On Socialism Reconsidered, midcan5’s APP Thread:

IMT

New member
I attempted to reply to midcan5’s thread in the ‘Above Plain Politics Forum,’ but was prohibited from so doing by forum design. So this is my reply to that thread, Socialism Reconsidered.

Dear midcan5:

I printed and read your linked article on the APP forum. My thoughts are as follows.

That neither Obama nor Occupy could ‘give the idea of fraternity any real substance' might suggest that 'the space of political possibility' INDEED contracted. If said reforms were supposed to be the 'fix' for Capitalism, it didn't take.

‘Things Can Only Get Better’ and ‘Let’s Change the Future:’ citing no more than such slogans, Jonny Thakkar postulates that activist bases seem to go through ‘the same emotional cycle.’ He offers no shred of explanation to why this is so. Are we to believe this because Jonny Thakkar tells us this? Moreover, is another analysis is possible?

The Populist Party in the 1890s, the Progressive movement of the early 20th century, Robert La Follette's Farmer-Labor Party of Wisconsin in the 1920s, similar groups in Minnesota and the Dakotas, and Henry Wallace’ Progressive Party in 1948 have this in common. All collapsed or dissolved into the Democratic Party. Why? Perhaps the Democratic Party is where reform movements go to die.

The Vietnam War, the violent attacks on labor in the 1980s, war on the Middle East as stated policy, the staggering growth of social inequality – we have seen opposition rise and fall in each case. There was Eugene McCarthy and Bob Kennedy in 1968, followed by George McGovern in 1972, followed by Jesse Jackson in 1984 and 1988, then Howard Dean in 2004, and now it is Bernie Sanders. Is Thakkar's 'emotional cycle' the only 'explanation?'

In 1920, no less a figure than Leon Trotsky gave prescient warning of and insight into this so-called ‘cycle’ in 'Terrorism and Communism:' His words are at least as true ninety-six years later.

“The capitalist bourgeois calculates...'at the right moment I will bring into existence opposition parties, which will disappear tomorrow, but which today accomplish their mission by affording the possibility of the lower middle class expressing their indignation without hurt therefrom for capitalism.'”

This equally contradicts John Kenneth Galbraith’s puerile speculation that the ballot can break this ‘cycle.’ J.K. Galbraith's remarks seem somewhat supportive of the socialist adage that US history reads like the illustrated version of Marx’ manifesto.

This is no ‘emotional cycle,’ [whatever Thakkar’s fallacious nomenclature/category means]. This is a political process whereby the ruling elite defuses significant opposition by containing and dissipating it within the Democratic Party.

Thakkar’s supposition that US legislation satisfies no one and will therefore bend toward centrism willfully ignore the very deep investment of the US bourgeoisie in both big-money parties.

Thakkar should consider the possibility that working class people are disillusioned with US governance because the agenda does not change for THEM however elections go. It is the PERCEPTION that Sanders is socialist which makes him popular with youth. But youth will see through him also. The bourgeoisie fears deeply that youth will sweep far past Sanders’ so-called ‘socialism.’ When they do, the state will turn guns on its own people. It has nothing else left.

Social vision is in short supply because the nation as a whole is exhausted even as the ruling class steers us toward massive military budget increases in advanced stage preparation of discretionary war on Russia, China, or both. Thakkar speaks of the exhaustion of the so-called ‘left.’ The left is not alone in exhaustion. Listen to right wing Republicans! Listen to your Libertarian neighbor! Their every other statement begins, ‘I’m so tired of – followed by the latest assault on working people. The whole nation is staggering.

Again, this is bourgeoisie driven politics. The ruling class is safe while the nation bickers on partisan lines. And it is all over the JPP forum. On signalmankenneth's thread, I began saying that Democrats and Republicans at all levels of government, together with the MDWQ and the EPA are answerable for the disaster at Flint. But no sooner was I saying that it was NOT lead but the bourgeoisie driven Austerity Agenda that poisoned Flint, and the 'Flint Residents ... Poisoned Water Bills' thread was abandoned. We haven't yet learned how to get past our bickering in order to fix anything.

Yet IF we can’t get past that, whatever will all our voting accomplish? Unless or until we change the way we do things and begin educating ourselves and studying the role of class in our history – YES, class in United States history – there is no way forward for us.

Thakkar says some curious things about socialism. Thakkar sees socialism largely as a system of production, rather than a system of production, of distribution, of exchange and of consumption. For another perspective on socialism, see Marx’ Critique of Political Economy. Yet Thakkar defines socialism with just two scant lines. Two. He then proceeds to rule by fiat that between 1946 and 1951, Great Britain had ‘an unequivocal socialist government’ because key industries and health care were under state operation.

This is astonishing! No revolutionary socialists regard those five years as an era of socialist government! They don’t even regard Stalinist Russia and/or various associated East European regimes as socialist regimes. Today, Venezuela is arguably the world's most socialist country. Yet even Marxists who live there cannot decide whether it is a Capitalist or socialist country. Thakkar says that ‘socialism’ used to mean something. True! So when did Russia and these East European ‘socialist’ countries abolish the coerced extraction of surplus value from labor? When did those nations abolish wage slavery, commodity production, currency, rent, interest, the market – in short, the essential components of Capitalism? Does Thakkar think that because it is the state which organizes some key businesses [largely in the interests of the bourgeoisie] that this somehow constitutes an unequivocal socialist government? By what conceivable metric does Thakkar conclude that Great Britain had socialism at that time?

For the record, Thakkar describes not socialism but state-run Capitalism. And state run Capitalism proved itself all the disaster that the US right-wing claims it to be, and largely for those same reasons.

And please, please – how, pray-tell, does one get to be a Postdoctoral Fellow at Princeton University and not know these things?

Thakkar states:

‘If the term socialist had been used to refer to liberals in mid-century Europe, in contrast, people would have needed a new term to describe the real socialists.’

I honestly found this amusing. The term ‘socialist’ has so long been associated with the ‘left’ that socialists found it necessary to develop a new term to describe the left, hence the term ‘pseudo-left’ and the theoretical/historical story behind it.

Socialism is dead, Thakkar tells us! It is dead in Europe, it is dead in the US!

For another opinion, consider The Emergence of Class Struggle in the US, A World Convulsed by Crises, and On the Threshold of a New Year.

Joseph Kishore’s article states:

‘Beyond the confines of the top five or ten percent of the population, the state confronts an angry, dissatisfied and increasingly hostile working class. Broad sections no longer look to the political system as a mechanism for addressing any of their grievances. This has immense revolutionary implications.’

Indeed!

And those broad layers of society which no longer look to the political mechanism for addressing any of their grievances? Thakkar wants to guide them back into the political system. That is why he has written. That is why he tells us that unions have a vital role to play in industrial democracy. In reality, the recent assault on autoworkers and steelworkers show that their respective unions are entirely at the disposal of their corporate handlers, and serve to police the labor pool in corporate interests. That is why action OUTSIDE unions [such as the Detroit teachers] is now necessary. This is also why Thakkar closes with the ‘industrial to a service economy’ rhetoric. Translation? No genuinely productive work, but more low paying, low hours, no benefit, wage slavery service jobs, ensuring poverty into perpetuity while boosting profits.

For 100 years, anti-socialism has enjoyed the uncontested status of a civil religion in the US. But after a century of silence, the bourgeoisie has HAD to allow socialism to enter the civic discourse, even if only in the pseudo-leftism of Senator Sanders. This was necessary because as Kishore says, youths are abandoning our political order in droves.

Yet this is a calculated risk. Youths are intelligent. When they see the ‘bait and switch’ – and they till – the younger generation sweep far, far past Sanders' very modest and ill-defined reformist posturing into a genuinely socialist program. And when this discussion is hosted, it won’t be on Thakkar’s premises, on Republican premises, or Democratic Party premises. It will be on the basis of socialist premises.

And I for one can’t wait for that discussion to happen.

The Republican Party will be what the Republican Party is. That is a good thing. It belongs to socialists to build a mass movement. That mass movement must be shaped into a wedge to smash into the Democratic Party, so that its adherents become revolutionary socialists or else join the Republican Party. These dynamics cannot be interrupted. These are exciting times!

Since WWI, Capitalism has been in convulsion. Capitalism is finished. Capitalism has no forward, progressive role in history. Capitalism is mired in unending war. Capitalism long ago gave up on its own. Flint Michigan alone is a scathing indictment of the whole, Capitalist system. Capitalism has four policies – War, Famine, Pestilence and Death. Having endured the devastation of two world wars, genocide and pogroms, democracy across Europe is collapsing into military-police dictatorships. The post WWII system of relations is breaking apart under the weight of the refugee crisis precipitated by continuous bombing of ME countries, which is necessary to save Capitalist nations from economic collapse. European borders are again being manned with soldiers. Tanks will follow. They are rearming for war, and economic and political rivalries will push them into ever increasing conflict. Europe looks very much as it did prior to WWI. Capitalism has no solutions. These are Capitalism’s death throes. In fact this has been so for some time as stated in the 1938 Transitional Program by Leon Trotsky.

No, Mr. Thakkar. Socialism is not dead. It is anything but dead.

The only question is whether World War III or the world socialist agenda will be first to gain ascendancy.

IMT
 
Last edited:
the Idea of Unfettered Capitalism is DEAD.



well fettered Capitalism is a great tool for mankind to harness the good of capitalism and the good of a human centric Democracy.



The founders gave us all the tools to make his work



Those tools are unbroken


they are lying right on the table



the only reason our Democracy is faltering is that the Republican party has cheated the people in elections for 30 years now.


that means we have not had REAL Democracy for 30 years now.


RESTORE the integrity of elections and we will be fine
 
the Idea of Unfettered Capitalism is DEAD.



well fettered Capitalism is a great tool for mankind to harness the good of capitalism and the good of a human centric Democracy.



The founders gave us all the tools to make his work



Those tools are unbroken


they are lying right on the table



the only reason our Democracy is faltering is that the Republican party has cheated the people in elections for 30 years now.


that means we have not had REAL Democracy for 30 years now.


RESTORE the integrity of elections and we will be fine

There is no such thing as "unfettered" capitalism. It exists in the deluded minds of left wingers
 
I attempted to reply to midcan5’s thread in the ‘Above Plain Politics Forum,’ but was prohibited from so doing by forum design. So this is my reply to that thread, Socialism Reconsidered.

Dear midcan5:

I printed and read your linked article on the APP forum. My thoughts are as follows.

That neither Obama nor Occupy could ‘give the idea of fraternity any real substance' might suggest that 'the space of political possibility' INDEED contracted. If said reforms were supposed to be the 'fix' for Capitalism, it didn't take.

‘Things Can Only Get Better’ and ‘Let’s Change the Future:’ citing no more than such slogans, Jonny Thakkar postulates that activist bases seem to go through ‘the same emotional cycle.’ He offers no shred of explanation to why this is so. Are we to believe this because Jonny Thakkar tells us this? Moreover, is another analysis is possible?

The Populist Party in the 1890s, the Progressive movement of the early 20th century, Robert La Follette's Farmer-Labor Party of Wisconsin in the 1920s, similar groups in Minnesota and the Dakotas, and Henry Wallace’ Progressive Party in 1948 have this in common. All collapsed or dissolved into the Democratic Party. Why? Perhaps the Democratic Party is where reform movements go to die.

The Vietnam War, the violent attacks on labor in the 1980s, war on the Middle East as stated policy, the staggering growth of social inequality – we have seen opposition rise and fall in each case. There was Eugene McCarthy and Bob Kennedy in 1968, followed by George McGovern in 1972, followed by Jesse Jackson in 1984 and 1988, then Howard Dean in 2004, and now it is Bernie Sanders. Is Thakkar's 'emotional cycle' the only 'explanation?'

In 1920, no less a figure than Leon Trotsky gave prescient warning of and insight into this so-called ‘cycle’ in 'Terrorism and Communism:' His words are at least as true ninety-six years later.

“The capitalist bourgeois calculates...'at the right moment I will bring into existence opposition parties, which will disappear tomorrow, but which today accomplish their mission by affording the possibility of the lower middle class expressing their indignation without hurt therefrom for capitalism.'”

This equally contradicts John Kenneth Galbraith’s puerile speculation that the ballot can break this ‘cycle.’ J.K. Galbraith's remarks seem somewhat supportive of the socialist adage that US history reads like the illustrated version of Marx’ manifesto.

This is no ‘emotional cycle,’ [whatever Thakkar’s fallacious nomenclature/category means]. This is a political process whereby the ruling elite defuses significant opposition by containing and dissipating it within the Democratic Party.

Thakkar’s supposition that US legislation satisfies no one and will therefore bend toward centrism willfully ignore the very deep investment of the US bourgeoisie in both big-money parties.

Thakkar should consider the possibility that working class people are disillusioned with US governance because the agenda does not change for THEM however elections go. It is the PERCEPTION that Sanders is socialist which makes him popular with youth. But youth will see through him also. The bourgeoisie fears deeply that youth will sweep far past Sanders’ so-called ‘socialism.’ When they do, the state will turn guns on its own people. It has nothing else left.

Social vision is in short supply because the nation as a whole is exhausted even as the ruling class steers us toward massive military budget increases in advanced stage preparation of discretionary war on Russia, China, or both. Thakkar speaks of the exhaustion of the so-called ‘left.’ The left is not alone in exhaustion. Listen to right wing Republicans! Listen to your Libertarian neighbor! Their every other statement begins, ‘I’m so tired of – followed by the latest assault on working people. The whole nation is staggering.

Again, this is bourgeoisie driven politics. The ruling class is safe while the nation bickers on partisan lines. And it is all over the JPP forum. On signalmankenneth's thread, I began saying that Democrats and Republicans at all levels of government, together with the MDWQ and the EPA are answerable for the disaster at Flint. But no sooner was I saying that it was NOT lead but the bourgeoisie driven Austerity Agenda that poisoned Flint, and the 'Flint Residents ... Poisoned Water Bills' thread was abandoned. We haven't yet learned how to get past our bickering in order to fix anything.

Yet IF we can’t get past that, whatever will all our voting accomplish? Unless or until we change the way we do things and begin educating ourselves and studying the role of class in our history – YES, class in United States history – there is no way forward for us.

Thakkar says some curious things about socialism. Thakkar sees socialism largely as a system of production, rather than a system of production, of distribution, of exchange and of consumption. For another perspective on socialism, see Marx’ Critique of Political Economy. Yet Thakkar defines socialism with just two scant lines. Two. He then proceeds to rule by fiat that between 1946 and 1951, Great Britain had ‘an unequivocal socialist government’ because key industries and health care were under state operation.

This is astonishing! No revolutionary socialists regard those five years as an era of socialist government! They don’t even regard Stalinist Russia and/or various associated East European regimes as socialist regimes. Today, Venezuela is arguably the world's most socialist country. Yet even Marxists who live there cannot decide whether it is a Capitalist or socialist country. Thakkar says that ‘socialism’ used to mean something. True! So when did Russia and these East European ‘socialist’ countries abolish the coerced extraction of surplus value from labor? When did those nations abolish wage slavery, commodity production, currency, rent, interest, the market – in short, the essential components of Capitalism? Does Thakkar think that because it is the state which organizes some key businesses [largely in the interests of the bourgeoisie] that this somehow constitutes an unequivocal socialist government? By what conceivable metric does Thakkar conclude that Great Britain had socialism at that time?

For the record, Thakkar describes not socialism but state-run Capitalism. And state run Capitalism proved itself all the disaster that the US right-wing claims it to be, and largely for those same reasons.

And please, please – how, pray-tell, does one get to be a Postdoctoral Fellow at Princeton University and not know these things?

Thakkar states:

‘If the term socialist had been used to refer to liberals in mid-century Europe, in contrast, people would have needed a new term to describe the real socialists.’

I honestly found this amusing. The term ‘socialist’ has so long been associated with the ‘left’ that socialists found it necessary to develop a new term to describe the left, hence the term ‘pseudo-left’ and the theoretical/historical story behind it.

Socialism is dead, Thakkar tells us! It is dead in Europe, it is dead in the US!

For another opinion, consider The Emergence of Class Struggle in the US, A World Convulsed by Crises, and On the Threshold of a New Year.

Joseph Kishore’s article states:

‘Beyond the confines of the top five or ten percent of the population, the state confronts an angry, dissatisfied and increasingly hostile working class. Broad sections no longer look to the political system as a mechanism for addressing any of their grievances. This has immense revolutionary implications.’

Indeed!

And those broad layers of society which no longer look to the political mechanism for addressing any of their grievances? Thakkar wants to guide them back into the political system. That is why he has written. That is why he tells us that unions have a vital role to play in industrial democracy. In reality, the recent assault on autoworkers and steelworkers show that their respective unions are entirely at the disposal of their corporate handlers, and serve to police the labor pool in corporate interests. That is why action OUTSIDE unions [such as the Detroit teachers] is now necessary. This is also why Thakkar closes with the ‘industrial to a service economy’ rhetoric. Translation? No genuinely productive work, but more low paying, low hours, no benefit, wage slavery service jobs, ensuring poverty into perpetuity while boosting profits.

For 100 years, anti-socialism has enjoyed the uncontested status of a civil religion in the US. But after a century of silence, the bourgeoisie has HAD to allow socialism to enter the civic discourse, even if only in the pseudo-leftism of Senator Sanders. This was necessary because as Kishore says, youths are abandoning our political order in droves.

Yet this is a calculated risk. Youths are intelligent. When they see the ‘bait and switch’ – and they till – the younger generation sweep far, far past Sanders' very modest and ill-defined reformist posturing into a genuinely socialist program. And when this discussion is hosted, it won’t be on Thakkar’s premises, on Republican premises, or Democratic Party premises. It will be on the basis of socialist premises.

And I for one can’t wait for that discussion to happen.

The Republican Party will be what the Republican Party is. That is a good thing. It belongs to socialists to build a mass movement. That mass movement must be shaped into a wedge to smash into the Democratic Party, so that its adherents become revolutionary socialists or else join the Republican Party. These dynamics cannot be interrupted. These are exciting times!

Since WWI, Capitalism has been in convulsion. Capitalism is finished. Capitalism has no forward, progressive role in history. Capitalism is mired in unending war. Capitalism long ago gave up on its own. Flint Michigan alone is a scathing indictment of the whole, Capitalist system. Capitalism has four policies – War, Famine, Pestilence and Death. Having endured the devastation of two world wars, genocide and pogroms, democracy across Europe is collapsing into military-police dictatorships. The post WWII system of relations is breaking apart under the weight of the refugee crisis precipitated by continuous bombing of ME countries, which is necessary to save Capitalist nations from economic collapse. European borders are again being manned with soldiers. Tanks will follow. They are rearming for war, and economic and political rivalries will push them into ever increasing conflict. Europe looks very much as it did prior to WWI. Capitalism has no solutions. These are Capitalism’s death throes. In fact this has been so for some time as stated in the 1938 Transitional Program by Leon Trotsky.

No, Mr. Thakkar. Socialism is not dead. It is anything but dead.

The only question is whether World War III or the world socialist agenda will be first to gain ascendancy.

IMT

Did you read the rules for the APP forum; because the very first line, reads as such:

** NOTE: APP access is not enabled by default. If you wish to post here, message any of the mods and we'll grant you access **

I've underlined a very important part.
 
Dear evince:

Please understand that I mean no disrespect, but did you read my reply to the link in midcan5’s post? I just don’t see much interaction with anything I wrote.

Moreover, do you truly believe that it is a credible position to saddle the demise of democracy on the Republican Party alone? Speaking only for myself, I would hate to be put in the position of having to try to defend the premise that Republicans alone cheat. In fact in a country where gerrymandering is as widespread as it is legal, electoral cheating hardly seems necessary.

I would sooner offer the proposition that elections are themselves a cheat, and that they perpetuate rather than end civic malfeasance. Could that be why our youth are deserting the polling station?

As I see it, democracy’s woes are more than three decades old.

It isn’t clear to me what you intend by ‘well-fettered Capitalism.’ My best guess is that you refer to the so-called ‘New Deal’ ushered in on the heels of the Great Depression. Certainly, efforts have been made to scrap what remains of the ‘New Deal’ and any other measures introduced to assuage social misery over the past century.

But notice something, evince: F.D. Roosevelt’s administration could put millions to work through programs that repaired and constructed infrastructure. Yet that was driven by working class upheaval. Smarting from the October Revolution, the US bourgeoisie had real fear that something similar could happen in the US. By contrast, no one today can even hint at a program the Works Progress Administration. US capitalism is in continuing crisis. We are a declining power. We are the most indebted nation on the planet. The ruling elite is dominated ever more and more by an oligarchy that has extracted massively obscene treasure NOT by producing anything, but by Wall Street speculation that crosses into quazi-legal/criminal practices. Quantitative easing, virtually free money, huge mergers, selloffs/dumping_liabilities/buybacks and more –massive fortunes are fraudulently generated by such means! Bill Van Auken’s, Obama’s right-wing ‘jobs’ speech from which this paragraph is largely drawn shows that this is anything but a one [Republican] party matter.

I realize that your position is not envious. But at some point, you WILL face that choice between revolutionary socialism and the Republican Party.

Regards!

IMT
 
Dear USFREEDOM911:

I recalled reading that after attempting to post. You know how it goes ... it's always the 'short term' that goes first :) Regards.

IMT
 
Dear evince:

Please understand that I mean no disrespect, but did you read my reply to the link in midcan5’s post? I just don’t see much interaction with anything I wrote.

Moreover, do you truly believe that it is a credible position to saddle the demise of democracy on the Republican Party alone? Speaking only for myself, I would hate to be put in the position of having to try to defend the premise that Republicans alone cheat. In fact in a country where gerrymandering is as widespread as it is legal, electoral cheating hardly seems necessary.

I would sooner offer the proposition that elections are themselves a cheat, and that they perpetuate rather than end civic malfeasance. Could that be why our youth are deserting the polling station?

As I see it, democracy’s woes are more than three decades old.

It isn’t clear to me what you intend by ‘well-fettered Capitalism.’ My best guess is that you refer to the so-called ‘New Deal’ ushered in on the heels of the Great Depression. Certainly, efforts have been made to scrap what remains of the ‘New Deal’ and any other measures introduced to assuage social misery over the past century.

But notice something, evince: F.D. Roosevelt’s administration could put millions to work through programs that repaired and constructed infrastructure. Yet that was driven by working class upheaval. Smarting from the October Revolution, the US bourgeoisie had real fear that something similar could happen in the US. By contrast, no one today can even hint at a program the Works Progress Administration. US capitalism is in continuing crisis. We are a declining power. We are the most indebted nation on the planet. The ruling elite is dominated ever more and more by an oligarchy that has extracted massively obscene treasure NOT by producing anything, but by Wall Street speculation that crosses into quazi-legal/criminal practices. Quantitative easing, virtually free money, huge mergers, selloffs/dumping_liabilities/buybacks and more –massive fortunes are fraudulently generated by such means! Bill Van Auken’s, Obama’s right-wing ‘jobs’ speech from which this paragraph is largely drawn shows that this is anything but a one [Republican] party matter.

I realize that your position is not envious. But at some point, you WILL face that choice between revolutionary socialism and the Republican Party.

Regards!

IMT

we do not need to massively alter this government.


all the tools are here and unbroken


the republican party is to BLAME because they chose the path of CHEATING American voters out of their rights to vote so that they can STEAL the power from the people.




they are trying to murder Democracy


why do you pretend the evidence is not all there for anyone to see?
 
I attempted to reply to midcan5’s thread in the ‘Above Plain Politics Forum,’ but was prohibited from so doing by forum design. So this is my reply to that thread, Socialism Reconsidered.

Dear midcan5:

I printed and read your linked article on the APP forum. My thoughts are as follows.

That neither Obama nor Occupy could ‘give the idea of fraternity any real substance' might suggest that 'the space of political possibility' INDEED contracted. If said reforms were supposed to be the 'fix' for Capitalism, it didn't take.

‘Things Can Only Get Better’ and ‘Let’s Change the Future:’ citing no more than such slogans, Jonny Thakkar postulates that activist bases seem to go through ‘the same emotional cycle.’ He offers no shred of explanation to why this is so. Are we to believe this because Jonny Thakkar tells us this? Moreover, is another analysis is possible?

The Populist Party in the 1890s, the Progressive movement of the early 20th century, Robert La Follette's Farmer-Labor Party of Wisconsin in the 1920s, similar groups in Minnesota and the Dakotas, and Henry Wallace’ Progressive Party in 1948 have this in common. All collapsed or dissolved into the Democratic Party. Why? Perhaps the Democratic Party is where reform movements go to die.

The Vietnam War, the violent attacks on labor in the 1980s, war on the Middle East as stated policy, the staggering growth of social inequality – we have seen opposition rise and fall in each case. There was Eugene McCarthy and Bob Kennedy in 1968, followed by George McGovern in 1972, followed by Jesse Jackson in 1984 and 1988, then Howard Dean in 2004, and now it is Bernie Sanders. Is Thakkar's 'emotional cycle' the only 'explanation?'

In 1920, no less a figure than Leon Trotsky gave prescient warning of and insight into this so-called ‘cycle’ in 'Terrorism and Communism:' His words are at least as true ninety-six years later.

“The capitalist bourgeois calculates...'at the right moment I will bring into existence opposition parties, which will disappear tomorrow, but which today accomplish their mission by affording the possibility of the lower middle class expressing their indignation without hurt therefrom for capitalism.'”

This equally contradicts John Kenneth Galbraith’s puerile speculation that the ballot can break this ‘cycle.’ J.K. Galbraith's remarks seem somewhat supportive of the socialist adage that US history reads like the illustrated version of Marx’ manifesto.

This is no ‘emotional cycle,’ [whatever Thakkar’s fallacious nomenclature/category means]. This is a political process whereby the ruling elite defuses significant opposition by containing and dissipating it within the Democratic Party.

Thakkar’s supposition that US legislation satisfies no one and will therefore bend toward centrism willfully ignore the very deep investment of the US bourgeoisie in both big-money parties.

Thakkar should consider the possibility that working class people are disillusioned with US governance because the agenda does not change for THEM however elections go. It is the PERCEPTION that Sanders is socialist which makes him popular with youth. But youth will see through him also. The bourgeoisie fears deeply that youth will sweep far past Sanders’ so-called ‘socialism.’ When they do, the state will turn guns on its own people. It has nothing else left.

Social vision is in short supply because the nation as a whole is exhausted even as the ruling class steers us toward massive military budget increases in advanced stage preparation of discretionary war on Russia, China, or both. Thakkar speaks of the exhaustion of the so-called ‘left.’ The left is not alone in exhaustion. Listen to right wing Republicans! Listen to your Libertarian neighbor! Their every other statement begins, ‘I’m so tired of – followed by the latest assault on working people. The whole nation is staggering.

Again, this is bourgeoisie driven politics. The ruling class is safe while the nation bickers on partisan lines. And it is all over the JPP forum. On signalmankenneth's thread, I began saying that Democrats and Republicans at all levels of government, together with the MDWQ and the EPA are answerable for the disaster at Flint. But no sooner was I saying that it was NOT lead but the bourgeoisie driven Austerity Agenda that poisoned Flint, and the 'Flint Residents ... Poisoned Water Bills' thread was abandoned. We haven't yet learned how to get past our bickering in order to fix anything.

Yet IF we can’t get past that, whatever will all our voting accomplish? Unless or until we change the way we do things and begin educating ourselves and studying the role of class in our history – YES, class in United States history – there is no way forward for us.

Thakkar says some curious things about socialism. Thakkar sees socialism largely as a system of production, rather than a system of production, of distribution, of exchange and of consumption. For another perspective on socialism, see Marx’ Critique of Political Economy. Yet Thakkar defines socialism with just two scant lines. Two. He then proceeds to rule by fiat that between 1946 and 1951, Great Britain had ‘an unequivocal socialist government’ because key industries and health care were under state operation.

This is astonishing! No revolutionary socialists regard those five years as an era of socialist government! They don’t even regard Stalinist Russia and/or various associated East European regimes as socialist regimes. Today, Venezuela is arguably the world's most socialist country. Yet even Marxists who live there cannot decide whether it is a Capitalist or socialist country. Thakkar says that ‘socialism’ used to mean something. True! So when did Russia and these East European ‘socialist’ countries abolish the coerced extraction of surplus value from labor? When did those nations abolish wage slavery, commodity production, currency, rent, interest, the market – in short, the essential components of Capitalism? Does Thakkar think that because it is the state which organizes some key businesses [largely in the interests of the bourgeoisie] that this somehow constitutes an unequivocal socialist government? By what conceivable metric does Thakkar conclude that Great Britain had socialism at that time?

For the record, Thakkar describes not socialism but state-run Capitalism. And state run Capitalism proved itself all the disaster that the US right-wing claims it to be, and largely for those same reasons.

And please, please – how, pray-tell, does one get to be a Postdoctoral Fellow at Princeton University and not know these things?

Thakkar states:

‘If the term socialist had been used to refer to liberals in mid-century Europe, in contrast, people would have needed a new term to describe the real socialists.’

I honestly found this amusing. The term ‘socialist’ has so long been associated with the ‘left’ that socialists found it necessary to develop a new term to describe the left, hence the term ‘pseudo-left’ and the theoretical/historical story behind it.

Socialism is dead, Thakkar tells us! It is dead in Europe, it is dead in the US!

For another opinion, consider The Emergence of Class Struggle in the US, A World Convulsed by Crises, and On the Threshold of a New Year.

Joseph Kishore’s article states:

‘Beyond the confines of the top five or ten percent of the population, the state confronts an angry, dissatisfied and increasingly hostile working class. Broad sections no longer look to the political system as a mechanism for addressing any of their grievances. This has immense revolutionary implications.’

Indeed!

And those broad layers of society which no longer look to the political mechanism for addressing any of their grievances? Thakkar wants to guide them back into the political system. That is why he has written. That is why he tells us that unions have a vital role to play in industrial democracy. In reality, the recent assault on autoworkers and steelworkers show that their respective unions are entirely at the disposal of their corporate handlers, and serve to police the labor pool in corporate interests. That is why action OUTSIDE unions [such as the Detroit teachers] is now necessary. This is also why Thakkar closes with the ‘industrial to a service economy’ rhetoric. Translation? No genuinely productive work, but more low paying, low hours, no benefit, wage slavery service jobs, ensuring poverty into perpetuity while boosting profits.

For 100 years, anti-socialism has enjoyed the uncontested status of a civil religion in the US. But after a century of silence, the bourgeoisie has HAD to allow socialism to enter the civic discourse, even if only in the pseudo-leftism of Senator Sanders. This was necessary because as Kishore says, youths are abandoning our political order in droves.

Yet this is a calculated risk. Youths are intelligent. When they see the ‘bait and switch’ – and they till – the younger generation sweep far, far past Sanders' very modest and ill-defined reformist posturing into a genuinely socialist program. And when this discussion is hosted, it won’t be on Thakkar’s premises, on Republican premises, or Democratic Party premises. It will be on the basis of socialist premises.

And I for one can’t wait for that discussion to happen.

The Republican Party will be what the Republican Party is. That is a good thing. It belongs to socialists to build a mass movement. That mass movement must be shaped into a wedge to smash into the Democratic Party, so that its adherents become revolutionary socialists or else join the Republican Party. These dynamics cannot be interrupted. These are exciting times!

Since WWI, Capitalism has been in convulsion. Capitalism is finished. Capitalism has no forward, progressive role in history. Capitalism is mired in unending war. Capitalism long ago gave up on its own. Flint Michigan alone is a scathing indictment of the whole, Capitalist system. Capitalism has four policies – War, Famine, Pestilence and Death. Having endured the devastation of two world wars, genocide and pogroms, democracy across Europe is collapsing into military-police dictatorships. The post WWII system of relations is breaking apart under the weight of the refugee crisis precipitated by continuous bombing of ME countries, which is necessary to save Capitalist nations from economic collapse. European borders are again being manned with soldiers. Tanks will follow. They are rearming for war, and economic and political rivalries will push them into ever increasing conflict. Europe looks very much as it did prior to WWI. Capitalism has no solutions. These are Capitalism’s death throes. In fact this has been so for some time as stated in the 1938 Transitional Program by Leon Trotsky.

No, Mr. Thakkar. Socialism is not dead. It is anything but dead.

The only question is whether World War III or the world socialist agenda will be first to gain ascendancy.

IMT

you are dead wrong
 
Dear evince:

As I see it, elections are a waste of hard-earned taxpayer money with all the democratic import of a national beauty pageant.

Elections are an instrument of social control. They are based on the premise as simple as it is ingenious as it is effective -- that if you THINK you are 'free,' you will not try to BECOME free. You will instead be a nice, quiet, passive, manageable, doting, respectful little tax-payer, a model citizen who lives a second-hand life tailored to fit the interests of professional politicians and their bourgeoisie masters. I, unfortunately, am none of those fine things.

Nor do I do consent to be retained as a political hostage to the maleficent machinations of what is ostensibly my own system of governance. For what compelling reasons ought I to do otherwise?

If no massive alteration of governance is needed, if nothing is so bad that a good election can't fix it, I see little point to your Republican chicanery rhetoric.

I draw parallels to pre-WWI conditions in Europe. I name specific practices of gigantic, financial fraud. I provide quotes from 75 and 95 years past that find fruition in present trends. I indicate our nation's catastrophic indebtedness.

And in reply?

I see no attempt to confront grapple with this. With slight of hand, all is brushed off -- no analysis of global economic crisis, no reckoning with increasingly tumultous international relations or to war as standing policy, no acknowledgment of the class relations behind these developments.

Instead, you proffer a well-managed election which, like some cosmic, enchanted wand, will clear from view the rubbage of history and all that drives it.

Seriously, evince?

Shouldn't you at least describe the policies which [supposedly] will make all this bad stuff vanish, and why they will do this?

It is one thing to 'plead the [electoral] myth; it is quite another to explain how and why this most assuredly will happen.

Unless or until you do so, you give me no reason NOT to assert that Capitalism DOESN'T answer the charges made because it HAS no answer.

And, your full-throated support of Capitalism insufficiently differentiates your party and the Republican Party [for me at least] to warrant an election. If you won't offer more, I suggest that you make your peace with the Republican Party. Other than the way it administers elections, methinks you're there already.

Against your three decades of 'problematic elections' assertion, I offer a perspective which, if some 160 years past, resonates with many instantly.

I refer to Marx' dictum that every few years, the ruling class let us decide which bourgeoisie faction gets to bully, order and oppress us.

IMT
 
It is absolute lunacy to even consider socialism or communism, given the history of the world and it's governments that implemented it. over 200 million people were murdered by those governments. absolute lunacy and it should make sane people wonder what exactly is the intent of those who are pushing us towards it. who do they want dead?
 
Dear SmarterthanYou:

As I asked [above] in referencing Jonny Thakkar's article, of what so-called 'socialist' countries are we speaking?

'When did Russia and these East European "socialist" countries abolish the coerced extraction of surplus value from labor? When did those nations abolish wage slavery, commodity production, currency, exchange rates, rent, interest, the market – in short, the essential components of Capitalism?'

To repeat myself [again, above], these countries illustrate not socialism but state-run capitalism; and this is all the disaster the right says that it is, and largely for the same reasons.

Mao and Stalin and Hitler, Amin and others like them murder tons of people NOT because of political ideology, but because they were monsters and would have done the same whatever system of political economy prevailed.

Moreover, the US killed plenty of people in the Philippines; does that disqualify Capitalism as an ideology?

It seems to me that making socialism answerable for such crimes is rather like blaming Jesus for the Spanish Inquisition.

Global economic crisis, global geo-political tensions, military violence, worsening social conditions everywhere, renewed class conflict, and near universal alienation from established political power indicate impending revolutionary crisis.

Yet bourgeois-driven Capitalist parties cannot admit these issues into civic discourse, let alone offer solutions. How could they? These conditions were created by the very social relations and political forms that Capitalism developed!

The incompatibility of these social relations and political forms can be resolved solely by the transfer of political power to the working class everywhere based on a socialist world economy. Otherwise, it is pursuing the course which brought us where we are that will bring us into barbarism.

We could wish that Capitalism was half as good at solving crises as it is at scapegoating others for them.

IMT
 
what is socialism, except for state run capitalism? it's the redistribution of wealth to 'create a classless society', while ignoring the inevitable result of a two tier citizenship status. that of serf and that of ruler. and the crimes of genocide were committed solely to protect that two tier system. using government of force to solve crises such as poverty has never worked and will never work. the only thing that solves issues of economic inequality is for people to have the opportunity to use their skills in creating their own wealth while having the human decency to help others in developing those skills.
 
You asses seem to talk about socialism and capitalism as black and white.

There are no purely socialist or capitalist governments. We are all along a continuum. The question is how far to one side or the other do we want to be and on what issues.

We have socialist programs in the United States that almost all of our elected officials agree with keeping.
 
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