Seems bad.

  • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
    ·
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    Lol if Russia or China became hegemony of any significant chunk of the world things would be exactly the same economically (at best, maybe in Russia's case we'd have more openly oligarchic economical structures the government is run almost exclusively for their interests whereas the US at least sometimes reigns in billionaires historically), but worse socially.

    Is this some weird accelerationist take then? Because no leftism will come from any success for Russia, unless Pol Pot is the model here.

    Because me and my queer comrades would prefer the status quo over that, despite how bad the status quo is. But we don't have to pick. We can be critical of all empires and the structures of oppression they create be they capitalism, patriarchy, xenophobia, queerphobia etc. by their nature as structures of oppression and apply both Marxist and Anarchist readings to that and be allies.

      • BeamBrain [he/him]
        ·
        6 months ago

        The US famously executes its corrupt billionaires, while China gives theirs a slap on the wrist if they're punished at all

        Oh wait

    • Sodium_nitride@lemmygrad.ml
      ·
      6 months ago

      Lol if Russia or China became hegemony of any significant chunk of the world things would be exactly the same economically (at best, maybe in Russia’s case we’d have more openly oligarchic economical structures the government is run almost exclusively for their interests whereas the US at least sometimes reigns in billionaires historically), but worse socially.

      There is literally no basis for this. It's just an unfalsifiable orthodoxy at this point that only exists to justify American imperialism. Russia or China becoming regional or global hegemons is simply a hypothetical, and you can make anything happen in a hypothetical. The fact is, right now, both countries have very good relationships with the global south. China especially has greatly helped many other nations by building infrastructure with cheap loans that they are often willing to restructure or even outright forgive.

      In some imaginary future where China and Russia make an attempt at world conquest, they will be problems to deal with. There is just nothing to indicate that this is the future we are headed towards. This kind of future makes many assumptions:

      1. China and Russia after a "confrontation" (likely war) with the west will still have enough strength left to become hegemons.
      2. China and Russia want to become hegemons. They can see the troubles the USA keeps getting into because of its hegemonic role, why would they want that?
      3. China and Russia are export economies, relatively self-sufficient, have massive populations and industrial bases. What are they even supposed to gain from establishing empires?
    • ZoomeristLeninist [comrade/them, she/her]M
      ·
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      We can be critical of all empires

      in the modern context, imperialism describes a phase of capitalism. it's characterized by international monopolies that control industrial capital, finance capital, and raw material extraction while partitioning the world among themselves. this is a phenomenon that includes monopolistic firms of many countries (US, western europe, australia, japan). while it could be argued that russia takes part in imperialism, it could also be argued that because russia is denied access to many routes of imperialist collaboration (NATO, G7, Davos, etc.) it more resembles a pre-imperialist structure that has national monopolies and takes part in colonialism in its own sphere of influence that is demonstrably separate from the imperial core. but China is not imperialist: monopolistic practices are cracked down on by the government, less than 40% of enterprises are privately owned, most of the raw material extraction is state-owned, and they dont engage in colonialism. we like China here because they are in direct opposition to imperialism and they are a great example of the successes of socialism

      • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
        ·
        6 months ago

        That's fair, honestly. Thanks for the explanation of your perspective.

        I still oppose China on the whole largely due to social issues (and it's policies towards Taiwan) rather than economic, but also definitely acknowledge that it's had some great successes and that overall it maintains a good SoL for it's people.

    • BeamBrain [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      Lol if Russia or China became hegemony of any significant chunk of the world things would be exactly the same economically

      A thief believes everybody steals.

      • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
        ·
        6 months ago

        My comrade in Christ, do you seriously think Russian oligarchs - who picked the corpse of whatever was left of nationalized infrastructure to give themselves unfathomable riches and own entire sectors of the economy - wouldn't?

        These are capitalist vultures in as straight-forward a manner as possible.