In an interview with Jacobin, Jeremy Corbyn talks about the need to rebuild the trade unions, internationalism, and why socialists can’t afford to be on the defensive.
would use any legislative power to move the needle away from social democracy and towards socialism given half the chance.
Man was "too nice" , inactive and compromising to even enact inter-party power to antagonize and go against the reactionaries and neolibs in his party openly trying to bring him down. Imagining a gigazhad Corbyn that not only had a hidden power level "transitioning away from social democracy" agenda but also that he would USE LEGISLATIVE POWER TO ENACT IT GIVEN HALF A CHANCE is pure fancfiction and its imaging a much more based and balsy personality. IF he was elected and IF he whiped the party into a remotely functioning shape that woud even 70% back and vote half of his Agenda and IF a better handling of Covid and Brexit dont still completely throw the country into chaos he would optimisticaly be a good harm reductive socdem materialy with the country under him have being probably a more conductive and energized enviroment of unions and youth communist organization. Also it falls in the "we get this socdem/demsoc party or candidate elected who will successfully then act in the most based way we can possibly imagine for them based on their rhetoric and actualy move the country towards socialism through legislation and reform" which is the dellusion that constantly arose and and constantly ate shit all over Europe after WW2 in dozens and dozens of occasions. Even in the most spectacular failure of someone like Tsipras and Syriza. If he wasnt elected and i after the fact focused on at a bunch of his rhetoric through the years,radcial party members,on paper agenda and radical younger self and comprehensively circlejerk myself into thinking he would be Chavez
Corbyn is more focused on the effect he can have on people, I think he sees a picture in which the goals are to move the people towards class conflict and have them develop into a national desire for socialism rather than pushing it through with only a small minority of people being truly ideologically motivated towards it. I still think the plan to force companies to give shares to their employees was a good one and would have required elected representatives for workers forcing elements of workplace democracy and forcing elements of class conflict internally in companies across the county as workers would then have a material interest in what decisions the bosses are making. It's also a measure that can't be easily undone and attempting to do so would create a national shitstorm.
He wanted to change the conditions to change the people. I do see value in that.
Anyway we're going to do trade unionism and then move to an anti-war anti-imperialist position I guess? I'm worried that beating the drum of ww3 will start to take national priority for people.
Man was "too nice" , inactive and compromising to even enact inter-party power to antagonize and go against the reactionaries and neolibs in his party openly trying to bring him down. Imagining a gigazhad Corbyn that not only had a hidden power level "transitioning away from social democracy" agenda but also that he would USE LEGISLATIVE POWER TO ENACT IT GIVEN HALF A CHANCE is pure fancfiction and its imaging a much more based and balsy personality. IF he was elected and IF he whiped the party into a remotely functioning shape that woud even 70% back and vote half of his Agenda and IF a better handling of Covid and Brexit dont still completely throw the country into chaos he would optimisticaly be a good harm reductive socdem materialy with the country under him have being probably a more conductive and energized enviroment of unions and youth communist organization. Also it falls in the "we get this socdem/demsoc party or candidate elected who will successfully then act in the most based way we can possibly imagine for them based on their rhetoric and actualy move the country towards socialism through legislation and reform" which is the dellusion that constantly arose and and constantly ate shit all over Europe after WW2 in dozens and dozens of occasions. Even in the most spectacular failure of someone like Tsipras and Syriza. If he wasnt elected and i after the fact focused on at a bunch of his rhetoric through the years,radcial party members,on paper agenda and radical younger self and comprehensively circlejerk myself into thinking he would be Chavez
Corbyn is more focused on the effect he can have on people, I think he sees a picture in which the goals are to move the people towards class conflict and have them develop into a national desire for socialism rather than pushing it through with only a small minority of people being truly ideologically motivated towards it. I still think the plan to force companies to give shares to their employees was a good one and would have required elected representatives for workers forcing elements of workplace democracy and forcing elements of class conflict internally in companies across the county as workers would then have a material interest in what decisions the bosses are making. It's also a measure that can't be easily undone and attempting to do so would create a national shitstorm.
He wanted to change the conditions to change the people. I do see value in that.
Anyway we're going to do trade unionism and then move to an anti-war anti-imperialist position I guess? I'm worried that beating the drum of ww3 will start to take national priority for people.