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Archive for the ‘Stalin and Stalinism’ Category

Greece: Actually overthrowing the troika or seeking a stabilizing left unity?

Posted by Mike E on May 8, 2012

The three-horse troika has become a symbol for the three forces most directly oppressing the people of Greece: the European Union, the International Monetary Fund, and the European Central Bank.

Eric is the national organizer of the Kasama Project, and reported from Greece last summer as part of the Winter Has Its End team.

by Eric Ribellarsi

I would like to share some of the thinking and questions that have been going through my head as of late:

1. I have noticed that a great deal of the response (among radical people in the U.S.) to the jolting political  developments has been starting from whether enough seats can be attained to form a left government. Actually, it seems no government can be formed, which is probably a very good thing — from the point of view of revolutionary openings.

But more, merely counting parliamentary seats and seeking one or another left coalition is a wrong starting point:

The main thing to note here is that the long-standing establishment political parties of capitalism have been shattered, that the Greek parliament has become increasingly polarized between a  hard left and a hard right. This is more what a society looks like before a revolution or a civil war than before some grand resurgence of social-democracy and rescue of capitalist stability.

A communist orientation in such moments and crises requires exploiting these cracks and fissures to unravel the previous system.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, communism, Eric Ribellarsi, Greece, Stalin and Stalinism, winter has its end blog | 18 Comments »

Democracy and centralism? Yes, sure, but….

Posted by Mike E on January 24, 2012

The ideas of the rank-and-file are more than just raw material for leadership decision-making. Democracy involves elements of real power and ongoing accountability.

by Mike Ely

How should communists and revolutionaries be organized? Even asking that ruffles some feathers — since some communist currents have considered this a “settled question.”

Well, we should un-settle it — problematize it — for the simple reason that the  idea of a single “universalized” model of revolutionary organization has been a bad idea.

Its flaws and illusions have been revealed over the last decades — including in the grandiosity and self-delusion of various small self-declared “parties” within the U.S.

There are a number of issues involved — which we are only starting to touch on. But for now, we are exploring the communist organizational concept of “democratic centralism” (DC) — both what it means and whether it should be embraced as a common approach.

We have discussed how it got “settled” in the discussions of the new-born Third Communist International (between 1921 and 1924) and how the form of democratic centralism was further modified — especially in the “Bolshevization” campaigns of the late 1920s.

Now, Let’s go beyond the historical question of how specific organizational structures and processes got codified (“settled”) — let’s explore some of the concepts that pass as “settled,” their justifications and lessons.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, comintern, communism, Communist Party, Mao Zedong, Maoism, Mike Ely, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism, vanguard party | 106 Comments »

How one Communist organizational model got universalized

Posted by Mike E on January 21, 2012

Zinoviev's rules: a universalized party form for all countries and all moments was finalized during the campaign called "Bolshevization"

The following post combines  includes a few excerpts from an essay by Louis Proyect called “The Comintern and the German Communist Party” with a few explanatory [notes] in brackets. Louis’ much longer piece can be read by clicking on this link.

This quick outline is not intended as in-depth examination or summation of communist organizational history — but merely gives readers a sketch, a starting point, for understanding how it came to be assumed (in several distinct stages and leaps over the 1920s) that a particular and very specific organizational form was (down to minor details) universal for all countries and all times. It also describes, briefly, how it  the Comintern center in Moscow came to have final say over the decisions of communists (and their parties) in each country (a decision and practice which was to have disastrous effects in one favorable or complex situation after another, starting with the great debacles of Germany’s 1923 revolutionary attempts.)

* * * * * *

How did we end up with the organizational model called Marxism-Leninism, or alternately, democratic centralism?

The tendency has been to assume that there is an unbroken line between the small, sectarian groups of today and the Bolshevik Party of the turn of the century. When organizational changes have been made, the assumption is that these are refinements to Lenin’s party.

For example, if Bukharin published ruthless criticisms of Lenin’s position on the national question in the newspaper “The Star”, an émigré Bolshevik paper, we have tended to assume that this was an anomaly. The essence of Leninism is to defend a unitary political line in the official party newspaper and Bukharin’s “indiscipline” was a sign of immature Bolshevism rather than a confirmation of its true spirit.

Tracing the evolution of Lenin’s organizational approach to the rigid, monolithic models of today requires an examination of official Comintern documents of the early 1920s since these became the guidelines for organizing Communist Parties. Most “Marxist-Leninist” parties of today regard this period as a link in the chain between the historic Bolshevik Party and what passes for Leninism today. Rather than seeing these Comintern documents as a distortion of historic Bolshevism, we have tended to regard them as hagiography.

Part of the problem is that Lenin gave his official blessing to these documents and this somehow gives them a hallowed status. It is time to examine them on their own merits.

[Note: Lenin proposed 19 "Terms for admission" to the communist internationalin July 1920, in order to exclude reformist social democratic elements, and those who insisted on remaining in a common party with them. A month later, the Comintern adopted an expanded version, the famous "21 Conditions." This contains one of the first discussions of democratic centralism as a necessary foundation of communist organization, while connecting a declared need for militarized centralism with "the present epoch of acute civil war." Condition 17 says that all parties must adopt the same name "Communist Party of xxxx."  The last article says: "Party members who reject in principle the obligations and theses laid down by the Communist International shall be expelled from the Party. ]

1921 decision to enforce one model

The first clear statement on organizational guidelines were contained in the July 12, 1921 Theses on the Structure of Communist Parties, submitted to the Third Congress of the Comintern. W. Koenen, a German delegate, confessed that they were hastily drafted and were referred without further discussion to a commission. Two days later, they were passed unanimously without discussion. The purpose of the theses was to impose a uniform model on Communist Parties worldwide.

For example, they state that

“to carry out daily party work every member should as a rule belong to a small working group, a committee, a commission, a fraction, or a cell. Only in this way can party work be distributed, conducted, and carried out in an orderly fashion.”

Of course, what this led to everywhere is the immediate creation of fractions or cells. Anybody who has been a member of a “Marxist-Leninist” group will be familiar with this approach to political work.

Nobody has ever thought critically about what it means to have a “cell” or a “fraction” in a union or mass movement that speaks with the same voice on behalf of a single tactical orientation, but nevertheless the rule–hardly discussed at the Congress–became law.

Poor Lenin was trying to sort out all sorts of problems that year and probably didn’t have the minutiae of organizational resolutions upper-most in his mind, but there is some evidence that these sorts of rigid guidelines did not sit well with him.

A year later, at the Fourth Congress, Lenin offered some critical comments on them:

“At the third congress in 1921 we adopted a resolution on the structure of communist parties and the methods and content of their activities. It is an excellent resolution, but it is almost entirely Russian, that is to say, everything in it is taken from Russian conditions. That is its good side, but it is also its bad side, bad because scarcely a single foreigner–I am convinced of this, and I have just re-read it-can read it.

“Firstly, it is too long, fifty paragraphs or more. Foreigners cannot usually read items of that length.

“Secondly, if they do read it, they cannot understand it, precisely because it is too Russian…it is permeated and imbued with a Russian spirit.

“Thirdly, if there is by chance a foreigner who can understand it, he cannot apply it…

“My impression is that we have committed a gross error in passing that resolution, blocking our own road to further progress. As I said, the resolution is excellent, and I subscribe to every one of the fifty paragraphs. But I must say that we have not yet discovered the form in which to present our Russian experience to foreigners, and for that reason the resolution has remained a dead letter. If we do not discover it, we shall not go forward.”

This resolution, which was composed in haste and which Lenin described as “too Russian”, was never subjected to the sort of critical evaluation that he proposed.

The opposite process occurred. The rigid, schematic organizational forms were not only accepted, but turned even more rigid and schematic. Part of the explanation for this is that Lenin himself died and nobody in the Communist Party of the Soviet Union had the sort of subtle understanding that he did about such questions.

The party hack Zinoviev became the supreme arbiter of organizational questions and took the communist movement in exactly the opposite direction. The Comintern ended up proposing organizational guidelines that were even “more Russian” than the ones that were adopted in 1921.

The explanation for this is twofold.

The party leadership–including all factions left and right–understood only the outward forms of the Bolshevik Party rather than its inner spirit. Also, the reversals in the class struggle in the early 1920s–especially in Germany–tended to create a crisis atmosphere in the Russian party and the Comintern. Under such conditions, the tendency is to circle the wagons and enforce ideological uniformity on the basis of the orientation of the current leadership. Criticism is considered “anti-party” and ultimately an expression of alien class forces.

[Note: the Fifth Congress of the Comintern was its  "Bolshevization" congress (June-July 1924 six months after lenins death). This is where leaps were made in adopting  a specific monolithic model universally -- with the argument that this organizational form applied generally, and had been key to Bolshevik success, and that it alone conformed to communist views on discipline, decision-making, secrecy and combative unity It also envisioned the Communist International itself increasingly as a single world party, with disciplined decision-making on a world scale.]

The Statutes of the Communist International adopted at the fifth congress were a rigid, mechanical set of rules for building Communist Parties. All of the Communist Parties were subordinate to the Comintern and members of the parties had to obey all decisions of the Comintern. The world congress of the Comintern would decide the most important programmatic, tactical and organizational questions of the Comintern as a whole and its individual sections….

The Statutes also included the sort of ridiculous measures that mark most of the sect-cults of today. For example, statute 35 declares that:

“Members of the CI may move from one country to another only with the consent of the central committee of the section concerned. Communists who have changed their domicile are obliged to join the section of the country in which they reside. Communists who move to another country without the consent of the CC of their section may not be accepted as members of another section of the CI.”…

Compare these unbending strictures with the norms of the Bolshevik Party. In the Bolshevik Party, there was no such thing as formal membership. A Bolshevik was simply somebody who agreed with the general orientation of Iskra. Nobody had to get permission to transfer from one Bolshevik branch to another because such a concept was alien to the way the free-wheeling Bolsheviks functioned.

Even more insidious than the Statutes were the Theses of the Fifth Congress on the Propaganda Activities of the CI and its sections. This document sets in concrete the methodology of dividing every serious political disagreement into a battle between the two major classes in society. It states:

“Struggles within the CI are at the same time ideological crises within the individual parties. Right and left political deviations, deviations from Marxism-Leninism, are connected with the class ideology of the proletariat.

“Manifestations of crisis at the second world congress and after were precipitated by ‘left infantile sicknesses’, which were ideologically a deviation from Marxism-Leninism towards syndicalism….The present internal struggles in some communist parties, the beginning of which coincided with the October defeat in Germany, are ideological repercussions of the survivals of traditional social-democratic ideas in the communist party. The way to overcome them is by the BOLSHEVIZATION OF THE COMMUNIST PARTIES. Bolshevization in this context means the final ideological victory of Marxism-Leninism (or in other words Marxism in the period of imperialism and the epoch of the proletarian revolution) over the ‘Marxism’ of the Second International and the syndicalist remnants.”

So the legacy of the Fifth World Congress of the Comintern was organizational rigidity and ideological conformity. This has been the unexamined heritage of the Marxist-Leninist movement since the 1920s….

[Note: The campaign of Bolshevization elevated a particular form of factory cell organization to universal status, and condemned cell organization along community lines. This was justified as a critque of electoralism -- since community cells also functioned as ward structure during electoral mobilizations. But it also reinforced a growing assumption that communist work was wedded to trade union organizing and economic struggle -- so that a shift to factory only organization was connect to assumptions about the role and importance of strikes and unionization. And this too was assumed to be universal -- even if the Comintern would soon become more rooted in many different kinds of countries, including colonial ones where workplace communist structures were far from centerstage.]

The [American] party was re-organized on the basis of factory cells and a rigid set of organizational principles were adopted. For example, it stipulated that

“Wherever three or more members, regardless of their nationality or present federation membership, are found to be working in the same shop, they shall be organized into a shop nucleus. The nucleus collects the Party dues and takes over all the functions of a Party unit.”

What strikes one immediately is that there is absolutely no consideration in the resolution about whether or not a factory-based party unit makes political sense. It is simply a mechanical transposition of Comintern rules, which in themselves are based on an undialectical understanding of Lenin’s party.

Posted in >> analysis of news, Germany, Lenin, Russia, Socialism, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism, vanguard party | 48 Comments »

Why revolutionaries can’t reclaim the American flag

Posted by Mike E on October 22, 2011

Cleansing and reclaiming the red flag

The following is an important and highly controversial document from the previous communist movement (of the 1970 and 80s). This is an argument against socialist revolution attempting to reclaim patriotism or nationalist symbols in a country like the United States. The essay was part of a major theoretical effort by the Revolutionary Communist Party in the period of 1979-1984 to break with rightist and patriotic legacies within the international communist movement. It contains extensive sections written by Bob Avakian during this period — one of the times when a younger  Avakian was still pressing the envelope of communist thinking and making creative contributions.

This essay was first published in 1980 and has been unavailable for decades. It has been republished by the Encyclopedia of Anti-Revisionism On-Line. It is part of an archival project making documents of the “New Communist Movement” available to revolutionaries today for study, evaluation and summation.

* * * * * * * * *

On the Question of So-Called “National Nihilism”:

You Can’t Beat the Enemy While Raising His Flag

Can revolution in the U.S. today come wrapped in the American flag? Can we “claim it as our own”? Should a revolutionary party be motivated by a desire to “save America. . . from her rulers and for her people”? Can a class-conscious revolutionary in the U.S. “have pride in the true history of this country”? These are questions which have posed themselves again and again in the development of the revolutionary movement in the U.S. and are doing so today. In fact, similar questions of national pride and patriotism have historically been very important in the advances–and setbacks–of the international communist movement.

Earl Browder, the naked revisionist former leader of the Communist Party, USA gave his infamous answer to these questions in the mid-1930s when he coined the phrase “Communism is 20th Century Americanism” and said that the CPUSA was carrying on the revolutionary tradition of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and the like. Unfortunately, when all was said and done, Earl Browder was right about the CPUSA (though most certainly wrong about genuine communism) because the CP had completely taken up the program and outlook of bourgeois democracy. Such a stand may be American and definitely is bourgeois, but for a communist it is a thoroughly counter-revolutionary one, especially here in the imperialist USA in this, the era of proletarian revolution.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, comintern, Lenin, Maoism, Marxist theory, RCPUSA, Socialism, Stalin and Stalinism, V.I. Lenin | 25 Comments »

The vital mix and its input to our communism

Posted by kasama on August 16, 2011

by Mike Ely

I have many thoughts on each of John-John’s questions — and (i suspect) a rather different starting point.

This is a discussion about both the past and the future. What do we need or want from the past? How creatively do we prepare for the future? How much of the theory we need will emerge from our own coming practice?

I’m a partisan of appropriating what was revolutionary in the past — I think it is precious and that there is no way of facing the future without it. I am skeptical of the idea that our theory should come mainly from our own practice (since that is usually an approach that goes over to routinized and unimaginative activism). Yes our ideas and organizations will be tested (and transformed) in coming fires — and we need to prepare now energetically and expect then to be transformed again and yet again.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Bill Martin, Black Panthers, communism, Cultural Revolution, Kasama, Maoism, Marxist theory, Mike Ely, New Com. Movement, philosophy, RCPUSA, Stalin and Stalinism, theory, Young Lords Party | 3 Comments »

Perp-walking into the Future: Problems of tankie fantasy

Posted by Mike E on June 15, 2011

Students in Prague reach out to invading Warsaw Pact soldiers, 1968

“Why not celebrate the people rising up under socialism (as in the cultural revolution), rather than celebrate tanks rolling over the people to protect restored capitalism?”

by Mike Ely

Red fly wrote in our protracted discussion of Tiananmen repression of 1989:

“Demanding accountability and the right to criticize, struggling for genuine political representation, fighting against the reactionary notion that the party always knows best and the masses’ job is to obey…these are neither ultra-leftist, nor bourgeois positions. They are in fact a prerequisite to the carrying out of a project of human emancipation, which is supposed to be what we’re all about around here.”

I think this an important part of the issue — because I suspect that some folks don’t agree and think your ideas here are just liberalism. There is a vision of “socialism” that believes that a big, determined, brutal state needs to impose state planning, state ownership and the necessities of discipline on mere humans — and that the whining of the ordinary people (intellectuals, dissenters, political critics, workers with complaints) should just be shut up.

That’s why they got the nickname “Tankies.”

To be clear: No one is against tanks (per se). Used against the right enemies (like Nazis in the great battle of Kursk), tanks can be a marvelous thing. Of course.

 Rude bullying of the people

But a society headed by arrogant, threatening, corrupted capitalist-roaders, resting on a network of uniformed and secret police, willing to unleash their army against the people themselves…. that is a problem. And that was what was concentrated in Tiananmen 1989.

Victor Serge famously remarked that problems in the Soviet Union started with rudeness — when revolutionaries-turned-officials started to see themselves as the people’s bosses, not their servants and representatives. This came early in the Soviet Union (a result of the experiences of the Civil War, the difficult political alignments and the “We are made of a special stuff” sensibility promoted at some points) — and was one of the well-springs undermining popular power that contributed to an eventual capitalist restoration.

Celebrating (glorying in) crude power arrangements over the people (not over selected reactionaries, not over proven counterrevolutionaries, but over broad sections of the people themselves and their complaints) is what marks someone as a tankie.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, communism, Mike Ely, Socialism, Stalin and Stalinism | 77 Comments »

Toward a communist theory of Socialism: Bukharin & the origin of capitalist roaders

Posted by Mike E on May 29, 2011

Appreciation of the Soviet socialist revolution, does not require white-washing the terrible events of the late 1930s, on the contrary it requires a sober and critical analysis to understand how it happened and how we can make sure it is never repeated.

This is written quickly while I am on a week’s walk-about (please forgive any mistakes made in haste) I may only participate sporadically in the ongoing discussion.

Several people have asked that we sort out the threads on psychology and the Moscow trials. And so now you have ways of discussing these things separately. Feel free to move your own earlier comments from the earlier thread into this one, if it helps the discussion.


by Mike Ely

In our nearby discussion, there have been exchanges on the Soviet communist leader Nikolai Bukharin between  Carl Davidson, ( a consistent and outspoken admirer of Bukharin)  and  Grover Furr who claims to have evidence that Bukharin was in fact in some way a foreign agent and a “truly revolting person.”

I would like to speak in opposition to both of these views — both the capitalist roader view of Carl and the Stalin-era view of politics Grover — and lay out an approach to these historical questions of line that rests on Mao’s most important contribution, in his theory of classes in socialist society and how powerful restorationist forces emerge within socialism.

(In his comments, Grover rejects the concept of socialist transition itself, in the way promoted by Progressive Labor Party, that is its own issue, and its own mistake, which I won’t take up here.)

Bukharin the first capitalist-roader

1) I have long thought (after protracted study) that Bukharin was the first example of what we now call a “capitalist roader” (or specifically what Maoists in China called “from bourgeois democrat to capitalist roader.”)  And he was (in many ways much more than Trotsky) a major figure and force within the Soviet revolution — and over two decades, developed a specific and articulated series of programs for how Soviet society should develop.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, Bukharin, communism, Mike Ely, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism, Trotskyism, Zinoviev | 77 Comments »

Mel Rothenberg: Denying Capitalist Restoration and Other Matters

Posted by Mike E on April 6, 2011

Idealized portrayal: Czech-Soviet friendship on paper. Socialism at least in name.

What is socialism? What is capitalism?

The history and changes of the Soviet Union have been a place where those questions are engaged — because the evaluation of the Soviet Union and its actions have always quickly transitioned to a discussion of the nature of the social formation. And for those reasons, this debate over the Soviet Union remains important (even seminal) long after the USSR itself has ceased to be a historical player.

We have posted some initial Maoist analyses of Soviet social-imperialism here on this site — the view that the Soviet Union was a socialist country in its first decades, and became state monopoly capitalist in the mid-fifties. There has been considerable controversy over this Maoist thesis that the post-50s USSR was “socialist in name, capitalist in nature.”

Here is an interview with Mel Rothenberg who has been associated with an opposing view — that the Soviet Union was not capitalism. He has sharp (and debatable) summations of the capitalist restoration theories below — though his fuller analysis was gathered in a book “The Myth of Capitalism Reborn: A Marxist Critique of Theories of Capitalist Restoration in the USSR.”

On January 31, 2011, Spencer A. Leonard interviewed Mel. The interview was aired on the radio show Radical Minds on WHPK–FM Chicago, on February 1. What follows is a revised and edited transcript of the interview circulated by Platypus.

Overcoming bourgeois right:

An interview with Mel Rothenberg

Spencer Leonard: Last December the Platypus Review published an interview I conducted with a former comrade of yours, Max Elbaum. There I discussed the emergence, by the late 1960s, of the widespread impulse within the New Left towards reconstituting the Communist movement in the United States. Being older than Elbaum and having participated in the New Left as a member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee [SNCC] in Chicago from 1961 onwards, you have a different perspective than him on the motivations behind the New Communist Movement [NCM]. What determined your joining a Marxist organization in the 1960s and how representative do you think your experience was? What do you take to be the continuities, both ideological and organizational, between the New Left and the NCM?

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, Krushchev, Maoism, Marxist theory, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism | 12 Comments »

Against Simplistic Thinking about Main Enemies: A Heretical View of World Communist Strategy

Posted by Mike E on March 21, 2011

Intro by Mike Ely

The following essay, “Advancing the World Revolutionary Movement: Questions of Strategic Orientation,”criticizes the  long-entrenched communist assumption that it is possible to identify a single world enemy (usually a single imperialist power or coalition) on a world scale — and more, it also criticizes the doctrine :

  • that it is then necessary for communists everywhere in the world to form a single global united front against that “main enemy.”
  • that this united front naturally includes all the many diverse forces globally that (for their own class interests) can be arrayed (or can be fantasized to be in array) “against” that main enemy.
  • that in each country, communists and the oppressed should be universally required to make far-reaching compromises (or even alliances) with their own oppressors — in the name of such an international united front against the main enemy, and in the name of the great good that it supposedly represents.
  • And (as an often unspoken corollary) that this “main enemy” is usually the imperialists who are most directly threatening the main existing socialist countries (either USSR in the late 1930s, or China in the 1970s).

This piece was written by Bob Avakian during the early 1980s, as part of a larger series of breaks with many once-unquestioned orthodoxies of previous communisms. It appeared during a creative period of debate and new thinking within the RCP’ that might be hard now for a newer generation of revolutionaries to even imagine.

This first appeared in Revolution magazine in Spring 1984 and is generally viewed as Part 2 of an earlier work “Conquer the World? The International Proletariat Must and Will” (which is also worth your time).

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Bob Avakian, comintern, communism, Mike Ely, RCPUSA, Stalin and Stalinism | 3 Comments »

You asked for it: Kasama Reading Clusters

Posted by Mike E on January 1, 2011

Here are previous posts and threads grouped loosely by topic. They’re available on our Navigation Bar on each page >>

Kasama Reading Clusters

A post kicks it off, and then the threaded discussion refines and deepens… and lays the basis for the next post.

Want an overview of what we have done together over these three years? That’s  one place to look around.

Want to back up and study? Here it is.

Posted in >> analysis of news, >> communist politics, >> Kasama Project, 9 Letters, comintern, communism, Cultural Revolution, Kasama, Kasama pamphlets, revolution, Socialism, Stalin and Stalinism, study guides, theory | Leave a Comment »

Soviet Union 1956-1991: Socialist or Social Imperialist

Posted by Mike E on December 10, 2010

Woman worker on Soviet farm: Exploited or Liberated

by Mike Ely

An important theoretical resource is now available — presenting in sharply posed debate-format different views on the post-50s USSR. It will be valuable for many different revolutionaries today to study it, and engage the controversies.

In 1983, the RCP,USA organized a significant conference in the U.S. to debate the nature of the USSR.

I was one of the organizers of that conference and participated in the RCP team that developed and evaluated papers (and worked through the RCP’s own position in the debate).

As part of that conference, the RCP published two books and an issue of Revolution magazine (#52) that gathered opposing positions.

Now, after a long time out of print, one of those books is now available for download in PDF format. It is volume 1 of Soviet Union: Socialist or Social Imperialist.

I want to thank the folks at Revolutionary Initiative for making it available to us.

At the time, of course, the nature of the Soviet Union was a burning question of the highest importance. But today it is not merely of distant historical value:

This is a debate over how to understand the twentieth century, and what that experience says about the very NATURE of socialism.

  • What is a socialist society?
  • How is it different from just a mix of welfare programs, state planning and leftist self-description?
  • Is it possible to have capitalist restoration while continuing a socialist pretense — and
  • If so, how can oppressed people be conscious of the mechanisms and signs of that process?

There can be no new wave of successful socialist revolution without deeply understanding these controversies.

Download Soviet Union: Socialist or Social Imperialist vol. 1

For contents and details > Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, Krushchev, Mike Ely, Socialism, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism, theory | 23 Comments »

Iris Bright: What Communism Really Looks Like NOW?…In OUR World?

Posted by Mike E on November 14, 2010

Looking beyond the obvious

“…sometimes communism doesn’t feel like a living idea; that those darn creative anarchists seem like they’re having way more fun, and that I had few resources to pass on that presented vibrant, appealing, intellectually rigorous materials to a complete beginner in communist ideas.

“Was this reasonable? Have I fallen prey to stereotypes about my own political strain, or to anti-intellectualism—or was I sensing a real problem with isolation?”

by Iris Bright

This article is an attempt to work through some of my thoughts on agitating for communism effectively, as well improving my own understandings of it, and the world we live in.

Plans for the Future

I used to think that if someone handed me a road map to a free society, or a plan to “get there” in regards to communism, that I would find this satisfying. I thought,

“Man, next time someone asks me what communism is going to be like, I’m going to whip this bad boy out and say here ya go. Problems solved!”

Yes ma’am, I’m going to have policies, and laws, tactical theory and a vision all laid out in response to that difficult, nebulous, deep question:

“What would it look like?”

I know I’m not the only one to encounter this constantly with friends, family, peers, and work acquaintances when I attempt to argue convincingly for communism, and against capitalism. I really thought that all I needed was that map, that explicit framework—I mean, until quite recently.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> communist politics, Iris, Maoism, Socialism, Stalin and Stalinism, theory | 47 Comments »

A Counterpoint on Soviet Prisons: Take Me, Rehabilitate Me!

Posted by Mike E on November 5, 2010

by Mike Ely

In two accompanying posts, we explore some of the effects of Soviet methods in the 1930s — particularly the large numbers of prisoners within Soviet society, and their experiences. Because that can be understood somewhat one-sidedly, I would like to inject this counter-story:

I was reading Sheila Fitzpatrick’s book, Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times: Soviet Russia in the 1930s. Without giving away the plot, it is a story of great struggle and sacrifice, where despite shortages and madness, ordinary people felt (deeply) they were part of a great historic experiment, consructing a radically different and better world.

She writes:

“This was an age of utopianism…. Most memoirs about the period, including many written in emigration, recall the idealism and optimism of the young, their belief that they were participants in a historic process of transformation, their enthusiasm for what was called “the building of socialism.”

In one of the chapters dealing with institutions like education, I came to the part that started to talk about prisons. And  I thought to myself, “OK, here we go,” and mentally braced myself for the discussion of a “dark side” of Soviet socialism.

I was wrong.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism, theory | 1 Comment »

Historical Socialism (and Stalin) Need Better Defenders

Posted by Mike E on November 5, 2010

Peasant woman in Soviet prison. We need to base our analysis on what we know now about the real events, lines and decisions -- and have no need to cling to the official arguments of those times.

“We don’t have many successful proletarian socialist revolutions — and the experience of each one is precious. And the Soviet Revolution was the very first of its kind, and particular rich…

“I personally think that we need a “nodal view” of the development: the restoration of capitalism happened (imho) around the mid-fifties (culminating in the Kosygin Reforms of 1963), but i think something also went ‘terribly wrong’ politically after the death of Kirov in 1934 that helped kill the revolutionary spirit and enthusiasm of the people (including a conservative wind, an air of real political repression, a rise of nationalism etc.) There are other nodal points, of course, but we need to situate the major ones — and excavate their causes and outlines.”

by Mike Ely

The debate we had here on Kasama over Grover Furr’s fictional and deceptive apologia for purges and executions of the Stalin era has continued to sputter on the popular RevLeft bulletin board. I posted a quick summary statement there, to interject some thoughts. Here it is:

* * * * * * * *

1) I think it is very important to craft a serious and truthful account of the Soviet revolution — its amazing eruption in October 1917, its huge challenges, its path-breaking experimentalism, its accomplishments, and its negative lessons.

We don’t have many successful proletarian socialist revolutions — and the experience of each one is precious. And the Soviet Revolution was the very first of its kind, and particular rich.

2) Furthermore, people of the world expect communists to have a sophisticated analysis of these events — including what we would do differently and better. Clearly the major revolutions of the last century has both breathtaking accomplishments and also problems that eventually led to their reversal. And so there is a lot to say on BOTH accounts.

3) In my personal opinion, this involves a significant analysis (and largely an upholding) of the Stalin years. This complex period produced the world’s first planned economy, the first attempt at socialized agriculture, the first creation of a world wide communist international and (importantly) the remarkable defeat of Hitler fascism (which was largely carried out by soviet arms). And so, while anti-communists of many kinds choose to negate the Stalin years (and Stalin) totally — we have a different task and approach.

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Posted in >> analysis of news, communism, Mike Ely, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism, theory | 81 Comments »

From Archives: Describing the Soviet Prison System of the 1930s

Posted by Mike E on November 5, 2010

The evaluation of socialism is not mainly about numbers — it is about the choices posed and made during radical transformation. But there are questions of data raised by the repressions of the Soviet years (particularly in the late 1930s). Patrick mentioned in a neighboring thread that this document (co-authored by respected Soviet scholar, J. Arch Getty) is worth reading.

It is available on the site simply called “On Stalin,” but originally was published in The American Historical Review, Volume 98, Number 4, October 1993. There has been a great deal more data published since 1993, when the Soviet archives had just started to be explored — it is a “first approach” as it says. It is possible that these same authors may have since further elaborated their findings (including in Getty’s more recent books on these matters.)

* * * * * * *

Victims of the Soviet Penal System in the Pre-war Years:
A First Approach on the Basis of Archival Evidence

J. ARCH GETTY, GABOR T. RITTERSPORN, and VIKTOR N. ZEMSKOV

The Great purges of the 1930s were a maelstrom of political violence that engulfed all levels of society and all walks of life. Often thought to have begun in 1934 with the assassination of Politburo member Sergei Kirov, the repression first struck former political dissidents in 1935-1936. It then widened and reached its apogee in 1937-1938 with the arrest and imprisonment or execution of a large proportion of the Communist Party Central Committee, the military high command, and the state bureaucracy. Eventually, millions of ordinary Soviet citizens were drawn into the expanding terror.

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Posted in J. Arch Getty, political prisoners, Socialism, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism | 2 Comments »

Not Give Any Ground: Žižek’s Factual Controversy Over Mao

Posted by Mike E on October 27, 2010

In the midst of China's storm of agrarian revolution, 1952

“For those interested in the engagement on these matters, DFV recently suggested a valuable source:
Utsa Patnaik on the Great Leap Forward Famine (pdf)”

by Mike Ely

One of the frustrating things about  communist philosopher Slavoj Žižek is his blanket acceptance of many anti-communist summations, made even as he provocatively puts forward, in his own idiosyncratic way, the communist cause and its giant figures like Lenin and Mao.

As John Steele recently wrote:

“[Žižek] makes no distinction between the USSR under Stalin, the USSR under Khruschev, China under Mao, and China since the 1980s, and classifies it all as ’20th century Communism.’ A lot of us, I’m sure, would want to say that there are qualitative distinctions within that melange and that it doesn’t all fit under that label. So the challenge is to analyze and think, and not dogmatically from the past.”

In one notorious example, Žižek helped publish and promote a new edition of Mao Zedong’s philosophical essays “On Practice and Contradiction” — which is a much-needed development bringing important communist essays (once again!) into countless college classrooms. But then he prefaced it all with his own ominously named essay “Mao Tse-tung, the Marxist Lord of Misrule.” That preface is complex and not easily characterized — but among its themes is, once again, that very strange willingness to simply accept (to swallow whole) extreme anticommunist charges as if they were true.

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Posted in >> analysis of news, China, communism, Cultural Revolution, Mao Zedong, Maoism, Mike Ely, Slavoj Žižek, Stalin and Stalinism | 7 Comments »

J. Arch Getty: Creating Alternative New History of Soviet 30s

Posted by Mike E on October 7, 2010

For those interested in understanding the complex events of the Soviet Union, especially in the 1930s as war with Nazi Germany loomed — on important place to start is the work of J. Arch Getty — the professional Soviet historian who has worked to overturn that once-dominant “standard” analysis associated Robert Conquest and the anticommunist theory of “totalitarianism.”

In the following video interview, J. Arch Getty starts briefly with his early years, education, and involvement with revolutionary politics in the 60s-70s, but soon focuses on his life’s work: how he developed a new analysis of the Stalin-era Soviet Union.

He also discusses his own methodology — identifying gaps and irrationalities in the “standard” analysis, and using them as doorways to a new theory of the history, to be filled in (and modified) as new data emerged from Soviet party archives over the last twenty years. In the process Getty raises (toward the end) interesting observations about the relationship of the Party and the State in the Soviet Union, including the degree of unofficial clique (“clan”) politics in defining the dynamics of that Party-State amalgam and the eruption of the purges.

His work has helped dethroned the theories of “totalitarianism,”  and enabled us to approach to the Soviet Union as a series of real political events. In the process he has brought forward some startling discoveries and observations about those dramatic conflicts.

Interview with J. Arch Getty

This video first appears on the History Faculty website. (51 minutes)

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Posted in Bukharin, Russia, Socialism, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism, Trotskyism, Zinoviev | 29 Comments »

Three Quick Examples of Leftist Pseudo-Science

Posted by Mike E on October 4, 2010

by Mike Ely

In our discussions of leftist versions of pseudo-science, I foolishly wrote:

“I’m really tempted to list all the logical fallacies above, and give examples of how they have been used on the left.”

Predictably, TNL replied:

“First, I think it would be be a real service to give examples of each of theses fallacies from the left and encourage Mike to do so.”

And Keith piled on:

“I second TNL’s hope that Mike finds time to put down some instances of the Left using some of these specific fallacies.”

I can quickly think of a half dozen documents that are deeply emmeshed in that kind of logical fallacy. And part of what happens is that it becomes hard to engage matters of line and analysis — because for some documents (the kind we are discussing here) the point is not so much rival analysis of reality but elaborate misdirection.

Part of what we are dealing with is deception: Documents are disguised as research, scholarship, and critical thinking — but that is by adopting the formal skin of serious engagement (quoting, footnoting, deductive argument, counter-argument etc.)

I’m not saying that the people writing these documents don’t have developed lines (that one could excavate and critique), but that the polemics and analysis of this kind actually turn readers away from key questions of line — and choose instead for various reasons to employ red herrings and distortion to prevent a serious engagement over line or analysis.

Below I am just sketching some examples — not fully breaking them down (line by line), which each of you can do on your own time. And I’m writing this quickly. If we really wanted to take on pseudo-science on the left we would have to engage the explicit claims (of particular ideologies) that they are a “science of revolution” — and break down what is true and untrue about those claims. That is a larger project I am not trying here.

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Posted in >> analysis of news, >> Science, Alain Badiou, Cultural Revolution, Mike Ely, Raymond Lotta, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism | 80 Comments »

Investigate & Speak on the Soviet Union

Posted by Mike E on August 10, 2010

by Radical Eyes

Often on this site, we see people bringing out that pithy but powerful Mao-phrase:

“No investigation, no right to speak.”

In dealing with the history of the Communist movement, and in particular the history of what actually transpired in the Soviet Union during the period of Stalin’s leadership, it would appear that we need to revise this guiding phrase a bit. This is because so much of what has been written – and read – in the way of “investigations” into this period are themselves in part or in full works of propaganda. (Most often they are “anti-Stalinist” and/or anticommunist, less often “pro-Stalin.”)

On top of this layer of “classic” works, there have further emerged several generations of scholars who are not themselves setting out to serve narrowly propagandist ends – at least not consciously – , and many of whom may even be “of the left” in one sense or another, but who nonetheless continue to build upon the – far from objectively verified, and often utterly falsified – accounts of previous generations of propaganda.

Even where these scholars may bring new theoretical approaches and subtle thinking to the old questions, they often remain on the terrain of “happenings” constructed by the unreliable and often thoroughly dishonest “scholarship” of earlier eras.

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Posted in Marxist theory, Socialism, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism | 19 Comments »

A Single Global Arch-Enemy or an Oppressive System?

Posted by Mike E on August 7, 2010

U.S. reconquest of the Pacific: Was this mainly an antifascist act or a colonialist one?

“Our world strategy  should place revolution and the defeat of imperialism central in our thinking and action — not this or that state interest of socialist states, not temporary alliances with various reactionary powers.”

by Mike Ely

May 9 objected angrily to my analysis that World War 2 was principally an interimperialist war.

Let me open up my argument by stepping back, and seeing the current importance of this argument against “international united front against a single main enemy.”

This question is not just historic but acutely strategic:

Is there a single worldwide united front against a main enemy today?

Can one be built?

Do the people of the world (at each point) somehow have one single “main enemy”worldwide (among the various imperialists and reactionary powers they face)? And if so, how is it determined?

Part of the reasonv this matters is that the argument of “united front against main enemy” has been used in the present time to portray any force opposed to the United States as (somehow) “objectively anti-imperialist.”Even in the absence of an organized international communist movement or a major socialist country, this view is asserted  — so that a number of different, highly reactionary forces are portrayed as “objectively” allies of oppressed people (including, in some cases, oppressors like Islamist theocrats or Milosevic style chauvinists in the Balkans or Saddam Hussein in Iraq, or revanchist Russian imperialism in the Caucasus etc.)

We needto look at the arguments (claiming such forces are “allies”) in an objective class analysis, and also examine the theoretical framework that assumes there is a single “main enemy” (and that its existence defines the objective role of various reactionary forces).

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Posted in comintern, Mao Zedong, Marxist theory, Mike Ely, Socialism, Stalin and Stalinism, theory, World War II | 28 Comments »

 
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