Thread: Class Struggle

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  1. #1
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    I was thinking to myself what if we are in the transition to Communism already? Now hold on a second before you go crazy but think of it this way, it seems the Capitilist's have had their heydey in the industrial revolution.

    We now have our distinct class systems in western culture, the poor are steadily getting poorer and the rich, getting much richer. How much longer can they continue this system.

    If you asked a peasent maybe even 10 years before the start of the industrial revolution that within 50 years society would have changed from rural life to huge sprawling slums and citys they would have called you an idiot and a lunatic.

    Well capitilism now has started to make resecsions to the workers in the western world to subdue them and keep them in there place. A sign possibly, of the weakening of their system?

    Well if you asked some workers today of the huge transition to Communism they would call you an idiot and a lunatic. What i'm trying to say is, we could be closer to achieving our goals then we could have ever imagined. Capitilism can't support itself much longer and when it does we just have to be ready to seize power.

    The only thing that stands in our way is the army and the police, who it seems, still pledge alliance to the state. As long as they do we will find it hard to secure power, but eventualy we can defeat them.

    The main point of this is, don't lose hope, revolution could be around the corner and we should carry on preparing for it!
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  2. #2
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    Originally posted by Digital Nirvana@Jun 14 2004, 10:14 PM
    I was thinking to myself what if we are in the transition to Communism already?
    In a classical sense the transition to communism doesn&#39;t really begin until the workers are engaged in a revolution.

    Now hold on a second before you go crazy but think of it this way, it seems the Capitilist&#39;s have had their heydey in the industrial revolution.
    I think your right, but capitalism is taking on a new dimension. Corporations have seen the benifit of buying each other out and forming giant conglomorates which have their fingers in everything. Coca-Cola, Microsoft, Nike, control so much. Coca-cola own several soft drinks, if not all the top brands, they control Columbia-Tristar productions. Capitalists aren&#39;t stupid.

    If you asked a peasent maybe even 10 years before the start of the industrial revolution that within 50 years society would have changed from rural life to huge sprawling slums and citys they would have called you an idiot and a lunatic.
    Idealism is not just a fantasy. These peasents must have thought it was pure idealism to think that one day they would be able to cook food in a microwave. Now look.

    Capitilism can&#39;t support itself much longer and when it does we just have to be ready to seize power.
    There are many movements which challange capitalism on a day to day basis. Sometimes not very blatant, such as the WTO demonstrations, but in other ways like creating forums. Felicia and her comrades in Canada are challaning capitalism every day by organising their group. Capitalism is being challanged by this very conversation. The problem is that isn&#39;t going to be enough.

    The main point of this is, don&#39;t lose hope, revolution could be around the corner and we should carry on preparing for it&#33;
    I think that getting involved with different groups and movements and getting others to do the same is all we can do at the moment. Preparation can come in many different forms and there are many groups engaged in it.
  3. #3

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    Lenin, addressing students in 1916, thought that he wouldn&#39;t live to see a Bolshevik revolution in Russia. How wrong he was. However, I don&#39;t think that revolution is quite "around the corner" - not yet.


    If you asked a peasent maybe even 10 years before the start of the industrial revolution that within 50 years society would have changed from rural life to huge sprawling slums and citys they would have called you an idiot and a lunatic.
    Hmmm. Some academics might well call you "an idiot and a lunatic" for suggesting that the Industrial Revolution was a seemingly instantaneous event&#33; I&#39;ve been studying it this term. It transpires, in true Marxist fashion, that the event was the product of underlying socio-economic change - over a period of centuries. Urbanisation itself was gradual...


    The only thing that stands in our way is the army and the police, who it seems, still pledge alliance to the state. As long as they do we will find it hard to secure power, but eventualy we can defeat them.
    But even the army; even the police - they are workers. When they see class-consciousness developing amongst the workers, they will more than likely desert their masters; abandon the sinking ship of capitalism; join with the Proletariat and instigate a glorious revolution. :P Lenin himself initially received tremendous support from the soldiers - so let&#39;s not be too quick to portray them as enemies&#33;


    In a classical sense the transition to communism doesn&#39;t really begin until the workers are engaged in a revolution.
    In a "classical sense"? This must be incorrect. The transition has already begun - it began when Marx wrote the Manifesto of the Communist Party. Since then, co-ordinated class consciousness has been developing. And as more and more workers recognise their plight, the movement gathers strength. The revolution is the realisation of ideas that have been around for centuries; the dramatic seizure of power the last in a series of steps through history...

    The transition to Communism - it&#39;s all around us&#33; h34r:
    Peace, Love and Jesus&#33;
    <span style=\'color:red\'>Also, Lenin.</span>
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  4. #4
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    Hmmm. Some academics might well call you "an idiot and a lunatic" for suggesting that the Industrial Revolution was a seemingly instantaneous event&#33; I&#39;ve been studying it this term. It transpires, in true Marxist fashion, that the event was the product of underlying socio-economic change - over a period of centuries. Urbanisation itself was gradual...
    Did you read my post, I said over 50 years&#33; Britain was industrialized much quicker then their continental counter-parts and over a space of 50-80 years the population has shifted from heavily rural to heavily urban with cities popping up almost everywhere in the north on England.

    But even the army; even the police - they are workers. When they see class-consciousness developing amongst the workers, they will more than likely desert their masters; abandon the sinking ship of capitalism; join with the Proletariat and instigate a glorious revolution. Lenin himself initially received tremendous support from the soldiers - so let&#39;s not be too quick to portray them as enemies&#33;
    Historicaly once the army joins the revolution the revolutionaries suceed, but historicaly the army are the last class to become conscious and abandon their leaders. They often subdue many attempted revolutions before leaving the Bourgeouse.
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  5. #5
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    I was thinking to myself what if we are in the transition to Communism already?
    If such a thing is inevitable, as Marx described it, then I don&#39;t think we are, not at all.

    If anything, the last 10 years have represented a hegemony of liberal democratic values on a scale previously unforseen. Many even claim the &#39;death of ideology&#39;, as free market policies are adopted on an ever wider scale.

    Perhaps the time is merely a &#39;blip&#39; on the longer path to an eventual revolution, we will have to wait and see.

    it seems the Capitilist&#39;s have had their heydey in the industrial revolution
    Certainly the years prior to the 20th century were marked by laws favourable to the development of the bourgeois classes. However, many capitalists are having quite a &#39;heyday&#39; right now, with the expansion and development of a global market economy.


    We now have our distinct class systems in western culture, the poor are steadily getting poorer and the rich, getting much richer.
    I beg to differ.

    I agree that the poor are, by and large, "getting poorer", however I disagree that this is taking place within "Western Culture". In part due to globalisation and the collapse of the Warsaw pact terrirories, ever more, the "working class" seems to represent large populations of third world nations.

    I fundamentally disagree that our classes are "distinct" at the moment. I believe that there are a great number of poor people in Western states, yet, due to the fact that many work in tertiary industries (as opposed to manual labour) and the extensive welfare systems present in many Western (at least Western European) states, it would seem that many do not feel working class, certainly I do not see any kind of "class consciusness" right now, though this may change at some point.


    How much longer can they continue this system.
    That&#39;s a tough question.

    I&#39;m really not sure myself, I feel that Marx failed to anticipate capitalism&#39;s adaptability to changing circumstances. No other class sysytem has been able to work in such a manner.

    Again, we&#39;ll have to wait and see.


    If you asked a peasent maybe even 10 years before the start of the industrial revolution that within 50 years society would have changed from rural life to huge sprawling slums and citys they would have called you an idiot and a lunatic.
    That&#39;s a very important point, that many who dismiss outright the prospect of any revolution neglect.

    Right now, many woul claim that "communism is dead". And that "revolution is impossible".

    They may well be right, but, if anything, history shown itself to be very unpredicatable. Predictions of the future are nearly always wrong, for example, in 1912, many believed that the world was entering into a time of continual prosperity, though the most grisly war ever occured only 2 years later.


    Well capitilism now has started to make resecsions to the workers in the western world to subdue them and keep them in there place. A sign possibly, of the weakening of their system?
    I don&#39;t know about that.

    Of course capitalist nations, after the second world war especially, have extended their welfare schemes. Though if anything, it seems today that these welfare schemes are being ever more "cut back".

    The main point of this is, don&#39;t lose hope, revolution could be around the corner and we should carry on preparing for it&#33;
    Well....I&#39;d give it 62 years........ minimum.

    I certainly won&#39;t be around to see it :P .
    &quot;all the people in my books i read are men who fuck each other do drugs and kill people fuck the dead body and eat it. but dissmembering a body to make another is just as cool. &quot;- Captain anarchy

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    Referring to the Commie Club!...
    This very real limitation of the productive forces, both static and dynamic, demands at any given time the most suitable environment for it's advancement. - Gent, head of the RA...aka the People's Front of Judea

    ONTO STREET - The immortal HUQIAO
  6. #6
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    Good post Dust&#33;

    If such a thing is inevitable, as Marx described it, then I don&#39;t think we are, not at all.

    If anything, the last 10 years have represented a hegemony of liberal democratic values on a scale previously unforseen. Many even claim the &#39;death of ideology&#39;, as free market policies are adopted on an ever wider scale.

    Perhaps the time is merely a &#39;blip&#39; on the longer path to an eventual revolution, we will have to wait and see.
    The Point I was trying to make was that we can&#39;t say for sure that we aren&#39;t in this transitional peroid, capitilism had made way for huge corporations who own pretty much everything, one huge stock market crash could spell an end to them and put the western world in financial ruin like it did in &#39;29.

    Can they survive again though?

    Certainly the years prior to the 20th century were marked by laws favourable to the development of the bourgeois classes. However, many capitalists are having quite a &#39;heyday&#39; right now, with the expansion and development of a global market economy.
    But hardly anyone makes it into these capitilist classes anymore, all money is inherited now, you have rich parents you get good school, good school = good job = good money. Good money then transfers into a good education for your children.

    The cycle doesn&#39;t look it can be broken and the working classes can break out of it so what we will see is them becoming eventualy class-consious. I don&#39;t think we are far off this now&#33;

    fundamentally disagree that our classes are "distinct" at the moment. I believe that there are a great number of poor people in Western states, yet, due to the fact that many work in tertiary industries (as opposed to manual labour) and the extensive welfare systems present in many Western (at least Western European) states, it would seem that many do not feel working class, certainly I do not see any kind of "class consciusness" right now, though this may change at some point.
    I didn&#39;t say that they had become class conscious yet, simply that they were now in these classes. Most people are, in relative terms, pretty poor. Yes the welfare state makes up for this, but it just takes one spark to light a fire. Revolution it appears is inevitable we just need to wait for the moment.

    That&#39;s a tough question.

    I&#39;m really not sure myself, I feel that Marx failed to anticipate capitalism&#39;s adaptability to changing circumstances. No other class sysytem has been able to work in such a manner.

    Again, we&#39;ll have to wait and see.
    Personaly I would say this shows the huge flaw in the capitilist system, they have had to change to avoid being otherthrown, they can probably change again to avoid being overthrown. My theory was that they are moving away from their true system, like in Hungary in &#39;56 and the Prague Spring, the workers were given an inch, they tried to take a mile though.

    What i&#39;m saying is, that the workers have been given a glimmer of hope through the welfare state and the small reforms, once they become concsious they will want to move on.
    <span style=\'color:black\'>Culture sucks down words
    Itemise loathing and feed yourself smiles
    Organise your safe tribal war
    Hurt maim kill and enslave the ghetto</span>

    <span style=\'color:red\'>Life lies a slow suicide
    Orthodox dreams and symbolic myths
    From feudal serf to spender
    This wonderful world of purchase power</span>
  7. #7
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    The Point I was trying to make was that we can&#39;t say for sure that we aren&#39;t in this transitional peroid.
    Of course we can&#39;t be 100% sure that we&#39;re not in a &#39;transition&#39;, we can rarely be certain of such things. However, all of the signs at the moment seem to indicate that capitalism is thriving more now than ever before. For example, business still flourishes in the West, the global market economy is more pronounced than ever before and Capitalism has taken root in Asia (and to a lesser extent parts of Africa) quite successfully.

    The &#39;progression&#39; following the &#39;long boom&#39; (after world war two) would have seemed much more of a &#39;transition&#39; than what we&#39;re experiencing now, though that only amounted to the emergence of Neo-Liberalism and the "New Right".

    one huge stock market crash could spell an end to them and put the western world in financial ruin like it did in &#39;29.
    The point about &#39;29 is a valid one. Yet it has two major failings:

    Firstly, a potential crash is an unlikely scenario at the moment (unless you believe the emerging oil crisis to be an ominous sign). Economists today, as opposed to the 1920&#39;s are very cautious, and are able to recognise the &#39;signs&#39; of a possible depression and to rectify the situation accordingly. You could say that the capitalists have "learned their lesson" from the Wall street crash.

    Secondly if a crash similar to that of 1929 was to occur then governments would be far more effective in combating it quickly. This is partially due to the emergence of Keynesian reflationary policies which were never really considered in earnest until the 1940&#39;s.


    But hardly anyone makes it into these capitilist classes anymore, all money is inherited now, you have rich parents you get good school, good school = good job = good money. Good money then transfers into a good education for your children.
    Ordinarily I would agree with this comment entirely. Yet the word in the first line, "anymore", does not seem appropriate to me.

    I agree that, to some extent the bourgeois classes repopulate themselves, though if anything, they do so less today than ever before.

    For example, prior to the 20th century, almost all education was private, and one had to be of a certain demeanour to be considered &#39;worthy&#39; of a position in the rich classes. In short, one was &#39;born into wealth&#39;.

    In contrast, today, one can have a reasonable education for free and can, to some extent, go from "rags to riches", though this is still very unlikely.

    I agree that classes are still very static, worrylinlgy so in fact, though the extent to which this is the case is less so now than it has been previously.


    The cycle doesn&#39;t look it can be broken and the working classes can break out of it so what we will see is them becoming eventualy class-consious. I don&#39;t think we are far off this now&#33;
    I think we&#39;ve got quite a long way to go yet.

    Again, I must emphasise that in the 1920&#39;s, 30&#39;s, and to a lesser extent into the 1980&#39;s people were far more "class conscious" than they are today (or so it would seem). These years were witness to a number of classic "class conflicts", such as the British General strike of 1926, the French strike of 1968, the Spartacist uprisings in Germany 1919 and the Thatcher v Scargill confronatation of the 80&#39;s.

    Yet no substantive revolution occurred, not even close.

    If it didn&#39;t happen then, what makes you think it will happen soon?

    I didn&#39;t say that they had become class conscious yet, simply that they were now in these classes. Most people are, in relative terms, pretty poor. Yes the welfare state makes up for this, but it just takes one spark to light a fire. Revolution it appears is inevitable we just need to wait for the moment.
    I don&#39;t know about that. Classes are undoubtedly more fragmented today (at least in Britian) than ever beofore. Moreover, people in the West are generally "better off" than they were prior to the second world war.

    Certainly a revolution may be an inevitability, though only in the long term (60 or 70 years at least).

    Personaly I would say this shows the huge flaw in the capitilist system, they have had to change to avoid being otherthrown, they can probably change again to avoid being overthrown.
    That&#39;s exactly my point.

    What i&#39;m saying is, that the workers have been given a glimmer of hope through the welfare state and the small reforms, once they become concsious they will want to move on.
    Unlikely.

    All of the evidence we have suggests that welfare schemes &#39;pacify&#39; workers, rather than make them more annoyed.

    For example, after the German &#39;revolutions&#39; of 1918, the majority of workers were more than willing to support social-democracy, and, in many cases, actually opposed the Communists led by such figures as Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht.
    &quot;all the people in my books i read are men who fuck each other do drugs and kill people fuck the dead body and eat it. but dissmembering a body to make another is just as cool. &quot;- Captain anarchy

    I ate capt. Anarchy, as he stole my thunder! No longer will you hear some bizarre rambling coming from the self assigned Captain of utter non-sense
    - T_SP......because he's worth it.


    Referring to the Commie Club!...
    This very real limitation of the productive forces, both static and dynamic, demands at any given time the most suitable environment for it's advancement. - Gent, head of the RA...aka the People's Front of Judea

    ONTO STREET - The immortal HUQIAO
  8. #8

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    But hardly anyone makes it into these capitilist classes anymore, all money is inherited now, you have rich parents you get good school, good school = good job = good money. Good money then transfers into a good education for your children.

    The cycle doesn&#39;t look it can be broken and the working classes can break out of it so what we will see is them becoming eventualy class-consious. I don&#39;t think we are far off this now&#33;
    I&#39;m not so sure. My parents are fairly well off. But I went to the local primary school, like any normal child. I took the 11+. And I "made it" into a grammar school which just so happened to be one of the top "state schools" in the country. This was not because my parents had the money to pay for it - my school, quite rightly, was free. Nor was it because I&#39;d had a privileged background; like I said, I went to a normal primary school. And there were many students from "deprived" backgrounds - all you had to do to "get in" was pass a simple test. There ARE opportunities, but these are limited.


    ersonaly I would say this shows the huge flaw in the capitilist system, they have had to change to avoid being otherthrown, they can probably change again to avoid being overthrown.
    Nothing can remain static forever. Marx believed so himself. (Dialectics...) If anything, I think the ability of the capitalist system to adapt proves its strength. If things had not changed after the early years of organised capital - the notorious factories, for example, when workers toiled for 16 hours a day - revolution would have occured long, long ago.


    I agree that classes are still very static, worrylinlgy so in fact, though the extent to which this is the case is less so now than it has been previously.
    That class is static, from a Communist point of view, is wonderful news. If there were true and observable class mobility inherent in the system in which we lived, dreams and aspirations would flourish. Competition between members of the working classes would increase; unified action against big business would be nigh-on impossible to co-ordinate. It is precisely because "upward-social-mobility" is so rare that "we" stand a chance.


    Again, I must emphasise that in the 1920&#39;s, 30&#39;s, and to a lesser extent into the 1980&#39;s people were far more "class conscious" than they are today (or so it would seem). These years were witness to a number of classic "class conflicts", such as the British General strike of 1926, the French strike of 1968, the Spartacist uprisings in Germany 1919 and the Thatcher v Scargill confronatation of the 80&#39;s.
    Hmmm. You seem to suggest that the West is the only important area in the world, comrade&#33; True, workers uprisings in "the West" have been relatively limited. But, in my opinion, this is because "the workers" are now largely situated abroad. Of course exploitation remains rife in Britain. However, it is not on the same scale as in Latin America - people in the UK, in general, AREN&#39;T badly off. Now look at Argentina, Ecuador or Venezuala; the "revolution" is taking off and class-consciousness devloping THERE.

    We have quite a way to go. But let us not underestimate our strength either&#33; h34r:
    Peace, Love and Jesus&#33;
    <span style=\'color:red\'>Also, Lenin.</span>
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    Standing on a hill in my mountain of dreams,
    Telling myself it&#39;s not as hard, hard, hard as it seems.&quot;
    (Led Zeppelin&#33</span>
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    Buy Leninade and get &quot;Hammered and Sickled&quot;&#33;
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    Hmmm. You seem to suggest that the West is the only important area in the world, comrade&#33;
    That&#39;s not the point I was making at all.

    I merely pointing out to DN that "revolutionary situations" (such as the ones I listed) rarely lead to actual revolutions. Thus the prospect of any revolution being "around the corner" in our current situation seems somewhat far-fetched.

    That I used Western examples is merely incidental. It&#39;s a fact that for the majority of the 20th century the urbanised working classes resided in the West, if only because the West was the only urbanised place there was.

    True, workers uprisings in "the West" have been relatively limited. But, in my opinion, this is because "the workers" are now largely situated abroad.
    I agree as I made the point earlier, though I do not see how the fact that uprisings in the west failed in the past is a result of workers being abroad today. Please explain.

    Of course exploitation remains rife in Britain. However, it is not on the same scale as in Latin America - people in the UK, in general, AREN&#39;T badly off.
    To a considerable extent, I agree.

    the "revolution" is taking off and class-consciousness devloping THERE.
    Arguably yes.

    Though I&#39;ve yet to see any substantive uprisings in the developing world which are comparable to those we saw in the West in the Early 20th century.
    &quot;all the people in my books i read are men who fuck each other do drugs and kill people fuck the dead body and eat it. but dissmembering a body to make another is just as cool. &quot;- Captain anarchy

    I ate capt. Anarchy, as he stole my thunder! No longer will you hear some bizarre rambling coming from the self assigned Captain of utter non-sense
    - T_SP......because he's worth it.


    Referring to the Commie Club!...
    This very real limitation of the productive forces, both static and dynamic, demands at any given time the most suitable environment for it's advancement. - Gent, head of the RA...aka the People's Front of Judea

    ONTO STREET - The immortal HUQIAO
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    Damn Digital, That was a great point, and it made my day. Thank you.
    You tell Moses to make bricks without straw,
    Now he tells you to make cities without bricks!
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    cheers darling, anytime

    That&#39;s not the point I was making at all.

    I merely pointing out to DN that "revolutionary situations" (such as the ones I listed) rarely lead to actual revolutions. Thus the prospect of any revolution being "around the corner" in our current situation seems somewhat far-fetched.

    That I used Western examples is merely incidental. It&#39;s a fact that for the majority of the 20th century the urbanised working classes resided in the West, if only because the West was the only urbanised place there was.
    If you remember Marx said the world progessed in this order;

    Fuedalism -> Capitilism -> Socialism -> Communism

    And it was an historic inevitability(sp?) to progress from each stage to the next. Now revolution in country&#39;s such as China and Russia failed on account of trying to skip the capitilist stage.

    China and Russia were hugely backwards in many respects and hadn&#39;t the infa-structure to support a Socialist revolution, especialy in the horrible climate of Russia and having lost some of it&#39;s best farm land and huge ammounts of her raw materials to Germany in the treaty of Brest-Litovsk at the end of the war.

    Also with 84% of it&#39;s citizens as peasentry still running under a basic fuedilist system it was in no place to have a revolution of a Socialist nature.

    We in the west have progressed to Capitilism and you could argue both ways that Capitilist society is fizziling out and can&#39;t last much longer or it is on the rise and we haven&#39;t seen even half of the destruction it is capable but&#33;

    We can&#39;t predict what will happen tomorow, least of all what short term causes will effect the struggle over the next decade or so. I was saying we have some of the basic material conditions for revolution and we are progressing steadily nearer to the day, we just require that extra push.

    Now the point about us not being exploited as much as say Latin America or Africa is interesting, I never said we had it bad, cos we have it good compared to some people. What do have is the infar-structure for a revolution to succeed and from that to spread to continental Europe. (note I was mainly reffering to the UK in my post)

    After the frenc revolution it had the whole of every ruling class in Europe shooken, they were worried that this revolutionary mindset would spread to their countrys and threaten them as well. This is what I see happening and what Truman (I think) first reffering to as the Communist Dominoe Effect.

    Don&#39;t lose hope, I was simply stating the optimism I have for our movement. We need to be ready because the revolution could happen at any time.
    <span style=\'color:black\'>Culture sucks down words
    Itemise loathing and feed yourself smiles
    Organise your safe tribal war
    Hurt maim kill and enslave the ghetto</span>

    <span style=\'color:red\'>Life lies a slow suicide
    Orthodox dreams and symbolic myths
    From feudal serf to spender
    This wonderful world of purchase power</span>
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    i believe we are DN,

    i believe we are far from achieving the GOAL but more and more people are becoming socially aware, look at the gay rights movenment in the last 10 years, and the animals rights *shudders* and the anti war marches this whole place is evolving slowly so in a sense yes the revolution has begun it began when marx manifested the communist manefesto,

    society is still too materialistic to handle full revolution Capitalism still has a firm grip on the world Else Tony Blair wouldn&#39;t have gone to war against the will of the public
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    Originally posted by Digital Nirvana@Jun 19 2004, 05:33 PM
    If you remember Marx said the world progessed in this order;

    Fuedalism -> Capitilism -> Socialism -> Communism
    Marx was wrong.

    And it was an historic inevitability(sp?) to progress from each stage to the next.
    Socialism is the flaw. It has been proven over and over that this "tranisitional" stage can never become anything else. There can never be a progression from socialism to communism.

    Had Marx lived through the catastrophies of Russia, China, Vietnam and Cuba he would have seriously reconsidered his position. I believe the state was Marx achilies heel. Bakunin pointed out very aptly that Marx came from a country where the state was something to be admired and worshipped. He was a Young Hegelian for one, and although he appears to reject Hegel in some areas, he continued to share Hegels lust for the state.

    I think also that the period of time Marx was alive, the state seemed extremly logical, and although the Bakuninists attempted to identify the real nature of it, the Marxists rejected that analysis. Even now, when it is clear that Bakunins predictions were right, the Marxists fail to see what that real nature is. It cannot wither away. The very being of the state renders that ideal impossible. Marx would have, begrudgingly i&#39;m sure, have said the same, had he lived through the twentieth century.
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    well if somes think it is getting better i do have doubt about it
    if i look to proletariat as it is in europa it&#39;s only a bunch of people who will only fight fortheir petty portemonnaie.they won&#39;t do anything to help others (and surely spit on you if you ask something,treating you as parasites).the (almost)only proletarian people in europa are imigrated people from other parts of the 3rd world seeking a better life here.but they are now chase away and seen as potential danger.
    marx was wrong no doubt of it ,but the reaction is strong now ,dividing people in a lot of ways(politics religious,and economics).we are living in dangerous times .and how i see it nobody and no ideas will never do it,like it is.realizing yourself understanding and respect could give us a chance but for it .we have to begin from scratch.........
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    I guess we will have to agree to disagree Joe, we can&#39;t just go straight from Capitilism to Communism, that would require a world wide revolution all at the same time. There would be somekind of war and we&#39;d wouldn&#39;t be assured victory.

    We might not even be able to control more then one country in our next revolution and what do we implement then? Complete self suffiecency over a very short period of time? Because that is the only choice I can see.

    We would have millions of people to feed and care for whilst still securing the revolution. England doesn&#39;t have the means nessescary to become self sufficient for the large number of people living here. We are over crowded and haven&#39;t got to much land ideal for farming. If there was a trade blockade we would be fucked.

    So a Socialist transitionary phase were we have control and are not rushed so quickly into handing all power over we can make descisions to secure the revolution so the people we would ultimatly fighting for aren&#39;t left fighting for their lives against famine, you&#39;re trying to run before you can walk and it won&#39;t work, you&#39;ll just fall flat on your face.
    <span style=\'color:black\'>Culture sucks down words
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    Originally posted by Digital Nirvana@Jun 19 2004, 08:38 PM
    we can&#39;t just go straight from Capitilism to Communis,
    I agree.

    that would require a world wide revolution all at the same time.
    A revolution of this kind will most likely have a knock on effect in the western world. Unless it is an opportunist revolution, in which case we&#39;ll get Stalin or some such all over again.

    We would have millions of people to feed and care for whilst still securing the revolution.
    And the state is an efficient way to deal with that problem, but it will not lead to communism. There are other ways of organising this transitional period. The state will not wither away.

    If there was a trade blockade we would be fucked.
    Regardless of whether there was a state or not.

    So a Socialist transitionary phase were we have control and are not rushed so quickly into handing all power over we can make descisions to secure the revolution so the people we would ultimatly fighting for aren&#39;t left fighting for their lives against famine, you&#39;re trying to run before you can walk and it won&#39;t work, you&#39;ll just fall flat on your face.
    The state cannot wither away. No matter how much you want it to. The very point of a state is to perpetuate itself. In order to secure this revolution the way you envisage it will lead you to have to increase the state and decrease workers power. how can you increase the state while decreasing it at the same time? How can you decrease workers power while attempting to increase it? The state contradicts the purpose of the revolution. The state, by its very being, is designed to defend itself. That&#39;s the nature of the state.

    Imagine trying to clean your clothes with dirt...It&#39;s the same as trying to create communism with a state.
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    A revolution of thids kind will most likely have a knock on effect in the western world. Unless it is an opportunist revolution, in which case we&#39;ll get Stalin or some such all over again.
    But it is the very nature of the revolution to be oppurtunist?

    We have to take advantage of others (the ruling classes) mistakes for our own gain to make progress. Would you class this as opportunist?

    The inherent flaws in the Capitilist system will eventualy destroy it, I&#39;m sure we can both agree on that, so we should simply take all opportunitys to speed the process up? Should we not present the mistakes of Capitilism in order to highlight it&#39;s failings?

    And the state is an efficient way to deal with that problem, but it will not lead to communism. There are other ways of organising this transitional period. The state will not wither away.
    Suggest one mon Ami?

    And if there is a trade blockade we will need some kind of order, some kind of non-heirachl(sp?) state (in the very broadest sense) to organise ourselves and distriute food, good, maintain our sanitary conditions etc

    Now thats leads to me this, why would this State have to stay aftr it&#39;s purpose had become redundant? It could quite easily be used to help the workers, to increase democracy and to sort out any problems that arise whilst we secure the revolution and set up our new system.

    Now I do not mean that this state is a kind of respressive organism like the one in existance at the moment, but a non-heirarchal organisation set out to help.

    Would this kind of Socialist transition which would secure our revolution and defend it from the counter insurgents be so bad?
    <span style=\'color:black\'>Culture sucks down words
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    If you remember Marx said the world progessed in this order;

    Fuedalism -> Capitilism -> Socialism -> Communism
    That&#39;s a simplification, but yes, he did.

    But then again, Marx predicted that revolutions would first occur in Western European states, Germany, for example, seemed &#39;ripe&#39; for revolution, for many years. Yet the first substantive revolution (ignoring comparatively minor events such as the 1871 commune) was in Russia, subsequent revolutions occurred primarily in developing states also.

    Marx doesn&#39;t necessarily equal right. He was a clever bloke, but we still have to look at his works critically: to take what&#39;s good and forget the crap.

    Personally, I do not believe in any transition through socialism, in fact, I believe that Socialism will inevitably either revert to capitalism, or remain the same for a long time.


    We in the west have progressed to Capitilism and you could argue both ways that Capitilist society is fizziling out and can&#39;t last much longer or it is on the rise and we haven&#39;t seen even half of the destruction it is capable but&#33;
    Yes but we haven&#39;t just progressed to capitalism. In Britian capitalism has been around for a long time.

    Capitalism survived a number of possible threats prior to WWII. After the war, a number of &#39;mainstream&#39; politicians were quite receptive to progressive ideals.

    But now, capitalism seems to have more of a hegemony than ever before, especially with the collapse of Socialist states eksewhere and the emergence of Capitalism as the only dominant ideology.

    My question is: Why would a revolution happen now, when it didn&#39;t happen before?

    I still think we have about 50 years at least; minimum.

    Don&#39;t lose hope, I was simply stating the optimism I have for our movement. We need to be ready because the revolution could happen at any time.
    Optimisms all well and good, though personally I find it more productive to try and spread our ideas as well as we can, without sitting around, relying on &#39;inevitablity&#39;.


    we can&#39;t just go straight from Capitilism to Communism, that would require a world wide revolution all at the same time. There would be somekind of war and we&#39;d wouldn&#39;t be assured victory.

    No one said anything about going "straight from Capitalism to Communism. It is probably the case that a "transition" will be necessary.

    But in order for it to succeed, a transition must be undertaken by the workers themselves, and the material conditions which give rise to capitalism must be removed.

    Thus we fundamentally cannot allow the state, or oligarchical rule to remain through any transition whatsoever.
    &quot;all the people in my books i read are men who fuck each other do drugs and kill people fuck the dead body and eat it. but dissmembering a body to make another is just as cool. &quot;- Captain anarchy

    I ate capt. Anarchy, as he stole my thunder! No longer will you hear some bizarre rambling coming from the self assigned Captain of utter non-sense
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    Referring to the Commie Club!...
    This very real limitation of the productive forces, both static and dynamic, demands at any given time the most suitable environment for it's advancement. - Gent, head of the RA...aka the People's Front of Judea

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  19. #19
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    Originally posted by Digital Nirvana@Jun 19 2004, 09:10 PM
    We have to take advantage of others (the ruling classes) mistakes for our own gain to make progress. Would you class this as opportunist?
    It isn&#39;t just a question of taking advantage of capitalisms mistakes. If you want to have a meaningful change of power the working class, or at least the majority of them are going to have to know what it is your trying to change, and to what you want to change it to.

    When I say opportunism, I mean a group of people, ie the vanguard, forcing change because it&#39;s possible. Regardless of the situation within the working class.

    Should we not present the mistakes of Capitilism in order to highlight it&#39;s failings?
    Yes of course, but that shouldn&#39;t be the sole purpose of revolutionary change.

    Suggest one mon Ami?
    Workers collectives. Organised and controlled by the workers.

    some kind of non-heirachl(sp?) state (in the very broadest sense) to organise ourselves and distriute food, good, maintain our sanitary conditions etc
    You cannot have a non-hierarchical state. The nature of the state creates hierarchy.

    why would this State have to stay aftr it&#39;s purpose had become redundant?
    The state has to exist in a real form. In order for it to exist it must create real situations. In order for the state to exist it must increase itself in size. In order for the state to exist it must consolidate power into its hands. In order for the state to exist in the form you want it to exist, it must remove power from other people, regardless of who they are.

    Now look at the so called objective of perpetuating this state. You are wanting, by the use of this state, to create a society where the state doesn&#39;t exist. Where the state has no power and where people can freely reject the state if they don&#39;t agree. You want to create a society where people have the power and not the state. How can you do these two opposite things at the same time?

    Now I do not mean that this state is a kind of respressive organism like the one in existance at the moment
    A state is oppressive by its very nature.

    Would this kind of Socialist transition which would secure our revolution and defend it from the counter insurgents be so bad?
    Yes&#33; We don&#39;t want to create that kind of society. We have to look at the best possible way to create communism. Not socialism. And using the state is not going to achieve that. It&#39;s impossible.
  20. #20

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    Just quickly, chaps...


    The state cannot wither away. No matter how much you want it to. The very point of a state is to perpetuate itself. In order to secure this revolution the way you envisage it will lead you to have to increase the state and decrease workers power. how can you increase the state while decreasing it at the same time? How can you decrease workers power while attempting to increase it? The state contradicts the purpose of the revolution. The state, by its very being, is designed to defend itself. That&#39;s the nature of the state.
    The state does not defend itself - it defends the interests of the ruling class. If that ruling class is, in fact, the Proletariat... The state will exist to support and uphold the interests of the workers. This was Lenin&#39;s theory - and it stands. Place "class-conscious" workers at the head of this "state" and if material conditions are suitable, the state will indeed wither away. When the ruling class is the ONLY class in society... What possible function could a state ever have?

    Enjoy&#33; :P
    Peace, Love and Jesus&#33;
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