Yes it was insignificant as an overall influence, when compared to ICP membership, political and military teaching within that organisation, or with the Vietnamese-created and guided Khmer People's Revolutionary Party (which was renamed the CPK in 1966). And several leading cadre, while being ICP members had never been to France, let alone joined a marginal cell connected to the PCF, a cell that was overshadowed in importance by the Vietnamese anti-imperialist radicals then in the French capital. A few leading CPK cadre, while in France, never joined the PCF either. And all this, according to Ben Kiernan in his seminal study How Pol Pot Came to Power. According to David Chandler in his Brother Number One: A Political Biography of Pol Pot. According to Thomas Engelbert and Christopher E. Goscha in Falling Out of Touch: A Study on Vietnamese Communist Policy Towards an Emerging Cambodian Communist Movement, 1930-1975. And, according to Steve Heder in his Cambodian Communism and the Vietnamese Model Volume. 1: Imitation and Independence, 1930-1975.
If I recall, it was you who got the hump, because I pointed out that it was the sources you cited which contradicted your position on the subject.
They were never primitivists, with or without adjectives. This is quite clear to those who have studied the subject. As for 'actions' in using a Stalin-Mao political overlay (revolution from above and great leap respectively) speaking for 'themselves,' then full-steam ahead with primitive (note: don't get confused here) capital accumulation for an investment surplus, in order to kick-start country-wide industrialisation, however unrealistic in the circumstances, is definitely not 'primitivist.'
Of course I can back it up, and will use my sources to beat you over the head with later on if you wish, but we've already been there before. So, anyway, what you're saying is that the intention of the CPK was not to create a fully-functioning industrialised country within twenty or thirty years?
Their policies were doomed, yes, but the problem here is that you seem to be confused as to just what their policies were. I would also advise you not to wrench other 'lessons' in history from their specific historical contexts.
I don't take a shitty attitude to people who 'dare' to tackle the subject. I dare say, though, that hastily googling articles and posting up videos without really knowing much about the content of such, nor the sources, isn't tackling the subject. Also, in response to your pathetic dig, I think you should stick to your metaphysics, and I'll deal with history.


As I recall you ended up being contradicted by your own cited sources, but never mind- small things for small minds.

