https://twitter.com/LachlanMcNamee/status/1615151096321970182

  • CyborgMarx [any, any]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Dipshits like this proliferate because we don't have a foundational theoretical framework for warfare

    Seriously if you asked left scholars in the west a basic question like "How were the revolutionary militaries of Cuba, Vietnam, China organized and sustained" 99% of them would give you a blank stare, despite the fact it was by far the most crucial factor that determined the success of their respective revolutions

      • CyborgMarx [any, any]
        ·
        2 years ago

        Idk, that's pretty much the problem, there's little to no western Marxist theory on military science, despite the fact it's so central to the continued existence of both capitalism and socialism

        Closest we have is the old Soviet Deep Battle theory

        • Dolores [love/loves]
          ·
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          the marxist interface with military strategy is literally "depends on the material circumstances" in the same way revolutionary organization is. the CPC's road to victory is utterly unpracticable anywhere but 1930s-40s China.

          there's good lessons from the CPC: relying on other classes than city proles can be successful, guerilla operations can be really popular, sometimes you gotta march a really long way, etc. but this ain't a rubric, when the material situation changes, the guerilla operations are supplanted by conventional. the communists in vietnam or korea never needed to dramatically relocate their base. sometimes guerilla war doesn't ingratiate the left to the population depending on conduct & reprisals, sometimes the left are the ones who have to do anti-guerilla war.

          and also, imagining warfare to be a separate domain from revolutionary praxis seems to me a little arbitrary and liberal. there's a very real danger to distancing the military from the revolutionary (fall of the USSR.jpg)

          • CyborgMarx [any, any]
            ·
            2 years ago

            the marxist interface with military strategy is literally “depends on the material circumstances” in the same way revolutionary organization is.

            That's frankly not good enough, any successful theory should account for the particularities of any given location, but there are always commonalities and general frameworks that good scholars can suss out, Ho chi minh and Che Guevara didn't just make up their battle doctrines on the spot, they were heavily influenced by the likes of Abd el-Krim, through their war experience they created a developing body of war knowledge that was applied successfully in locals as diverse as Morocco, Cuba, and Vietnam

            and also, imagining warfare to be a separate domain from revolutionary praxis seems to me a little arbitrary and liberal

            But that is my primary objection, the inability of western left scholars to properly incorporate military science tends to lead them into this persistent blindness when it comes to locating state violence or the potential of it, it's the same blindness that got Allende and Patrice Lumumba killed, it's a blindness that animates the core of western left critique of AES states in the south, this naïveté concerning socialist state capacity in the face of western military violence, as if 1 million Indonesian communists could have saved themselves had they followed the peaceful "social democratic" framework advanced by western left parties

            The story of all successful socialist revolutions is a story of a successful military operation

        • AssortedBiscuits [they/them]
          ·
          2 years ago

          Mao, Che, and Nkrumah all wrote text about waging guerilla warfare. Likewise, there's various counterinsurgency text and manuals written by agents of reactions on how to crush revolutionaries. Western Marxist theory won't touch warfare because Western Marxism is completely academic and out of touch with class struggle, let along class warfare. A bunch of tenured professors couldn't be bothered to support the TA strike, so what makes you think they would care about warfare waged by a revolutionary organization?

  • TreadOnMe [none/use name]
    ·
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    This is the classic mistake of reminding me of a better author while I am reading your shitty book. Although if his tweets are anything to go by, he hasn't actually read any Lenin.

    Lenin, throughout his works, hints at and basically predicts financialized empires, he just didn't quite literally put two and two together because he was, you know, in the middle of staging one of the world's largest revolutions and had more pressing practical matters to write about.

    Alongside that, I am pretty sure that Lenin thought we could avoid that incredibly stupid inevitability through communism. He was basically warning us what would happen if communism wasn't established and he was absolutely on the money.

  • Juiceyb [any]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Jesus Christ this is as stupid as a liberal telling me to care about :ukkkraine:. Decolonization without Marxist ideology is the neoliberal turn many 3rd world countries did especially in Latin America. Where they were taken over by juntas and other right wing groups. It doesn’t work because you’re just describing liberal ideology.

  • Ram_The_Manparts [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    decolonization, not imperialism, is the highest stage of imperialism

    You have to be fucking kidding me

  • puff [comrade/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    They don't lose their empires because of wholesome remorse, they lose their empires because the colonies undertake violent uprisings against their oppressors. If given the opportunity to cling on to their empires, they would.

  • emizeko [they/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    decolonization, that's when the economic coercion is invisible, right?

  • AHopeOnceMore [he/him]B
    ·
    2 years ago

    Imagine thinking that Israel is an example of decolonization and slowing down on settler land grabs.