Thread: why do M-Ls oppose 'imperialism'

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  1. #1
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    Default why do M-Ls oppose 'imperialism'

    Word to word, "the enemy is one, imperialism" etc, why do they say that instead of mentioning 'capitalism' which includes all the forms of capitalism not only the aggressive - international one.

    M-Ls = marxists leninists btw
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    I'm not a Leninist, but I'd wager it's because Imperialism is, to them, now synonymous with capitalism, as imperialism is merely capitalism in its most advanced state, and it has spread its hold worldwide now through globalization.

    Hopefully someone can correct me.
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    Yeah,but imperialism is just a method of manifestation of capitalism, not capitalism itself.

    The hole thing reeks of opportunism.
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    Like the comrade above said, Imperialism is the highest stage of capitalism, and it's most total and brutal form- well apart from fascism. It's not opportunism- opportunism would be condemning imperialism just because it's useful as a tool to combat capitalism or because of some perceived personal benefit from denouncing imperialism, while really not caring at all about ending imperialism. But imperialism is just the latest form of capitalism, where the contradictions of it are carried to their extremes.

    In the long run, you can't have imperialism without capitalism and you can't have capitalism without imperialism. They're one and the same in the end.

    Therefore there's nothing opportunist about it.
    "We stand with great emotion before the millions who gave their lives for the world communist movement, the invincible revolutionaries of the heroic proletarian history, before the uprisings of working men and women and poor farmers – the mass creators of history.

    Their example vindicates human existence."

    - from 'Statement of the Central Committee of the KKE (On the 90th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution in Russia 1917)'
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  7. #5
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    Yeah,but imperialism is just a method of manifestation of capitalism, not capitalism itself.

    The hole thing reeks of opportunism.
    According to Lenin, who rebuked Kautsky's arguments in the matter, imperialism in the highest stage of capitalism is also inseperable from capitalism itself. Kautsky presented imperialism as "a choice", Lenin taught us it is inherent.

    It's important we stress that fact and make clear why we say "imperialism". If someone asks how comes we talk about the political factor and not the economic one, we must explain that imperialism is not seperate from economic factors and that this is a stage where capitalism perverts also every "independent" political opportunity.
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    Because it allows them to avoid an exhaustive critic of the protagonists 'before the end'.
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    Another aspect is the fact that M-L as both a theory and ideology is linked to many oppressed countries (f.e. China, Vietnam, etc.), or countries heavily dependent on the imperialist oppressor nations (f.e. Russia).
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    Another aspect is the fact that M-L as both a theory and ideology is linked to many oppressed countries (f.e. China, Vietnam, etc.), or countries heavily dependent on the imperialist oppressor nations (f.e. Russia).
    Now that's a very good point. I've oft lamented that many comrades from the West maintain a stubbornly social-imperialist outlook but I never gave any real thought to the flip side of that coin - that colonial struggles themselves (particularly the conflict between territorial and capitalist logic in the Russian Empire) may have impacted the evolution of Marxist thought. Hmmm....
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    Imperialism is, as Lenin put it, the highest stage of capitalism. The corporate oligarchy, which play a significant role in pulling the strings with imperialist Western governments, uses war, occupation and corporate domination as profit motives. They disregard human life, suffering and necessities in a never-ending venture for capital gain. Capitalism and imperialism go hand in hand, as the capitalist system fuels the militaristic campaigns of globalization and colonialism.
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    Imperialism is an extreme form of ethnocentrism
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    Imperialism may be seen as capitalism transcending the boundaries of the nation state. This is the tendency and the logic of capitalism everywhere. And since capitalism applies in every single country of the world without exception (in the pseudo-socialist countries it take the form of state capitalism) it follows that all countries are inherently or intrinsically imperialist. Its just that some are more successful at it than others for obvious reasons.

    This is why socialist refuse to align themselves with any kind of national liberation struggle whatsoever. To do so is actually to lend support to the ruling class of the country in question and to perpetuate the lie that that there is some kind of commonality of interests - represented by the so called nation - between this class and the workers it exploits
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    Imperialism is an extreme form of ethnocentrism
    That's only a partial aspect of it...it's political and economic.
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    "(The) working class exists and struggles in all countries, and has the same enemies in all countries – the police, the army, the unions, nationalism, and the fake ‘socialism’ of the bourgeois left. It shows that the conditions for a worldwide revolution are ripening everywhere today. It shows that workers and revolutionaries are not passive spectators of inter-imperialist conflicts: they have a camp to choose, the camp of the proletarian struggle against all the factions of the bourgeoisie and all imperialisms." -ICC, Nation or Class?
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    Imperialism may be seen as capitalism transcending the boundaries of the nation state. This is the tendency and the logic of capitalism everywhere. And since capitalism applies in every single country of the world without exception (in the pseudo-socialist countries it take the form of state capitalism) it follows that all countries are inherently or intrinsically imperialist
    That logical result seems inconsistent.

    Cant a capitalist country's economy be capitalist and not imperialist?
    Imperialism can be divided in economic and military aggresiveness, not all economies can manage that.

    An economy functioning within the country's borders exclusively would be called capitalist, not imperialist.

    And to get out of the closet, i think that raising imperialism as the arch-enemy, leaves the door open to imply that ' a mild capitalism would be better/ok '
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    Imperialism can be divided in economic and military aggresiveness, not all economies can manage that.
    Imperialism is not a particular government policy, or something rooted in the political arrangements of an individual country or set of countries, but rather a world system, which impacts all countries in various ways regardless of whether they want to be part of the world economy or not. It is a stage in the development of capitalism because it comes into existence as a result of capitalism's laws of motion which eventually give rise to a situation in which the most powerful capitalist countries are forced to look beyond their own borders and exploit other countries in order to avoid a crisis of profitability and the collapse of the capitalist system. Imperialism can manifest itself in different ways; initially imperialism took the form of direct territorial domination (otherwise known as colonialism) whereby imperialist states would annex other countries, including those which had not yet been incorporated into the world capitalist system because they were still based on feudal relations of production, and maintain control of these countries through military force, in order to exploit their natural resources and labour force. The bourgeoisie may still resort to military conquest if a given state is unwilling to submit to other forms of pressure and contains vital strategic interests, but during the post-war period the manifestation of imperialism shifted away from colonialism and towards indirect forms of control such as the imposition of certain policies by means of powerful international institutions such as the IMF and WTO and the use of covert operations to overthrow leaders who were willing to defy the demands of the imperialist core and adopt policies designed to encourage endogenous industrial development. Despite these different manifestations, the fundamental nature of the system remains the same, and anti-imperialist struggles retain their progressive character.

    Left-Communists adopt a completely simplistic view of imperialism and assume that all anti-imperialist struggles only serve the interests of the bourgeoisie even when they involve large numbers of workers and peasants and are directed against a brutal occupying power, as in the case of the NLF in Vietnam, and, more recently Hamas in Gaza. In other words, their entire analysis is based on the assumption that the workers of the developing world can't think for themselves, and will automatically follow the nationalist slogans of the bourgeoisie, not because fighting imperialism serves their own class interests, but because the bourgeoisie is somehow capable of casting a spell over the working population which causes them to lose all capacity for independent thought and political judgment. Needless to say, Left-Communists have never gained substantial support in nations facing imperialist oppression, and are generally seen as a useless current by the rest of the left.

    i think that raising imperialism as the arch-enemy, leaves the door open to imply that ' a mild capitalism would be better/ok
    You're completely wrong - by identifying imperialism as a world system and a stage in the development of capitalism, we can avoid falling under the illusion that the external manifestations of imperialism - such as war - can be solved by electing a different section of the bourgeoisie to office, as many fake leftists seem to assume.
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  19. #15
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    by identifying imperialism as a world system and a stage in the development of capitalism, we can avoid falling under the illusion that the external manifestations of imperialism - such as war - can be solved by electing a different section of the bourgeoisie to office, as many fake leftists seem to assume.
    And similarly,we can fall under the illusion that imperialism and its aggressivenes is the problem, where a "mild and peaceful capitalism" would be okay.

    But you are not answering:Why anti-imperialism and not anti-capitalism,since 'capitalism' covers the whole spectrum of that economic system's development.
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    But you are not answering:Why anti-imperialism and not anti-capitalism,since 'capitalism' covers the whole spectrum of that economic system's development.
    This is exactly the point - Marxists don't oppose capitalism for the whole of the capitalist epoch because, at least in its initial stags, in the immediate period after the overthrow of feudalism, capitalism was an incredibly progressive system. It resulted in the rapid growth of the productive forces, breakthroughs in all fields of science and technology, and incorporated the entire world into a single economic unit - all of these developments and others which have been made possible by capitalism serve as the necessary preconditions for the attainment of a socialist society, in the absence of which socialism would not be possible, as socialism can only come into being once scarcity has been abolished. We call for the overthrow of capitalism now because capitalism is no longer progressive during the imperialist epoch and actually threatens to destroy the whole of humanity through wars and ecological detestation, but calling for the overthrow of capitalism during the industrial revolution would have been incredibly reactionary, and indicative of an anti-materialist outlook.
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    And similarly,we can fall under the illusion that imperialism and its aggressivenes is the problem, where a "mild and peaceful capitalism" would be okay.

    But you are not answering:Why anti-imperialism and not anti-capitalism,since 'capitalism' covers the whole spectrum of that economic system's development.
    To be anti-imperialist you'd really have to be anti-capitalist as well, so that's a given. Unless you can show us an example where Marxists abandoned anti-capitalism in favour of anti-imperialism, I'm not really sure why you brought this up.

    Marx himself saw that anti-imperialism was at times useful to the workers movement. In fact he came to see the national liberation of Ireland as essential for the English working class to break with their ruling class.

    Connolly also wrote about this subject- both how imperialist expansion can be useful in speeding up productive forces and also how resistance to it can provoke a crisis in capitalism.
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    That's only a partial aspect of it...it's political and economic.

    Of course, I was mentioning the ideology behind imperialism. The aspect of ethnocentrism was a moral excuse for plundering other countries
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    To be anti-imperialist you'd really have to be anti-capitalist as well, so that's a given.
    What about theocratic national liberation movements ?

    the bourgeoisie is somehow capable of casting a spell over the working population which causes them to lose all capacity for independent thought and political judgment.
    If the workers who joined hamas are politically independent from the islamist movement, why didn't they build their own organizations and only after that build a national liberation front with the islamists ?

    And also, I suppose it has been answered before, but I'm too lazy to search. Empires existed before the development of industrial capitalism... why should they not be considered as imperialist ?
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    And similarly,we can fall under the illusion that imperialism and its aggressivenes is the problem, where a "mild and peaceful capitalism" would be okay.

    But you are not answering:Why anti-imperialism and not anti-capitalism,since 'capitalism' covers the whole spectrum of that economic system's development.
    Comrade it's true there's a possibility that 'imperialism' might be scapegoated as the only problem at hand, leaving capitalism unmentioned, but in my experience Leninism never takes up this sort of posturing - analysis of imperialism as merely a development of capitalism, an inevitable development of capitalism, is just as characteristic of Leninists as condemning imperialism.
    "We stand with great emotion before the millions who gave their lives for the world communist movement, the invincible revolutionaries of the heroic proletarian history, before the uprisings of working men and women and poor farmers – the mass creators of history.

    Their example vindicates human existence."

    - from 'Statement of the Central Committee of the KKE (On the 90th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution in Russia 1917)'

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