• TheCommunismButton@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    People these days know that capitalism sucks. Communism and socialism aren’t the dirty words they used to be. It no longer works to try to convince people that socialism isn’t good. The new propaganda strategy is to convince people that any viable form of socialism “isn’t real socialism.” Hence the belief in “state-capitalism.” For the same reason, people now call communists “tankies” instead of commies.

    • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      For the same reason, people now call communists “tankies” instead of commies.

      Fast forward 10 years and communists parties are gonna rebrand to tankie parties. Hell, the rebranding of communism already happened twice so it’s not even that /s

  • Addfwyn@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    Bad thing = Communism. Good Thing = State-capitalism.

    Very simply, they don’t want to acknowledge any socialist successes, so they have to find a way to rebrand any country’s success as being due to capitalism.

  • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    If you think about some other terms liberals use, it’s not surprising at all, they always have the problem of confusing the tool with the wielder.

    Also of course by calling socialism that, they reinforce their own ideological purity as the keepers of the “true socialism” - that’s for the westolefto. As for openly antisocialist libs, they think it’s a gotcha.

  • Ronin_5@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    Communism is when the state does stuff.

    Decades of lies spread against communist countries, painting them as a totalitarian surveillance state. Like, when’s the last time your vote counted? Hell, when’s the last time there was a candidate that actually represented you? I’m not even gonna start on the TLA’s.

    • Better Red Than Dead@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      Not not really. China’s economy is currently a state monopoly capitalist one, which is a socialist market economy. State monopoly capitalism is the correct term, but liberals use it to denounce the socialist system and say “look, capitalism always wins!” without any analysis of how it works

  • Sudruh_Lebkavic@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    I talked with a communist the other day, who was advertising for a communist newspaper he, I’m guessing, works for. Well he asked me if I am organised, to which I said yes and we started talking. At some point I said smth positive abt China and he was like: “uh… So China is socialist to you?”. That’s when I took a deep breath and started having a discussion with him.

    I stated that there are only like 24 capitalists in the bottom part of the Party, which consists of thousands of people. I also said that the government is known to support workers on strike. But he in turn argued that the Chinese gov may support strikers, but since it’s “state-capitalism” they still have to bend in the direction of the companies, cuz of the profits and so on. He also said that their economy is sure to collapse soon. I just thought abt the metric shitload of videos that comes out every year claiming China’s economy will collapse any second now My guy cited the fact that Evergrande, a company that according to him makes up a rly big part of their economy, filed for bankrupcy in the US or so.

    Well quite frankly I was standing there, I’d say a pretty good understanding of China, but I couldn’t outright refute his claims or present a compelling counterargument. So I’ve been looking forward to talking with any comrade abt that so that I could learn abt how to deal with this in the future, and to learn abt valid counter arguments as well.

    • Water Bowl Slime@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      I think political convictions aren’t normally swayed by debate. You can dispute individual claims all day but beliefs are more than the sum of their parts. I mean, even if you debunk every single justification he has, that doesn’t mean he’ll stop believing that China is capitalist. No, he’ll probably just invent new reasons instead. So rather than asking why he believes it, you should ask why the idea is compelling to him.

      Part of the reason is surely because his job depends on it. But besides that, what about China does he take issue with? That they do business with the US? That their capitalist class still exists? That they’re unlike western “socialists”?

      • FullCommie@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        "I think political convictions aren’t normally swayed by debate. "

        If I could tattoo that part on my brain to remind me every time I get in a dumb debate about this shit I would have a happier life I think. Great point

        • Water Bowl Slime@lemmygrad.ml
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          1 year ago

          Fr. Sankara and Mao would’ve probably added a few caveats to their teachings if they had to deal with the fortified ignorance of westerners

    • DamarcusArt@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      I’ve found with a lot of ultras, they will say things that are technically true but are non-sequiturs, they aren’t relevant to the central question of the argument, but you’re put on the defensive to “debunk” them, and when you can’t, because they are technically true, but sort of miss the forest for the trees. They use the same sort of logic as conspiracy theorists, where a huge pile of garbage evidence for their position substitutes for an actual direct answer to their question. The question of “is China socialist” is answered by “who holds political power in China?” not through examples of billionaires existing or corruption or them trading with capitalist nations or supporting governments that fight Maoist uprisings. A million bits of circumstantial evidence will never add up to the same thing as a single piece of direct evidence.

      It’s like bigfoot. It doesn’t matter how many blurry photos or foot casts or recordings of random animal noises in the woods they have, the thing that proves bigfoot real is a real bigfoot. It’s the same thing with China. It doesn’t matter how many examples of some small thing that isn’t “pure enough” for them, what matters is who holds political power in the country.

      The trick is to not get pulled into their games, they aren’t interested in challenging their ideas about China, which is why they ignore the big picture in favour of tiny little “examples” instead.

      The only way you can beat them is to not waste your time with them. If you let them go on long enough, they will inevitably start spouting bullshit from the CIA sooner or later, and I think that really shows their true colours. They’d rather critically support the organisation that has done more to harm socialist movements in the world than any other rather than critically support a socialist nation that doesn’t pass their purity tests. They’re western chauvinists at their core, even if they refuse to admit it.

  • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.mlM
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    1 year ago

    The rationale there is that you’re still using capitalist mechanics, but instead of the capital being owned by private individuals, it’s in the hands of the state. However, the key difference in my view is with the respective incentives created by both approaches.

    When the capital is in the hands of private individuals then they’re able to use this capital for direct personal benefit. This creates incentives for exploitation of the workers by capitalists in order to get the best return on their labour. The primary goal of labour becomes producing value for capitalists with any other benefits being strictly incidental.

    On the other hand, when the capital is owned by the state then nobody is directly profiting from the labour, and the only incentive is to reinvest the capital back into developing the productive forces of the country.

    The one valid criticism we can make of state owned industry is in terms of labour organization where it often follows top down corporate structure. However, that is obviously not an inherent problem associated with having state run industry.

    • Munrock ☭@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      I think a good illustration of this is Jack Ma and Ant group, vs Bezos and Amazon (or corporate America in general). Both in their interactions with consumers, and with their governments.

      Western governments bend over backwards to help their corporations fleece consumers. Their antitrust operations are pathetic.

      Meanwhile in China, the government has helped Alipay and Wechatpay become the de-facto cash currency infrastructure because it’s a quality of life improvement for people. But as soon as Ant Group started to step out of line (where being ‘out of line’ is not putting public interests first) the government broke it. No kid gloves, no appeasement.

      Whenever I’m using Alibaba apps the ads are fucking annoying. But when the ad says ‘we think you’d be interested in this’ it rarely misses because its algorithms are genuinely looking to sell me things I want to buy. In the Amazon app the algorithm is looking to sell me things it wants me to buy. Same with douyin and facebook/ig promoting shit at me. Douyin is eerily accurate because it’s looking for what I want to see while fb is weighing what I want to see against products and politics its sponsors & handlers want to show me.

      SWCC’s implementation of capitalism can look very similar to actual capitalism on the surface, but the heavy regulation and policing of the profit motive is transformative on a very fundamental level. The difference is most noticable crossing the Hong Kong-Shenzhen boundary, where the unfettered Western-liberal capitalism is still quite pronounced on the HK side. Fortunately that’s changing, albeit slowly.

      • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.mlM
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        1 year ago

        Looking at how capitalists are treated in China is a very good indication of what class holds power in society. This is another point a lot of people don’t seem to understand about ML theory, the key goal is to ensure that working class holds power and forms the government that represents the interests of the working majority. We recognize that there will necessarily be a transition period where capitalist relations persist. Thinking otherwise is naive and leads to impractical idealism.

  • ProfessorOwl_PhD [any]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    Because they think the “capitalism” part proves it’s not socialist. Every so often a Marxist term gets noticed by libs, then adopted and diluted by their surface level understanding until it becomes functionally meaningless. See also: tankies.

  • Throwaway
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    1 year ago

    Because everything bad it right wing, everything good is left wing. They define words around that.