#161
Donald: Assuming Alende's Chilé existed in a vacuum, you don't think it would have been possible for it to transition into full socialism? It would have sputtered out once reaching peak liberalism, or w/e, and revolutionary fervor would have subsided? Or are we only talking about social democracies like the Scandinavian kind (i.e. those existing within empire)?
#162
I think theoretically it can but external capital spends an exorbitant amount of resources on suppressing the maturation of capitalism into socialism (i.e. imperialism), even to levels threatening capital's own existence. Which is the biggest obstacle.

I don't think we've yet to see literal socialism exist, just an ideological and political shift of certain countries and societies that attempted to transition from capitalism to a socialist mode of production, which can be considered "formal" socialism, I suppose. But, the drive being political and cultural means the state can regress backwards into conserving capitalist modes of production if the culture or leadership changes—like that Peace of Crap MegaF*ckér Khrushchev. Largely it's a difficult proposition because if a country goes socialist and attempts to transition into socialism proper, it's faced with massive external violence by fascists kamikazing into socialism to destroy both societies. There is a very real necessity to shift surplus value away from productive capital and into defending national capital/resources, which, imo, would subject the socialist country to the LTRPF and capital/power accumulation potentially reverting policy towards market reformism to get much needed resources in the short run. But, that's just one guys thoughts ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
#163
the answer is third world caesarean socialism
#164
my band is opening for chile in a vaccum next weekend.
#165

AmericanNazbro posted:

I refuse to emptyquote because I am the 1% of GBS who gets the joke but I love the shift-key too much. You can get f*cked, "Kylé"

:cawg:

#166
if only we could have some kind of... permanent revolution
#167

postposting posted:

if only we could have some kind of... permanent revolution



That's a ban.

#168

AmericanNazbro posted:

Donald: Assuming Alende's Chilé existed in a vacuum, you don't think it would have been possible for it to transition into full socialism? It would have sputtered out once reaching peak liberalism, or w/e, and revolutionary fervor would have subsided? Or are we only talking about social democracies like the Scandinavian kind (i.e. those existing within empire)?

well i don't want to sound flippant but it didn't exist in a vacuum. i mean if the capitalist totality was entirely chile then its political economy would be completely different, like, not relying on copper exports or whatever, not having a vast reserve of bourgeois power in the united states and its allies, etc. i think chile could have sustained the basics of socialism in one country but they would have had to suppress the organizing of the right and smash the bourgeois state to prevent counterrevolution.

#169
the problem with Socialists is that theyre just Too Nice
#170

getfiscal posted:

AmericanNazbro posted:

Donald: Assuming Alende's Chilé existed in a vacuum, you don't think it would have been possible for it to transition into full socialism? It would have sputtered out once reaching peak liberalism, or w/e, and revolutionary fervor would have subsided? Or are we only talking about social democracies like the Scandinavian kind (i.e. those existing within empire)?

well i don't want to sound flippant but it didn't exist in a vacuum. i mean if the capitalist totality was entirely chile then its political economy would be completely different, like, not relying on copper exports or whatever, not having a vast reserve of bourgeois power in the united states and its allies, etc. i think chile could have sustained the basics of socialism in one country but they would have had to suppress the organizing of the right and smash the bourgeois state to prevent counterrevolution.



Right. I think we agree, I was just asking for clarification really with the absurd hypothetical so no worry about being flippant.

#171
[account deactivated]
#172
we can always post news and cat gifs
#173
[account deactivated]
#174

roseweird posted:

getfiscal posted:

i try not to debate people on-line anymore but i hope you have a nice day.

i support this idea but it might get very quiet around here

a spooky posting ghost town wouldn't be all bad, especially with hallowe'en coming up.

#175
Simulwatch of 'the spook who sat by the door' on Halloween.
#176

getfiscal posted:

roseweird posted:

getfiscal posted:

i try not to debate people on-line anymore but i hope you have a nice day.

i support this idea but it might get very quiet around here

a spooky posting ghost town wouldn't be all bad, especially with hallowe'en coming up.



*floor creaks*
*you feel the air stir around you, and a voice speaks into your left ear as if someone is standing behind you*
"....Stalin..."

#177
the failure of socialism was also a failure of the cultural revolution to create New Socialist Man, due to suppression (of Constructivism, etc. for Socialist Realism) and also lack of cultural values of who that New Man would be.
#178

NoFreeWill posted:

who that New Man would be.


#179
[account deactivated]
#180
Dinald or whoever else wants to sit through 2 hours of this sexy little fat man drone on about proudhon's peyronie's disease, how to abolish the oppressive matriarchy and stigma surrounding fordyce spots

#181

AmericanNazbro posted:

But, the drive being political and cultural means the state can regress backwards into conserving capitalist modes of production if the culture or leadership changes—like that Peace of Crap MegaF*ckér Khrushchev.



in material analysis Khrushchev or any name doesn't really explain anything, as for culture we need to understand what's behind it, again in the material sense

#182
i think i read parts of the transcript of that talk. he makes similar (although briefer) points in his crisis book. i think he's half-right. he's right that if you just nationalize the banks and try to run the economy as if it's capitalism in the interest of workers that it is unstable and not a new or intermediary "socialist" mode of production. but that's not really what the soviets ever argued. they argued that there were certain tasks you could complete in order to prepare for socialism. socialism is a lower form of communism. it has holdovers from capitalism because it is an evolving system. but it's a process of class struggle.

if you seize political power you can't just start full socialist planning right away. the economy is already in motion. but you can do things like consolidating businesses in particular industries, building supply chains, ensuring the state has firm control over things like communications and transportation, etc. and at the same time you're taking those businesses out of the hands of the capitalist class, and ensuring they are being inspected and guided by revolutionaries, etc.

kliman actually clearly doesn't know what the intermediate stage would look like because he's not even sure what would happen. like in his book he says that he doesn't know how you get from current society to communism exactly because there's no feasible intermediary. he thinks the ideas just need to spread so deeply that people just start organizing things directly from production to use and abandon money. i think all the reformist and state-capitalist sort of things can and do produce positive changes, because they strip the bourgeoisie of some of their power and give workers more breathing space to organize (and, like, live their lives), and build real capacities that can be exploited for further change. like, if some left party nationalizes the banks, that doesn't create socialism in itself, but it can be a powerful weapon as part of a broader class war.
#183

daddyholes posted:

AmericanNazbro posted:

But, the drive being political and cultural means the state can regress backwards into conserving capitalist modes of production if the culture or leadership changes—like that Peace of Crap MegaF*ckér Khrushchev.

in material analysis Khrushchev or any name doesn't really explain anything, as for culture we need to understand what's behind it, again in the material sense



I know but A.) I'm lazy; B.) I think it's understood here that Khruschev instituted a bunch of reforms to reaffirm a bourgeious state apparatus, and also made a bunch of indictments against oppressing of bourgeoisie (via slandering stalin)—which did have an impact on the culture.

#184
i think that, if you were in control of the economy/government, all youd really have to do is use that control to make everyone else in power stop continually stomping out the kindling fires of Socialism before they become a raging inferno. American Capitalism is not a naturally emergent system, it is not a default state of affairs, but rather the direct, eternally-in-collapse result of massive amounts of global theft and state violence
#185
i'm coming around to thinking that the USSR was basically far too weak internationally throughout its existence to take any particularly deep economic lessons from it. the transition from stalin to khruschev seems more the beginning of a path to first worldism that really comes into full blossom with gorbachev. at some point, and you can probably mount decent arguments for a few historical moments for this, a defensive position simultaneous with trying to help revolutions in other countries collapses into a kind of beat-nato-at-their-own-game hiding-to-nothing.

note the transition in the 1980s (observed by fukuyama, lol) from actual material support for third world movements to mere "sympathy" from the ussr. i think this was idiotic mostly because their success actually depended on continual and increased independent development in the third world. they couldn't just burp out stuff about Our Common European Home and hope for the best.

i think a lot of the arguments over economic transition and restoration, as above, are sort of occulted versions of this argument regarding international position.
#186

fleights posted:

that is why models such as venezuela or bolivia are more pertinent to 21st century communism than cuba or north korea



this really only makes any sense if you are viewing it from the typical anticommunist line of 'outdated states' (an impossible thing, really, if they exist than they are not outdated). i mean cuba is absolutely a central issue to these latin american movements, provides alot of close political guidance, come on.

#187

jools posted:

i'm coming around to thinking that the USSR was basically far too weak internationally throughout its existence to take any particularly deep economic lessons from it. the transition from stalin to khruschev seems more the beginning of a path to first worldism that really comes into full blossom with gorbachev.



so, uh, what's the definition of first worldism in this case? because the USSR was a middle-income country:

GNI per capita in USSR in 1990 was equal to 2691 US dollars., ranked 86th in the world and was on par with GNI per capita in Lithuania (2802 US dollars), GNI per capita in Brazil (2719.5 US dollars), GNI per capita in Cuba (2644.4 US dollars). GNI per capita in USSR was less, than GNI per capita in the World (4214.9 US dollars) by 1523.9 US dollars.



http://kushnirs.org/macroeconomics/gni/gni_ussr.html

and then it "collapsed" (how passive. "Mistakes were made") spectacularly and was partitioned off, while entering very deep and violent political and economic crises. so i'm not exactly sure that the USSR was approaching first-world conditions, certainly not in terms of exploitation of the third world, etc.

i think a lot of these debates here are missing key statistical and historical facts and figures. like, the position of political leadership is not the same thing as the mode of production. party leadership is not the same thing as various organs of the soviet state and attendant institutions. 'state capitalism' isnt really a mode of production (unless you just mean capitalism), and

also people talk a lot about "capitalism is planned too" but we have to remember it's still fundamentally unplanned in the most important aspects, investment is not determined directly by social use, so it is still anarchic in key respects. capitalists have attempted to smooth these cycles and distortions through policy but it has never been that effective over long periods of time, especially at the level of the global market as a whole.

capitalist economies will often bring sectors into the state in order to reorganize them and redeploy them in new ways, like nationalizing the banking sector or investing in manufacturing and such, but what they can't do is bring these capitals under unified control in order to abolish the global market in labour and move away from production for exchange towards production for use.



the USSR doesn't fit this description of capitalism. so, what is capitalism? what is socialism? What's for launch

#188
i am also interested in what's for launch
#189
https://twitter.com/CorsairsLunch
#190
#191
i just realized who that is
#192
you misunderstand me crow, i think. i'm talking about in terms of foreign policy and international alignment more than anything. and saying "we can't take any particularly deep lessons" is more addressed at people worrying too much about overproduction crises or whatever else. toy train set politics is pretty useless.

and you kind of hit on that anyway with

like, the position of political leadership is not the same thing as the mode of production. party leadership is not the same thing as various organs of the soviet state and attendant institutions.



because those two things more than anything else influence this question of international alignment.

plus imo measures like GNI are crap for measuring actual welfare in socialist states just because a lot of stuff is distributed much more effectively (take ukraine - their GNI PPP/capita is higher than it ever was in the USSR, but lmao at the idea that welfare is anything near what it was).

Edited by jools ()

#193

Superabound posted:

i think that, if you were in control of the economy/government, all youd really have to do is use that control to make everyone else in power stop continually stomping out the kindling fires of Socialism before they become a raging inferno. American Capitalism is not a naturally emergent system, it is not a default state of affairs, but rather the direct, eternally-in-collapse result of massive amounts of global theft and state violence



I agree with this. Socialism has sprung up in almost every country on Earth but there has been both overt and covert suppression of it by local and foreign governments as part of a specific plan to combat and eliminate socialism and communism. The fall of the USSR and the failure of world socialism isn't just due to some philosophical defect or lack of navel gazing, it's because there is and has been an active campaign against it for almost a hundred years if you want to use the birth of Communist Russia as a yardstick.

#194
venus is still soviet
#195
battlezone was so sick
#196

Crow posted:

fleights posted:

that is why models such as venezuela or bolivia are more pertinent to 21st century communism than cuba or north korea

this really only makes any sense if you are viewing it from the typical anticommunist line of 'outdated states' (an impossible thing, really, if they exist than they are not outdated). i mean cuba is absolutely a central issue to these latin american movements, provides alot of close political guidance, come on.



reactionary states do exist, but you raise a good point, hasta siempre, comandante

#197

roseweird posted:



i played this video and my Cat frreak'd the sh'd out

#198

stegosaurus posted:

battlezone was so sick

#199

AmericanNazbro posted:

Dinald or whoever else wants to sit through 2 hours of this sexy little fat man drone on about proudhon's peyronie's disease, how to abolish the oppressive matriarchy and stigma surrounding fordyce spots



oh wow this is a body blow to communists worldwide, seriously there's no recovering from a devastating analysis like that; if you want to be a communist in good faith after 9/18/2014, you have to watch that whole video and respond in detail to every point.

#200

Barbarossa posted:

.custom249957{}Superabound posted:i think that, if you were in control of the economy/government, all youd really have to do is use that control to make everyone else in power stop continually stomping out the kindling fires of Socialism before they become a raging inferno. American Capitalism is not a naturally emergent system, it is not a default state of affairs, but rather the direct, eternally-in-collapse result of massive amounts of global theft and state violence

I agree with this. Socialism has sprung up in almost every country on Earth but there has been both overt and covert suppression of it by local and foreign governments as part of a specific plan to combat and eliminate socialism and communism. The fall of the USSR and the failure of world socialism isn't just due to some philosophical defect or lack of navel gazing, it's because there is and has been an active campaign against it for almost a hundred years if you want to use the birth of Communist Russia as a yardstick.


well perhaps the fact that it was successfully suppressed implies a philosophical, economic, or cultural defect in it's program. if it was superior it would win...