• OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    One thing I personally can’t understand is their defending to the death of every socialist government. But by that I mean every government that has called itself socialist or been called socialist by the US as some sort of justification for undermining them, not if they’ve actually done anything socialist. Like do we have to simp for North Korea.

    There’s a couple of points I would make in response to that.

    First, a problematic aspect of the internet is that your existence is defined by the last thing you posted. Which is to say, if someone says that a story about North Korea is fake, then to a reader they are a “North Korea defender,” regardless of whether they hold more critical beliefs about it that they didn’t happen to voice in that particular comment. And there have been plenty of sensationalist, fake news stories about North Korea, as well as about other countries the US doesn’t like.

    Second, most Hexbears are Marxist-Leninists, and an important thing to understand about that ideology is that it isn’t about one specific set of policies that are universally applicable. When an ML defends a country, it doesn’t necessarily mean that they think that country should be held up as a model for other countries to emulate.

    So if they’re not a model to emulate, then why defend them? First off, because the only means we in the West have of influencing their policies is through our government using military force, clandestine operations, or crippling economic sanctions. Second, because even if a socialist government is a failure, the extent to which it failed is important, because it will be held up as a criticism of socialism in general. Many Western leftists believe in simply putting as much distance as possible between themselves and AES (actually existing socialist) states, and will be some of their harshest critics to that end. But others, myself included, would argue that that’s the wrong approach, because it allows false and exaggerated claims to go unchallenged, which will then still be used to criticize the left no matter how much one tries to distance themselves from it. Like, people will call Obama and Harris communists, so it doesn’t seem to matter how much distance there is.

    Michael Parenti’s Blackshirts and Reds is a good starting point for understanding the perspective.

    • Valmond@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      “the US doesn’t like”

      OMG, like North Korea isn’t bad, it’s just the US that “doesn’t like them”.

      Anyobe not knowing North Korea is the worst dictatorship on planet earth should get their brain tested.

      I mean this is what OP talks about (or so I feel), people so out of touch you can’t even have a normal discussion with them.

      It’s like talking about sexual abuse and someone saying that the person raped is now not “liking” the rapist, but a million times worse.

      • Aeao@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I’m a capitalist. The person you are responding to sounded very reasonable.

        “the US doesn’t like”

        That’s very true. The us does not like north Korea. That isn’t saying north Korea is good. It’s just saying there are motives at play to make north Korea look as bad as possible.

        If I said Jeffrey Epstein was a cannibal, you can say “no he wasn’t” without thinking he was a good person.

        • alcoholicorn@lemmy.ml
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          1 month ago

          Not really important, but a capitalist is someone who has a significant amount of capital.

          Someone who supports the existence of capitalism is called a liberal.

          • Aeao@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Yes someone explain my poor phrasing. They even mentioned the word I mentioned but I forget.

            I’m not the capitalist version of a tanky.

            I believe the concept of capitalism could work, and I believe it would work better than socialism. Another common ground I have with socialist is that I understand the examples of my preferred… Arrangement of society have been corrupted and not run under the ideas they claim.

            That’s what I mean by common ground and that’s where I sympathize. I wouldn’t want someone pointing at trump and saying “that’s capitalism!” And I would never point at Kim jun un and say “that’s socialism”

            I also understand the “ideal, pure, perfect implementation” of either idea probably isn’t possible.

            I lean more to capitalism.

            That’s what I meant when I said “I’m a capitalist” I misspoke.

          • Aeao@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Funny side note I think the problem with both systems is lazy people not doing what they should.

            I won’t go over the example for how lazy people could effect socialism because I’m sure you’ve heard it a million times before.

            I skip straight to capitalism.

            People don’t vote with their dollar like they should. Everyone hates Walmart, they still shop at Walmart. Everyone hates child slavery, they still buy chocolate. Women want real pockets in their clothing, they still buy clothing that does not have pockets.

            I’m lazy too in that way. I don’t shop at Walmart, and I don’t really like chocolate… But I hate how shitty airlines are… When I fly tho, I buy the cheapest ticket on the cheapest airline. Every single time.

            That’s the problem with capitalism. I’m lazy, we’re all lazy.

            • rekabis@lemmy.ca
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              1 month ago

              It’s not laziness.

              Most people are too resource poor, too time poor, and too exhausted from being violently forced to be profitable to someone else, to have the headspace to do what you suggest.

              You can indeed spend every waking moment optimizing your life, but then you would be just one person among tens of thousands who could be successful doing that. 99.999% of people would utterly burn out trying to achieve the same. They don’t have the underlying intergenerational wealth that would give them the ability to do so, or don’t have the free time to do so, or have too high of a cognitive load just putting one foot in front of the other to do so. Vanishingly few people are “just too lazy” to do so, and of those who are, they are the ones who can monetarily afford to be lazy.

              It’s why poverty is fiendishly expensive, and why it is almost impossible to escape poverty

              • Aeao@lemmy.world
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                30 days ago

                I’m new to this platform and can’t tell if I already replied to this or not.

                I totally understand and agree with your point. In case I already replied to this I’ll just give my short answer.

                If I could snap my finger and magically make a perfect capitalist system (or socialist for that matter) no corruption or greed. Starting absolutely fresh and right with the perfect principles in place for the system… And also all of us people started fresh, well rested, well fed, thinking clearly…

                I think people would still buy the cheapest chocolate and ignore the slaves, they’d still shop at Walmart, and I’d still book the cheap airline ticket and complain I have no leg room, and a handful of super rich elites would quickly regain literally all the power.

                You absolutely nailed it on the head with everything thing you said, that’s exactly why I don’t call out system true capitalism. I also agree the lives we are forced to live prevent us from having time to sort this stuff out.

                I just don’t think we’d be less lazy (myself included) even if we did have the time and energy. I feel the same problem in both systems.

                1)good idea

                1. revaluation

                2. get lazy

                3. back to essentially where we started.

        • Valmond@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          What on earth do you think you saying you are a capitalist does?

          There are smart communists, and as you so succinctly prove, capitalists that are less so.

          • Aeao@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Pointing out I can disagree with someone’s ideas and still recognize when they are being very reasonable.

            capitalists that are less so.

            Ah the ol’ “you’re stupid” rebuttal. Works every time. Automatic win in every debate lol

      • rekabis@lemmy.ca
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        1 month ago

        OMG, like North Korea isn’t bad, it’s just the US that “doesn’t like them”.

        You’re linking North Korea to the conversation about communism, when that alone is a fatal error: NK is equally as much communistic as they are democratic. As in, not in the least.

        There has never been any kind of a long-term (5+ years) communist country on the planet. Prior power structures have always stepped in to decapitate communism in favour of a violently autocratic dictatorship much like a monarchy. What remained of communism was only ever kept as a thin veneer of legitimacy, much like a rotting Edgar suit.

      • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        This is what I’m talking about. The US not liking North Korea is an objective fact. But because people on the internet treat whatever you last posted as your entire identity and belief system, then you assume that’s the full extent of my position on North Korea. You expect me to do the typical signals to disavow and denounce the country as part of the strategy of the Western left distancing itself from AES states. But I’m not interested in signalling anything, for the reasons I explained. The strategy of allowing and repeating all sorts of sensationalist nonsense for fear that pushing back against it will tie you to the state in question just doesn’t work.

        Is North Korea really “the worst dictatorship on planet Earth?” Are they worse than, for example, Saudi Arabia? Are they so much obviously worse that anyone who thinks Saudi Arabia is worse “should get their brain tested?”

        It’s like talking about sexual abuse and someone saying that the person raped is now not “liking” the rapist, but a million times worse.

        Ok, maybe you’re right. Perhaps it’s important to mention the horrible things the US and North Korea have done to each other. Like when the US invaded and killed 15% of their entire population (primarily civilians), carpet bombed the country, and deployed all sorts of chemical weapons, or when North Korea, er, sorry, what did North Korea do to America that’s “a million times worse than rape?” Gonna have to refresh my memory on that one chief.

    • Fleur_@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Look they first thing I’m confused about is why you started your comment with a sympathetic viewpoint to North Korea, like I would’nt open my essay about how nuclear energy is good with Chernobyl wasnt that bad. Your basically delegitimising everying else after that, which is unfortunate because there’s a lot of interesting things in your comment.

      And then I disagree with the false and exaggerated claims unchallenged part. What exactly do you mean. This seems like a catch all to dismiss anything that you disagree with. Nuance is everything embrace it. More importantly, because the only state you’ve mentioned is North Korea I’m now prompted to assume the AES’s you’re talking about is north Korea.

      • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        Look they first thing I’m confused about is why you started your comment with a sympathetic viewpoint to North Korea, like I would’nt open my essay about how nuclear energy is good with Chernobyl wasnt that bad. Your basically delegitimising everying else after that

        That’s a perfect demonstration of my point. The only thing I said about North Korea is that there are fake stories about it, which is true. I have no interest in saying or tolerating false claims just to make my position seem more appealing, or to avoid being accused of something. If speaking truth delegitimizes me somehow, if it makes people think I’m a bad person or something, then so be it, it doesn’t change what’s true.

        And then I disagree with the false and exaggerated claims unchallenged part. What exactly do you mean. This seems like a catch all to dismiss anything that you disagree with.

        I linked a video to give an example of what I was talking about. I recommend watching it, it’s a little long but it’s informative while being entertaining and well-produced (it has 3.6 million views with good reason). The video describes a story that was very widespread in the media with lots of mainstream sources talking about it, which claimed that everyone in North Korea had to get the same haircut as Kim Jong Un. That story was completely and totally false, it was a wholesale fabrication. The two guys in the video travel to North Korea and get a perfectly normal haircut to disprove it. It also mentions several other stories that turned out to be fake news.

        You’re jumping to conclusions when you say that I “use it as a catch-all to dismiss anything I disagree with.” I’m not going to dismiss claims that are actually backed by evidence, but I am going to investigate whether there is actually evidence backing up a given claim.

        More importantly, because the only state you’ve mentioned is North Korea I’m now prompted to assume the AES’s you’re talking about is north Korea.

        That’s a silly assumption, as there’d be no need for a term like that if it only applied to one country. AES states also include for example Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, China, and the USSR (prior to it’s collapse).

        • Fleur_@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          I’m still confused why you’re including north Korea as a socialist state

          • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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            1 month ago

            People use all sorts of metrics to determine whether or not a state is socialist or not, so it’s hard to find neutral terminology everyone can agree with. North Korea calls itself socialist and has a centrally-planned economy, and has been historically aligned with other countries that also call themselves socialist (such as the USSR and PRC), so it seems reasonable enough to me to call them socialist. Should I call them capitalist instead? Seems a little odd, especially since I live in the US which has a much larger proportion of the economy in the private sector.

            • rekabis@lemmy.ca
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              1 month ago

              North Korea calls itself socialist

              They also call themselves democratic.

              Are they? Would you call their system democratic? No?

              Why one and not the other?

              • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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                1 month ago

                For one thing, virtually every country on earth claims to be democratic, whereas only some claim to be socialist. There are many countries that claim the label of democratic that don’t consider the DPRK to be a democracy, but the countries that claim the label of socialist, such as Cuba, generally recognize the DPRK as socialist. If would be strange to refer to a group of countries as socialist and then exclude a country that those countries recognize as being socialist.

                It’s worth noting that one of the main reasons the DPRK is not considered democratic is not because of the way the government and elections are structured, but because it doesn’t allow its elections to be monitored by international observers.

            • Fleur_@lemm.ee
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              1 month ago

              They’re not socialist because the means of production is owned by literally one guy?

              • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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                1 month ago

                The means of production are mixed between public/state ownership, collective ownership, and private ownership, actually.

                I take it that your metric for whether or not a state is socialist is something like, “Worker ownership of the means of production.” But that metric has a lot of ambiguities that make it difficult to apply practically in an objective way. Which workers own which means of production, and in what form? Suppose we have a system where everything is state-owned and the state determines who can use what when based on a truly democratic process - but then, an organization of trained professionals in a given field go on strike to demand things be done the way they want. If all the workers should own all the means of production, then the strikers are out of line, but if the workers in a particular field should own the means of production in that field, then the state is out of line.

                And should the economy be transformed, fully and immediately, to that ideal? Historically, both the USSR and PRC attempted widespread collectivization of farms, like with the Great Leap Forward, which was an abject failure. That’s not to say that farming collectives cannot be successful, but I don’t think it’s reasonable to expect immediate and total transformation to that model or else a state isn’t socialist.

          • Valmond@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Because they either live in their own dream world, or they are pushing the idea that communism is good, which is hard if you use and listen to facts.

            Start off with an enormous lie, everything after that might feel not that un-true.