Cheezy the Wiz
Socialist In A Hurry
Political fragmentation is one of the most iconic problems of political Leftism. This thread is made to determine the following things:
1. The causes of Leftist political fragmentation
2. If Leftist Unity is the most desirable course of action
3. If Leftist Unity is possible
It is my personal opinion that the fragmentation of the Left is the single greatest barrier to our success. The apt maxim that "united we stand, divided we fall" holds excellently here. We have so many different kinds of political leftism, and each of them unique, but we must remember that we are not philosophers and our parties are not philosophical schools of thought; political parties are formed to bring about action, not to pontificate about the righteousness of a specific position relative to nearly-identical ones. The single uniting plank of all leftist parties is opposition to capitalism. For some, like the Greens, this does not include a Marxist vision of socialism, merely an opposition to rampant corporatism, consumerism, and wanton destruction of the environment. For others, like the anarchists, this means total revulsion with all forms of state-oriented society, be it capitalist or socialist (some even have the gusto to refer to socialism as "state capitalism!" ) Others are Socialist Utopians, desiring Faurieresque social structures which are anti-capitalist but not driven by the same Hegelian-inspired ideas of Marxism. And then, of course, we have the various schools of Marxism, from the left Trotskyists and grass-roots stylings of Eugene Debs to the right-leaning, pragmatic Stalinists and Maoists, and everything in between, including the high-minded Marxist Feminists and Marxist Humanists. At the furthest Right of our group are those parliamentary "socialists," the various Labour and Social Democratic parties, who are mostly nowadays socialist only in name. I do not know if they are worth including in such an alliance, since they more often take the side of the capitalists when true socialists enter the argument. I hold similar reservations about anarchists, and for similar reasons, but I think for the time being more important things demand that we set our differences aside in the interest of throttling the bourgeoisie.
Separated, we bicker amongst ourselves, our hatred sometimes as virulent as those fights between the denominations of the early Christian Church. This infighting has weakened our ability to fight the capitalists, and caused disinterestedness and loss of membership in all our parties. We stand disunited, together criticizing capitalism in all the same old ways, but we are all just little voices yelling in a crowd, independently, we are not feared, we are not heard, and our voices mean nothing. What we must do is draw together some sort of Leftist Alliance, and turn our individual yells into a unifying shout of defiance. We must cooperate together to end the capitalist system, the thing we all agree must be done. Once we have conquered Capital, then we can sort out our different ideas about how to create a just society in a civilized way. And even then, it may not be pretty, since our differences are sharp in many areas, and the necessity of ending capitalism is perhaps the only thing we can universally agree on. But we continue to lose ground every day that we bicker amongst ourselves about how to do it. If we care half as much as we say we do about ending exploitation and oppression, then we should be able to do this.
The overriding drive, in my opinion, must be discipline. Not party line discipline, but personal control of ourselves, and adherence to our own commitment to democratize various aspects of society. All actions must keep this in mind. It was a great weakness displayed, for example, by the Bolsheviks, to have resorted to repression and self-righteousness rather than compromise, but the other parties of the day were just as guilty of that complex. Some blame that on their Russian-ness, some say it is a product of Lenin and a conquest for power, and some say it is endemic to socialism. I think the reason in the context of today is irrelevant and a question for historians to debate; it should not shape our thinking today, except to serve as an example of something to be avoided.
Another question whose answer we must be united around is the conquest of power itself. Is revolution acceptable? Is it the only way to end Capitalism? Is the only way that Capitalism should be ended? Whatever is decided, it must be adhered to by all Leftist parties if only for the sake of cohesion. This is one of the most difficult subjects for us, so we must always been on guard when debating it to quell the self-righteous urge to split and "do things our own way." As noted above, this will get us nowhere, and being right means nothing if it never comes to pass.
I hope this at least inspires some thought in the minds of Leftists who read it. Its a problem we will most definitely need to face if we ever intend to do anything other than pontificate and pray the masses flock to our brand of "the right way." Our motto is, after all:
Пролетарии всех стран, соединяйтесь!
1. The causes of Leftist political fragmentation
2. If Leftist Unity is the most desirable course of action
3. If Leftist Unity is possible
It is my personal opinion that the fragmentation of the Left is the single greatest barrier to our success. The apt maxim that "united we stand, divided we fall" holds excellently here. We have so many different kinds of political leftism, and each of them unique, but we must remember that we are not philosophers and our parties are not philosophical schools of thought; political parties are formed to bring about action, not to pontificate about the righteousness of a specific position relative to nearly-identical ones. The single uniting plank of all leftist parties is opposition to capitalism. For some, like the Greens, this does not include a Marxist vision of socialism, merely an opposition to rampant corporatism, consumerism, and wanton destruction of the environment. For others, like the anarchists, this means total revulsion with all forms of state-oriented society, be it capitalist or socialist (some even have the gusto to refer to socialism as "state capitalism!" ) Others are Socialist Utopians, desiring Faurieresque social structures which are anti-capitalist but not driven by the same Hegelian-inspired ideas of Marxism. And then, of course, we have the various schools of Marxism, from the left Trotskyists and grass-roots stylings of Eugene Debs to the right-leaning, pragmatic Stalinists and Maoists, and everything in between, including the high-minded Marxist Feminists and Marxist Humanists. At the furthest Right of our group are those parliamentary "socialists," the various Labour and Social Democratic parties, who are mostly nowadays socialist only in name. I do not know if they are worth including in such an alliance, since they more often take the side of the capitalists when true socialists enter the argument. I hold similar reservations about anarchists, and for similar reasons, but I think for the time being more important things demand that we set our differences aside in the interest of throttling the bourgeoisie.
Separated, we bicker amongst ourselves, our hatred sometimes as virulent as those fights between the denominations of the early Christian Church. This infighting has weakened our ability to fight the capitalists, and caused disinterestedness and loss of membership in all our parties. We stand disunited, together criticizing capitalism in all the same old ways, but we are all just little voices yelling in a crowd, independently, we are not feared, we are not heard, and our voices mean nothing. What we must do is draw together some sort of Leftist Alliance, and turn our individual yells into a unifying shout of defiance. We must cooperate together to end the capitalist system, the thing we all agree must be done. Once we have conquered Capital, then we can sort out our different ideas about how to create a just society in a civilized way. And even then, it may not be pretty, since our differences are sharp in many areas, and the necessity of ending capitalism is perhaps the only thing we can universally agree on. But we continue to lose ground every day that we bicker amongst ourselves about how to do it. If we care half as much as we say we do about ending exploitation and oppression, then we should be able to do this.
The overriding drive, in my opinion, must be discipline. Not party line discipline, but personal control of ourselves, and adherence to our own commitment to democratize various aspects of society. All actions must keep this in mind. It was a great weakness displayed, for example, by the Bolsheviks, to have resorted to repression and self-righteousness rather than compromise, but the other parties of the day were just as guilty of that complex. Some blame that on their Russian-ness, some say it is a product of Lenin and a conquest for power, and some say it is endemic to socialism. I think the reason in the context of today is irrelevant and a question for historians to debate; it should not shape our thinking today, except to serve as an example of something to be avoided.
Another question whose answer we must be united around is the conquest of power itself. Is revolution acceptable? Is it the only way to end Capitalism? Is the only way that Capitalism should be ended? Whatever is decided, it must be adhered to by all Leftist parties if only for the sake of cohesion. This is one of the most difficult subjects for us, so we must always been on guard when debating it to quell the self-righteous urge to split and "do things our own way." As noted above, this will get us nowhere, and being right means nothing if it never comes to pass.
I hope this at least inspires some thought in the minds of Leftists who read it. Its a problem we will most definitely need to face if we ever intend to do anything other than pontificate and pray the masses flock to our brand of "the right way." Our motto is, after all:
Пролетарии всех стран, соединяйтесь!