• MrPiss [he/him]
    ·
    5 months ago

    "If voting changed anything they'd make it illegal."

    The capitalist class doesn't need to destroy liberal democracy to keep everyone in line so nothing should change. We might go to having a right wing strong man with a political party that returns to an older kind of political corruption with party machines that strong arm the populace to vote how they want and stuff the ballot boxes as needed. Basically what the US did to create "democracies" around the world like in Russia.

    In like 10-20 years there might be a decline in the treat economy and the crushing weight of neoliberalism might spawn an actual socialist movement. If that happens then there would be the bipartisan dictatorship under the Hunter Biden/Barron Trump copresidency where they share the share the presidency like Roman consuls to crush anything anticapitalist.

    After a few years they might let go of the dictatorship and institute a multiparty democracy like the eurocucks have with defanged social democrats as the furthest left option and proclaim progress.

    • BynarsAreOk [none/use name]
      ·
      edit-2
      5 months ago

      "If voting changed anything they'd make it illegal."

      Is this a good rhetoric considering the history of universal suffrage and all, voting was illegal for large parts of the population throughout history? Of course liberal democracy is shit, but I don't think hard fought concessions necessarily legitimizes the system.

      • MrPiss [he/him]
        ·
        5 months ago

        It's a pretty well known phrase in the US (I don't know where you're from). Capitalist countries throw out rights and institute reactionary/fascist dictatorships to rediscipline the working class and the quote was the first thing I thought of to explain my views on what it would take for the US to revoke them. It's not literally true but it's spiritually true. Those rights were given out a concessions and are subject to change or being revoked like abortion.

        Ultimately, we're in a very far left internet space and if I was talking to a "normal person" I'd gauge their politics and try to figure out how to talk to them without seeming weird.

      • freagle@lemmygrad.ml
        ·
        5 months ago

        It's actually a good thought experiment. Giving the franchise to people who have been oppressed for years is a great way of losing control of the system. So, how did they maintain control despite expanding the franchise? They separated voting from land ownership and ensured the power remained with the ownership and not the vote. Voting changed things in and amount the American bourgeoisie before the expansion of the franchise. In preparation for the expansion of the franchise, the American bourgeoisie made voting less and less likely to change anything. This, if voting changed anything, they would make it illegal, and in fact they did, and they made it legal after it wouldn't change anything.

      • Biggay [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        5 months ago

        Enfranchising more people is always risky, yes, but as time bore on its pretty evident that the franchise in America is a very weak form of voting.

    • Muad'Dibber@lemmygrad.ml
      ·
      5 months ago

      This is why I kinda hate the term fascism now, bourgeois democracy has proven itself to be much worse. Old post:


      The western left’s use of the term fascism, is borderline white-supremacist at this point. Fascism was a form of colonialism that died by the 1940s, and is only allowed to be demonized in public discourse, because it was a form of colonialism directed also against white europeans. It was defeated, and Germany / Italy / Japan reverted to the more stable form of government for colonialism (practiced by the US, UK, France, the Netherlands, Australia, etc): bourgeois parliamentarism.

      British, european, and now US colonizers were doing the exact same thing, and killing far more people for hundreds of years in the global south, yet you don’t hear ppl scared of their countries potentially "adopting parliamentary democracy”. They haven't changed, and their wealth is still propped up by surplus value theft from the super-exploitation of hundreds of millions of low-paid global south proletarians.

      This is why you have new leftists terrified that the UK or US or europe “might turn fascist!!”, betraying that the atrocities propagated by those empires against the global south was and is completely acceptable.

      Make no mistake about it: parliamentary / bourgeois democracy is not only a more stable form of government, it's also far more effective at carrying out colonialism, and killing millions of innocent people.

      • MrPiss [he/him]
        ·
        5 months ago

        I do sympathize with that views like that somewhat. Especially since fascism and liberalism aren't opposites but complimentary aspects used within capitalism.

        Then theres the fact that fascism can be a hard thing to pin down with a definition. Do we call Germany and Japan classic fascism and then the Pinochet dictatorship early neoliberal fascism? Where does fascism apply and when? Can fascism exist without mass politics? (If everyone in the US is pacified by so many consumerist options can they form the political mass necessary for Trump to create a real fascist movement like Nazi Germany?) Can we call what the US does abroad in colonial wars and interventions fascist? At what point are racial codes fascism? Fascism is not a structured ideology like communism so it's very slippery.

        Some recommended reading I saw in the news mega is below. Had to skim for the highlights again but you might like it.

        https://redsails.org/really-existing-fascism/