#161

c_man posted:

Panopticon posted:

i'm just inclined to believe that the katyn massacre was a result of the arbitrary exercise of power in the soviet union, stemming from a lack of rule of law

is there a reason that you think that, as opposed to maybe that it was the nazis, that isnt related to books or other media that were created with the explicit intent of generating hatred for the ussr? if the presence of the "rule of law" is so important for you here, do you feel like the nazi commitment to the rule of law was so much stronger than that in the ussr that they are much more trustworthy?



the ussr admitted responsibility in 1990 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8648275.stm

i don't believe the nazis had stronger rule of law. in fact the holocaust was carried out extralegally. a fascist judge who was also obsessed with rule of law executed camp commandants on minor corruption charges because he had no way of stopping the holocaust, which was ordered by hitler and thus not under his jurisdiction. himmler had to order him to stop shooting camp officials.

http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/08-07-46.asp

#162

aerdil posted:

intelligence institutions like the NKVD apparently. i mean the fact that a bunch of people in the politburo had to sign off on the executions before they happened (if those documents are true) -- isn't that exactly a system of checks on the power of the state? it just didnt result in something you liked.



that was more record keeping than checks, there was no independent judiciary with the power to stop it happening. the troika of chekists was the first and last appeal and then you were executed.

#163

Panopticon posted:

the ussr admitted responsibility in 1990 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8648275.stm

i don't believe the nazis had stronger rule of law. in fact the holocaust was carried out extralegally. a fascist judge who was also obsessed with rule of law executed camp commandants on minor corruption charges because he had no way of stopping the holocaust, which was ordered by hitler and thus not under his jurisdiction. himmler had to order him to stop shooting camp officials.

http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/08-07-46.asp


so if your position is that it's more important whether or not the admission is real and not forged than whether it was some sort of inevitable outcome of lack of commitment to rule of law on the part of stalin then this business about the rule of law has been a bit of a red herring. if the most important thing for you would be whether or not the order is genuine then you should probably take grover furr seriously and read his long-ass thing about the actual history of the event, because i dont think you can plausibly make the argument that there would be no reason to forge a document like that in 1990.

#164
im not going to venture an opinion on it, personally, because i think dwelling on things like that when there are much better documented and more reliable readouts of valuable information about the states in question is a lot of effort spent for relatively little (immediate, personally intellectual) gain. if other people want to, good luck
#165
stalin
#166
they are both important, if the massacre happened it demonstrates a failure in the soviet system.
grover furr is a couple of steps away from time cube. the opening sentence of the pdf version is a complaint about the wikipedia page.

i mean look at this garbage

Kuligowski was taken prisoner by the Red Army sometime
after September 17, 1939, when Soviet troops entered Eastern
Poland to prevent the German Army from establishing itself hundreds
of miles further east at the USSR’s pre-1939 border.

no pasaran eh

#167
i dont see why you're willing to extend the benefit of the doubt to opportunist anticommunist pop-historians whose sole goal in writing is to discredit the ussr but not extend the same to grover furr. not very liberal of you.
#168
disappointed by the lack of anticommunist purges in the Stalin thread
#169

c_man posted:

i dont see why you're willing to extend the benefit of the doubt to opportunist anticommunist pop-historians whose sole goal in writing is to discredit the ussr but not extend the same to grover furr. not very liberal of you.



i try, and then i see stuff like him citing a wikipedia page as his source and i give up again

#170
isnt he just complaining about the quality of the wiki page?
#171
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#172

c_man posted:

isnt he just complaining about the quality of the wiki page?



no, that's something else

21. A description of this method of execution may be found on the English-language Wikipedia
page on Jeckeln at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Jeckeln#World_
War_II_mass_murderer

#173
stalin was a good christian boy who did nothing wrong
#174

Panopticon posted:

21. A description of this method of execution may be found on the English-language Wikipedia
page on Jeckeln at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Jeckeln#World_
War_II_mass_murderer


well, wrap it up communismailures

#175

Panopticon posted:

grover furr is a couple of steps away from time cube.


catchphrase

#176
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#177

tpaine posted:

why are you people even...*just kind of trails off*

defending Grover Furr is the shit. you should try it some time.

#178

tpaine posted:

why are you people even...*just kind of trails off*


N1Wrx6eQZ1E

#179
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#180
the only good form of governance is the one where nothing bad happens ever
#181
NOT!!!
#182
mccaine debated grover furr, so defending grover furr is like debating mccaine by proxy
#183
the 'stalinist' argument for the great 'terror' and executions of 1936 are not that they didn't happen, or that they were somehow necessary for the socialist state, but that they were a gross mistake forced by foreign agents (as Doctor Furr asserts) or opportunists operating without supervision. and that it was a mistake that the soviets themselves recognized, regretted, and corrected.

consider how fucking crazy it is that the fact that Stalin had Ezhov and his men at the NKVD tried and executed for their crimes against the soviet peoples is used as evidence of his complicity of their crime.

Like, if Obama's first act as president had been to order the arrest and trial of bush, chenny and powell for war crimes against the iraqi people would you take a stand and say that this was proof that he was the true mastermind behind the invasion and slaughter? no, because thats fucking stupid!!.
#184

Panopticon posted:

Petrol posted:

every other poster itt: *thoughtful well reasoned post*
panopticon: *non-sequitur quote from poorly written anticommunist book*

everyone in the world who doesn't love stalin seems to be an anti-communist



lemme lay it down here {taking off my Stalin mask and night vision gear} when I first started posting here, I thought Stalin was a bad man, because I was a young liberal too. Then all the really smart and well read communists here explained why Stalin was actually good. As k learned more about revolutionary science....I realised......I. Like. Stalin.

whether Stalin was mean or callous or what his psychological quirks were, to be frank who gives a fuck, what are we a pack of liberals?? "Oooh winston used to have a scotch before bed, that's why he had the jolly rogering gumption to bend those nazis over and give them a thrashing!!!!" No , we're "insane commandos for socialism" as the Donald recently opined. Our goal, as made clear by the work and practice of communists in the past, is not a moral high ground, it's to do whatever it takes to succeed. Definitely the soviet leadership including Stalin fucked some things up, but they also corrected mistakes in just an emphatic a way. The tenuousness of the revolution in the Soviet Union {we need only look at how easily it collapsed to see that it was indeed tenuous} meant that a ruthless approach to internal security was necessary during certain periods. I mean fuck, purges in the late 80s would've saved the USSR, they probably saved it in the 30s too. Anyway whatever you don't care you like liberal stuff for whatever reason

#185
but what if the most ruthless way to build socialism.... is liberalism?

#186
Here is an excellent article about how "area studies", and especially "Russian studies", was developed directly by the CIA working with the cream of US universities in the immediate postwar and cold war period: https://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/cumings2.htm (PDF version with illustrations: http://home.sogang.ac.kr/sites/kylee/Courses/Lists/b6/Attachments/7/Boundary%20Displacement_Area%20Studies%20and%20International%20Studies%20during%20and%20after%20the%20Cold%20War%20-%20Bruce%20Cumings%20-%2029-01%20(1997).pdf ) - just a little more perspective on exactly how deep the US state anticommunist influence runs in soviet studies. (an interesting-sounding book called "the compromised campus" is mentioned, which i note is on libgen and seems worth checking out also)
#187
How to breathe life into tHE r H i z z o n E: deny that Stalin was great & whatever he did is correct.

<---------------------- Regardless, @Panoptikkkon , this is where your going
#188
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#189
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#190
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#191
Let's be nice to Crow.
#192
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#193

conec posted:

wasn`t crow also obama crazy just a few years ago?

citation needed

#194
Conec Lied: The Evidence that Every "Revelation" of Crow's (and Babyhueypnewton's) "Crimes" in Conec's Infamous "Bad Post" to tHE r H i z z o n E 2000th Pro-Stalin Thread on February 29, 2016, is Provably False
#195
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#196
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#197

getfiscal posted:

i think you are confusing hegel. the point about necessity is a reply to kant. moral imperatives do exist but they have no force in themselves, only within a specific situation. that situation has an institutional and individual context. ethics for hegel involves the unity of the particular and the universal, it is not just a restatement of an abstract moral imperative. this is not rejecting the idea of morality, it is saying that morality operates within history and cannot be separated from it into a pure regulative idea.



i'm not actually suggesting hegel himself does this, obviously that would be fruitless, hegel delineates categories of the natural world that are explicitly tied to the pure idea, the absolute and the divine. marxists aren't hegelians, though - marx and engels inherit much of the logical distinctions of hegel's thought but very specifically reject the conception of god, the idea and the absolute and by so doing invert the hegelian system

if you retain a concept of the necessary without the hegelian notions of the closed and the pure idea, the absolute liberation, the absolute truth of the divine etc. then you strip it of its moral weight because those are the principles the moral dimension of hegel's thought is predicated upon. we instead have an explicitly physical principle of necessity

Just as the savage must wrestle with Nature to satisfy his wants, to maintain and reproduce life, so must civilised man, and he must do so in all social formations and under all possible modes of production. With his development this realm of physical necessity expands as a result of his wants; but, at the same time, the forces of production which satisfy these wants also increase. Freedom in this field can only consist in socialised man, the associated producers, rationally regulating their interchange with Nature, bringing it under their common control, instead of being ruled by it as by the blind forces of Nature; and achieving this with the least expenditure of energy and under conditions most favourable to, and worthy of, their human nature. But it nonetheless still remains a realm of necessity. Beyond it begins that development of human energy which is an end in itself, the true realm of freedom, which, however, can blossom forth only with this realm of necessity as its basis.



that is, this is the rationalist deduction of the physical necessity of the maintenance and preservation of life as the condition of its continued existence. to quote engels from the anti-duhring again, "Freedom does not consist in the dream of independence of natural laws, but in the knowledge of these laws and in the possibility this gives of systematically making them work towards definite ends." that is, again, presenting necessity as the quality of natural laws. while of course hegel's presentation of the system of nature and natural law are bound to the absolute and the divine, the marxist conception of nature is solely materialist in character

the elevation of moral principles to that of natural law would be trans-historical and as such not consistent with the marxist position even by your understanding, as such we can't understand the marxist conception of necessity as being moral in character

and again, contrary to you claims, in the german ideology marx does explicitly distinguish morality as a distinct sphere from a real, positive science and undermines the former as a phantom of human mind. that marx subsequently rehabilitates a notion of morality as consistent with science simply because he stops talking about it is really not a convincing argument

the fact that he advocates a notion of freedom isn't a rehabilitation itself of some proletarian morality, because as is my entire point, freedom in the marxist schema is the recognition and fulfilment of natural law and physical necessity (and as such necessarily contrary to moral presupposition, because the elevation of moral principles to physical necessity or natural law is to make moral principles trans-historical). for hegel freedom, as is all existence, ultimately a moral vector but this is precisely in hegel what marx and engels reject - their notion of freedom and necessity resembles hegel in form and structure but not in content

the fact that marx advocates for political principles such as freedom of speech is not necessarily indicative of a moral reasoning behind such principles but a functional and agent relative reasoning that is ultimately grounded in the recognition of physical necessity

that being said, obviously marx doesn't suggest that the phantoms of the human mind spring out of nothingness, they are echoes and reflexes of and toward real life-processes

this means we can talk about a morality as something that exists but this is in the same sense we can talk about religion being a thing that exists. accounting for that, we can perhaps speak of a "proletarian morality" that will exist under the conditions of socialism that would cohere with the physical necessity presented by marxist thought. however this is not in itself a moral reasoning, it's just a recognition of the propensity of human agents to moral reasoning

Edited by blinkandwheeze ()

#198
*clears throat* Stalin.
#199

blinkandwheeze posted:

Just as the savage must wrestle with Nature to satisfy his wants, to maintain and reproduce life, so must civilised man, and he must do so in all social formations and under all possible modes of production. With his development this realm of physical necessity expands as a result of his wants; but, at the same time, the forces of production which satisfy these wants also increase. Freedom in this field can only consist in socialised man, the associated producers, rationally regulating their interchange with Nature, bringing it under their common control, instead of being ruled by it as by the blind forces of Nature; and achieving this with the least expenditure of energy and under conditions most favourable to, and worthy of, their human nature. But it nonetheless still remains a realm of necessity. Beyond it begins that development of human energy which is an end in itself, the true realm of freedom, which, however, can blossom forth only with this realm of necessity as its basis.

that is, this is the rationalist deduction of the physical necessity of the maintenance and preservation of life as the condition of its continued existence. to quote engels from the anti-duhring again, "Freedom does not consist in the dream of independence of natural laws, but in the knowledge of these laws and in the possibility this gives of systematically making them work towards definite ends." that is, again, presenting necessity as the quality of natural laws. while of course hegel's presentation of the system of nature and natural law are bound to the absolute and the divine, the marxist conception of nature is solely materialist in character

That Marx quote doesn't mean that. Marx is making a point similar to Aristotle, that higher moral ends are ends in themselves and not instrumental to those ends. In capitalist class society, labour is estranged from its aim because the worker is alienated from the object it produces and must also do that work to survive. Marx is saying that communism will bring harmony between aim and effort.

You excised the final sentence: "The shortening of the working-day is its basic prerequisite." This is Marx's point. There are two basic types of labour: Instrumental labour which is not satisfying, and satisfying ends in themselves. For example, someone needs to collect the garbage, and someone needs to perform great music. That section refers to the fact that socialism allows the work of garbage-collecting to be minimized, since socialized production will aim at the reduction of that work, and allow more people to spend time making great music. This is because instrumental labour is necessary but not the aim of life in itself. Marx is specifically saying that the moral life is one where the focus is less on necessity and more on free human creation.

This is also why there is no (systematic, economic) exchange under communism - needs are met in a conscious way. Which is the related notion - by "Nature" here Marx is making an analogy to, say, bad weather. A worker under capitalism doesn't decide what to produce for any real conscious reason, it's because of what the capitalist thinks the market says will be profitable. So the worker treats economic choices as one might plan for weather - they don't (generally) know what they might produce in their life, or whether they will even get a job. Conscious planning allows this "Natural" element to disappear as far as possible, because socialized producers determine what to do with their days, and don't have to worry about going hungry (barring total catastrophe).

#200
I think even at his most radical, Lenin agrees with that basic point by Marx:

Only in communist society, when the resistance of the capitalists have disappeared, when there are no classes (i.e., when there is no distinction between the members of society as regards their relation to the social means of production), only then "the state... ceases to exist", and "it becomes possible to speak of freedom". Only then will a truly complete democracy become possible and be realized, a democracy without any exceptions whatever. And only then will democracy begin to wither away, owing to the simple fact that, freed from capitalist slavery, from the untold horrors, savagery, absurdities, and infamies of capitalist exploitation, people will gradually become accustomed to observing the elementary rules of social intercourse that have been known for centuries and repeated for thousands of years in all copy-book maxims. They will become accustomed to observing them without force, without coercion, without subordination, without the special apparatus for coercion called the state.

The "copy-book maxims" means Christian and Greek childhood rote learning about morals, which is cynical under capitalism but becomes truly possible under communism, even if they are largely intuitive.

Edit: Even the denying of "freedom" here is an indirect reference to Hegel, because Lenin is saying that freedom becomes real in its actualization in human history, not because of formal reference to freedoms. That's also why these freedoms are called "formal" in bourgeois society, because they have a form but lack real content (which communists aim to provide, not dismiss).