• Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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    1 month ago

    Killing and revolution is an intrinsic part of transforming society, whether that’s from feudalism to capitalism or capitalism to communism. Listen, as an anarchist I’m not personally a fan of China and the Soviet Union either, but the demonization of communism as if it’s this brutal and violent ideology is just silly. Violence and brutality are the tools of the state, no matter its’ economic system. The actions of China or the Soviet Union are attributable only to China or the Soviet Union, not communism.

    If you want to attribute a death to the economic system of communism you have to explain how the economic system resulted in that death. I attribute the deaths of homeless people to capitalism because there is a clear line of causality to follow, but like I said before there are many layers of abstraction and the determination is a subjective and philosophical one. When a cop kills someone capitalism is often a factor, but I don’t blame capitalism, I blame the state.

    • goat@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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      1 month ago

      Violence and brutality are the tools of the state, no matter its’ economic system. The actions of China or the Soviet Union are attributable only to China or the Soviet Union, not communism.

      Yes, but it is communism that gave rise to these states, and they do these actions in the name of being a communist state as well. Like purges were common.

      Homelessness in the soviet union is very interesting, though. It wasn’t reported often due to cultural reasons, falling under ‘social waste’ and work ethic, so we don’t have much to work with other than some personal experiences and modern exploration. It existed, but the government didn’t report it for fear of looking weak.

      Crossing the Line: Vagrancy, Homelessness and Social Displacement in Russia By Svetlana Stephenson is a very interesting book that goes into detail about this unreported homelessness

      regardless, these states did engage in genocide against dissidents and minorities, which you cannot deny. That’s the main focus of this post.

      • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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        1 month ago

        regardless, these states[emphasis mine] did engage in genocide against dissidents and minorities, which you cannot deny.

        I don’t deny it, I just disagree that those actions are attributable to the economic system. The economic system of communism is fine, it’s the marxist conception of the intelligentsia seizing the state and establishing a “dictatorship of the proletariat” that leads to problems. The responsible party for genocide is the state that carried it out, not communism. If not in the name of communism, they would have done so in the name of some other belief system.

          • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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            1 month ago

            The US invaded Iraq for the sake of “democracy,” in their own words. Did “democracy” kill all those Iraqis, or did the US government?

            Edit: changed “freedom and liberty” to “democracy” for better clarity and accuracy.

            • goat@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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              1 month ago

              Freedom and liberty isn’t an economic system that requires the previous system to die.

              • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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                1 month ago

                The revolution was justified, the subsequent oppression was not. Both were done in the name of communism but the revolution failed to achieve it and the state never actually meant it.

                I changed “freedom and liberty” to “democracy” in my comment above to make my point more clear. While democracy is a political system and not an economic one, it does require the previous system to die in order to be established.

                • goat@sh.itjust.worksOPM
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                  1 month ago

                  Yeah, I kind of agree with you. You made some pretty convincing points. I do want to note some stuff, though.

                  I’ve mainly heard ‘victims of communism’ about the imperialism from these communist states. In the case of the Holodomor, the Ukranians had their grain taken by the Soviet Union as a means of control and collectivisation, this is directly tied to communism. It is the victims themselves who say it was communism, it is quite difficult to prove them wrong when that’s what they say about their own history.

                  I think you can die to economic systems, such as homelessness being solely responsible by capitalism, but I also understand your point that you can apply it to anything, like the police, infrastructure, or even bad weather. Hence, my initial question was how an economic system can kill. Capitalism can also directly kill, such as corporations in Africa, like Coca-Cola and Nestle, killing unionists and deliberately starving towns.

                  But with communism, it’s a little bit different. Communism (like any revolution) requires death. It’s a part of it. Communist governments like the Soviets and China killed dissenters and their opposition deliberately and regularly. Later they each performed genocides, and both were imperialistic in doing so. They say it was for the sake of communism.

                  Still, they existed. They were communists. They killed to create communism. They kill for communism. They were the leaders of communism and were the most successful at implementing it. It doesn’t matter if they weren’t your version of communism or whatever definitions you want to use – People died, that’s the end of it. Perhaps we can say ‘victims of communism’ as communism is dead and gone. History is written by the victor, as you know.

                  You can argue saying, ‘That wasn’t real communism!’ but at that point you’re arguing over nothing. It’s the same as ‘guns don’t kill people.’ – It detracts from the point. It’s not about the gun; it’s about the purpose of the gun, which is to kill. Once you start going into ‘what-ifs’ when it comes to history, then I think your argument is nonexistent, what if an asteroid hits? It’s pointless.

                  But we’re also arguing semantics and trying to apply something tangible to intangible systems, and we’re both biased. This is not going to get us anywhere.

                  Though, at the risk of being off-topic, do you know anything about Capitalism’s eventual takeover of Feudalism? I’ve discovered this topic recently, and it’s quite interesting. So too is a divine economy, basically it’s indulgence, but with mutual prayer as opposed to money-to-prayer.