#361

EmanuelaBrolandi posted:

Well, drwhat, if those Cyrillic letters were to be transliterated into Roman ones it would roughly be written as 'lymyt'


no, i know that. but in context in 1937 (or whatever, maybe you are reading a modern source and i'm barking down the wrong tree) it may have been used in the sense of the modern english word quota. i think it would be misleading to assume one way or the other without trying to find some contemporary translation dictionary instead of a modern one

#362
or better still a source that defines specifically what a lymyt is
#363
I've looked up examples of the word in completely different contexts not related to purges and I think that it can mean both quota orblimit... the word is ambiguous, perhaps intentionally so, and different party members in different regions reacted accordingly.
#364
#365
So here we see limit referring to people who fall 'within' a quota which to me means limit and also a quota to meet which could be applied for... which seems to be the other definition of quota . Theres probably cases or ___positions etc.. involved we cant gleem just from a translation of vocabulary
#366
yeah that's difficult. hm
#367
lets try to interpret a document in Russian while not understanding Russian, that's the Brown Moses spirit
#368
Also note i used wikipedia as my source
#369
I understand russian and it says Stalin is good
#370
actually limit is limit and quota is quota because they're latin words that have been used forever. it's just that even in english, limit and quota can be used to mean a minimum or maximum. in either case, there's no reason to randomly flip the translation since both the english and russian come from the latin.
#371
This whole "rule of law" thing is just obfuscatory. Any socialist government is going to be built on the local conditions of social relations. Trying to impose some kind of fixed Platonic ideal of Law and Order on the masses of people is as liberal as it gets.
#372
Even if the Soviet legal system was the biggest clusterfuck in history, it would still be a move towards creating socialist law. And its either Socialism or WW3
#373
I mean it's easy to say that innocent people shouldn't be killed or that people should be innocent until proven guilty. It's also easy to say that the rule of law prevents this. But let's think about what this means concretely.

1. The enforcers of the rule of law are, of course, lawyers. Judges, courts, government legal structures, and ultimately laws. Law is by its very nature a specialized profession which involves technical ability on the part of a privileged strata of society. A socialist revolution will always be opposed to the class interests of this 'judicial class' and either has the option of overturning all previous laws or keeping them until socialism is stable enough that it can be reflected in the superstructure through new laws and new lawyers. One cannot keep the 'good' bourgeois rights while discarding the bad, not only because the law is a structure that must be internally consistent and not only because bourgeois rights are tied to the bourgeois mode of production, but practically retaining laws requires retaining lawyers who specialize in those laws.

2. The 'rule of law' under capitalism is ultimately the rule of private law. Private law, i.e. the right of property, is the foundation of public and criminal law in bourgeois society. Under socialism, public law is the foundation of all law, and it is this foundation that allows criminal law and public law to exist autonomously but in subordination. Obviously, this is an unstable relationship because the subordination of one form of law to another is in reality its nonexistence, or rather its existence as a mere facade. If public and criminal law only exist when they do not interfere with private law and private law trumps the other two when it demands it, then these are not really coherent legal systems but disguises for the cruelty of private property. If socialism is the reverse, than it is precisely in moments of the 'state of exception' when the facade of private law and criminal law fade and the true socialist 'rule of law' reveals itself. The purges reveal the essence of the socialist rule of law in the way that economic crisis reveals the essence of the bourgeois rule of law: the maintenance of that system by any means necessary.

3. Was watching House of Cards and forgot the third thing.
#374

walkinginonit posted:

This whole "rule of law" thing is just obfuscatory. Any socialist government is going to be built on the local conditions of social relations. Trying to impose some kind of fixed Platonic ideal of Law and Order on the masses of people is as liberal as it gets.



this is such garbage. there's nothing inherently liberal about dividing powers and responsibilities between different groups. it's been done everywhere from the iroquois league to the roman republic.

#375

babyhueypnewton posted:

1. The enforcers of the rule of law are, of course, lawyers. Judges, courts, government legal structures, and ultimately laws. Law is by its very nature a specialized profession which involves technical ability on the part of a privileged strata of society. A socialist revolution will always be opposed to the class interests of this 'judicial class' and either has the option of overturning all previous laws or keeping them until socialism is stable enough that it can be reflected in the superstructure through new laws and new lawyers. One cannot keep the 'good' bourgeois rights while discarding the bad, not only because the law is a structure that must be internally consistent and not only because bourgeois rights are tied to the bourgeois mode of production, but practically retaining laws requires retaining lawyers who specialize in those laws.



absolute bullshit. you can keep good laws while getting rid of bad. for example, universal adult suffrage, a feature in bourgeois democracies, has also been the basis of socialist states

#376

babyhueypnewton posted:

2. The 'rule of law' under capitalism is ultimately the rule of private law. Private law, i.e. the right of property, is the foundation of public and criminal law in bourgeois society. Under socialism, public law is the foundation of all law, and it is this foundation that allows criminal law and public law to exist autonomously but in subordination. Obviously, this is an unstable relationship because the subordination of one form of law to another is in reality its nonexistence, or rather its existence as a mere facade. If public and criminal law only exist when they do not interfere with private law and private law trumps the other two when it demands it, then these are not really coherent legal systems but disguises for the cruelty of private property. If socialism is the reverse, than it is precisely in moments of the 'state of exception' when the facade of private law and criminal law fade and the true socialist 'rule of law' reveals itself. The purges reveal the essence of the socialist rule of law in the way that economic crisis reveals the essence of the bourgeois rule of law: the maintenance of that system by any means necessary



more bullshit. having laws which are non-retroactive, and enforcers of the law who have checks on their power, is far more public than the soviet system, which gave chekist troikas the power to shoot people with no evidence or jury trial

#377
and yet somehow this division of power and rule of law throughout history has done nothing to curb the systemic violence inherent in the economic system which promotes it. slavery and genocide can be perfectly legal and have been perfectly legal historically under the rule of law.

the dictatorship of the proletariat is a historically necessary condition whereby the majority of humanity uses the state to impose its will on, and thereby crush, the previously ruling classes. this obviously includes the use of violence and repression.

to condemn the ussr because they 'used violence' is not only to completely fail to understand what a revolution is, but to fall into the reactionary trap whereby socialist states are judged against a perfect ideal instead of being evaluated dialectically in comparison to capitalist states as they should be.

Engels, On Authority:

All Socialists are agreed that the political state, and with it political authority, will disappear as a result of the coming social revolution, that is, that public functions will lose their political character and will be transformed into the simple administrative functions of watching over the true interests of society. But the anti-authoritarians demand that the political state be abolished at one stroke, even before the social conditions that gave birth to it have been destroyed. They demand that the first act of the social revolution shall be the abolition of authority. Have these gentlemen ever seen a revolution? A revolution is certainly the most authoritarian thing there is; it is the act whereby one part of the population imposes its will upon the other part by means of rifles, bayonets and cannon — authoritarian means, if such there be at all; and if the victorious party does not want to have fought in vain, it must maintain this rule by means of the terror which its arms inspire in the reactionists. Would the Paris Commune have lasted a single day if it had not made use of this authority of the armed people against the bourgeois? Should we not, on the contrary, reproach it for not having used it freely enough?



Edited by postposting ()

#378

postposting posted:

and yet somehow this division of power and rule of law throughout history has done nothing to curb the systemic violence inherent in the economic system which promotes it. slavery and genocide can be perfectly legal and have been perfectly legal historically under the rule of law.



states with slavery (different classes of people having different legal rights) obviously did not have rule of law

Edited by Panopticon ()

#379
Which societies have or have had the "rule of law" then?
#380
Then see my point about comparing socialist states against an ideal while simply accepting capitalist abuses as the status quo.

You seem to be saying (correct me if I'm wrong) that the Rule of Law has never been adequately established in any human society. Yet you single out the soviet union under stalin as being uniquely bad in this regard without any comparative analysis of capitalist states during the same time period.

Defending the Soviet Union isn't about saying that nothing bad ever happened there or that it was some kind of perfect utopia. It's about realizing that their attempts to construct a truly egalitarian and just society did actually make tremendous strides for the people living there and around the globe, that these strides should be applauded and extolled in order to showcase the real benefits of actually existing socialism. Especially when compared with the alternatives.

Bringing up a standard that humanity has apparently never been able to achieve anywhere and then blaming the ussr for falling short of it while being subject to intense imperialist pressure and subversion seems awfully unfair.
#381

Panopticon posted:

states with slavery (different classes of people having different legal rights) obviously did not have rule of law



Bahahaha

#382
So how about the Civil War when the North used violence and dictatorship against the South which had codified slavery but apparently no rule of law? Was Lincoln a monster for knowing the consequences of Shermans campaign?
#383

states with slavery (different classes of people having different legal rights) obviously did not have rule of law


it was all very legal and human rights != rule of law

all that said I don't believe any of the things panopticon likes about the rule of law are intrinsically flawed. the problem is that the machinery of any real legal system requires money and skill to operate, and as such it's impossible to provide actual equal protection when the actors are not of the same class. a person who can hire legal expertise will almost always prevail over one who cannot. liberal systems try to rectify that with people like me and TG (civil legal aid and public defender, respectively) but in both cases they run up against the fact that the anglo legal system is built to thoroughly and completely adjudicate the legal problems of british nobility. to apply such an overbuilt system to regular peoples' regular legal problems is going to take enormous resources, unless you either limit the access (the civil system approach, my office rejects the vast majority of its applicants) or you largely bypass the process (the criminal approach, which would grind to a halt without a plea bargain system that is mostly a post-Gideon innovation). needless to say, neither of these options preserves the things panopticon likes to any real degree.

so if you had a classless society, I think a liberal legal system would be far less flawed, as the resource differentials would be limited. but a.) you can't get to a classless society under a liberal legal system, because capital has rights in it and far greater means to defend them than anyone else would to infringe them, and b.) granting every litigant/defendant a competent lawyer and full due process would cost you a fuckin fortune and i'm not sure that doing so is going to be the best use of the socialist society's resources. the only way I see to square that circle would be to ditch the adversarial system entirely--but that's going to constitute losing a big part of your checks and balances at best, and all of them at worst.

#384

postposting posted:

the dictatorship of the proletariat is a historically necessary condition whereby the majority of humanity uses the state to impose its will on, and thereby crush, the previously ruling classes. this obviously includes the use of violence and repression.



the violence doesn't necessarily have to be arbitrary, secretive and unpredictable.

postposting posted:

to condemn the ussr because they 'used violence' is not only to completely fail to understand what a revolution is, but to fall into the reactionary trap whereby socialist states are judged against a perfect ideal instead of being evaluated dialectically in comparison to capitalist states as they should be.



let's compare the kulak campaign in 1937-8, which was officially sanctioned by the party, with police brutality in america. the actions of individual kulaks didn't matter in whether they were arrested or not. they were a class enemy. on the other hand the police brutality in america is in response to specific crimes. the fact the violence falls more heavily on one section of the population is officially coincidental. the democratic party is not laying out upper and lower bounds on the number of executions they are expecting from state governors.

maybe you aren't sold on the idea of being able to avoid state violence?

#385

walkinginonit posted:

Which societies have or have had the "rule of law" then?



it is an ideal towards which we should strive. there will never be an "end of history" where we have perfect rule of law. but a slave empire like rome was obviously a more flawed implementation than the soviet union, and the soviet union was obviously more flawed than a modern day bourgeois democracy.

#386

Panopticon posted:

postposting posted:

and yet somehow this division of power and rule of law throughout history has done nothing to curb the systemic violence inherent in the economic system which promotes it. slavery and genocide can be perfectly legal and have been perfectly legal historically under the rule of law.

states with slavery (different classes of people having different legal rights) obviously did not have rule of law



you are correct in a certain sense. but by historicizing the rule of law as a bourgeois creation you fail to see that it is a historically transient concept. As the young Marx says:

The establishment of the political state and the dissolution of civil society into independent individuals – whose relation with one another epend on law, just as the relations of men in the system of estates and guilds depended on privilege – is accomplished by one and the same act. Man as a member of civil society, unpolitical man, inevitably appears, however, as the natural man. The “rights of man” appears as “natural rights,” because conscious activity is concentrated on the political act. Egoistic man is the passive result of the dissolved society, a result that is simply found in existence, an object of immediate certainty, therefore a natural object. The political revolution resolves civil life into its component parts, without revolutionizing these components themselves or subjecting them to criticism. It regards civil society, the world of needs, labor, private interests, civil law, as the basis of its existence, as a precondition not requiring further substantiation and therefore as its natural basis. Finally, man as a member of civil society is held to be man in the proper sense, homme as distinct from citoyen, because he is man in his sensuous, individual, immediate existence, whereas political man is only abstract, artificial man, man as an allegorical, juridical person. The real man is recognized only in the shape of the egoistic individual, the true man is recognized only in the shape of the abstract citizen.
...
All emancipation is a reduction of the human world and relationships to man himself.

Political emancipation is the reduction of man, on the one hand, to a member of civil society, to an egoistic, independent individual, and, on the other hand, to a citizen, a juridical person.

Only when the real, individual man re-absorbs in himself the abstract citizen, and as an individual human being has become a species-being in his everyday life, in his particular work, and in his particular situation, only when man has recognized and organized his “own powers” as social powers, and, consequently, no longer separates social power from himself in the shape of political power, only then will human emancipation have been accomplished.

-On The Jewish Question



And he is even more clear in his critique of Hegel:

Hegel proceeds from the state and makes man into the subjectified state; democracy starts with man and makes the state objectified man. just as it is not religion that creates man but man who creates religion, so it is not the constitution that creates the people but the people which creates the constitution. In a certain respect democracy is to all other forms of the state what Christianity is to all other religions. Christianity is the religion kat exohin, the essence of religion, deified man under the form of a particular religion. In the same way democracy is the essence of every political constitution, socialised man under the form of a particular constitution of the state. It stands related to other constitutions as the genus to its species; only here the genus itself appears as an existent, and therefore opposed as a particular species to those existents which do not conform to the essence. Democracy relates to all other forms of the state as their Old Testament. Man does not exist because of the law but rather the law exists for the good of man. Democracy is human existence, while in the other political forms man has only legal existence. That is the fundamental difference of democracy.

-Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right



the rule of law means the existence of law as something outside the will of the people. it is impossible to have democracy and the rule of law, though of course by democracy Marx means the radical democracy of communism in which man is a species-being.

#387

Panopticon posted:

the actions of individual kulaks didn't matter in whether they were arrested or not. they were a class enemy. on the other hand the police brutality in america is in response to specific crimes. the fact the violence falls more heavily on one section of the population is officially coincidental. the democratic party is not laying out upper and lower bounds on the number of executions they are expecting from state governors.

maybe you aren't sold on the idea of being able to avoid state violence?

holy shit, can you really not see the contradiction here?

#388

postposting posted:

You seem to be saying (correct me if I'm wrong) that the Rule of Law has never been adequately established in any human society. Yet you single out the soviet union under stalin as being uniquely bad in this regard without any comparative analysis of capitalist states during the same time period.



because this is the stalin thread. this seems like the most appropriate place to critcise stalin and the system he created.

#389

swampman posted:

Panopticon posted:

the actions of individual kulaks didn't matter in whether they were arrested or not. they were a class enemy. on the other hand the police brutality in america is in response to specific crimes. the fact the violence falls more heavily on one section of the population is officially coincidental. the democratic party is not laying out upper and lower bounds on the number of executions they are expecting from state governors.

maybe you aren't sold on the idea of being able to avoid state violence?

holy shit, can you really not see the contradiction here?



yes, it is much easier to avoid state violence when it comes in response to specific actions i take.

#390
Umm
#391

thirdplace posted:

the only way I see to square that circle would be to ditch the adversarial system entirely--but that's going to constitute losing a big part of your checks and balances at best, and all of them at worst.


i'd add that even if you did pull this off in a fair and equitable way, any scholarship written eighty years later in the language of the empire that deposed your state would probably treat the pretences to fairness and rule of law as bullshit, assume that the magistrates were biased or irrelevant rubber stamps or both, and generally would read exactly like the scholarship on the soviet union does

#392

thirdplace posted:

it was all very legal and human rights != rule of law



the universality/generality of the law is part of the rule of law

#393

Panopticon posted:

swampman posted:

Panopticon posted:

the actions of individual kulaks didn't matter in whether they were arrested or not. they were a class enemy. on the other hand the police brutality in america is in response to specific crimes. the fact the violence falls more heavily on one section of the population is officially coincidental. the democratic party is not laying out upper and lower bounds on the number of executions they are expecting from state governors.

maybe you aren't sold on the idea of being able to avoid state violence?

holy shit, can you really not see the contradiction here?

yes, it is much easier to avoid state violence when it comes in response to specific actions i take.

You're saying that the purges in the 30s were not subject to "the rule of law." In a sense they were, it's just that the law did not deal with individuals, the law said, "xxx kulaks should die."

Whereas in America, the law said exactly what kind of treatment youc ould expect, in every circumstance, all you gotta do is *thwap* read the laws buddy. And in fact it was known openly that the laws were not enforced fairly and that the laws discriminate against the poor, that this resulted in actual violence falling on the lower classes, especially racial violence, but to you this is more like the ideal "rule of law" than having a central authority ask local governing bodies to do what they think is fair.

#394
rule of law means no one is above the law, not that no one is below it. even today no liberal nation provides equal protection to noncitizens, and pretty much no one claims that counts as a derogation of rule of law. if you want to try and change the definition thereof to something more universal and socialist i wish you all the luck, but if you were asking my advice i'd suggest picking a term that's not already owned lock-stock-and-barrel by liberal legal theorists.

edit: or even one that is owned by those theorists but is more apt: human rights
#395
There is an argument that bourgeois dictatorship fails to live up to its own standards. This is a legitimate as the modern bourgeois freedoms panopticon loves actually come from the Soviet Union and the socialist pressure on the West:

http://www.amazon.com/Soviet-Legal-Innovation-Western-World/dp/0521881749

I'm sure a pdf exists somewhere. Arguing that by the standards of bourgeois democracy, socialism was more democratic, more fair, more comprehensive in its human rights, etc is a pretty good argument, after all the accomplishments of socialism on economic growth, human development, scientific advances, medical and health advances, and legal innovation are phenomenal given a realistic model of their potential.

The other argument is that the legal system we have is entirely fraudulent, an outdated relic of the revolutionary potential of the bourgeoisie which is now a fetter on humanity. That socialism is not just a better version of bourgeois jurisprudence but its abolition and possibly an entire new form. Maybe this isn't the thread for it since this is primarily a defense of Stalin, but I think Marx and Engels work on law is fascinating and basically ignored. While this work is full of postmodern garbage, I think the most innovation in this regard is in the field of critical jurisprudence:

http://www.amazon.com/Critical-Jurisprudence-Political-Philosophy-Justice/dp/184113452X

I find this stuff cool and wrote a bunch on it.
#396

swampman posted:

You're saying that the purges in the 30s were not subject to "the rule of law." In a sense they were, it's just that the law did not deal with individuals, the law said, "xxx kulaks should die."



this made it a retroactive law, though. the people who owned farms during NEP and then lost them to collectivisation could be following the law perfectly and still be shot.

swampman posted:

Whereas in America, the law said exactly what kind of treatment youc ould expect, in every circumstance, all you gotta do is *thwap* read the laws buddy. And in fact it was known openly that the laws were not enforced fairly and that the laws discriminate against the poor, that this resulted in actual violence falling on the lower classes, especially racial violence, but to you this is more like the ideal "rule of law" than having a central authority ask local governing bodies to do what they think is fair.



"read the laws buddy" is more fair than "if we don't shoot you, stalin might think we don't fully support his dekulakisation campaign"

#397
are you really under the impression that Black people in the amerikan south during the 1930s were only subject to police and klan terror if they 'broke the law'?

this is not even to begin the subject of why you believe that a law which targets individuals based on race is somehow more in line with 'the rule of law' than one which targets individuals based on class.
#398

postposting posted:

are you really under the impression that Black people in the amerikan south during the 1930s were only subject to police and klan terror if they 'broke the law'?

this is not even to begin the subject of why you believe that a law which targets individuals based on race is somehow more in line with 'the rule of law' than one which targets individuals based on class.



i was talking about modern day america.

the law might be targeting people based on race if it were "possession of dark skin shall be an offence", but it isn't, it's possession of drugs, involvement in gangs etc. these are actions which people can avoid. the american police are thugs who don't care about the rule of law either, so obviously they shoot black people on a whim, but they have to pretend it's for drugs, gangs etc, whereas the nkvd were destroying "enemies of the people", not punishing specific crimes.

#399

Panopticon posted:

the police brutality in america is in response to specific crimes

what in the immediate fuck

#400

gyrofry posted:

Panopticon posted:
the police brutality in america is in response to specific crimes
what in the immediate fuck



well that's the official story yeah. that makes it qualitatively different than the kulak operation etc. the official story in 1937 was that kulaks were class enemies that needed to be destroyed.