I'm watching the DNC, and it's made me even more aware of the power of liberal bourgeois democracies to let out a little revolutionary energy whenever it gets close to the edge, through concessional policies, like New Deal policies or whatever Kamala might do if she wins, or even the act of voting and campaigning itself. Do they have to go through a fascism phase first, or has there been a liberal bourgeois democracy that has successfully had a socialist revolution? Will it take new theory to figure it out?

  • deathtoreddit@lemmygrad.ml
    ·
    4 months ago

    I don't believe that the Beiyang government warrants the term liberal, if I'm being honest... what justifies the label?

    • Large Bullfrog@lemmygrad.ml
      ·
      4 months ago

      I suppose it's a bit murky perhaps as China at the time simply wasn't at a stage of development where it could be clearly designated between capitalism and socialism, and the Beiyang government during it's time mostly just had it's hands full bringing about very basic rights and reforms that were deprived during the Qing era. I've heard that there is still debate within China if Sun Yat-Sen's vision for China was more in line with socialism or liberalism, I simply deemed Beiyang China as liberal since it couldn't clearly be designated as socialist.