Hmm, I think you may have missed the point of the meme? Your point 1 seems to just be an articulation of the first panel (a liberal idealist perspective: “the system is broken, we need to fix it”). If the second panel isn’t clear (the left materialist perspective), maybe this helps.
1 Power to the people
The statement “the system is working as intended” is to point out that our only two options are two bourgeois classes, both hellbent on exploiting working people as much as possible. There cannot be other options…this is the system. It’s working as intended…it was intended to be a committee of the bourgeoisie to arrange their affairs, and it serves that function fine, whether the American people turn up to “legitimize” it with their rubber stamp approving of Bourgeois Party A or Bourgeois Party B, or stay home. It doesn’t really matter. It doesn’t matter whether it’s trump or Obama or Reagan or FDR. All of them represent the system continuing to work as intended: a dictatorship of the bourgeoisie. The people’s lack of power is intended.
2 Violence
If you deal with violence, you probably know how unbelievably expensive state violence is. It requires bullets and bombs, it requires food and clothing, it requires administration and healthcare. These are things that can only be provided by the working class. Destroying the system is unquestionably possible, the question is, what’s the cost, and is it worth it?
Rebuilding, is an issue too, for sure. That’s why dual power and organization are so important! Though I’d be pretty surprised if the struggle of destroying the system wouldn’t create the organization necessary to rebuild.
3 Billionaires?
The billionaires would not destroy such a system? I’m not sure what you mean by this point…the system is great for them…and I don’t just mean under trump, it’s been great for them the whole time (and always will be - which is why destroying it is correct and “fixing” it is not)
Yeah, I mean, that’s fine. I think that your knee-jerk reaction is negative shows that we have a real disagreement :P I’m not trying to be pedantic about the “false dichotomy” thing!
Forget all that; let’s talk about the more interesting question of whether the system is designed to support the people, and therefore must be fixed, or if it’s designed to oppress the people, and therefore must be destroyed.
I think that’s really what you wanted to respond to, right?
“The system” isn’t designed. It’s a patchwork of interests, causes and effects. The meme is a false dichotomy in that the system isn’t categorically functional or dysfunctional and the notion that parts of it being repressive doesn’t preclude repairing institutions that are salvageable.
Its great you guys can hodgepodge some first year economic theory with a surface level of military concepts to convince yourselves and a few people on reddit.
But I’m not convinced you guys know wtf you’re talking about and genuinely think you’re all talk and no follow through.
I’m not sure what to say to the idea that the system isn’t designed. Like…surely you don’t deny that the electoral system is created by the bourgeoisie in the bourgeoisie’s interest? Sure they have fights with each other…finance vs industry, etc. The world is a complicated place. But those differences clearly don’t stop them working together when it matters (protecting property).
Sure, you might take out the refrigerator before knocking down a decrepit house, but when the construction is unsound, the fact that some parts may be salvageable is not a reason to try to fix it rather than knock it down.
And as for Marxists being nobodies, obviously true in the imperial core since…well a long time. But you’ve heard of the USSR, the PRC, Vietnam, Cuba, etc? It’s not first year economic theory being bandied about on Reddit, and they’ve got some serious follow through haha
the fact that some parts may be salvageable is not a reason to try to fix it rather than knock it down.
No but the people still living there are. Thats the part you guys always forget is that you’re literally asking people to sacrifice their vulnerable loved ones for your half baked ‘solution’.
But you’ve heard of the USSR, the PRC, Vietnam, Cuba, etc?
USSR - 300+ years of Romonov Monarchy before Russian Revolution
PRC - 2000 years of Qing Dynasty before Xinhai Revoluiton
Vietnam - Imperial rule followed by French/Japanese occupation until being partitioned after US occupation
Cuba - A Spanish colony for 400+ years that failed to gain independence despite several revolts before the Spanish-American war.
Even citing those in this conversation deeply discredits your argument in my mind. Never mind drawing straight line comparisons between societies with decades/centuries of autocracy to our poorly utilized but still functional democracies.
Maybe I’m putting words in your mouth, but I’m hearing you say:
people who think systems of oppression should be destroyed rather than reformed are losers.
Or in other words:
Reform or revolution? Reform is correct…if you say revolution you’re a larper.
I provided successful revolutionary societies as a counterexample to that claim. You know, Batista held elections too, maybe the Cuban people should have just voted him out? The July 26 movement was the equivalent of redditors with no follow through? (I’m sure you’re not saying that, which is why I think it’s a useful counterexample).
And despite the US’s centuries (250 years) of autocracy, I certainly did not and am not saying “the US is like those revolutionary societies.” I don’t think anyone thinks the United States is on the cusp of a revolution. I do say it’s silly to think that these capitalist republics are “functional” in any sense other than functioning to oppress working people, and it has been silly for a long time.
Help people out of the house before knocking it down, for sure. That’s dual power! That comes way before knocking it down. And we’re not even doing a good job at that yet. No doubt about it, we got a long way to go before we start knocking the house down. But the point we’re disagreeing about is that I think we shouldn’t waste time propping up the house…help people instead…get people out. And you think we should be patching up the cracked foundations and rotten support beams (or…sounds like maybe you don’t think the foundation is so bad, which might be a whole separate conversation).
Don’t take me seriously; I’m a very un-serious person. I do a little organizing in my community, but I haven’t found the true marxist vanguard party or the insurrectionist anarchist cell that’ll kick it all off or whatever. But the position that the system is not salvageable as a whole is a serious position!
America’s “democracy” will never result in the eschewment of capitalism (I put democracy in quotes because the US is not a democracy, and its vaguely democratic-flavored institutions will also never result in a democracy). The dictatorship of the bourgeoisie cannot give rise to a dictatorship of the proletariat. If you don’t think class is what counts, or that some kind of labor-peace is possible I am not gonna convince you here lol. If wolves control deer by biting them, the deer will not control the wolves by biting them back. And there is no peace to be had between wolves and deer.
Like…I think what you’re talking about is a US Allende, which…dude I’d be so happy. But it’s quite a naive hope. Like…can you imagine what it will take to give working people power? To start we’d need constitutional amendments at the federal level and in every state, and we’d need to wait for every judge to die and still be in power to appoint new ones. All while the bourgeois parties maintain all the power and inertia they already have. To look for that is idealism (in the sense that it’s about ideas primarily affecting the material world, rather than the material world primarily affecting ideas - not in the sense of “hopeful” … it’s that too, but that part is nice).
I’m sorry but the USA has not been an autocracy for 250 years. Maybe you misspoke?
I hate your house analogy. But I’ll use it if that helps.
people who think systems of oppression should be destroyed rather than reformed are losers.
People who are not accredited home inspectors trying to declare a building condemned while the actual occupants are trying to renovate, are wrong.
the true marxist vanguard party
Yea because that’s not how it works. Marxism is an end point for social democracy. In the context of a society achieving marxism, a marxist party would be redundant.
A society of people who would rather fight than vote will not rebuild better institutions than the one’s they forsook.
In the context of a society achieving marxism, a marxist party would be redundant.
If you swap that for “in the context of a society achieving a stateless classless society, a communist party would be redundant” I completely agree (Marxism is a means of analysis, not an end point). I think maybe you’re not familiar with the concept of a vanguard party? It doesn’t really matter to what I was saying, that was a throwaway self-depreciating joke. But if you want I’m happy to talk about that more.
A society of people who would rather fight than vote will not rebuild better institutions than the one’s they forsook.
I think Ireland, Cuba, and the USSR all disprove that… and many more besides. Home rule was a shoe-in for Ireland if not for the revolutionary war. Batista held elections. The February revolution lead to significant reforms before the October revolution. Sometimes the good fight is worth fighting.
Hmm, I think you may have missed the point of the meme? Your point 1 seems to just be an articulation of the first panel (a liberal idealist perspective: “the system is broken, we need to fix it”). If the second panel isn’t clear (the left materialist perspective), maybe this helps.
1 Power to the people
The statement “the system is working as intended” is to point out that our only two options are two bourgeois classes, both hellbent on exploiting working people as much as possible. There cannot be other options…this is the system. It’s working as intended…it was intended to be a committee of the bourgeoisie to arrange their affairs, and it serves that function fine, whether the American people turn up to “legitimize” it with their rubber stamp approving of Bourgeois Party A or Bourgeois Party B, or stay home. It doesn’t really matter. It doesn’t matter whether it’s trump or Obama or Reagan or FDR. All of them represent the system continuing to work as intended: a dictatorship of the bourgeoisie. The people’s lack of power is intended.
2 Violence
If you deal with violence, you probably know how unbelievably expensive state violence is. It requires bullets and bombs, it requires food and clothing, it requires administration and healthcare. These are things that can only be provided by the working class. Destroying the system is unquestionably possible, the question is, what’s the cost, and is it worth it?
Rebuilding, is an issue too, for sure. That’s why dual power and organization are so important! Though I’d be pretty surprised if the struggle of destroying the system wouldn’t create the organization necessary to rebuild.
3 Billionaires?
The billionaires would not destroy such a system? I’m not sure what you mean by this point…the system is great for them…and I don’t just mean under trump, it’s been great for them the whole time (and always will be - which is why destroying it is correct and “fixing” it is not)
I was 100% knee jerk reacting to your meme.
Yeah, I mean, that’s fine. I think that your knee-jerk reaction is negative shows that we have a real disagreement :P I’m not trying to be pedantic about the “false dichotomy” thing!
Forget all that; let’s talk about the more interesting question of whether the system is designed to support the people, and therefore must be fixed, or if it’s designed to oppress the people, and therefore must be destroyed.
I think that’s really what you wanted to respond to, right?
“The system” isn’t designed. It’s a patchwork of interests, causes and effects. The meme is a false dichotomy in that the system isn’t categorically functional or dysfunctional and the notion that parts of it being repressive doesn’t preclude repairing institutions that are salvageable.
Its great you guys can hodgepodge some first year economic theory with a surface level of military concepts to convince yourselves and a few people on reddit.
But I’m not convinced you guys know wtf you’re talking about and genuinely think you’re all talk and no follow through.
I’m not sure what to say to the idea that the system isn’t designed. Like…surely you don’t deny that the electoral system is created by the bourgeoisie in the bourgeoisie’s interest? Sure they have fights with each other…finance vs industry, etc. The world is a complicated place. But those differences clearly don’t stop them working together when it matters (protecting property).
Sure, you might take out the refrigerator before knocking down a decrepit house, but when the construction is unsound, the fact that some parts may be salvageable is not a reason to try to fix it rather than knock it down.
And as for Marxists being nobodies, obviously true in the imperial core since…well a long time. But you’ve heard of the USSR, the PRC, Vietnam, Cuba, etc? It’s not first year economic theory being bandied about on Reddit, and they’ve got some serious follow through haha
Who’s design? Certainly not King George III’s.
No but the people still living there are. Thats the part you guys always forget is that you’re literally asking people to sacrifice their vulnerable loved ones for your half baked ‘solution’.
USSR - 300+ years of Romonov Monarchy before Russian Revolution
PRC - 2000 years of Qing Dynasty before Xinhai Revoluiton
Vietnam - Imperial rule followed by French/Japanese occupation until being partitioned after US occupation
Cuba - A Spanish colony for 400+ years that failed to gain independence despite several revolts before the Spanish-American war.
Even citing those in this conversation deeply discredits your argument in my mind. Never mind drawing straight line comparisons between societies with decades/centuries of autocracy to our poorly utilized but still functional democracies.
Maybe I’m putting words in your mouth, but I’m hearing you say:
Or in other words:
I provided successful revolutionary societies as a counterexample to that claim. You know, Batista held elections too, maybe the Cuban people should have just voted him out? The July 26 movement was the equivalent of redditors with no follow through? (I’m sure you’re not saying that, which is why I think it’s a useful counterexample).
And despite the US’s centuries (250 years) of autocracy, I certainly did not and am not saying “the US is like those revolutionary societies.” I don’t think anyone thinks the United States is on the cusp of a revolution. I do say it’s silly to think that these capitalist republics are “functional” in any sense other than functioning to oppress working people, and it has been silly for a long time.
Help people out of the house before knocking it down, for sure. That’s dual power! That comes way before knocking it down. And we’re not even doing a good job at that yet. No doubt about it, we got a long way to go before we start knocking the house down. But the point we’re disagreeing about is that I think we shouldn’t waste time propping up the house…help people instead…get people out. And you think we should be patching up the cracked foundations and rotten support beams (or…sounds like maybe you don’t think the foundation is so bad, which might be a whole separate conversation).
Don’t take me seriously; I’m a very un-serious person. I do a little organizing in my community, but I haven’t found the true marxist vanguard party or the insurrectionist anarchist cell that’ll kick it all off or whatever. But the position that the system is not salvageable as a whole is a serious position!
Word. I respect the effort youre putting into this. But FYI I will never respect any means to the end which is communism other than democracy.
IMO giving up on America’s democracy will never result in the eschewment of capitalism.
No doubt. “Democracy is essential.”
America’s “democracy” will never result in the eschewment of capitalism (I put democracy in quotes because the US is not a democracy, and its vaguely democratic-flavored institutions will also never result in a democracy). The dictatorship of the bourgeoisie cannot give rise to a dictatorship of the proletariat. If you don’t think class is what counts, or that some kind of labor-peace is possible I am not gonna convince you here lol. If wolves control deer by biting them, the deer will not control the wolves by biting them back. And there is no peace to be had between wolves and deer.
Like…I think what you’re talking about is a US Allende, which…dude I’d be so happy. But it’s quite a naive hope. Like…can you imagine what it will take to give working people power? To start we’d need constitutional amendments at the federal level and in every state, and we’d need to wait for every judge to die and still be in power to appoint new ones. All while the bourgeois parties maintain all the power and inertia they already have. To look for that is idealism (in the sense that it’s about ideas primarily affecting the material world, rather than the material world primarily affecting ideas - not in the sense of “hopeful” … it’s that too, but that part is nice).
I’m sorry but the USA has not been an autocracy for 250 years. Maybe you misspoke?
I hate your house analogy. But I’ll use it if that helps.
People who are not accredited home inspectors trying to declare a building condemned while the actual occupants are trying to renovate, are wrong.
Yea because that’s not how it works. Marxism is an end point for social democracy. In the context of a society achieving marxism, a marxist party would be redundant.
A society of people who would rather fight than vote will not rebuild better institutions than the one’s they forsook.
If you swap that for “in the context of a society achieving a stateless classless society, a communist party would be redundant” I completely agree (Marxism is a means of analysis, not an end point). I think maybe you’re not familiar with the concept of a vanguard party? It doesn’t really matter to what I was saying, that was a throwaway self-depreciating joke. But if you want I’m happy to talk about that more.
I think Ireland, Cuba, and the USSR all disprove that… and many more besides. Home rule was a shoe-in for Ireland if not for the revolutionary war. Batista held elections. The February revolution lead to significant reforms before the October revolution. Sometimes the good fight is worth fighting.