“Communism bad”

“Why?”

200 year old tropes so ancient they were debunked by Marx himself

Of course, you go through the motions of explaining the most basic political concepts that could be grasped by skimming the cliff notes for literally any Marxist works

“Friedrich Engels? Is he like the president of Germany or something?”

It’s like a kindergartener trying to teach you calculus.

  • BelieveRevolt [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    Liberals keep saying history is written by the winners while simulatenously believing everything Westerners wrote about communism after the Cold War.

    • SkingradGuard [he/him, comrade/them]
      ·
      9 months ago

      You also get libs from ex-socialist countries that go

      "You wouldn't like communism like I lived it in x Warsaw pact country " smuglord

      Then they follow that with the most racist, fascistic thing possible. Happens everytime

    • UlyssesT [he/him]
      ·
      9 months ago

      It could be as G!merbrained as seeing the winners writing the history as based because that just means the winningest winners deserved to win, every time. Secular Calvinist shit.

      • SacredExcrement [any, comrade/them]
        ·
        9 months ago

        Nah, I think that those two takes, like many others, just exist in separate, frictionless vacuums for libs; the metaphorical venn diagram has no overlap to them.

        History is written by the winners only applies to bad country, and Communism is bad because I was told that in school.

        • UlyssesT [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          I may have come up with a too-generous way for the libs to reconcile those contradictions. It's probably easier for them that they don't even notice the contradiction.

  • Gosplan14_the_Third [none/use name]
    ·
    9 months ago

    In every American community, you have varying shades of political opinion. One of the shadiest of these is the liberals. An outspoken group on many subjects. Ten degrees to the left of center in good times, ten degrees to the right of center if it affects them personally.

    • Phil Ochs, Love Me I'm a Liberal, 1968
    • The_Jewish_Cuban [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      I heard "ten degrees" as "tend to graze". I love when your brain substitutes random shit but it still makes sense.

      Edit: in hindsight I think it's a good change. Represents the herd mentality of liberal thought.

  • star_wraith [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    200 year old tropes so ancient they were debunked by Marx himself

    In the very first lecture of my Macro 101 course in undergrad, my libertarian econ professor talked about how if the LTV was correct then an inedible mud pie would have as much value as a real pie. I was delighted when I first read Capital and I saw that Marx debunked this very myth like on page 4. Marx is great at anticipating objections and then thoroughly responding, it’s just the libs don’t bother to read him.

    • GenderIsOpSec [she/her]
      ·
      9 months ago

      It's lovely to hear people say that Marx has been debunked. Have they read Marx? No, of course not. The debunkers who they DID read hadnt either so this conversation is always pleasant blob-no-thoughts

      • VILenin [he/him]
        hexagon
        M
        ·
        9 months ago

        They aren’t interested in the truth. They’re interested in “debunking” Marxism by any means necessary. It’s the political version of the gamer thing where you don’t need to actually play the game to decide it’s bad because professional opinion havers already told you what to think.

      • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
        ·
        9 months ago

        value is produced not by "any labor time that i imagine" but by "socially necessary labor time." mud pies are not socially necessary in any context, and it would be an absurd counterfactual to attempt to defend. the hypothetical society too stupid to realize that mud pies are worthless.

    • VILenin [he/him]
      hexagon
      M
      ·
      9 months ago

      Are these dumbasses aware that they’re not the first people in the world to think of the most basic and simple objections?

  • UlyssesT [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    It worked for up-yours-woke-moralists who claims to have studied communism for over 20 years and by study he meant be really mad at the Manifesto.

      • ReadFanon [any, any]
        ·
        9 months ago

        I believe he said he read it once in his earlier days.

        (Maybe his youth? I feel like it was in his livestream where he responded to a question asking what he's doing to prepare for the debate and he told on himself because he said "well, there's a lot you can do in 24 hours" and proceeded to say that he's going to do a "close re-reading" of the manifesto, which he reported to have read many years prior, but I could be getting confused here.)

        Bruh.

        You don't read The Communist Manifesto because you're a fraud and a charlatan.

        I don't read The Communist Manifesto because it's a rushed pamphlet drafted with the intent to inform the demands of the European masses during the revolutions of 1848 and as such it holds very little value as theory.

        We are not the same.

        • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
          ·
          9 months ago

          It's clear he didn't particularly understand it either. He took the manifesto as a call to make paradise on Earth. His opening statement was saying that paradise cannot exist on earth, because living as a human means existing within brutal, uncaring nature.

          He brought up that the manifesto doesn't mention nature like this, which is true, it's a political manifesto for organizing factory workers. If he had read Capital he'd know Marx defines labor as transformation of natural resources through human ingenuity.

          I don't think Peterson ever cared about history or theory as much as vibes. I don't think he even regards facts as important. He likes little anecdotes that signal things with metaphorical truths.

          • ReadFanon [any, any]
            ·
            9 months ago

            100% agree.

            I don't think he actually read the whole Manifesto through tbh and if he did, he was too busy coming up with his own personal objections to each sentence that he was clearly unable to see the forest for the trees.

            I'm not saying that he would have come out of the reading as a freshly-minted Marxist but he was really grandiose and slimy about his refuting of the communist manifesto in a way that was obvious he thought he had this list of epic gotchas but it just showed that he didn't go into reading it with the intent of understanding it or refuting it from its own internal logic.

            I'd tolerate his approach to the manifesto better if he made asides to how it didn't address this or that issue before proceeding to critique the actual content and arguments of the manifesto itself but to expect that someone would provide an account of human nature in a 30 page pamphlet while expounding upon their entire political philosophy is, frankly, ridiculous (and even moreso when you're expecting Marx of all people to do that.)

            Peterson is such a pseud.

            • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
              ·
              9 months ago

              I bring this up a lot and I'm sorry if people here have to read it over and over, but I'm always gonna bring it up since it's central to who Peterson is. During that debate Zizek asked Peterson to specifically name any alleged Marxist professors. Peterson had no names, probably because he wanted to say Foucault or Marcuse, guys who've been dead for decades. Zizek offered the name David Harvey, the British scholar who's an expert on Marx's Capital. Peterson didn't recognize the name.

              • ReadFanon [any, any]
                ·
                9 months ago

                I still can't believe that this wasn't the big "Emperor has no clothes" moment that, by rights, it should have been to the Peterson fanboys.

              • BelieveRevolt [he/him]
                ·
                9 months ago

                It was super funny how before the debate Jorp was all smuglord ”I've studied communism”, but during the debate he was more like cri ”Oh shit oh fuck I haven't done the reading and the teacher's asking me questions”

        • duderium [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          I think the manifesto is based and filled with bangers tbh

        • redtea@lemmygrad.ml
          ·
          9 months ago

          I'm happy to take your word for it. I watched that debate with Zizek when it came out and tbh I was a mixture of confused and infuriated. Very happy to accept I missed his exact point. I agree with your other comment below, too: whenever he read it, he didn't understand it.

          • ReadFanon [any, any]
            ·
            9 months ago

            I'd take it with a healthy dose of skepticism.

            I did write "he said" intentionally there because he's also the guy who said he read 200 books on climate change in two years when he was advising some CEO who was on a UN committee on climate change and the only way Peterson has read books on climate change is if their titles are something like "Climate Change: What The Government Doesn't Want You To Know" and "The Great Climate Hoax". But if you're trying to become educated about climate change then you shouldn't be reading books anyway, you need to be reading scientific articles instead. Of course there's no way that you could ever disprove his claim and he'd never appear in front of a camera opposite a person who is an actual climate scientist because he knows that he'd get called out for his towering ignorance on the subject.

            Suffice it to say that the guy's full of shit and you have my full support if you choose not to believe what he says.

            • redtea@lemmygrad.ml
              ·
              9 months ago

              Lol I saw the start of a breakdown of his bullshit video. It takes clips from multiple interviews, 'speeches', etc. One of the early themes is his climate change work. In different clips he says completely opposite things. An advisor in one. A panelist in another. Etc, etc. He's an unabashed bullshit artist. The real problem is what it means for the modern 'intelligentsia' if he could blend in for so long (not sure how many people in the academy believe him nowadays but I bet there are some; I saw his 12 Rules listed as a course text, for example, in a shocked Twitter screenshot).

      • SkingradGuard [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        9 months ago

        I've read the Gulag Archipelago that Peterson recommends.

        It's the most propaganda ridden book I've read about the USSR, so many factual inaccuracies and lies.

          • UlyssesT [he/him]
            ·
            9 months ago

            "It's not true, but it basically is true because that's how I already felt about gommunism vuvulzula gorillion dead!"

            Show

            • ReadFanon [any, any]
              ·
              9 months ago

              This is gonna sound like it's a bit and that I'm just parodying Peterson's way of speaking in vague hand-wavey style but I promise you that it's not and I'm legitimately making an argument here...

              To Peterson, the historicity of The Gulag Archipelago is irrelevant to him because it represents a higher order, metaphorical truth.

              When you grasp this about what is important to Peterson's approach to truth then it becomes very obvious that he plays fast and loose with facts because he's not concerned with mundane truths that are the domain of historians and scientists, in fact he holds them in contempt especially when they run counter to his understanding, because he sees his purpose in uncovering and elucidating the metaphorical truths that structure our existence.

              If this sounds like a bunch of nonsense woo then you're right. If this sounds like the attitude of an aspiring prophet then you're right.

              But if you want to really understand how Peterson's brain works and why his avid followers seem largely immune to facts then this is the mentality that you need to wrap your head around. Pretty much everything that Peterson does is a sort of exegesis on this higher order, metaphorical truth that he's both attempting to understand himself while attempting to articulate it to his audience at the same time.

              There's a quote from him that really illuminates his belief about his "mission". I'll try to find it and if I do I'll edit it into this comment.

              • UlyssesT [he/him]
                ·
                9 months ago

                To Peterson, the historicity of The Gulag Archipelago is irrelevant to him because it represents a higher order, metaphorical truth.

                I know he'd argue that. He's on a very special personalized level of solipsism with The Secret characteristics.

              • star_wraith [he/him]
                ·
                9 months ago

                To Peterson, the historicity of The Gulag Archipelago is irrelevant to him because it represents a higher order, metaphorical truth

                And to add on to your comment, I think Solzhenitsyn himself sort of takes this approach in writing. I’ve heard Gulag Archipeligo described as “campfire stories about the gulags”, and I think that’s very apt. It’s not factual information, it’s just him gathering stories he hears from others. Whether or not those stories are true isn’t relevant. Solzhenitsyn saw it as his mission to bring down the USSR (and replace it with some Christo-fascist authoritarian state) and whatever stories he needed to pull out of his ass to make that happen was fine by him.

              • ShimmeringKoi [comrade/them]
                ·
                edit-2
                9 months ago

                I'm totally picking up what you're putting down here, yeah these people love subjectivr metaphorical truths, it gives them a spiritual charge. Its like they live in a world of pure signifiers, like they exist in a fog of metaphor and allegory and symbolism (they fuckin love their numerology too). It's like they're hoping to reach some kind of existential truth by tunneling through nonsense. It's ironic that theyre the ones who bang on and on about "facts and logic" because they have neither. They use the concepts as ritual fetishes, invoke their strange bile and wave around an ornate little doll called Facts and Logic. They present themselves as unassailable, because they have the doll on their side, but as soon as you assail them it crumples.

                • UlyssesT [he/him]
                  ·
                  9 months ago

                  theyre the ones who bang on and on about "facts and logic" because they have neither. They use the concepts as ritual fetishes, invoke their strange bile and wave around an ornate little doll called Facts and Logic

                  expert-shapiro

            • ProfessorAdonisCnut [he/him]
              ·
              9 months ago

              "He could have been simply brave for speaking truth to power, but instead he was braver for speaking untruth for power"

          • SkingradGuard [he/him, comrade/them]
            ·
            9 months ago

            I'm aware.

            Even if you tell libs/conservatives that, they just ignore it and say that her interview is just propaganda. Unreal.

                • Parenti Bot@lemmygrad.mlB
                  ·
                  9 months ago
                  The quote

                  In the United States, for over a hundred years, the ruling interests tirelessly propagated anticommunism among the populace, until it became more like a religious orthodoxy than a political analysis. During the Cold War, the anticommunist ideological framework could transform any data about existing communist societies into hostile evidence. If the Soviets refused to negotiate a point, they were intransigent and belligerent; if they appeared willing to make concessions, this was but a skillful ploy to put us off our guard. By opposing arms limitations, they would have demonstrated their aggressive intent; but when in fact they supported most armament treaties, it was because they were mendacious and manipulative. If the churches in the USSR were empty, this demonstrated that religion was suppressed; but if the churches were full, this meant the people were rejecting the regime’s atheistic ideology. If the workers went on strike (as happened on infrequent occasions), this was evidence of their alienation from the collectivist system; if they didn’t go on strike, this was because they were intimidated and lacked freedom. A scarcity of consumer goods demonstrated the failure of the economic system; an improvement in consumer supplies meant only that the leaders were attempting to placate a restive population and so maintain a firmer hold over them. If communists in the United States played an important role struggling for the rights of workers, the poor, African-Americans, women, and others, this was only their guileful way of gathering support among disfranchised groups and gaining power for themselves. How one gained power by fighting for the rights of powerless groups was never explained. What we are dealing with is a nonfalsifiable orthodoxy, so assiduously marketed by the ruling interests that it affected people across the entire political spectrum.

                  -- Michael Parenti, Blackshirts And Reds

                  I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please contact the admins of this instance if you have any questions or concerns.

    • VILenin [he/him]
      hexagon
      M
      ·
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      Western “communism studies” invariably consists of undergrad classes taught by either cold warrior professors or miserable academics, and the “study” consists entirely of regurgitating passages from whatever pseudointellectual anticommunist steaming drivel Anne Applebaum shat out this year.

    • Philosoraptor [he/him, comrade/them]
      ·
      9 months ago

      I'm assuming that you didn't literally work for jordan-eboy-peterson , but (from what I can tell) this is exactly what he means by "studied communism" also: he collects the propaganda artwork and gets mad at Marx as he's concocted him in his head.

      • UlyssesT [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        I've had classmates, roommates, and faculty peers that were devotees of up-yours-woke-moralists

  • 2Password2Remember [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    realizing this has actually helped my mental health so much. liberals are fundamentally unserious about politics, so I simply don't have to care what they think, in the same way I don't care about childrens opinion on topics they dont understand. it's very liberating, I've found

    Death to America

  • Awoo [she/her]
    ·
    9 months ago

    The most common experience I've seen new leftists talk about is how overwhelmingly large the left is and how much there is to learn. The average switched off liberal has missed out on decades of political education.

  • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
    ·
    9 months ago

    Even PhDs aren't great. I've had history professors tell me directly that communism in practice is the same as monarchy. One time a sociology prof I had was having a casual chat with me about why socialists can't achieve their aims unless they integrate within American Protestantism. Then he called Marxism a religion.

    For the life of me I just want some educated liberals who know their class position and I want them to be openly evil about it. That would be so much easier. I thought that's what self-identified neoliberals would be, but even they're very confused.

      • GarbageShoot [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        They are usually knowledgeable within their field, but not necessarily intelligent or aware of their lack of knowledge in other fields

      • Sephitard9001 [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        After all, they learned from a fucking idiot who thought those ideas were worth nurturing for another generation

    • Sephitard9001 [he/him]
      ·
      9 months ago

      The people you mention in the last paragraph that are openly evil had to work very hard to overcome their humanity or they were born sociopaths. It's hard for an average normal non-reptilian dork to read 100 wikipedia pages about liberalism and admit that he wants to plunge the entire earth into labor camps for profit. They need many layers of plausible deniability to convince themselves that they have good intentions and that they should definitely not be stricken from this world

    • Gosplan14_the_Third [none/use name]
      ·
      9 months ago

      For the life of me I just want some educated liberals who know their class position and I want them to be openly evil about it. That would be so much easier. I thought that's what self-identified neoliberals would be, but even they're very confused.

      You have to look for these among social democrats of the 90s and early 2000s in Europe. Many of them were former Marxists in the 60s, 70s, throwing bombs at cops etc. They adapted to throwing bombs at middle easterners and implementing radical market reforms (increasing the exploitation rate) to "fix" Capitalism accomplish capitalist goals.

    • kristina [she/her]
      ·
      9 months ago

      or the life of me I just want some educated liberals who know their class position and I want them to be openly evil about it.

      You mean Hill dawg and Obama

  • quarrk [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    I was just reading this thread on r/neoliberal yesterday (ik that sub is basically cheating) that is exactly what you speak of here. An echo chamber of “Marx was wrong about almost everything” with almost no specifics or demonstration of understanding of the actual theory. In the few cases where they happen to mention a real Marxian term like alienation, it’s purely a vibes thing for these libs. They’ll take the alienation stuff, thank you, because Marx was right about workers being depressed and stuff. No no, don’t worry about the content and motivation of Marx’s theory of alienation or the progression of thoughts which led him to it; it is sufficient to take the results based on your gut intuition.

    • VILenin [he/him]
      hexagon
      M
      ·
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      I doubt they’ve read a single word of Marx. They reed the Debooooonking articles but don’t care to read the original source material.

      Imagine a prosecutor showing up to court with zero evidence other than “he just looks guilty”. That’s the liberal standard.

      • quarrk [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        lol I just looked back at the same thread and found this amazing take by another Marx Understander

        Had he lived to be 200, Karl Marx would almost certainly have become an ardent capitalist.

        he-laughed

        • ProfessorAdonisCnut [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          Had he lived to 200, he'd have become the methuselan overlord of Earth based solely on how messianic that seems

          • Ho_Chi_Chungus [she/her]
            ·
            9 months ago

            I for one, welcome our new unfathomably ancient overlord. May he live centuries past us all

        • duderium [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          Liberals don’t even know that some Marxist economists (David Harvey) can be annoying in their dialectical praise of capitalism as an engine of historical progress.

          • Sephitard9001 [he/him]
            ·
            9 months ago

            They would simply assume he was a capitalist like how they all say China is capitalist

      • Kieselguhr [none/use name]
        ·
        9 months ago

        Reminds me of a debate I had.

        Poster said "Marxists lack nuance".

        I asked which one of these works lacked nuance in his opinion: The German Ideology? The Grundrisse? Anti-Dühring? Or maybe slightly more recent stuff like Gramsci's Prison Notebooks?

        The reply: "Marxists don't understand human nature: it's about the stronger monkey having things."

        The irony didn't even hit him. He was dead seriously try to sell me this "human natooor is strong dogs fuck" as a social theory.

        • UlyssesT [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          it's about the stronger monkey having things

          Non-zero chance of cryptofascist monkey cartoon NFT purchases from that Social Darwinist edgelord.

        • Sephitard9001 [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          That's when you take out your pocket knife and tell him that, because you came to this discussion prepared, you own him and everything he used to own because he's a weaker monkey. And then you demand he takes you to your new house.

        • VILenin [he/him]
          hexagon
          M
          ·
          9 months ago

          It’s always like this. They refuse to engage with the works themselves, because all they can muster is vague allusions to “human nature” and “debunked”

          • Kieselguhr [none/use name]
            ·
            9 months ago

            And I didn't even really tried to debate them, I just wanted them to admit they haven't read anything. Because why are they lying when we both know they have not?!

        • Gosplan14_the_Third [none/use name]
          ·
          9 months ago

          I love how their assumption "human nature is homo homini lupus" lies with the underlying assumption of "so we have to let people be bad and not do anything to reign in these tendencies for a better life."

          It even contradicts liberal theory, such as the social contract. "Oh humans are bad, so to try and create a state where it rules over society and keeps peace won't succeed. It's against human nature and they'll rebel"

      • BynarsAreOk [none/use name]
        ·
        9 months ago

        I'll just mention it is not even about reading Marx's actual works; it is not really necessary to read all the volumes of Capital. It is about the method of inquiry and intellectual honesty.

        If you want to know Marx, then reading any modern Marxist economic text is sufficient (for example, Michael Roberts' Marx 200); other texts like the Communist Manifesto are not even that long, and I'm sure Lenin's Imperialism has already been distilled down by other Marxists somewhere. There are also YT etc...

        The point, though, is intellectual honesty, and as you said, you don't learn a theory by first going to read what the critics have to say. Sure, that may be, and arguably even should be, part of the inquiry, but they make no effort to actually understand the Marxist point of view; they don't seek Marxist sources. They take the conclusion as granted to them on a silver platter.

    • radiofreeval [any]
      ·
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      "Had he lived to be 200, Karl Marx would almost certainly have become an ardent capitalist."

      Whiskey

      Tango

      Foxtrot.

      • Flinch [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        Marx was a capitalist, he even wrote 3 books about capitalism

    • grey_wolf_whenever [he/him]
      ·
      9 months ago

      thread on r/neoliberal

      first comment is 'child labor bad' and the very first response to that is some brainworms about how kids can earn kill that board

  • StalinForTime [comrade/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    The more Marx (or good Marxist theory more generally) that you read, the more you realise how detached from reality liberal discourse about anything even remotely connected to Marxist thought is. This is blindingly obvious in mainstream economics departments, where the average professor or TA normally manages to combine both shocking ignorance of any economic theory beyond their barrenly narrow purview, and depressing naivety when it comes to the apparent self-evidence of their arguments.

    That being said, economics is only the most obvious example. Set foot inside the average history, sociology or anthropology department and the epistemic consequences of a lack of Marxist approaches becomes immediately obvious when you see the low quality of alot of the work being produced and ask why that's the case.

    History probably has the best showing, although it's nothing like it was in the 1960's or 70's, and I suspect that that's because history is an area where the necessity of a materialist analysis makes itself the most immediately obvious, and because the results in this area achieved by Marxist are obviously superior and so more easily form the basis for further productive historical analysis. For example the debates around the origins of capitalism out of late feudalism cannot avoid the Brenner Debate. You see the influence of materialist thought here even in thinkers who are not explicitly Marxist. Historians who are otherwise not rigorously materialist and politically liberal will still sometimes readily recognise the validity, or make use of, class-analysis.

    Sociology is interesting because it's mainstream's basic methods seem deeply idealistic to me despite the fact that Marx is also one of the key figures in the development of modern sociology, and given that Marx's political economy, as opposed to modern neoclassical economics, recognises that you cannot really engage in productive economic analysis beyond a very superficial level if you do not recognise that it's essential to talk about the economic sociology, the economic institutions and social structures that serve differnent socio-economic functions and fit together in certain contexts to distribute the socio-economics functions amongst themselves, including the fundamentally important point of noting how different societies and different modes of production will see different social structures serve as the social relations of production. Otherwise you end up with an idealist theory of economic production.

    Honestly though you also see this among self-described leftists or even 'Marxists' who do not understand the meaning of the term 'value' in Marx, i.e. that it is a technical economic concept, not a moral one (though through its social and political implications we are obviously naturally going to attach normative value to how it functions or affects us).

    Another think that both liberals and soc dems do when discussing Marxism is taking quotes completely out of context and radically misunderstanding or misinterpreting what it being claimed or discussed. Which just makes all the more obvious the need for reeducation in the fundamentals of Marxism.

    • worker_bear [comrade/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      9 months ago

      the meaning of the term 'value' in Marx, i.e. that it is a technical economic concept, not a moral one

      We're so used to thinking of our fiscal debts to financial institutions and creditors as an extension of our social obligation to one another. It's perverse. Liberals especially love thinking along these lines - it appeals to their love of politics as a vessel for virtuous self flagellation (austerity politics, bootstrapping, individual choice/responsibility, etc, all the shit that exemplifies how liberals are in fact right-wing), as well as their sycophantic and undiscerning adulation for institutions. You'll probably never get any of these people to pick up Capital, let alone give you a rebuttal to something like the labor theory of value (as you mention, these people are not serious), but you might be able to make inroads by pointing them to David Graeber. The first chapter of Debt, "On the issue of moral confusion," addresses this topic directly.

      Side note, Trillbillies just had a guest author on whose work dealt with this concept, and I could not believe they didn't mention Graeber even once.

      :graeber:

      • Flinch [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        I have a copy of Debt sitting on my bookshelf, I got it as a Christmas present last year, I should really get around to reading it finally

    • Philosoraptor [he/him, comrade/them]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Say what you will about professional philosophy (and there's a lot of negative stuff to say about it), but my experience has been that people with doctorates in philosophy tend to both understand Marx better and be more receptive to his points than people in most other departments. Maybe I've just gotten lucky, though.

      • GarbageShoot [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        I disagree. They talk about it in a way that looks different, but philosophy academics tend to functionally be very liberal and just have more sophisticated ways of defending roughly the same stupid positions

        • StalinForTime [comrade/them]
          ·
          edit-2
          9 months ago

          You're correct that the big majority of philosophy academics are liberal. It's good to bear in mind tho imo that philosophy professors are not the only people employed as philosophy educators or teachers and are far from the only people who have seriously studied philosophy, formally or informally. There are a decent number of Marxist philosophy PhD's, not least from the combination of their experience of the labor market and the fact that they've had the time or priviledge to think critically about and 'deconstruct' certain key concepts that are essential parts of capitalist/liberal ideology.

          The issue is not so much, imo, in areas of philosophy like philosophy of science, mathematics, language, logic or even epistemology and metaphysics. The more immediate issue is when it comes to areas like moral or political philosophy, or philosophy of economics. The biases in these latter cases are really evident and you are correct imo that when considering that social function they are largely serving as more sophicated mechanisms of ideological legitimation of liberalism or reformism. E.g. any western political philosophy department is going to be dominated by Rawlsians, i.e. the least politically relevant and most mind-numbingly boring political theory that was ever shat over the face of the earth. The most recent wave of Rawlsian thought is soc-dem in nature, looking at his late texts on 'property-owning democracy', meaning accepts to have soc-dem societies which 'socialism' has been reached by reform but in which there is still private property. Obviously even a slight understanding of Marxist theory dispells this idea as obviously incoherent. The reason it is still present is because it acts as a moral paliative that petit-bourgeois soc-dem intellectuals - who are intelligent enough to realise that contemporary capitalism is completely fucked up but are neither intellectually sophicated enough nor morally strong enough to correctly diagnose it or offer genuine solutions - can use to sooth their consciences.

          That being said, you do often see a correlation with how deeply or seriously people are interested in philosophy and their interest in Marxism. The danger is that these people are often simply intellectual Marxists or Marxians with an abstract idea of politics. This is generally far from being entirely their fault, but it is a danger. In practice they are often interested more in abstract argument about certain ideas as opposed to the empirical and historical adequacy of Marxism as a theory of social reality.

          • Philosoraptor [he/him, comrade/them]
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            edit-2
            9 months ago

            In practice they are often interested more in abstract argument about certain ideas as opposed to the empirical and historical adequacy of Marxism as a theory of social reality.

            Right! This is a criticism of philosophy in general, and I think it's very well-founded. In particular, the incentive structure of professional philosophy tends to encourage this kind of abstract theorizing that's disconnected from real-world social ills. Any kind of "applied" philosophy (applied ethics, applied political theory, philosophy of any particular science, &c.) is very much treated as a kind of second-class research project within the profession, and inferior to "pure" metaphysics & epistemology. My own area of specialization, foundations of climate science, is no exception here: making contact with concrete problems, or engaging with actual scientific work, is always seen as less prestigious than working on pure logic-chopping abstract theories.

            I do think you're right that you're not incredibly likely to find "practicing" Marxists at the upper echelons of tenured R1 philosophy (though there are a few prominent exceptions that I'm aware of, and it still seems a bit more common than it is in most other disciplines). However, there's a vast underclass of (let's say) lumpenprofessoriat members--adjuncts, community college professors, non-tenured lecturers, and so on--that is, in my experience, extremely likely to endorse and be engaged with Marxist thought. As you say, this is almost certainly down to material conditions, at least to a great extent. I do think that a background in philosophical reasoning can help with glasses-on though.

            • StalinForTime [comrade/them]
              ·
              9 months ago

              Yeah it does seem to me that philosophy department's and the imposition of 'publish-or-perish' culture there (in a place where that makes possibly the least sense), compounds the issue of people starting their careers as academics and searching from a cottage-industry to milk for the sake of publishing; which is obviously not the kind of environment where philosophy will best do it's actual job of helping to dialectically clarify and conceptually develop the other areas of science, ethics, politics and aesthetics (in collaboration with these fields obvs). There are exceptions but they are still only exceptions which prove the rule imo.

              Yeh the lumpen-intelligentsia has far more Marxists in it (as you can see on this site) than many or even most current demographics in many societies, which is interesting as they are now the large majority of actual workers in higher education and yet remain largely invisible.

      • StalinForTime [comrade/them]
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        edit-2
        9 months ago

        I agree.

        Actually I'd go further and say that everyone should get the opportunity to study philosophy in school, and that everyone who pursues study in any subject should have to, or be encourage to, take at least one or a couple philosophy and history courses on the subject they study, e.g. philosophy of physics, biology, economics, sociology.... By contrast I don't really think there should be formal education in philosophy by itself without study other subjects to keep urself grounded and to do philosophy on. Abstraction and speculation do still need a minimum of grounding in the concrete if they are going to be meaningful or applicable imo.

        If by philosophy we mean the most general study of the must general, asbtract or fundamental properties of the world, including as applied to specific key topics or areas of knowledge, then even aside from philosophical questions of ontology, epistemology, aesthetics and ethics, the reason I think that having access to engaging in philosophy proper is worthwhile is that seriously studying philosophy really can help you work on your ability of critical and conceptual analysis and logical argument. This aids our own understanding of topics and makes more convincing as Marxists. Again, the different between Marxism and utopian socialism is that it is scientific. Even on this site I think you see quite a few discussions which drift into the territory of philosophy but which seem to contain alot of confusion because people are using terms with very different meanings but then talking simultaneously as if they were debating about the same topic. This obviously doesn't mean that every convo is like this or that any really is in it's entirety, but it does highlight how necessary it is to try make as clear as reasonably possible from the onset what we mean when we suddenly start using abstract or technical terms, in order to avoid needless confusion.

        There are of course many (often-correct) negative stereotypes about philosophy students and academic philosophy, which I agree are valid. One consequence of this is that, frankly, I'm not always convinced that the students in their class on, like, Baudrillard are really working on their critical and analytical skills in the ways they would if they studied other thinkers, schools or topics.

        That being said, no one needs to deeply study philosophy or it's history to understand the essential core of Marxism, Marxist politics or to engage as an effective militant. On the other hand, I really resent when people imply that we prols are slack-jawed meat sacks without the ability to think theoretically, abstractly or philosophically ourselves and on our own terms. I've met many brilliant organic working class intellectuals who could have pursued careers in respectable academia - and in fact blow the liberal professors who hold those spots out of the water - but are not as interested or would never have been given a place there if they were going to try and do anything remotely hinting of Marxist-influenced work.

        • Philosoraptor [he/him, comrade/them]
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          edit-2
          9 months ago

          If by philosophy we mean the most general study of the must general, asbtract or fundamental properties of the world, including as applied to specific key topics or areas of knowledge, then even aside from philosophical questions of ontology, epistemology, aesthetics and ethics, the reason I think that having access to engaging in philosophy proper is worthwhile is that seriously studying philosophy really can help you work on your ability of critical and conceptual analysis and logical argument.

          Hard agree. My favorite definition of the field is Wilfred Sellers': "the aim of philosophy is to study how things, in the broadest possible sense of the term, hang together in the broadest possible sense of the term." Some education--and experience in thinking about that stuff--is invaluable no matter what you're doing; it's the field of study that is (or at least can be) most laser-focused on critical thinking skills. I'd never advise anyone to get a PhD in it, but it absolutely should be part of general high school and college curricula, and it's an extremely versatile and valuable undergraduate major.

          One consequence of this is that, frankly, I'm not always convinced that the students in their class on, like, Baudrillard are really working on their critical and analytical skills in the ways they would if they studied other thinkers, schools or topics.

          Agree again. Teasing out relatively mundane positions from deliberately impenetrable texts isn't super useful for most people, and while it might give you some transferrable skill in exegesis, there are better ways to spend your time. A good philosophical education should focus on clarity of expression, rigorous thought, and careful definition of the terms/groundwork of a problem. Those are all incredibly useful skills, and are invaluable in seeing exactly how fucked up our contemporary economic system is. A good philosophical education will also make you comfortable asking "why" questions about things that are, to most people, just transparent parts of the status quo: it teaches you to be bothered by ordinary things, which is the first step toward awakening from (so to speak) the dogmatic slumber of liberal indoctrination.

          • StalinForTime [comrade/them]
            ·
            9 months ago

            Yeah I actually had Sellars' definition in mind when I said that :) Interestingly Sellars begain philosophically as a Marxist from time spent in Europe and then unfortunately moved away from this, but was always firmly on the left from what I understand. Not very different to Hilary Putnam if we're talking about yankie analytic philosophers. Obviously the value of their work is abstract not very socially or politically relevant. You can see a Marxist/Hegelian influence in his later thought though, and he put forward a process-based metaphysics at points.

            I agree that I would never recomment someone to get a philosophy PhD but that's mainly because it will be a very stressful experience and not worth if jobs-wise unless they already feel they are getting selected by certain profs for future careers.

            On the Baudrillard point I think it's also because, given his rejection of a scientific approach to philosophy as Marxism would ideally like to establish and be based on, there's necessarily also a rejection of concern for evidence and critically analyzing what the criteria or conditions for evidence, verification, confirmation, and systematic progress of the field are, and in Baudrillard I think this actually leads to an incoherent theory of signs. Obviously not important but it is for me a case study of the decline of critical though in many parts of academia, and which correlates strongly with the decline of Marxism in these places. I do also obvs agree that some of these (ahem, mainly French) thinkers are needlessly obscure. I'd add that they're not necessarily less obscure in French.

            Also ofc agree with your last comment. It's a shame that there's a tendency you sometimes see where people associate those things with 'boring positivist analytics', but is weird as a supposed rebuttal by itself, but also speaks to an ignorance of not only analytic thought by also the history of Marxist philosophy.

    • kristina [she/her]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Also pretty funny when liberals see when we criticize them because they think we sound like chuds because they can't comprehend that chuds are also liberals.

      • StalinForTime [comrade/them]
        ·
        9 months ago

        Yh that shit is hilarious. Especially as it speaks volumes about how theoretically fragile their liberal ideology actually is, when their echo-chamber bubble get's burst and they are confronted with actual critiques that they can't respond to properly and so right off as being equivalent to far-right 'populism'. It also reveals tons about their general class background and classist elitism that for them anything that even remotely smacks of 'appeals to the people' can be equated as 'populism', which also tells you that these liberals are very much stuck in a realm of ideological discourse and virtue signalling where what matters is not the actual meaning and practical implications and real actions of communists, but the sounds of the words and whether those same sounds are made by other people they dislike and can easily demonize because they are already obviously tarnished (i.e. conservatives and fascists).

  • Shrike502@lemmygrad.ml
    ·
    9 months ago

    It's not funny. It should be terrifying. Because confidence works. Because that's how millions of people have been convinced in the holiness of capitalism and will fight you, literally fight you with guns and bombs, to prevent even a ghost of communism from echoing meekly anywhere in their bubble.

    And they back it all up with decades upon decades of propaganda, media, shite pushed endlessly since the creation of USSR at least. Which feeds the confidence. "Oh yeah, if gommunism so good why did this random bloke who ran away from Russia in 1992 as his country burned and boiled around him says he lives okay in USA?! Checkmate, tankie!".

    It's not funny, it's not fun. It's horrifying and gutwrenching

    • Gosplan14_the_Third [none/use name]
      ·
      9 months ago

      I think about if the liberals had the same problems in the 1700s. Of course, capitalist modes of production have already been emerging across the world in form of dual power in places like the Netherlands or England, while feudal government was still prevalent.

      • star_wraith [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        In the 19th century, the Reign of Terror was treated much in the same way that “communism killed 100 million people” is used today. It was supposed to be the cautionary tale of what happens if you actually give the people any power. This was used to stop any sort of radical movements but also against liberals getting any more concessions out of the old order. Most narratives of the French Revolution spoke negatively of the Terror, Robespierre, et al until liberals started pushing back on that in the run up to 1848.

    • Goadstool [he/him, comrade/them]
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      edit-2
      9 months ago

      It's mostly daunting to me; I feel fatigued when facing the reality that people are so easy to manipulate. It makes me feel hopeless when I see someone so willing to speak with full confidence on something they have done no research into for themselves - when the source of their confidence is just a bunch of headlines they skimmed over on Reddit's front page over the course of several years and some heckin' hilarious Stephen Colbert quips.

      It's so easy to just accept the reality that everyone else around you is accepting, because everyone within that environment is being constantly blasted with the same ideas, while dissent is actively suppressed - even more so when you can play the trick of lumping communists in with ridiculous reactionary fanatics.

      Meanwhile, opening the eyes of someone who's accepted capitalist propaganda usually requires a personal touch. You have to get to know them, have a conversation with them, and methodically peel back the layers of misconception they've been covered in their whole lives over a broad period. And a lot of the time, you'll never convince people otherwise, no matter how you try. It's exhausting.

  • 小莱卡@lemmygrad.ml
    ·
    9 months ago

    That is why they always side with the fascists, like clockwork. They keep doubling down in their anti-communism that eventually they're indistinguishable from actual fascists.

    Also you nailed the Engels thing 😂 they have no clue who he is.

  • PKMKII [none/use name]
    ·
    9 months ago

    It goes back to the presentation of politics and political history as fundamentally a logic puzzle whereby you deduce the most freedom-y system in the abstract and everything descends from that. You see this all the time with the Founding Fathers where the revolution is taught as being purely about their ideals of what a just state should be and any historical context, discussions of their material interests, is brushed to the side or treated as a footnote. So it’s not just there’s an ignorance of historical context, it’s that they outright dismiss it as being important.

    This is why we get “Communism 200 billion dead vuvuzela no iPhone” when it comes to nominally socialist states but when it comes to US atrocities it’s always “that’s not what we truly are, those are hiccups on the path to a more perfect union.” If they think the logic puzzle fits, then deaths don’t matter because we need to trust the process.

    • barrbaric [he/him]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Idk, my version of that as a former lib was "wait so if the solution is social democracy, why can't we have it?" which inevitably drove me to communism.

      • Sephitard9001 [he/him]
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        edit-2
        9 months ago

        Yeah it's like, gee the world would be a better place if the capitalists in charge simply allowed us to have a better and fulfilling life that isn't an endless struggle to earn resources that aren't even scarce using the left over money we earned them after they skimmed 99% of it. They could be more generous and still stay insanely rich! Everybody wins!

        Yeah that would sure be great. They're never going to do that. Become a communist.

  • beautiful_boater [he/him, any]
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    9 months ago

    Look, he may be a member of the Waffen SS, but that doesn't mean he is a fascist. There were many members of the SS that were principled conservatives that happened to oppose Judeo-Bolshevism.

    • SoyViking [he/him]
      ·
      9 months ago

      They were just concerned citizens who wanted to have their fears of Judaism addressed

  • GrouchyGrouse [he/him]
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    9 months ago

    The part that infuriates me the most when libs talk about history is how little research they do. "Oh I watched a documentary" dude I have studied history at the "college level" or whatever you call it for 2 decades. I'm still learning new things. Go back to putting an Einstein book on your shelf instead of reading it. I'm a dumbass sometimes but I'm still putting in the work and I ain't proud of a lot of things I've done but I am proud of that.

    Communism isn't a thing we can achieve. It's a goal. We strive to make it real. But it's elusive. You just try to make life better for others. It's all we got. You'd think with the west's fascination with establishing "christendom" they'd fucking understand that you don't judge an ideal because it failed to be real. You keep working for it. If it makes lives better that is a success. Even if it is limited it still happened!

    Contrast that with fascism where the whole goal is to continually drag the human race through hell. Communism "failed" because it wasn't a utopia - but libs are sure willing to give fascism another turn at the wheel.

    • worker_bear [comrade/them]
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      edit-2
      9 months ago

      Communism in the Bolshevik sense really only "failed" because it existed in a context of warring capitalist nation-states with massive monopolies on imposing international violence, which strangled it from without. There were internal factors too, to be sure, but Communism in it's purest abstracted sense has existed successfully for centuries in societies all over the world, either before the age of the great capitalist empires or in isolation from those empires. Graeber/Wengrow detail in the Dawn of Everything that many of the native american tribes we genocided, to name a single example, lived in a state that we could only call communistic.

      It's almost like as soon as the entire world is subjugated to the idea that profit for its own sake is immutable and good, and then that imperative is enforced upon the world by violence, ideologies that place the health of societies over profit can't exist??

      • Philosoraptor [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        9 months ago

        But the fact that the capitalist death machine was able to successfully genocide all those people trying different ways of living proves that capitalism is the best possible economic system! This is just straightforward Darwin!

        • worker_bear [comrade/them]
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          edit-2
          9 months ago

          it is fucking astounding the number of "intellectuals" who still think Darwinism is a moral framework. READ DARWIN YOU FUCKING FUCKS!!! THE WHOLE POINT IS THAT IT'S A WASTEFUL, AMORAL SYSTEM, and imposing it deliberately IS FUCKING EVIL!

          one of my favorite lectures of all time is this lecture by Stephen J Gould on Darwin's revolution in thought blob-no-thoughts

          • fox [comrade/them]
            ·
            9 months ago

            guy writes about how natural selection, and nature as a whole, is an unending arms race of infinite brutality, cruelty, and exploitation

            Libs: We should strive to emulate this

            • UlyssesT [he/him]
              ·
              9 months ago

              "Law of the jungle" written with self-congratulation by a trust fund endowed failson who had to toil and strive doing basic chores to get nepo baby access to an editorial column. smuglord

      • GrouchyGrouse [he/him]
        ·
        9 months ago

        Well said, comrade. Also it's anecdotal but learning about my own indigenous background probably started my path down the left or at least made me aware that an alternative way of living could be achieved.

      • Catradora_Stalinism [she/her, comrade/them]
        ·
        9 months ago

        I dont really like describing tribal economies as communist, I mean I get the value of saying it is, but just describing a collective body in a primitive economy doesn't communism make.

        • CptKrkIsClmbngThMntn [any]
          ·
          9 months ago

          To be fair to the Davids, as far as I remember they don't explicity call pre-contact ways of life communist.

        • worker_bear [comrade/them]
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          edit-2
          9 months ago

          I don't think the claim is necessarily that tribal economies are inherently communist, rather that certain groups certainly were. Societies marked by an organizing ethos of "from each according to means, to each according to needs," no class hierarchies, robust social structures and welfare programs, and quite literal communal ownership of means of production -- if we are not going to call that communism, I think we're denuding the term of all meaningful content. I also think we should seriously scrutinize our reasoning for saying, "this was communism over here, but this small tribe or social state can't reallllly be communist." Not impugning your motives in any way, as I wholly agree with your critique as it was stated. I just think we should be careful here.

          Personally, I think the most pragmatic thing to do is go case-by-case and distinguish between communism that proceeded capitalism (whatever you'd like to call it) vs Marxist communism, characterized by a transition away from a capitalist state, which is obviously an inherently modern phenomenon.

      • Grimble [he/him,they/them]
        ·
        9 months ago

        Think he means we can't ever fully complete communism, thats all - though we can never achieve a "perfect" society, we can always work a little closer towards it.

        • GarbageShoot [he/him]
          ·
          9 months ago

          Marxist communism is neither perfect, nor unachievable, nor properly a goal in the teleological sense, as that is textbook utopianism