https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2024/02/15/is-julius-malema-the-most-dangerous-man-in-south-africa

  • Neptium@lemmygrad.ml
    ·
    9 months ago

    Nationalisation might be one of their few good proposed policies along with land reform.

    And that’s all that is needed. A complete reformation of the relations of production will have a profound effect in elevating the productive forces.

    Your critique on the manifesto seems lazy because most bourgeois democracies and their parties over-inflate and exaggerate in their manifestoes. Doesn’t say much about their class character.

    Many things can happen when a large mass movement built on consensus is in charge.

    I am not saying the EFF is one either, but the critique you bring forward doesn’t showcase your points well.

    Bringing back military conscription? For what?

    It is answered in the quote you mentioned.

    offering life skills and discipline.

    Teaching the masses life skills is GOOD.

    Military conscription (which in the cited quote doesn’t necessarily imply “conscription”) is not only about invading other countries or protecting sovereignty. That’s colonizer talk.

    The army can help with a lot of people’s projects, mobilizing resources for the betterment of the country. Furthermore, most places that have conscription also have options to participate in other governmental bodies, like firefighting. It is not strictly just into the army.

    Furthermore, all AES countries have mandatory military conscription.

    The countries that do not have military conscription are often those tainted with liberal individualism, prioritising the rights of the “individual” rather than the service to the community especially wrt to Global South countries.

    many of which have very little to do with Marxism.

    May I get specific examples of which policies “are not relevant” to Marxism? And I want something that is unequivocally and undeniably for the empowerment of the comprador classes and Capital.