So instead of having later just the Soviet Union and Red China we would have earlier a Soviet Germany and Soviet Russia? — ssu
A good question is if the Soviet Union would have been able to exist without Stalin. The standard leftist narrative is that it was great when Lenin was in charge, but unfortunately then Stalin took power. Yet it might be that it was Stalin the Soviet system needed. Or Mao in the case of China. — ssu
But aside from matters of taste, of which it's said there can be no dispute, I think that as a narrative or rhetorical device it's as Tom Storm suggests--intricate and confusing. — Ciceronianus the White
So, what Luxemburg is saying is that land must to be taken over by the “nation” which is actually the state which is the government which is the Socialist Party which is (ideally) run by people like Luxemburg herself ....
Obviously, most Germans - and most people in their right mind - would object to that. — Apollodorus
I also think that you fail to understand that Communism was extraordinarily appealing to many people in the Nineteenth Century. — thewonder
Jean Baudrillard writing an article "The Gulf War did not take place". — ssu
Given that Socialists felt like their common existence was at stake and had good reason to suspect that reform was going to take longer than they were going to live for, the revolutionary stance of the KPD, regardless as to whether it was either strategic or ethical, does make sense. — thewonder
Nineteenth Century? We're talking about the 1900s here, i.e. Twentieth Century, when Communists in Germany only mustered 10% of the vote. — Apollodorus
By the same logic, the SPD's opposition to the Communists does make sense and it can't be called "betrayal". Unless you're advocating Communism, i.e., in this case, the rule of a Communist minority over a non-Communist majority? — Apollodorus
Less than twenty years into the 1900s. The Communist Manifesto was first published in 1848. I don't think that it's a stretch to suggest that it did take enough of a hold for such sentiments to still exist in 1919. — thewonder
The "sentiments" you're talking about were 10% of the population at the time of Luxemburg. So, on one hand you're allegedly against totalitarianism, and on the other hand you're for rule by a small minority with which the vast majority disagrees. — Apollodorus
Though I, myself, am of the far-Left, what I do understand of it is that populated by kind of a lot of fanatics. When it comes to fanatics and their talking points, other people often refuse to listen to a single word that they say, and understandably so. — thewonder
What I am suggesting is that there needs to be a "third camp". — thewonder
And, well, the Spartakists had attacked and occupied the Vorwärts house - some sort of protofascist military headquarters? — hwyl
And Communists certainly picked their moment for revenge in the early 30's, they stabbed the sanest and biggest party in the back while it was trying to hold the front against the Nazis. — hwyl
It's funny to me that people often find what I say to be perplexing as I make such a deliberate attempt to be explicitly clear. — thewonder
As there was a revolution in Russia around the same period of time, I would suspect that being a Communist was common enough for most people to have met one. — thewonder
So, they occupied the legendary mouthpiece of the SPD in a fit of absence of mind? They only meant to destroy the freedom of expression of the bourgeoisie? If they were not Communists yet, at least they were learning bloody quickly how to best undermine liberal democracy... — hwyl
The “third camp” should reject statism, collectivism, totalitarianism, and embrace freedom. Only then could they resist using human beings as the brick and mortar of their projects. Unfortunately this means their vision must come about voluntarily. — NOS4A2
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