View Full Version : Was the Soviet Union a fascist state?
Short&Direct
14th February 2014, 02:13
When we get down to it the Soviet Union always had in a certain way a dictatorship governing over the people. The people had little to no say in this type of government. I also found this definition that defines fascism similarly to Leninism and Stalinism:
"Fascists sought to unify their nation through a totalitarian state that promoted the mass mobilization of the national community[5][6] and were characterized by having a vanguard party that initiated a revolutionary political movement aiming to reorganize the nation along principles according to fascist ideology.[7] Hostile to liberal democracy, socialism, and communism, fascist movements shared certain common features, including the veneration of the state, a devotion to a strong leader, and an emphasis on ultranationalism and militarism. Fascism views political violence, war, and imperialism as a means to achieve national rejuvenation[5][8][9][10] and asserts that stronger nations have the right to expand their territory by displacing weaker nations"
Illegalitarian
14th February 2014, 07:03
Absolutely not.
Fascism is an ideology with its own economic, political and social principles that in no way mirror those of the USSR during any of its periods.
Just because fascist states were authoritarian and so were many communist-ran states doesn't mean communist-ran states were fascist.
This idea, I believe, either came from Trots or one of the bourgeois academics that cashed in by bashing various socialist-led nations, the term and idea of "red fascism"
Red fascism is not a thing. It's an invention.
Bala Perdida
14th February 2014, 07:31
I can see the similarities, but the ideas held by the USSR and ideas held by Italy or Germany is what sets them apart. The USSR also ultimately ended the reign of fascism, which puts them at odds.
Fascism actually took from socialism most of it's tactics for national unity, that's why fascists back then would call themselves socialists. Socialists still call for international unity, while fascism seeks the domination of a state. That alone makes them polar opposites.
When you look at it, Stalin did have satellite nations, did impose a dictatorship, did treat Russians better than other groups, and may have been nationalistic at times. Also his socialism in one country doesn't help his case, but the idea he preached and the fact that he wasn't an imperialist keep him away from fascism.
Ultimately, the USSR wasn't anywhere near socialism or communism and they knew it. They did not claim to be Communist. Fascist states on the other hand, did claim to be near their goal. As it appears they came dangerously close to their goal.
However, if a different state did what the USSR did without upholding communism we would probably be labeling them fascist for the resemblance, but it would still lack the important imperialist and nationalist elements.
Alexios
14th February 2014, 15:52
Fascism actually took from socialism most of it's tactics for national unity, that's why fascists back then would call themselves socialists.
You're thinking of Nazism, not fascism. Mussolini never claimed to be promoting socialism of any type.
Igor
14th February 2014, 15:58
Mussolini never claimed to be promoting socialism of any type.never might be a bad choice of words considering mussolini was a leading figure among italian marxists pre-ww1
Celtic_0ne
14th February 2014, 16:12
I can see the similarities, but the ideas held by the USSR and ideas held by Italy or Germany is what sets them apart. The USSR also ultimately ended the reign of fascism, which puts them at odds.
Fascism actually took from socialism most of it's tactics for national unity, that's why fascists back then would call themselves socialists. Socialists still call for international unity, while fascism seeks the domination of a state. That alone makes them polar opposites.
When you look at it, Stalin did have satellite nations, did impose a dictatorship, did treat Russians better than other groups, and may have been nationalistic at times. Also his socialism in one country doesn't help his case, but the idea he preached and the fact that he wasn't an imperialist keep him away from fascism.
Ultimately, the USSR wasn't anywhere near socialism or communism and they knew it. They did not claim to be Communist. Fascist states on the other hand, did claim to be near their goal. As it appears they came dangerously close to their goal.
However, if a different state did what the USSR did without upholding communism we would probably be labeling them fascist for the resemblance, but it would still lack the important imperialist and nationalist elements.
I view the destruction of the fascist dictatorships merely as competition between nations and Stalinist Russia needed to come out on top just like any corporation.
Skyhilist
14th February 2014, 16:14
The SU definitely wasn't fascist. The fascist movement has specific goals and tendencies - anything that is authoritarian can therefore not automatically be labelled as "fascism".
Trap Queen Voxxy
14th February 2014, 16:30
If by Fascist you mean Communist and if by Communist you mean apparatchik fuckery. Then yes, totally.
Dialectical Wizard
14th February 2014, 16:45
When we get down to it the Soviet Union always had in a certain way a dictatorship governing over the people. The people had little to no say in this type of government. I also found this definition that defines fascism similarly to Leninism and Stalinism:
"Fascists sought to unify their nation through a totalitarian state that promoted the mass mobilization of the national community[5][6] and were characterized by having a vanguard party that initiated a revolutionary political movement aiming to reorganize the nation along principles according to fascist ideology.[7] Hostile to liberal democracy, socialism, and communism, fascist movements shared certain common features, including the veneration of the state, a devotion to a strong leader, and an emphasis on ultranationalism and militarism. Fascism views political violence, war, and imperialism as a means to achieve national rejuvenation[5][8][9][10] and asserts that stronger nations have the right to expand their territory by displacing weaker nations"
The Soviet Union started as an emancipatory project but ended in a complete nightmare. Although Stalinism and fascism might share some similarities they are definitely two different ideologies. I would categorize the Soviet Union as bureaucratic collectivism.
tachosomoza
14th February 2014, 17:28
Authoritarian, yes. Divergent, yes. Corrupt bureaucracy, yes. Fascist, absolutely not. If anything, it was anti-fascist, having lost a large chunk of its population in a war against fascists from Germany and all.
Alexios
14th February 2014, 17:54
never might be a bad choice of words considering mussolini was a leading figure among italian marxists pre-ww1
I was referring to his doctrine of fascism.
RedCornFlakes
14th February 2014, 18:44
Fascism is a radical authoritarian nationalist political ideology. Fascists seek to unify their nation based on commitment to an organic national communitywhere its individuals are united together as one people through national identity. The unity of the nation is to be based upon suprapersonal connections of ancestry and culture through a totalitarian state that seeks the mass mobilization of the national community through discipline, indoctrination, physical training, and eugenics. Fascism seeks to eradicate perceived foreign influences that are deemed to be causing degeneration of the nation or of not fitting into the national culture.
-Portal: Fascism, Wikipedia
Radical Authoritarianism
USSR: Hell yes
Radical Nationalism
USSR: Hell yes
"National Unification based on commitment to an organic national community"
USSR: Yes, in the form of socialism and economic collectivism. Of course communism an internationalist ideology, and likewise, the USSR countries collaborated amongst each other, as well as with other "communist" powers.
Totalitarian State
USSR: Widely considered one of the first totalitarian states formed.
Mass mobilization of the national community through discipline, indoctrination, physical training, and eugenics.
-Look no further than the USSR.
Eradicate perceived foreign influences that are deemed to be causing degeneration of the nation or of not fitting into the national culture
USSR: The Cheka and the NKVD made no hesitation to purge and demonize political opponents of the Soviet government. Of course this was from more than ideological standpoint, not necessarily a cultural one.
Was it fascist? No, but definitely close.
Sperm-Doll Setsuna
14th February 2014, 20:00
I was referring to his doctrine of fascism.
Giovanni Gentile was the real author of that document (though, he too was a former socialist if I remember correctly).
ArisVelouxiotis
14th February 2014, 20:30
It wasnt a fascist state.It was a bourgeios state.
Illegalitarian
14th February 2014, 23:19
I prefer the term bureaucratic collectivist state over charges of 'state capitalism', but that's not the point. Point is, it wasn't socialist, and certainly not capitalist.
There was a period during the do-nothing Kerensky government where worker's soviets did form a congress that dominated the region in practice, but how short-lived this was is not known to me exactly. I suppose we could essentially say that during this period, it was for all intents and purposes, a society controlled by the DotP that was fastly implementing socialism and doing away with the old society, but again, short lived and probably could be disputed.
Radical Authoritarianism
USSR: Hell yes
This is some sort of logical fallacy, I just don't know the name of it. "X has characteristic Y, and so does Z. Therefore, Z is X." Just because both the socialist-led state of the USSR and Fascist Germany and Italy were authoritarian does not mean that they were both one in the same.
Authoritarian is a bit of a loaded word to begin with, to make matters worse.
Radical Nationalism
USSR: Hell yes
Not overtly. There was FOR THE MOTHERLAND rhetoric here and there, but most state propaganda was very steeped in internationalism. There was no sort of exceptionalist ideology spewed forth that held Russians up on a pedestal as the best nationality of all time or any such garbage as we saw in Italy or Germany.
"National Unification based on commitment to an organic national community"
USSR: Yes, in the form of socialism and economic collectivism. Of course communism an internationalist ideology, and likewise, the USSR countries collaborated amongst each other, as well as with other "communist" powers.
Again, afraid not.
You were expected to tow party lines, but there was no "get down on one knee and say 50 "hail our soviet motherlands" before going out to work" type nonsense as was common in Fascist states. Fascism is, at its root, a class collaborationist ideology. It's about the unity and oneness of society, the state coming together with private enterprises who come together with the working class who form various councils that help manage certain sectors of the economy or society, or "corporatism". There was no such thing as this in the USSR.
Totalitarian State
USSR: Widely considered one of the first totalitarian states formed.
Well, no. Totalitarian denotes autocracy. Power in the USSR was not concentrated into the hands of one man during any period of its existence, with the party itself and even its lower level officials on a local level always holding great deals of influence.
Mass mobilization of the national community through discipline, indoctrination, physical training, and eugenics.
-Look no further than the USSR.
Ideological discipline, perhaps. Indoctrination, another cutesy loaded word, but I suppose it did exist within the USSR as it exists in every nation on earth. Physical training? Certainly there was an emphasis on healthy lifestyles, but they didn't want to make killing machines out of every last citizen, no. Eugenics? There were some sketch as fuck scientific experiments that didn't put much of an emphasis on human cost, but not literal eugenics, no.
As you point out in your last point this was ideological and nothing to do with nationality.
Again, while there could be parallels drawn, it's just not fascism.
One could much more easily make the argument that what we see in liberal bourgeois democracies today is more or less economic fascism, and to some degree social, with the emphasis on the proprietor class coming together with government, rampant national exceptionalism, etc.
bad ideas actualised by alcohol
14th February 2014, 23:23
It wasnt a fascist state.It was a bourgeios state.
Fascist states are also bourgeois states so that doesn't say much.
A Psychological Symphony
14th February 2014, 23:27
I can see the similarities, but the ideas held by the USSR and ideas held by Italy or Germany is what sets them apart. The USSR also ultimately ended the reign of fascism, which puts them at odds.
Fascism actually took from socialism most of it's tactics for national unity, that's why fascists back then would call themselves socialists. Socialists still call for international unity, while fascism seeks the domination of a state. That alone makes them polar opposites.
When you look at it, Stalin did have satellite nations, did impose a dictatorship, did treat Russians better than other groups, and may have been nationalistic at times. Also his socialism in one country doesn't help his case, but the idea he preached and the fact that he wasn't an imperialist keep him away from fascism.
Ultimately, the USSR wasn't anywhere near socialism or communism and they knew it. They did not claim to be Communist. Fascist states on the other hand, did claim to be near their goal. As it appears they came dangerously close to their goal.
However, if a different state did what the USSR did without upholding communism we would probably be labeling them fascist for the resemblance, but it would still lack the important imperialist and nationalist elements.
The soviet union wasn't imperialist? Really? REALLY?
Illegalitarian
15th February 2014, 00:17
Social Imperialism is real, yo. Ask Finland or.. almost any Eastern Euro nation.
Cambodia, too. And Vietnam.
Bala Perdida
15th February 2014, 02:43
The soviet union wasn't imperialist? Really? REALLY?
I'm not the biggest expert on the Soviet Union, but I don't remember them exploiting resources like most imperialists do. If they did they where really bad at it. They did make an effort to increase their global influence, like the foreign governments they supported and the satellite states, but I never saw that as imperialism until now. Can you elaborate for me or send me some links? This sounds very interesting.
Illegalitarian
15th February 2014, 03:28
I'm not the biggest expert on the Soviet Union, but I don't remember them exploiting resources like most imperialists do. If they did they where really bad at it. They did make an effort to increase their global influence, like the foreign governments they supported and the satellite states, but I never saw that as imperialism until now. Can you elaborate for me or send me some links? This sounds very interesting.
Ismail knows about this more, but Khrushchev really wanted to turn Albania into a food colony, calling it the "Grain Orchard of the USSR" or some such.
Economic imperialism is not the only form of Imperialism, however. The Invasion of Hungary, the war with Finland, the realpolitik behind Molotov-Ribbentrop, East Germany, etc. All just off-the-top-of-my head examples, I'm sure there are more
RedCornFlakes
15th February 2014, 06:52
Tenants of Fascism
Nationalism: Nationalism is the main foundation of fascism. The fascist view of a nation is of a single organic entity which binds people together by their ancestry and is a natural unifying force of people. Fascism seeks to solve economic, political, and social problems by achieving a millenarian national rebirth, exalting the nation or race above all else, and promoting cults of unity, strength and purity.
USSR: The Soviet Union was a "socialist" state, and thus it was a nation. But the Soviet style of unity in it's early days was based on proletarian internationalism (in it's early days) while Fascism promotes bourgeoisie nationalism. Thus communism and fascism are two sides of the same coin or polar opposites. However after awhile came the Soviet propaganda ditched the internationalist pro-diversity tone, and instead focused on Pan-Slavism (which was used to justify Soviet rule over countries like Poland).
Fascism supports a state-controlled economy that accepts a mix of private and public ownership over the means of production. Economic planning is applied to both the public and private sector in a fascist economy, and the prosperity of private enterprise depended on its acceptance of synchronizing itself with the fascist state's economic goals. It supports the profit motive.
USSR: Communism does not advocate for a mixed economy, nothing is privatized because everything is publicly owned by the community, and there is no nationalization since there is no government. The economy of the Soviet Union was based on a system of state ownership of the means of production, collective farming, industrial manufacturing and centralized administrative planning.
Action: Fascism emphasizes direct action, including supporting the legitimacy of political violence, as a core part of its politics. Fascism views violent action as a necessity in politics that fascism identifies as being an "endless struggle".
USSR: Communism views violent action as a necessity in politics that communism identifies as being a "class struggle", which in itself is kind of endless.
Lenin and the Bolsheviks did promote Left-wing chauvinism especially during the Russian Civil War, but they use words like "Soviet, Revolutionary, Red, Proletariat". Presumably since they're main enemy (The White Army) was mostly made up of and ran by Russian Nationalists.
The Soviets did promote Russian Nationalism (Reactionaries and Tsarist/White Army sympathizers were long purged by then) during World War 2, but that's because WW2 (started off) as a war of defense and national liberation from the fascist powers, and the Soviet government itself was very reluctant to introduce nationalism anyway.
Palingenesis and modernism: Fascism emphasizes both palingenesis and modernism. In particular, fascism's nationalism has been identified as having a palingenetic character. Fascism promotes the regeneration of the nation and purging it of decadence.
USSR: I'm sleepy now, but do some research for yourself. For Italy, there palingenesis was being reborn in Fascism, for Russia it was being reborn in socialism. Modernism? The Bolsheviks might have been blood-thirsty, but the Tsar regime wasn't full of angels either. Lenin and Stalin were indeed pro-rapid industrialization, and the literacy rate in Russia increased under them substantially.
Was the Soviet Union fascist? Nope, but as much as I hate to admit it, Communism and Fascism are two sides of the same coin. However, this does not make me fan of fascism, not one bit.
Illegalitarian
15th February 2014, 10:20
I'll respond to the above post tomorrow, but.. yeah, off the mark totally I'm afraid
ArisVelouxiotis
15th February 2014, 12:04
Fascist states are also bourgeois states so that doesn't say much.
It does actually.A bourgeois state isnt a fascist state just because a fascist state is a bourgeois state.
Per Levy
15th February 2014, 12:32
Was the Soviet Union fascist? Nope, but as much as I hate to admit it, Communism and Fascism are two sides of the same coin.
oh hai bolsheviksickle, back so soon? its like you didnt even gave us time to miss you. anyway, i know you're trolling and all that but fascism and communism arnt two sides of the same coin, since communism is something completly different then a bourgois ideology, you've been long enough on here to know that though.
However, this does not make me fan of fascism, not one bit.
but a fan of how diciplined, well organized and principled fascist groups like nazbols, edl, and what not are. i've seen your adoration threads about those groups.
as for the topic i just post to the work of james "Russia - A Fascist State", i havnt read it but it might be more usuable to the discussion.
http://www.marxists.org/archive/james-clr/works/1941/04/russia-fascist.htm
Rusty Shackleford
15th February 2014, 12:53
You can thank years of liberal theory and institutional education for the notion that 'totalitarianism' is an actual term to recognize things by. With that, anything but liberalism is bad.
This is honestly shocking to read. For starters' there was no such thing as the 'Soviet nation.'
Rusty Shackleford
15th February 2014, 13:11
[SIZE=3]
USSR: The Soviet Union was a "socialist" state, and thus it was a nation. But the Soviet style of unity in it's early days was based on proletarian internationalism (in it's early days) while Fascism promotes bourgeoisie nationalism. Thus communism and fascism are two sides of the same coin or polar opposites. However after awhile came the Soviet propaganda ditched the internationalist pro-diversity tone, and instead focused on Pan-Slavism (which was used to justify Soviet rule over countries like Poland).
Dat Pan-Slavism
(http://www.buzzfeed.com/marcjaysonc/29-astounding-soviet-propaganda-images-promoting-r-ffhg?sub=2926134_2308250)
Not to mention that Stalin was not even Slavic.
yeah, the fSU was chauvanistic, but no, it was not some proponent of Pan-Slavism.
USSR: Communism does not advocate for a mixed economy, nothing is privatized because everything is publicly owned by the community, and there is no nationalization since there is no government. The economy of the Soviet Union was based on a system of state ownership of the means of production, collective farming, industrial manufacturing and centralized administrative planning.
Never in the existence of the fSU was there a total socialization of ownership. You can't just wave the revolution wand and expect things to immediately fall into place.
And what is so bad about industrial manufacturing or planning shit out so things get where they need to be, and to make sure what is needed is made?
USSR: Communism views violent action as a necessity in politics that communism identifies as being a "class struggle", which in itself is kind of endless.
Lenin and the Bolsheviks did promote Left-wing chauvinism especially during the Russian Civil War, but they use words like "Soviet, Revolutionary, Red, Proletariat". Presumably since they're main enemy (The White Army) was mostly made up of and ran by Russian Nationalists.
The Soviets did promote Russian Nationalism (Reactionaries and Tsarist/White Army sympathizers were long purged by then) during World War 2, but that's because WW2 (started off) as a war of defense and national liberation from the fascist powers, and the Soviet government itself was very reluctant to introduce nationalism anyway.
What? :confused:
I mean yeah, the most developed economic regions of the fSU were in the Russian SFR, Byelorussian SFR, and Ukranian SFR, but you can blame history for why that was developed to such an extent already BEFORE the revolution.
USSR: I'm sleepy now, but do some research for yourself. For Italy, there palingenesis was being reborn in Fascism, for Russia it was being reborn in socialism. Modernism? The Bolsheviks might have been blood-thirsty, but the Tsar regime wasn't full of angels either. Lenin and Stalin were indeed pro-rapid industrialization, and the literacy rate in Russia increased under them substantially.
I'm 99.87% sure Stalin, Lenin, and Trotsky, and tens of millions of other people were not all about 'revitalizing the Russian nation.' especially when Pan-Slavism is also pretty anti-Semitic.
Was the Soviet Union fascist? Nope, but as much as I hate to admit it, Communism and Fascism are two sides of the same coin. However, this does not make me fan of fascism, not one bit.
Why are you coming off as if you are advocating fascism by being so defensive about making a critique of your own (as poor as it may be) declaring the fSU pretty much fascist?
This whole Fascism and Communism are not the same thing.
"But, Fascists and Communists (Marxist-Leninists) preside over the existence of a State and had virtually a single party! They are the same thing!" - Says the victim of modern bourgeois ideology.
theuproar
15th February 2014, 13:46
Posting for later review.
I travel to Russia a few times a year, and the perception of the Soviet state, by anecdotal accounts of those that were there, is smeared out over a spectrum. Some perceived it as fascist, whether it academically fit that definition or not.
Sent from my EVO using Tapatalk
erupt
15th February 2014, 14:17
Carl Friedrich and Zbigniew Brzezinski (Western bourgeois scholars) claimed Stalinist fSU and Nazi Germany were both "totalitarian" and were much more similar than different. They claimed that Nazi Germany was no longer a capitalist economy because, according to them, fear replaced confidence.
The totalitarian concept is idiotic in more ways than one, with the main reason, in my opinion, being that neither state was totalitarian; there were groups, businesses, etc. that retained some autonomy. Neither leader had complete control over everything.
Also, on a slightly different subject, a core tenant of fascism is having "internal enemies". Stalin had "class enemies" while Hitler had "race enemies".
I'm no fan of Stalin, but I fail to see how being authoritarian immediately makes the leader or nation "fascist".
consuming negativity
15th February 2014, 15:00
There are some posts in here that I feel understate that amount of appealing to nationalism that happened in the USSR, but...
Was the Soviet Union fascist? Nope, but as much as I hate to admit it, Communism and Fascism are two sides of the same coin. However, this does not make me fan of fascism, not one bit.
WTF? Communism and fascism are diametrically opposed ideologies. Maybe this thread should have been in the learning forum...
RedCornFlakes
15th February 2014, 15:23
There are some posts in here that I feel understate that amount of appealing to nationalism that happened in the USSR, but...
Was the Soviet Union fascist? Nope, but as much as I hate to admit it, Communism and Fascism are two sides of the same coin. However, this does not make me fan of fascism, not one bit.
WTF? Communism and fascism are diametrically opposed ideologies. Maybe this thread should have been in the learning forum...
I know, and that's what makes fascists and communists similar. In science, we have what are known as "black holes", and some theorist believe that if there is black holes which absorb matter, then there must be white holes which release matter. They're not the same, but they are polar opposites.
Fascism is opposed to communism. Fascism opposes communism's intention for international class revolution. Fascists attack communists for supporting "decadent" values, including internationalism, egalitarianism, and materialism. Fascists have commonly campaigned with anti-communist agendas.
Fascism and communism, however, have common positions in their opposition to liberalism, individualism, and parliamentarism. Fascists and communists also agree on the need for violent revolution to forge a new era. While fascism is opposed to Bolshevism, both Bolshevism and fascism promote the single-party state and the use of political party militias.
In spite of ideological differences, Fascist Italy was the first western country to recognize the Soviet Union, in 1933 Fascist Italy had signed a friendship and nonaggression treaty with the Soviet Union, and in the late 1930s both Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany supported rapproachment with the Soviet Union.
Again, there is a few similarities between fascism and communism, especially opposition to liberal capitalism. Alas, egalitarianism and internationalism are the main things that separate capitalism and fascism.
ArisVelouxiotis
15th February 2014, 15:59
I know, and that's what makes fascists and communists similar. In science, we have what are known as "black holes", and some theorist believe that if there is black holes which absorb matter, then there must be white holes which release matter. They're not the same, but they are polar opposites.
Fascism is opposed to communism. Fascism opposes communism's intention for international class revolution. Fascists attack communists for supporting "decadent" values, including internationalism, egalitarianism, and materialism. Fascists have commonly campaigned with anti-communist agendas.
Fascism and communism, however, have common positions in their opposition to liberalism, individualism, and parliamentarism. Fascists and communists also agree on the need for violent revolution to forge a new era. While fascism is opposed to Bolshevism, both Bolshevism and fascism promote the single-party state and the use of political party militias.
In spite of ideological differences, Fascist Italy was the first western country to recognize the Soviet Union, in 1933 Fascist Italy had signed a friendship and nonaggression treaty with the Soviet Union, and in the late 1930s both Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany supported rapproachment with the Soviet Union.
Again, there is a few similarities between fascism and communism, especially opposition to liberal capitalism. Alas, egalitarianism and internationalism are the main things that separate capitalism and fascism.
Are you one of those who believe in that crazy neo liberal "two extremes" theory?
Criminalize Heterosexuality
15th February 2014, 16:00
Apparently there are still people who believe Doriot's "brotherly enemies" nonsense.
In case it needs to be spelled out:
(1) Fascism opposes liberalism from the right, communism from the left;
(2) Fascists support coups and royal appointments, not the revolution;
(3) Communism has nothing to do with being a very straight, violently macho man of the dominant nationality marching under the national flag with an additional red stripe.
If you think communism is "international, egalitarian" fascism with a red flag, you've lost the thread.
robbo203
16th February 2014, 00:22
I prefer the term bureaucratic collectivist state over charges of 'state capitalism', but that's not the point. Point is, it wasn't socialist, and certainly not capitalist.
No. It was thoroughly capitalist in every important sense and above all in the generalisation of wage labour and commodity production.
Consumer goods were bought and sold, labour power was bought and sold , and capital goods were bought and sold between state enterprises and subject to legally binding contracts. Those state enterprises were compelled by law to keep profit and loss accounts and to achieve a commercial profit or be severely penalised if they did not even if they were not exactly made bankrupt if they did not - one of the few differences, perhaps, between Soviet style capitalism and Western style capitalism (although even in the West you have subsidies propping up some loss making enterprises).
As with western capitalism, the vast majority under Soviet capitalism - the working class - were alienated from the means of production - which means were collectively owned by a tiny class - the nomenklatura - not as a private individuals but as a collective class via its strangelohold on the state apparatus. In effect this tiny class owned the means of prpduction in de facto terms thruough the ultimate and decisive control it exercised over them.
After all, if you ultimately control something you own it and vice versa and in the Soviet Union it was the Red bourgeoisie , the enormously wealthy and privileged state capitalist class, who excercised ultimate control over, and hence ownership of, the means of prpoduction and in the process, systematically siphoned off part of the surplus value produced by the Russian working class to fund their own lavish lifestyles
bad ideas actualised by alcohol
16th February 2014, 15:09
It does actually.A bourgeois state isnt a fascist state just because a fascist state is a bourgeois state.
I'm not of the opinion that it was a fascist state (I personally try to stay away from over-generalisations in history). I am merely saying that stating that it was a bourgeois state (something which I disagree with though it certainly wasn't socialist) does not rule it being a fascist state out.
ArisVelouxiotis
16th February 2014, 16:03
I'm not of the opinion that it was a fascist state (I personally try to stay away from over-generalisations in history). I am merely saying that stating that it was a bourgeois state (something which I disagree with though it certainly wasn't socialist) does not rule it being a fascist state out.
Well robo pretty much explained why it could be considered a bourgeois capitalist state.I get your point though
bad ideas actualised by alcohol
16th February 2014, 17:14
Well robo pretty much explained why it could be considered a bourgeois capitalist state.I get your point though
And I take a different point of view when characterising the mode of production (and thus state-form) of the USSR. But, unfortunately, I do not have the time to explain that right now.
Ember Catching
16th February 2014, 18:20
For me, 'fascism' refers to the international offensive conducted against workers through corporatism — i.e. formal incorporation of capital and labor into the state apparatus for the ostensible national interest — in the aftermath of the defeated world revolution, which was inaugurated by the establishment of the Petrograd Soviet in 1917 and truly prorogued by the liquidation of the Shanghai Commune at the hands of Kuomintang butchers ten years and one month later. If we consider the revolutionary degeneration of the Soviet Union, promulgated by Socialism in One Country, to be representative of this tendency, then I think there is certainly some weight to the argument that it developed into an objectively fascist state. In fact, considering the drastic widening of the collaborationist franchise of bourgeois democracy to European workers in the decade after Red October; the pacification of most unions and, through their intricate ties to the various Labor and Social-Democratic parties, their perversion into tools — if not outright allies — of the bourgeois state in its hour of need during World War II; and the subsequent expansion of the use of mediation to sedate the working class and to obscure the class struggle by moving it from the shop floor to before an industrial tribunal, I don't think it is at all outlandish to suggest we live under an effective fascism today.
Altamira
16th February 2014, 20:33
Fascism had never a complete totalitarism I think, the URSS had it.
But, I think that one of the greatest differences beetwen fascism and the URSS, the mith that is always present in the fascist state. In the Italian case, the idea of a "new roman empire", a new man, and a sort of new religion (yes, the italian fascist state had good relations with the Catholic Church, anyway, with the time, the cult of "Duchismo" and admiration to Mussolini was replacing the Church).
In the National Socialist case, the mith is more present. The idea of a new aryan pure man, replaced the Church as a religion (or at least, it was going to do it).
I think this is not present in the USSR. In the fascist states, power demostrations are more common in form of military marches.
Also, all the fascist states have a "party army", the SA in Germany, and Black Shirts in Italy.
There shall be even more differences that i'm forgetin, sorry about that.
Sorry for my English, it's not my natural language so I always make a few mistakes.
Saludos desde Argentina.
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