiscation of church valuables with the most savage and merciless energy.a very large number of local clergyman and bourgeois must be arrested and put on trial. The trial must end in no other way than execution by firing squad of the most influential and dangerous Black Hundreds in Shuya, and to the extent possible, not only in that city but also in Moscow and several other clerical centers.... the greater the number of representatives of the reactionary clergy and reactionary bourgeoisie we succeed in executing for this reason, the better. We must teach these people a lesson right now, so that they will not dare even to think of any resistance for several decades.
a very large number of local clergyman and bourgeois must be arrested and put on trial. The trial must end in no other way than execution by firing squad of the most influential and dangerous Black Hundreds in Shuya, and to the extent possible, not only in that city but also in Moscow and several other clerical centers.... the greater the number of representatives of the reactionary clergy and reactionary bourgeoisie we succeed in executing for this reason, the better. We must teach these people a lesson right now, so that they will not dare even to think of any resistance for several decades.
we've all fired off ruthless and bloodthirsty emails to the politburo after that 2nd bottle of vodka - don't judge!
― calzino, Wednesday, 22 April 2020 21:27 (four years ago) link
xpostlol that is the most professorial post I've ever seen on this site!
― dip to dup (rob), Wednesday, 22 April 2020 21:31 (four years ago) link
I didn’t know about the sex worker genocide thing. Amazing what they don’t teach us in school.— Don Hughes 🦌 (@getfiscal) April 22, 2020
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 23 April 2020 10:23 (four years ago) link
tankies totally a real issue on the left ftr, baffling how many otherwise right on ppl will go to bat for North Korea and, more bafflingly to me as it clearly bears almost no traces of a communist nation in 2020, China as well
― Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 23 April 2020 10:56 (four years ago) link
I don't know where you come across all these people.
― The Corbynite Maneuver (Tom D.), Thursday, 23 April 2020 11:27 (four years ago) link
lol I know some IRL, I was at lunch last year where one friend suggested North Korea was up to some shit and my tankie friend rolled his eyes and really condescendingly said "oh, that's not true" about whatever shit Kim was up to that week
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 23 April 2020 11:37 (four years ago) link
Who knows what is Kim up to on a week -by-week basis though? I'd be up for querying the sources of the suggestions (depending on what they were).
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 23 April 2020 11:51 (four years ago) link
i don't think he gets the benefit of the doubt
― treeship., Thursday, 23 April 2020 12:27 (four years ago) link
neither does lenin by the way. there is ambiguity about whether he actually ordered a "massacre of sex workers" but, regardless, he did preside over a policy of terror.
― treeship., Thursday, 23 April 2020 12:30 (four years ago) link
It's not giving Kim any "benefit of a doubt" to query misinformation that could be used to build a case for any kind of action or increasing tensions xp
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 23 April 2020 12:31 (four years ago) link
Is no-one going to stick up for Lenin in his own thread?
― The Corbynite Maneuver (Tom D.), Thursday, 23 April 2020 12:32 (four years ago) link
i mean, i have done that throughout this thread in a heavily, heavily qualified way.
there are amazing posts in here, way up, from difficult listening hour.
― treeship., Thursday, 23 April 2020 12:33 (four years ago) link
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 27 November 2019 bookmarkflaglink
xp
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 23 April 2020 12:34 (four years ago) link
Citoyens, vouliez-vous une révolution sans révolution?
― The Corbynite Maneuver (Tom D.), Thursday, 23 April 2020 12:34 (four years ago) link
China and NK not really comparable in a lot of important respects
― The Cognitive Peasant (ogmor), Thursday, 23 April 2020 12:44 (four years ago) link
I agree they're not! Which is why tankies who love both are so maddening.
I accept that we must be cautious regarding misinformation but really you'll find ppl who just systematically deny any bad news on N Korea whatsoever based on that, when there's plenty of evidence that it's a terrible regime that doesn't come from US media. Also these types inevitably bust out the "oh sure, but AMERICA isn't a threat to world peace??" line even in discussions amongst leftists where it's a given that yes, America is that. There's a lot of knee-jerk enemy-of-my-enemy reasoning.
― Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 23 April 2020 15:12 (four years ago) link
Which is why tankies who love both are so maddening.
tanks don't really have a coherent ideology beyond "if Big Bad Empire says it's bad, it's probably good" iirc
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 23 April 2020 16:14 (four years ago) link
I dunno, there's some smart tankies with well thought-out arguments etc who when it comes down to it are like "stalinism was cool and contemporary china rocks, yay communism". Domenico Losurdo a good example
― COVID and the Gang (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 23 April 2020 19:36 (four years ago) link
tbf the only people I've chatted to who stan for china are chinese citizens. china seems v interesting from an economic & governance point of view
― The Cognitive Peasant (ogmor), Thursday, 23 April 2020 21:17 (four years ago) link
I don't know, I must get out more and meet all these pro-Chinese non-Chinese people and DPRK cheerleaders - or not, preferably.
― The Corbynite Maneuver (Tom D.), Thursday, 23 April 2020 21:21 (four years ago) link
Comparing China in 1920 to China in 2020, it's no cause for wonder if Chinese citizens are willing to accept many of the drawbacks and difficulties presented by their government.
― A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 23 April 2020 21:23 (four years ago) link
Accepting the drawbacks doesn't seem like much of a choice for Chinese citizens.
― Ira Einhorn (dandydonweiner), Thursday, 23 April 2020 21:42 (four years ago) link
Accepting the drawbacks of an Indian democratic capitalist system isn't much of a choice to a huge underclass there either, you could go on forever here!
― calzino, Thursday, 23 April 2020 21:59 (four years ago) link