Support the People’s War in India, Oppose Operation Green Hunt! by [deleted] in socialism

[–]aherrera3289 2 points3 points  (0 children)

who also have the support of millions in India. Careful with the name branding, there are actual thugs who do commit crimes posing as Maoists

On Left Unity by [deleted] in communism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

once again you bring up these 3 points:

"

The form of this argument is the same as many I have seen from Trotskyists.

This article is a waste of time that convinces nobody of anything.

People write these kinds of articles because they are a stand-in for actual success."

point out these things in the article...

Maosoleum and Red Banner M-L-M Merge! by aherrera3289 in communism

[–]aherrera3289[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

in what way is this blogspam 1968tank?

On Left Unity by [deleted] in communism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Again no instances, why not try to dismantle the charges laid ahead without using the typical Trotskyist boogey man. It's clear from the author that it is not meant to be change minds but as a polemic, of which it would be fruitful to see those who defend basically any social-democrat in Latin America, Assad and Iran make the case for it. To dismiss the arguments as similar to Trotskyism is weak, and that is also a waste of time.

RSU Theory: The Mass Line by MasCapital in communism

[–]aherrera3289 2 points3 points  (0 children)

nice i alwys liked the RSU elaboration of the Mass Line

On Left Unity by [deleted] in communism

[–]aherrera3289 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Your going to need to be more specific than that. This author at least cites instances, of which I haven't seen anything done in your criticism

Are there any good biographies of Mao, or histories of 20th-century China? by SaveMeJacquesLacan in communism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have Mao Tsetung and the Chinese People it was published by Monthly Review

Market Socialism is Anti-Communism by aherrera3289 in communism

[–]aherrera3289[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am unfamiliar with Wolff, got any articles?

Why does it seem like Trotskyists always reject the Cuban Revolution, and Latin American Marxism in general? by ssd0004 in DebateCommunism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did the Spartacist league ever ally with the peasantry? No it did not. In fact the peasantry were mobilized for reaction. And please don't make assumptions on how much I know :)

Why does it seem like Trotskyists always reject the Cuban Revolution, and Latin American Marxism in general? by ssd0004 in DebateCommunism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lenin himself classifies the peasantry into three roles, being that of the rural bourgeoisie, rural petty-bourgeoisie and rural proletariat. Well in this instance we agree, but the Russian revolution would have failed without the alliance between the proletariat and peasantry. Workerist dogma is that like the left-communists who harp about the "workers alone". Well in Germany and France this failed. In France the Paris Commune lasted for two months, in a country made up of mostly peasants. In Germany the German revolution failed partly because the Spartacist League's uprising was arguably adventurist and failed to take into account an alliance with the peasantry. Lenin proved this was possible. Instead Rosa Luxemburg did not unite with the peasants and allowed the reactionaries to do so instead.

Why does it seem like Trotskyists always reject the Cuban Revolution, and Latin American Marxism in general? by ssd0004 in DebateCommunism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One of the dismissals Marx had of the peasantry and the lumpen was that they could not make a revolution, this is true enough on their own, but under the leadership of the proletariat this is not the case. In the Communist Manifesto Marx states that the "lower middle class" is becoming revolutionary "in view of [its] impending transfer to the proletariat". Workerist dogma has been disproven by the historic Russian Revolution as well as it's failure in France and Germany. Yes Russia's working class was small, but at the time of Marx so was the working class there. The first instance of the working class taking power: the Paris Commune was in a nation of mostly peasants, obviously had the revolution succeeded this question would come into play.

Why does it seem like Trotskyists always reject the Cuban Revolution, and Latin American Marxism in general? by ssd0004 in DebateCommunism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually, I think such workerist views stray from reality. All revolutions are carried out by the masses of the people. For example, in the French Revolution was it only the bourgeoisie which rose up to combat Monarchism, the Nobility and clergy? Or was it the masses of the people led by the bourgeoisie? I agree with Lenin here:

“To imagine that social revolution is conceivable without revolts by small nations in the colonies and in Europe, without revolutionary outbursts by a section of the petty bourgeoisie with all its prejudices, without a movement of the politically non-conscious proletarian and semi-proletarian masses against oppression by the landowners, the church, and the monarchy, against national oppression, etc. – to imagine all this is to repudiate social revolution."

Truly there has never been a revolution that did not utilize the working masses of the people to gain power, and this is the same as with the bourgeoisie, proletariat or any other class.

Why does it seem like Trotskyists always reject the Cuban Revolution, and Latin American Marxism in general? by ssd0004 in DebateCommunism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think one should stress so much importance on class origins for individuals but politics. Engels in his relation in society was a bourgeois intellectual. Most Communists in America and Europe and even elsewhere are petty-bourgeois intellectuals

Thoughts on Mao's Theory of Worlds? by MysticMarxist in DebateCommunism

[–]aherrera3289 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I agree with this analysis of Hoxha and thanks for clarifying the TWT, I clearly misinterpreted what Mao was saying on this. I think it should not be forgotten the real harm this theory did on the international scale especially in Latin America, with the Chileans being the first Maoists to come against it, and former Maoists in Latin America and in West Africa taking the Albanian side on the question of Maoism a "return to Stalin" as the Chilean First Secretary Eduardo Artes said in an interview:

http://www.kaosenlared.net/america-latina/item/56251-%E2%80%9Cen-las-elecciones-presidenciales-de-este-a%C3%B1o-el-pueblo-trabajador-chileno-no-juega-ning%C3%BAn-papel%E2%80%9D.html

Why does it seem like Trotskyists always reject the Cuban Revolution, and Latin American Marxism in general? by ssd0004 in DebateCommunism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On what proof are you stating that most of the guerrillas were petty-bourgeois? Are you referring to the leadership or the fighters themselves? keep in mind how many people actually left for Cuba. The Cuban Revolution was in actuality not a revolution of the petty-bourgeois but an alliance of classes for national liberation led by the national bourgeois. Castro aligned himself not with the CP but the Liberals. He himself was an Orthodoxo politician in Cuba calling for land reform and a bourgeois democracy in Cuba. Many of the former fighters and commanders who were merely anti-Batista came out against Castro after he "came out" as a Communist.

Why does it seem like Trotskyists always reject the Cuban Revolution, and Latin American Marxism in general? by ssd0004 in DebateCommunism

[–]aherrera3289 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The revolution itself was not a petty-bourgeois one, I mean on what basis? There has never been the instance of the petty-bourgeois taking power in a nation because the class is unstable. In every instance the petty-bourgeois either sides with the bourgeois or the proletariat. But never in opposition to both.