That still looks like Stalin and Mao rationalizing away the impossibility of their stated goals.
Joel Send a noteboard - 11/10/2011 05:59:06 AM
Your statements about Stalin are conveniently ignoring that Stalin was not the leader of the revolution, only its butcher. You should not for one moment believe that Stalin was not committed to socialist revolution. If he were only interested in power, he would not have needed to finish off NEP and plunge the country into turmoil. It would have been safer to continue the policies put into place when the true revolutionaries saw that things weren't working like they had hoped.
Except that the sincere revolutionaries were not interested in (actually quite hostile to) any one man holding absolute power rather than it being distributed between soviets at various levels. They did not revolt against the Tsar and fight a civil war simply to install a different Tsar (though that result may have been inevitable in Russia, at least at the time.) That made even those not actively competing with Stalin for power a threat to be eliminated if they had the ABILITY to compete. Otherwise Stalin could and probably would have gone the way of Khrushchev sooner rather than later. Stalin had not only to seize but to consolidate his power, and aggressively did just that, reducing giants of the revolution, like Trotsky, to dissident expatriates awaiting an assassins bullet.
Instead, Stalin consigned millions of peasants to a torturous death so that he could industrialize the nation in keeping with Marxist dogma about the development of communism on the base of a highly developed industrial nation. Urban workers were time and again given preference over the "counterrevolutionary" peasants. They were trusted (given internal passports that let them move around the country) and it was from this industrial worker base that the Party tried to draw most of its recruits.
Yes, but thereby hangs the tale: It is one thing to argue conditions necessitate ones policies, but quite another to recognize the absence of and therefore attempt to create those conditions to legitimize the policies. That is just a naked coup seeking validation through propaganda (a time honored tactic for dictators of every stripe.)
Stalin was a socialist. Being a socialist and at the same time being paranoid to the point of bloodthirsty murder are not only not mutually exclusive, but actually quite common.
Stalin was a Stalinist, which he marketed by defining it as "socialism;" in that, as in so much else, he was identical to Hitler, but the rhetoric of neither makes them socialists. Just as communisms collective dictatorship implicitly requires a state in fact if not name, autocrats like Stalin and Hitler violate the basic collectivist premises of communism and socialism. I accept Mussolinis definition of fascism as the marriage of state and corporate power, and Stalins rule resembles that more than Marxism (though Premier Stalin was no more willing to sacrifice himself for "the proletariat" than il Duce was for Italy.) To be fair, communism could be argued on that basis to be essentially "democratic fascism" (since democracy has no INHERENT respect for individual rights, else Cleisthenes would never have been ostracized out of little more than jealousy,) but autocracies like Stalins fall outside that definition as well: A sham election remains only a sham, and a "collective" entirely controlled by a single man is in no sense Marxist.
Mao was not a traditional Marxist. There is a reason that "Maoism" is considered a separate doctrine from Marxism-Leninism, even though Mao claimed to follow the latter. It is because Mao tried the orthodox Marxist path to power and was quickly crushed by Chiang Kai-Shek because there was no industrial base in China. He switched to a model that saw the peasants as the force for revolution and was successful. However, despite some terrible campaigns designed to bring industry to the peasantry, like the misnamed Great Leap Forward, Mao remained a peasant-oriented dictator and continued along that path.
Drop the "traditional" from that first sentence and I agree with it. Switching to a model that empowers peasant rather than industrial masses is hardly communism; Jefferson adopted that model for the US (while encouraging and even subsidizing technical and industrial development) but was no communist. Russias industrial base in 1917 was little more developed than Chinas (they still fielded mounted cavalry as late as WWII, after all) but Stalin and Mao saw the same route to power in both: Seduce the masses with the twin allures of collectivism and industrial prosperity. Of course, Mao faced an obstacle Lenin did not: The West knew too well communist revolution could gain popular support even in countries with a stunted industrial base, and was not preoccupied with a global war, so it made far greater efforts to support Chiang than it had to support the Romanovs. Only in the wake of another global war that left the Allies as exhausted and demoralized as the first could Mao expel Chiang. Whether Russian serfs or Chinese peasants, however, the revolutions that succeeded via empty promises to the largely unindustrialized masses can hardly be called "communist," and subsequent failed attempts to create industrialization and thereby make communism relevant do not change that.
But that's not where you stop being wrong. The point is that both Lenin (and, after him, Stalin) and Mao realized that the conditions which Marx set out for communist revolution did not exist in their respective countries. Lenin tried to argue that Russia was "close enough" by writing an entire thick book (wholly unreadable) titled The Development of Capitalism in Russia (Развитие Капитализма в России). Stalin followed this path and developed (by stealing the Bukharin platform) "communism in an individual state" without formally renouncing world revolution. Mao essentially argued that China was a special case because the peasantry had been so oppressed by their landlords that they were China's equivalent of a proletariat. All of these leaders recognized that criticism could be made of their doctrines and all responded in an informed way.
Neither of them was anything like a true political scientist or economist, so it is hard to be sure if they did not know or simply did not care communism was a non sequitur in their native lands.
Neither Stalin nor Mao remotely resembled professional scholars, so they might genuinely have believed their own rhetoric (though I doubt it; neither of them was an idiot whatever their backgrounds) but more likely merely recognized, as Lenin did, their respective countries' incompatibility with Marxism and attempted to rationalize it out of existence. It was a good try, and their supporters and critics alike were well served by conceding the point, but it remains an invalid point irrespective of who benefits from saying otherwise. It is analogous to Christian and Muslim zealots insisting violent jihad is intrinsic to Islam, ignoring the hundred of millions of Muslims who reject it as categorically as hundreds of millions of Jews reject stoning blasphemers: Fanatics on both sides believing and encouraging belief in falsehood for the sake of self-serving propaganda does not make it any less false.
Not only that, but history's verdict DOES invalidate communism. Each experiment in socialism that approached communism killed more and more people the closer it got. Pol Pot probably came closer than anyone else to implementing full communism in a nation-state, and ended up killing 25% of the population to do so. The scale of murder undertaken was so colossal that many Cambodians of younger generations can't even believe it. We don't need to see an actual full communist state attempted to know that it won't work, and history helps us to prove this. Each time a socialist country has tried to approach communism in one way or another, the result is mass murder, famine and turmoil. So yes, history DOES pronounce a verdict on communism.
That "communist" states are invariably discussed in terms of a single leader ought to be enough to invalidate them as communist or even generally Marxist. I agree we need not see communism in practice to know it cannot succeed, but because of common sense and human nature, not because individual dictators cloaking personal tyranny in the dictatorship of the proletariat failed. The latter is only relevant to the extent that the same vices exist within both collectives and individuals, and thus, while competing selfish interests can mitigate them in collectives, no power on Earth can eliminate them.
We might also have a discussion about whether communism fails because of "human weaknesses" or because of "human strengths", but that is a relative argument and I wanted to stick to points which you made that can be rebutted factually.
That is surely debate enough for one subthread; we can discuss whether the profit motive is compatible with the Golden Rule, love of money with the "greatest commandment, and the second... like it," another time.
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Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
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LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
This message last edited by Joel on 11/10/2011 at 06:07:42 AM
Is communism the true economy of democracies?
10/10/2011 01:35:24 AM
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Sorry, not following this.....
10/10/2011 03:33:11 AM
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Um, a LOT of places have mixed "free" market and state rule.
10/10/2011 05:43:49 AM
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WTF? Canada, Western Europe, and Japan are democracies, not state-rule like China - *NM*
10/10/2011 05:53:17 PM
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They are not similar.
10/10/2011 04:01:59 AM
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That's why Lenin came up with the soviets, though that was pretty naïve, too.
10/10/2011 05:54:37 AM
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Lenin died in 1924. The Civil War was over in 1920. He died after several strokes. *NM*
10/10/2011 05:30:58 PM
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Sorry, did not realize he survived it that long.
11/10/2011 04:21:05 AM
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There is no evidence that Lenin was poisoned.
11/10/2011 04:50:28 AM
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That is hardly the only way to kill; in Lenins condition, neglect would have sufficed.
11/10/2011 06:28:31 AM
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Let's see...you're asking if property theft by the state is compatible with freedom? No.
10/10/2011 04:58:14 AM
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I'm curious how you distinguish "full socialism" from "full communism."
10/10/2011 05:32:53 AM
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You obviously don't understand the definitions of socialism and communism.
10/10/2011 02:41:39 PM
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In theory, but economics is not politics, making social contracts a bit more dubious.
10/10/2011 05:18:39 AM
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No. A thousand times no.
10/10/2011 07:46:22 AM
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Guess I count myself among those fools, though I pretty much agree with Danny.
10/10/2011 10:52:11 AM
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I don't usually answer your scattershot rants, Joel, but you have overextended yourself.
10/10/2011 05:28:07 PM
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That still looks like Stalin and Mao rationalizing away the impossibility of their stated goals.
11/10/2011 05:59:06 AM
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No time to today, but you're very wrong.
11/10/2011 02:32:38 PM
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OK.
11/10/2011 03:08:17 PM
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Nope, because free-market democracy totally permits communism already
12/10/2011 12:50:36 AM
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