democracy is essential but not sufficient
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What is your opinion about democracy and direct democracy.
I think it's necessary to have it to protect the right of everyone, just it's sad that the media have a so big influence on it.
democracy is essential but not sufficient
I think the issue is that democracy doesn't protect the "right of everyone" - it protects majorities (who, in practice, are not necessarily more correct or just by force of numbers).
This is particularly damaging in revolutionary organizations. A striking example comes from Solidarity Halifax's short-sighted endorsement of the NDP - a democratically made decision that was come to despite significant - though distinctly minority - internal opposition. Following the election, in which the NDP was thoroughly routed, SolHal, to put it bluntly, looked stupid. Had the diversity of positions within the organization been permitted to see light of day, perhaps they might have done better than this pathetic admission of defeat. Alas, democracy meant that (ultimately correct) minority positions were silenced.
The life we have conferred upon these objects confronts us as something hostile and alien.
Formerly Virgin Molotov Cocktail (11/10/2004 - 21/08/2013)
Its legitimacy as a political system relies on too many external factors such as the electorates' knowledge of political issues. It also reduces class conciousness by a lot; epitomised by European politics the working class no longer view politics as class politics now because they view and value this as the highest political and economic concession. Democracy is a lie, and it only perpetuates capitalism more through the illusion of the state as improving the material conditions of the working classes.
I think direct democracy is necessary to improve the world. I know it sounds naive but still![]()
Democracy is explicitly populist and only really works toward a more egalitarian end when those who vote are politically educated. In times of political backwardness democracy becomes a tool of the opportunist, the scaremonger and the used carsalesman.
So its a chicken and egg situation. Without direct democracy how do you educate the vast swathes of the public? With uneducated democracy change is always delayed and distorted. Round and round we go.
- To Vanguard or not to Vanguard, that is the question.
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Democracy is in best case a form of decision- making which is appropriate in many cases. In it's worst form however, namely modern parliamentary democracy, it's a despicable farce and the worst possible form of government.
I don´t think democracy should be elevated as a principle for revolutionaries. Our goal should be to transcend it instead.
"Give me a place to stand, and I will sit on your face."
- Trotsky in the opening speech to the third congress of the Fourth International.
I think it depends what you mean - I think directly participatory decision making is absolutely necessary. I don't think that 50%+1 rule making is necessarily any better if it is "direct".
Which isn't to say that voting on things is never useful - but I think it's a poor framework for making many if not most decisions.
Last edited by The Garbage Disposal Unit; 15th December 2014 at 23:19.
The life we have conferred upon these objects confronts us as something hostile and alien.
Formerly Virgin Molotov Cocktail (11/10/2004 - 21/08/2013)
Enlighten us, then. Should the minority have made the decision?Originally Posted by The Garbage Disposal Unit
Democracy implies the right of all to give an idea, and then the right of everyone to choose which idea. How is anyone silenced?Originally Posted by The Garbage Disposal Unit
Worse than absolute monarchy? Is this what passes as 'communist discourse' these days? It's not a literal farce. It's exactly what it promises. You directly or indirectly manage the bourgeois state.Originally Posted by Mass Grave Aesthetics
Empty phrasemongering.Originally Posted by Mass Grave Aesthetics
Well, it depends what you mean by your question. In terms of "Would the organization have been more correct if the minority had decided?" the answer is certainly yes! Of course, that's a pretty useless question, so I assume what you're actually getting at is something to the effect of, "If not by position of the majority, how should an organization take a position?"
I think there are a few answers, and not a "one size fits all" always applicable solution. One answer might be that, failing to reach consensus, it is simply better to do nothing at all. After all, if an organization of dedicated anti-capitalists united around a common project can't seem to agree to an answer, why is it out of the question to simply not take a position, especially on such a fleeting issue as a particular provincial election?
Alternatively, an organization could publish majority and minority positions, since, obviously, the disagreement wasn't sufficient to cause a parting of ways, it seems to me that presenting the reality of a diversity of opinions existing within an organization could be advantageous.
I'll stop there, but I'm sure you see my point.
Of course, it may give "everyone the right to choose which idea", but it doesn't give anyone the right to choose which idea. The distinction is important.
The life we have conferred upon these objects confronts us as something hostile and alien.
Formerly Virgin Molotov Cocktail (11/10/2004 - 21/08/2013)
I don't think meaningful democracy is possible as long as the means of production (and therefore wealth) are in the hands of a relatively small number of people, with everyone else forced to sell their labor power to live.
Essentially, I don't think we can have political democracy until we have economic democracy. Economic power precedes and dominates political power. Under capitalism, the capitalists and the rich are always going to be in the driver's seat because they can just buy off the politicians.
As usual it's necessary to mention that democracy is a tactic and not a system. Most parties, even in dictatorships, use democracy to make decisions. My feelings are about the same as TGU's, the majority view is important to try to balance it out. I don't like calling it democracy, because that word has a lot of negativity connected to it as I see it. My political view is mixed, so if I felt strongly enough against a democratic decision I would agitate against it. I guess that's the natural solution against it, although not always the best. Definitely good to use popular decision making, as inclusive as possible. Conflict, well I just can't answer that. That's usually where splits happen too.
"Maybe some day... I'll find a way... without you.."
Idealist Enlightenment idol. The Party ought to be organised in the manner of democratic centralism for rational reasons, not because of 'human freedom' or whatever.
Last edited by Mad Frankie; 17th December 2014 at 01:39.
Human freedom is a rational reason.
Democratic Socialism? You mean the Party should be organized by bourgeois reformists?
"Anarchism was [the] punishment for the opportunist sins of the working-class movement." - Lenin
"[Bakunin] understands absolutely nothing about social revolution" - Marx
"A revolution is certainly the most authoritarian thing there is." - Engels
i.imgur.com/WP9Amm6.jpg
The economy of the new society should be managed by democratic workers' councils, and major economic decisions by a congress of elected officials from the soviets.
The Party should be organized under the principle of democratic centralism during the period of the consolidation of the proletarian dictatorship, but should be slowly transformed towards something similar along the line of organic centralism when the dictatorship has been solidified and the threat of foreign invasion becomes minimal.
"Anarchism was [the] punishment for the opportunist sins of the working-class movement." - Lenin
"[Bakunin] understands absolutely nothing about social revolution" - Marx
"A revolution is certainly the most authoritarian thing there is." - Engels
i.imgur.com/WP9Amm6.jpg
A process which seeks to make those oppressed and marginalised by capitalism and it´s state responsible (if indirectly) for it's management is a farce and a distasteful one at that. Also, how is voting for a bunch of shills now and then managing the bourgeois state anyway?
What makes bourgeois democracy so intolerable is exactly how it seeks to involve those whom the system works against in it's management and making them responsible for the whole shebang.
Last edited by Mass Grave Aesthetics; 16th December 2014 at 09:33. Reason: fine tuning
"Give me a place to stand, and I will sit on your face."
- Trotsky in the opening speech to the third congress of the Fourth International.
I don't think the question can be answered in the abstract. One needs to take the class content of democracy into account. Bourgeois democracies are the most widespread form of bourgeois rule, and as such, communists should be hostile to them. (And in particular it's important to not fall into the trap of seeking a more perfect bourgeois democracy.)
Socialist democracy is important in the transitional period, but it is not the most important thing. The content is more important than form (although I don't want to go all-out-quasi-Bordigist here; the content and form are not isolated but are in a dialectical relationship and so on). If we have to violate democratic norms to preserve the revolution, so be it.
In socialism, democracy, as a form of state, is gone. It has withered away. There will probably still be voting and consultation, consensus-seeking etc., but this will be on purely technical matters relating to the administration of the production processes.
Obvious lapsus, come on, it is clear I referred to democratic centralism. The bourgeois reformist ideology of left-social democrats isn't about the internal organisation of the Party.
How so? It's an ethical principle, it's in the realm of Ideology.