How do you think about the assembly line and the impacts it has on labour?
In its time it was an innovation. i think we are fooling ourselves if we get too nostalgic about the good old days also regarding working routines.And we all want PCs ,Tv sets,
cars, dialysis apparats etc.available in the most rational way.
That said, obviously being on the assembly band, carrying out the same dreadfully boring routine operation day in and day out affects you in bad ways. Already some of the classical liberals were worried about this. Clearly society must make arrangements to minimize damage with for instance a certain job rotation and of course automatization when possible.
What one also must be aware of and which is a real problem for everybody who are interested in real progress is the disciplinary function here. While the ruling elites in the West want to abolish traditional industry for political purposes, see forinstance Margaret Thatcher, they also seek to impose the same routines in the service sector.
What are your views on the following people?
Tito
Nasser
Putin
Tito:Great partisan, excellent chess player, not my kind of guy politically (to cosy with the West, I am not sofond of hs econmic model either)
Nasser: Progressive nationalist who did soe important work to modernize Egypt. No socialist.
Putin: Intelligent, authoritarian and cynical. No socialist at all, but probably the best available leader for Russia after the catastrophic Yeltsin years. Loses a lot of attitude points for releasing Kasparov from prison so soon.
What are your thoughts on automation?
I don't believe that it is far fetched to say that we will have in the next few years (if not now) the capacity to automate a large amount of (unskilled?) labour. For instance, agriculture could make moves towards being largely controlled by machines. Not 'intelligent' machines of course, but machines programmed to plant, grow and correctly harvest crops, with little or no human involvement except for maintaining the machines.
Is automation something to be resisted, or is it something of a new emancipation from labour?
West 36 hit the nail on the head.BTW
West 36 my apologies for never answering your enquete, if it is not to soon I might give it a stab.
Automatation is something we should welcome. Sure, technology has a Janus face, and a technological imperative is a dangerous thing, but automation liberates millions of people. Keep in mind that we work to live, not the other way round.
A question for Luce:
You seem to have a particular bite against Trotsky and particularly the Fourth International; may I ask why?
Trotsky himself was intelligent and did a lot of good things but turned out to be an opportunist and the later trotskist attitude towards the USSR was a destructive one. I don'tthink it is a mere coincidence that quite a few prominent Trotskists ended up as reactionaries, like some of the noecons, Orwell or Hitchens to name a few.
I've just read that article, and frankly I don't buy it. It makes some good points (especially those about the real situation on the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe being different from what was and still is portrayed in western media, about how the positive points were ignored.
But I can't believe that the same writer who complained about "second-guessing" by what they call the "pure socialists" also wrote this:
Because this was a real example of second-guessing! In the 15 years before WW2 many things could have happened differently. Germany's development was not independent from that of the USSR. Events in Europe could have gone differently if Stalin had never taken power in the USSR, and we cannot foresee what might have happened. Or even know how a red army with less resources but without the purge would have done against a german invasion. Or know how fast Germany would have rebuild its army without the soviet material help and military cooperation supplied on Stalin's orders.
And many of those "heroic workers" building the industrial plants beyond the Urals were slaves in the gulag. Nothing can excuse that, nothing can justify that. If that were truly necessary to attain communism (and I don't believe it is), then to hell with it.
So I feel compelled to play the devil's advocate here. Another small issue with the article, and common in many pieces defending the USSR: the Soviet Union may not have practiced economic imperialism, but it certainly practiced ideological imperialism, and the end result was also death on a grand scale. Without the soviet hand pushing for the Korean War, for example, what would have happened there? I believe that I could argue that a large number of people would not have died uselessly... and pro-soviets cannot simply blame the "UN" forces, because it takes two sides to make a war. The USSR cannot even claim to have helped with the independence of most former colonial territories, it was the effects of WW2 and competition also among western countries which liquidated most of those empires. The USSR, in the meanwhile, went about reconquering and enlarging the former Russian Empire (failing only in Finland)...
Thanks for your input, but I think that we have so different perspectives on those historical topics that any debate is bound to be futile and contrafactual history is bunk anyway. It could be interesting though, to learn about some of your historical sources.
I must also add that both I and as far as I have understood Michael Parenti are fully aware of the crimes and errors of socialism, but that there is a qualitative difference between those and the (larger) commited by capitalism.
I don't like to see the wrongs of capitalism whitewashed, but nor do I like to see it done with soviet socialism either. Khrushchev did had good reasons to denounce Stalinism.
Of course he had. But that doesn't mean that he was right.