• SimulatedLiberalism [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        The KPRF was the only party that never stopped supporting and materially aid the people and the militias of Donbass over the years. Reminder that Putin wanted to return Donbass to Ukraine to make amends with Europe, and is now only being forced to take the matter into his own hands because he was denied from joining the fascist club of Europe.

          • Tachanka [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            the invasion was a terrible idea that has greatly harmed Russia and Russian interests

            speaking a bit soon, aren’t we? Also we’ll never get to see what the alternative was.

            VASTLY worsened Russia’s strategic position vis a vis the west.

            USSR asked to join NATO in 1954. They were told “no.” Then NATO let west germany in and appointed a bunch of “former” nazis to key positions. Russia tried to join NATO in 2002. Were told “no.” Russia supported America in its reactionary “war on terror.” and that still didn’t tighten Russia’s relationship with “the west.” turns out the only thing that can make Russia have a better relationship with the west is balkanizing themselves, breaking up into dozens of tiny republics, and privatizing everything, because the west’s vision for Yugoslavia is the same vision it has for Russia. Turns out there is nothing Russia can do to have a better relationship with the west. Because the west isn’t mutually interested in a better relationship. The west is interested in balkanizing and privatizing former soviet nations. To punish them for having the audacity for being socialist once upon a time. To make sure it never happens again. To turn them into neocolonies. Ukraine has tried to have a better relationship with the west. What did it get them? It got them to sacrifice themselves by the thousands in a western proxy war in exchange for not even a NATO membership. Ukraine is getting balkanized and privatized on NATO’s behalf.

            Oh, and the sanctions? They aren’t working. Russia is still selling gas to Europe, just through third parties. The entire situation is a reactionary shitshow, and the chief responsibility lies with the imperial core for deliberately instigating the conflict for years and years and years. Russia’s options were to allow itself to get slowly encircled, or to ruin its “reputation” with a bunch of reactionary capitalist nations. It chose the latter.

            Russia is reactionary and capitalist too? No shit! How did that happen? The west was gleeful when the Russian federation came into existence.

              • Tachanka [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                10 months ago

                there was no good moves for russia, even fewer for ukraine. i don’t think of it in terms of good moves. I think of it in terms of russia and ukraine as they currently exist both being byproducts of imperialism.

                Also I don’t think we can really know if it chose the better of two bad moves because we cannot see what the alternative would have been, we can only speculate. I thought that was clear in the last post.

          • SimulatedLiberalism [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            8 years of waiting for Ukraine to start implementing Minsk agreement just to see NATO arming them instead.

            The fact is that both Merkel and Hollande (guarantors of Minsk II) have publicly admitted that Minsk was merely to buy time for Ukraine to militarize itself, and was not a serious attempt to pursue peace between both countries. Ukraine was going to invade Donbass and Crimea sooner or later, Russia only realized this after stupidly waiting for 8 years.

            Like it or not, United Russia is a capitalist party that wanted to increase business ties with Europe and make money. Do you seriously think that Putin invaded Ukraine not knowing they would get sanctioned by the entire Western world and losing hundreds of billions of their oligarchs’ money? The Minsk agreement was their compromise - to return Donbass to Ukraine in an attempt to make amends with Europe. The communists are the ones who continued their support and aid to the Donbass militias all these years.

            • Tankiedesantski [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              Do you seriously think that Putin invaded Ukraine not knowing they would get sanctioned by the entire Western world and losing hundreds of billions of their oligarchs’ money?

              I’ve heard people say that United Russia is made up of two main components - the Oligarchs and the Siloviki (the security and intelligence complex). Occasionally they struggle for power internally but since Putin is strongly of the silovik background, the oligarchs have been subordinated to the siloviki for a long time.

              I don’t understand the complexities of Russian politics enough to have a firm view, but it’s possible that the Oligarchs losing a bunch of money (and therefore power) actually benefitted the Siloviki faction inside United Russia. That goes hand in hand with the idea that by sanctioning the Oligarchs, the West actually threw away their best chance at overthrowing Putin internally via some sort of Oligarch-backed coup.

              Edit: preemptive apologies to Russian speakers for probably butchering the grammatical forms.

            • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              The fact is that both Merkel and Hollande (guarantors of Minsk II) have publicly admitted that Minsk was merely to buy time for Ukraine to militarize itself, and was not a serious attempt to pursue peace between both countries.

              Nitpick but I see this claim a lot but I don’t buy it. Mostly because I don’t believe Germany would plan so heavily around Russian gas if it knew the war was inevitable. I’m inclined to think they’re impling it to look like they knew what they were doing and cover their own asses for negotiating a failed agreement, while appealing to an audience that is (for the most part) uncritically supportive of Ukraine. I also think its a pretty big stretch to characterize their words as “publically admitting it was not a serious agreement.” What Merkel said was,

              Then, in order to prevent even worse things, everyone signed this agreement. Was it possible to stop the war then? This question is no longer relevant. I believe that the Minsk agreements gave Ukraine more time to develop between 2014 and 2021.

              What she’s saying is that regardless of whether or not it was possible to achieve peace through the negotiations, they were still beneficial to Ukraine in buying time. That’s not the same thing as saying they were done in bad faith.

              I think the Russian charactization of this quote is trying to paint a picture of Western governments as highly co-ordinated, when the reality is more complex. Germany isn’t holding Ukraine’s leash, the US had to blow uo Nord Stream because the Germans weren’t willing to co-operate, etc. There’s bumbling, competing interests at play.

              • SimulatedLiberalism [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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                10 months ago

                Mostly because I don’t believe Germany would plan so heavily around Russian gas if it knew the war was inevitable.

                Yes I understand what you’re saying, but it needs to be reminded that the post-2009 German economic recovery was highly dependent on cheap Russian gas import. There is simply no alternative, Germany struck gold with Russia selling them cheap gas with euro as the currency of transaction. It was cheap energy that allowed Germany to preserve its high labor wages. That, or expensive energy with depressed wages (like many Asian countries do). No other way around that.

                What I think actually happened though (and there are many circumstantial evidence to suggest this), was that Germany was absolutely convinced that the combined sanctions of the world’s largest economies (US + EU) would absolutely demolish Russia’s economy within months, if not weeks, which they often deride as one that is smaller than Italy’s GDP. In their chauvinistic mind, there is no way that a weak economy like Russia’s could ever survive such powerful sanction forces of theirs. With the collapse of the Russian economy, they’d be able to actually carve up Russia’s resources for themselves. In other words, they got greedy.

                The EU responses after the war started support this hypothesis. Instead of advocating for ceasefire, the EU continued to pile up more and more sanctions against Russia, somehow hoping that just one more sanction would actually bring Russia to its knee. And they kept waiting and waiting and didn’t see what they expected to happen.

                It also wasn’t helped by the fact that Western propaganda churned out in support of Ukraine had distorted their frame of reference, often painting a picture of Russia on the brink of collapse, and it would not surprise anyone that their politicians and bureaucrats actually bought into that. Then, you also have someone like George Soros making headlines saying “Russia would not be able to stop exporting their gas because otherwise their wells will freeze, so Europe just need to hold out a little longer and wait for the Russians to come begging again.” Many European industrialists didn’t even see the perils of their own sanctions until it was too late.

                • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]@hexbear.net
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                  10 months ago

                  I’ve had this conversation before but I find it extremely implausible that the West planned all of this out in advance and the lynchpin of the entire plot was being able to destroy Russia with sanctions alone. Again, Germany wasn’t even willing to fully participate, and they had to resort to some pretty desperate measures after the pipeline was destroyed. Nothing was done to ensure India’s cooperation, and they were saber-rattling with China, neither of which makes sense if they were planning on all this.

                  I also haven’t heard any real explanation for what caused this miscalculation, other than pure stupidity and buying into their own propaganda. I think this is the same flawed analysis behind the initial point that I disputed. When a politician says something you can’t just take it at face value, even when it fits into your narrative and makes them look bad, you still have to consider why they’re saying it, what they’re trying to accomplish, and who they’re trying to appeal to. When they started doing sanctions, obviously they would say they thought they would work, but this indicates nothing about their actual beliefs. They were just trying to drum up support for the sanctions, there’s no reason why they’d say, “Well, who knows if these will work or not” if they’re trying to get people to support them. Very rarely do politicians say something just because they think it’s true.

                  The narrative that fits actual events better without requiring abject stupidity and actions contrary to the actors’ own interests, is that Germany did not expect a full scale war and did not plan for losing Nord Stream 2. The outbreak of war came as a surprise to a lot of people, including the majority of this site, and Merkel did not have a crystal ball. The ceasefire was broken due to domestic pressure from the far-right, plus international pressure from the US, which did not assume sanctions would work, but rather saw extended bloodshed as a possibility and did not care, due to the profits it would mean for the military-industrial complex and not caring at all about the lives of Ukrainians. There are internal fractures within NATO and within NATO states, due to competing class interests, it’s not one big conspiracy working together.

          • tuga [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            There is no evidence that Russia ever seriously meant to give up its influence over the D/LPRs.

            Minsk what? Ok no evidenc-Minsk 2 what?

            Ya’ll could have a Minsk 3 and then 4 years of ukraine bombing people they supposedly want to reintegrate into their country and still find it hard to fault the ukranian state

          • SimulatedLiberalism [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            That’s what the Minsk agreements were all about.

            In the 12-point protocol included the adoption of the “On temporary Order of Local Self-Governance in Particular Districts of Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts” that was passed in Ukraine’s parliament in September 2014. It would grant increased autonomy to the local governments in Donbass. And as you will note, this was a bill from the Ukrainian parliament - meaning that Donbass will be returned to Ukraine but with the conditions of having more local autonomy.

            To elaborate further, the protests against the Maidan coup government stemmed from the fact that the very first act of the new regime was repealing the Kolesnycheno-Kivalov Language Law that was approved in 2012, which granted the regional language status to Russian and other languages. The Russian-speaking population in eastern Ukraine obviously saw it as an infringement on their language rights, and started to protest, which eventually devolved into a separatist movement and then a full-fledged civil war (most significantly fueled by the the Odessa Trade Union House massacre by the fascists).

            So, an important resolution to the conflict in Ukraine would be for the Donbass regions with Russian-speaking majority population to have autonomy when it comes to protecting their cultural identities, such that someone in Kyiv cannot simply impose a nationwide ban on certain languages without regards for the local population in the regions.

            Ukraine refused to implement Minsk.

        • christiansocialist [none/use name]@hexbear.netOP
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          10 months ago

          I wonder what kind of parallels can be drawn with Ukraine now and China during WW2 (when the communists allied with the nationalists in order to fend off the Japanese). Perhaps strategically it makes sense for Russian communists to “support” Russia in order to stave off NATO. This would give more breathing room for leftist agitation inside of Russia (and eastern Ukraine for that matter, perhaps western Ukraine too I hope).

          • ProxyTheAwesome [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            These exact parallels have been discussed here quite a bit. The class breakdown of China in WW2 was that the communists (representing the landless peasants and proletariat) built a temporary alliance with the national bourgeois (the local owners) in order to fight outside colonizers, invaders and the international bourgeois (global imperialist capital hegemony).

            Russia, Iran, Syria, Belarus, Brazil and others are currently representing the national bourgeois in this alliance with the proletariat states of China, Cuba, DPRK, Venezuela, Vietnam, etc. They are temporarily allied to defeat the greater enemy, the international bourgeois of imperialist capital (NATO, America, UK, EU, Israel, Anglo-nations).

        • SpookyGenderCommunist [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          I get the impression the DPRK’s support boils down to the fact that, if the US is bogged down supporting Ukraine, that’s less resources going to harass the North.

          Their support of Russia has zero impact on the status of the war as imperialist or not.

          • ProxyTheAwesome [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            They have stated their position very clearly, you don’t need to go off “impressions”. They understand how anti-imperialism works. DPRK has never once in its history supported an imperialist war and have been on the correct side on basically every single conflict. They have a 100% track record in my view.

          • ProxyTheAwesome [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            Well every single western leftist poo pooed Syria and Russia for a decade, and now most realize that the anti-imperialists were correct and Syria/Russia were the side to be supported against the imperialists invaders and their proxies (ISIS, Turkey, US, etc). Just like Iraq should be supported against the US during the American invasion and Libya should have been supported while it was under attack. Nations being invaded by imperialists deserve critical support, regardless of if they are bourgeois capitalist states or not.

            Not all capitalist nations are imperialist.

            I’m going to trust DPRK’s assessment of the war over the westerners who have shown consistent patterns of chauvinist errors in regards to analysis of geopolitics. There’s a reason why Russia is allied with every single AES nation on Earth, do you really think every socialist nation is wrong and you have the perfect analysis from within the bowels of the empire?

              • ThomasMuentzner [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                10 months ago

                Let me explain:

                So when the Minority Region is at War with the Nation state it “de Jure” belongs to

                Then THAT is the Imperialism. Serbia did Imperialism TO Kosovo … not Kosovo to Serbia … And Nato the intervene to Protect the Minority against the raging hate of the Majority) Same story with Ukriane , dont get confused … it is West Ukraine , that did the Imperialism TO the Russian Majority Eastern Ukraine

                • forbidding their media ,
                • forbidding Russian in Adminsitration Use ,
                • Forbidding the Consume of Russian Media,
                • othering them “Orcs” / Vatnik / Russian / Occupiers.
                • Burning them In Odessa
                • Bombarding them
                • Proudly proclaim you want to Cleanse them when you “retake the territories”

                Russia protects Its Minority from Racial Persecution by a Faschist Regime. No Imperialism.

                This is a Anti imperialsit Global war , You lack the Expertise to understand that , it is no problem … BRICS 11 , Africa , Saudia Arabia , India , Latin America , Turkey , Eagypt , Iran all Understand it perfectly… on the Street of Niamey , Quagadgou and Bamako , they all understand it. its only your Tiny Minority in the West that still have not figured out that 2014 comes chronologically before 2022. its a Fascinating Phenomenon… Maybe its the Vitamen D deficit they have in the West ? maybe thats makes “the West” so collectivly unable to understand , basic physical concepts like “CHRONOLGY” … and “CAUSE AND EFFECT”

      • Mardoniush [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        Most of their youth wing literally split over supporting the war. when at best the only people worth supporting even critically was the LPR and DPR (and Putin couped their nascent proto-Socialist governments almost as soon as they formed.)

        I mean it’s right there ffs “Revolutionary Defeatism”

        • RedDawn [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          Revolutionary defeatism is when I root for NATO to finish what they started in their quest to destroy Russia so they can then move on to China

          • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            no one here doesn’t agree that NATO should stop arming ukraine and withdraw, the rhetorical sheen of ‘critical support’ or ‘defeatism’ doesn’t change the priorities of western leftists, but it gives everyone around here endless excuses to lecture each other about the way they talk about it being more “marxist” and “materialist”. it doesn’t matter what we call it, all that matters is pressuring natio governments to stop perpetuating the war

      • kristina [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        Hey at least they helped that Communist guy in Ukraine that lost his eye and had a red star etched into his back by the Nazis there

      • LarkinDePark@lemmygrad.ml
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        10 months ago

        No real communist or socialist grouping would support an imperialist war.

        You think this Russian communist party is supporting America here? Much confusion.

  • kristina [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    Hey at least they helped that Communist guy in Ukraine that lost his eye and had a red star etched into his back by the Nazis there

      • I love how they’ve been peddling the “warm water port” thing since the cold war. Soviets were somehow always expanding in order to get that holy land of a “warm water port” and if they got it they would take over the world.

        Now it turn out that the port was in ukraine the whole time! Dummy Soviets, you should have looked in your own country!

          • ProxyTheAwesome [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            It’s the “the jews/christians and muslims have been fighting since time immemorial in Israel” lazy explanation to all conflict in a region customized for Russia (which is a frozen hellscape filled with gulags desperately thirsting for some warm water in the liberal mind).

                • kristina [she/her]@hexbear.net
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                  10 months ago

                  Except for the random explosions from methane pockets under the permafrost. Saw an interview of some siberians and they were like “oh yeah we hear massive explosions all the time from climate change, hope I’m not walking somewhere when one happens”. Said they hear one every week

                  I also recall one study suggesting that the ‘new’ soil in Russia will not be arable and would need imported fertilizers to make any use of it.

          • GaveUp [she/her]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            Absolutely, Western media has to shine spotlights and magnify nut cases like Dugin because the Russian government is pretty competent and generally correct in their statements when it comes to geopolitics

              • ProxyTheAwesome [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                10 months ago

                Don’t have to like Putin to agree you need to listen when he speaks, as he delivers threats and warnings that he often is serious about and follows through with. His red lines were extremely explicit and clear, and were flagrantly crossed at many points - and he eventually pushed back as he warned he would. He is competent and makes rational moves, and he just iced the dude who tried to coup him 2 months to the day after he said he would.

    • thelastaxolotl [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      The donbass region is an important industrial region, eastern ukraine is were most of the black soil is, sevastapol is one of the only 2 warm water ports of russia, and ukraine has high population with prewar amount of 50 million

      Its a rich country, dugin is just a fascist that sees all non russians as inferiors aka an idiot

        • thelastaxolotl [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          yea, if you think russia wants to take over those rich areas then its for sure imperialism, if you think they are doing it to protect the russian speaking people in the east then its not, it would probably fall in something like nationalism.

          my point was mostly to show that ukraine is in fact important in a geopolitical strategic way.

        • CamaradeBoina [comrade/them, any]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          Yes it would be. A very strong argument can be made that Russia fits to a T the 5 conditions to be imperialist as set by Lenin. To note also that imperialism is NOT a policy decision, it’s an objective stage of capitalist development, any advanced or semi advanced state with its material base being capitalist will express variations of imperialist tendencies.

          I would argue that while the thesis “the war in Ukraine is a provoked (by the west) interimperialist confrontation”, holds a lot of merit, it does fail to account sufficiently for the extent this war was provoked, for the remaining fact the western imperialist alliances and particularly the US, remain hegemonic af, and for the more minute analysis of the Russian economy. That being said, if Russia isn’t an imperialist state, it is at the very least an aspiring-imperialist one (and in certain regions very much already acts as one).

          Regardless these two variations of analysis are FAR more accurate than those which aim to posit Russia as ANTI imperialist somehow, that one is just caricatural campist nonsense that isn’t rooten in an honest materialist analysis, and which echo a lot the (erroneous) thesis of “super-imperialism” that Kautsky put forward.

          In all the above this doesn’t change the role of communists in the west tho: revolutionary defeatism, fight our own imperialists. It does raise question about those who go further and give concrete support towards Russia (an IMO very damaging position that harms anti-imperialist organizing here), and it does change the attitude for say, Russian and Ukrainian communists ought to have with regards to the war ( attitude being a choice between revolutionary defeatism or critical support).

          • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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            10 months ago

            To note also that imperialism is NOT a policy decision, it’s an objective stage of capitalist development, any advanced or semi advanced state with its material base being capitalist will express variations of imperialist tendencies.

            Can you point me to a reference on this definition, by chance? I’m wondering if it may be deceptively scoped as imperialism predates capitalism by a significant margin (capitalism being an 18th century invention).

            • CamaradeBoina [comrade/them, any]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              I am referring to the Marxist-Leninist definition of the term, see these two texts: https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1916/imp-hsc/ and https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1915/s-w/index.htm

              To be clear its not some cooky ideologically driven fantasy, the marxist analysis of imperialism and subsequent impacts on geopolitical and international political analysis is a well recognized analytical and theoretical model in IR theory.

              From that perspective “imperialism” does not predate capitalism. It does not refer to “empires” in the vague sense of “Roman Empire, French empire, etc”. The mechanics are vastly different. Aggressive expansion of feudal states in europe and their colonial expansion around the world (funnily enough that second one directly fueling feudalism’s demise, serving as the “primitive accumulation of capital” that allowed the emergent bourgeois class to gain gradual economic hegemony, and eventual state hegemony) is not the same as the form of imperialism that emerges out of the most “advanced” expression of capitalism). It’s understood as the monopoly stage of capital wherein bank and industrial capital merge, forming large scale monopolies, seeking new markets, and leading the state to engage in imperial plunder of less economically advanced states, and direct confrontation with other imperialist entities.

              Furthermore, capitalism is positively not an “invention” nor is it dated to the 18th century ! Capitalism emerged organically from class struggle in the feudal period, with capitalistic elements emerging from within feudal society as early as the 15th century. It established itself as a dominant mode of production well into the 17th century in various areas of the world, but yes only fully superseded the feudal state structure and took control of the state as a whole in the 18th century. If anything was invented, it was the “word” for it, referring to what is an objectively observable scientific fact of human development (again, from the POV of marxist analysis, and its thesis of historical-materialism).

              • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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                10 months ago

                Thank you, very much. I really appreciate the willingness to share references and explanations both from yourself and other Hexbears. It’s been roughly 20 years (didn’t seem that long ago! - I really need to see if I can find my hardcopies) since I directly studied Marx’s writing so, it’s very helpful.

                Ensuring a good grasp of the nomenclature in the conversation is absolutely vital to productive conversation, supposing good faith. A good example of where this has been handled poorly by “mainstream leftists” (likely mainly liberals or those interested in “scoring points” on others) is racism - rather specifically, phrases like “black people can’t be racist”. The phrase is absolutely correct, if everyone understands that the definition of racism used is from a sociological standpoint where it is used to refer to systems of oppression targeting racial minorities, whereas those without that understanding take the definition of racism as a synonym for racial discrimination, which frequently leads to the mistaken conclusion that anyone not “white” is absolved of any guilt related to discriminatory behavior. Or, closer to on-topic, when a working class person says that they are a capitalist, meaning that they support capitalism as an economic structure, while those thinking more about the economic theory side will take it to mean “someone of the capitalist/bourgeoise class”.

                Furthermore, capitalism is positively not an “invention” nor is it dated to the 18th century ! Capitalism emerged organically from class struggle in the feudal period, with capitalistic elements emerging from within feudal society as early as the 15th century. It established itself as a dominant mode of production well into the 17th century in various areas of the world, but yes only fully superseded the feudal state structure and took control of the state as a whole in the 18th century. If anything was invented, it was the “word” for it, referring to what is an objectively observable scientific fact of human development (again, from the POV of marxist analysis, and its thesis of historical-materialism).

                Absolutely. I wasn’t really happy with the term “invented” when I wrote it but left it for simplicity. Most economic system classification has been in hindsight. Smith and other similar influential writers were mainly attempting to codify what they thought the system was from their observations and trying, in a similar vein to Marx, to reason through pitfalls and problems with long-term systemic sustainability.

                The major failures of their analysis and writing, in my opinion, is their attempts to frame economics in a “vacuum” with objective realities, and humans as rational actors. Humans are not consistently rational or irrational actors, however, which breaks a lot of the theory. Externalizing sociological, historical, medical, and other factors also breaks things even more.

                Thanks again and sorry for the ramble - ADHD is acting up a bit today.

                • CamaradeBoina [comrade/them, any]@hexbear.net
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                  No worries at all, it’s really my pleasure. As you said, establishing nonemclature within its theoretical and academic context really goes a long way, otherwise it’s super easy to find oneself in a “dialogue amongst deafs`” (idk if it makes sense, it’s a saying in my first language), and everyone speaks past each other while assuming the worst from one another.

                  Really happy to hear that other hexbear users were patient too, and I hope you get to brush up on your Marx notes (and include the Lenin texts I linked you, being serious they are very important, Marx only ever alluded to what Lenin ended up theorizing about !)

      • kristina [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        Tbh there is a huge belt of chernozem going into Russia and there’s no way they’re utilizing all of it effectively due to how much there is

      • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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        10 months ago

        Wasn’t intending to insinuate otherwise. I’ve been led to believe, that quite possibly incorrectly, that his writing was considered useful by the current regime.

        • MoreAmphibians [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          Dugin is basically irrelevant inside of Russia, he’s just beloved by westerners for some reason. He’s sort of like Tom Clancy or Jordan Peterson for Russia.

          In one of his books he says that what Russia needs to do is annex northern China. Do you think that’s something that’s part of Russia’s geopolitical plan or are these the ramblings of a crazy person?

    • tuga [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Dugin’s book states:

      You’re paying more attention to that guy than anyone in russia with decision making power is.

      • mounderfod@lemmy.sdf.org
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        10 months ago

        what are you on about? one can be anti-russia and anti-nazi and I’d go as far as to say that that’s a fairly common position

        • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          one can be anti-russia

          Or just don’t. Stop taking sides in the rich man’s wars.

          that’s a fairly common position

          Americans and being pro-war. Its more likely than you think.

            • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              One should support the Ukrainian right to self-determination

              Just rhetorically? Is a Tinkerbell thing, where saying “I don’t believe in Ukraine” kills a fairy and then I need to clap really hard to bring Ukraine back to life?

              Or are we supposed to be doing something in particular, like SWATing any of my neighbors I catch using Cyrillic?

              That doesn’t confer supporting this or that Ukrainian army regiment ipso facto

              So I need to support the abstract concept of self-determination, but I don’t need to support he physical means by which that self-determination is achieved? Why? What could possibly be the purpose of this?

              feeling sad

              Okay. So the purpose of supporting the underdogs in a grisly war that only seems to benefit the MIC is to… feel sad? That’s it? All of this is just an exercise in media-induced depression?

              Again, why the fuck would I want to do this?

                • zifnab25 [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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                  10 months ago

                  Well nothing we believe in makes any single difference in foreign policy so you’re under no obligation to care about anything whatsoever.

                  I’m more concerned with the reflexive need to pick a team and then get incredibly angry at your neighbors if they’re not on the same foreign-policy team. You’re clearly invested in doing something, if you believe

                  One should support the Ukrainian right to self-determination and thus be anti-Russia in the sense of opposing this unjust war of aggression.

                  So what’s the plan? What are you suggesting “support” looks like?

                  Because, right now, I’m seeing a lot of generic hysteria and hate aimed at anyone with a Russian ethnicity (among other ethnicities that people are “aligning” with Russia).

                  Personally I think you should care about things

                  Does caring about things mean taking a certain posture towards people? Does this posture affect the material conditions of those people?

                  Is your definition of “doing something” just “being low-key racist” towards anyone you track as insufficiently pro-AmericanUkrainian.

                  Because I went through that shit after 9/11. People running around to every Mosque and screaming at Muslims to prove that they care about things. I remember people cheering at waterboarding, because it proved that you cared about things. I remember how you had to be a zealous supporter of the next big war, to prove you cared about things. And if you didn’t, it could cost you. Your social circle. Your career. Potentially your life, depending on how heated things got.

                  We going to “care about” Ukraine like that, too?

            • privatized_sun [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              One should support the Ukrainian right to self-determination

              (woke neoliberal voice) “Biden is RACIST! He is cruelly removing the agency of Mexicans to cross the border to sell their blood. Blood work is work you fucking Stalinist authoritarian!”

          • mounderfod@lemmy.sdf.org
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            10 months ago

            taking sides in the rich man’s wars

            It’s not like I (or most people) want the war to continue and people to die, we just don’t want Russia to be able to just invade countries and take land as they please. If an end can be brought to the war that ensures that Ukraine maintains their own territory then obviously that is the ideal scenario

            I suppose you may be inclined to point out the hypocrisy of an anti-imperial stance from someone from a Western country but I wouldn’t support my own country if they were invading a nation for personal gain as in this case

            • SexMachineStalin [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              Why did Obama and his shriveled sentient fleshlight Biden overthrow Yakunovich a decade ago?

              Ukraine would still have Crimea and the Donbass. There would be no civil war. Ethnic Russians would continue to live in Ukraine as normal without a gun to their back, as would the rest of Ukrainian people. There would be no Azov or Bandera worship. No ceasefire violations or Minsk treaties being broken. Most importantly, Russia wouldn’t be at war with Ukraine and millions not needing to flee. No aspiration for Ukraine to join NATO. No SMO. But :amerikkka:.

              :PIGPOOPBALLS::PIGPOOPBALLS::PIGPOOPBALLS::PIGPOOPBALLS::PIGPOOPBALLS::PIGPOOPBALLS:

              Death to America

            • tuga [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              If an end can be brought to the war that ensures that Ukraine maintains their own territory then obviously that is the ideal scenario

              Emphasis on “ideal”

          • mounderfod@lemmy.sdf.org
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            10 months ago

            yeah but it’s “radical” to go around telling people they are Hitler because they dislike an imperialist invasion in the same way that it’s “radical” to wear underwear on your head

  • aport@programming.dev
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    10 months ago

    Ukraine’s counteroffensive is a massive failure and any media reporting the contrary is fascist western propaganda 😭😭😭

      • aport@programming.dev
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        10 months ago

        Yes. The point is to put an invading force on the defense. Even if Ukraine does not regain a centimeter of land it has a duty and obligation to try.

        I know you all hate Ukraine and think they should lay down and let Russia steamroll into Kiev and annex the whole country. But reality doesn’t always reflect your geopolitical wet dreams.

        • Egon [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          Did field marshal Douglas Haig write this?
          “You see them preparing defense fortifications which we throw ourselves senselessly into is actually a part of our master plan”.
          Are you doing a weird Blackadder bit?
          “They’d expect us NOT to attack where they are strongest, with little to no preparation and no chance of victory.”
          “I see a small issue with your plan sir. It’s the same we used the last 16 times.”
          “Which is precisely why they won’t expect us to do it again!”

          Russia is sitting on all the territory that it claimed, and is now in a war of attrition which it is winning pretty handedly in part because Ukrainians are being thrown into a meat grinder they have no chance of beating.

          I know you all hate Ukraine

          Hating ukrainians is when you don’t want them to die in the thousands for a pointless war.

          Oh wait you didn’t mean people you meant the political entity.
          I don’t really give a shit about countries, and I really can’t give a shit about which political entity ends up “winning” the game war. I care about people, and I’d like for them not to die.

          But reality doesn’t always reflect your geopolitical wet dreams.

          Are you being serious right now? The first of the surovikin line could not even be breached. You’re talking about thousands of casualties being worth it for some greater political goal. That’s geopolitics you idiot! You’re the one talking geopolitics, and you’re basing your wants on a fantasy. Thousands of ukrainians are dead, more are dying, and the Russians are chilling in defensive fortifications. But somehow you think I’m the one with a geopolitical aim and an unrealistic worldview?

          When do you think this war will end? You seem to think the Ukrainians will have to expel the Russian military first, so that would take the dismantling of the three defensive lines, as well as the lines that will have been erected further back in the meantime. Going by how you think they should do it - Throwing themselves to their deaths by the thousands - they will run out of Ukrainians before anything else happens. If you’re so into this grand geopolitical game, go fucking volunteer yourself. You’ll die in a ditch and the world will be none the worse for it.

          • Vncredleader [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            10 months ago

            God I can’t believe you hate Belgians and the French, why must you be so against them being shredded by artillery and choking on mustard gas? Don’t you know that Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori?

            • Egon [they/them]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              During the war of 1864 Denmark should’ve fought to the last man. Retreating after the battle at Dybbøl Mill and ceding Holstein to the Prussians is a breaking of their obligation to die as cannon fodder

              • ChapoKrautHaus [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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                You could have picked ANY hopeless last stand from 2000+ years of military history and you went for an obscure sideshow war in the German unification wars that less than 1% of humans are even aware of.

                Impressive.

                • Egon [they/them]@hexbear.net
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                  Thank you! I was hoping to start a thing where we went further and further back in time and obscurity. Sadly I chose something too obscure to being with

              • Vncredleader [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                10 months ago

                Ah glad someone else is aware of the second Schleswig war. The ACW was nothing compared to the moral battle going on there. Anyone who brings up the Confederacy is just like those tankies mentioning Azov and the shelling of Donbas.

                • Egon [they/them]@hexbear.net
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                  I think of it like a turning point for Denmark, it was as if everybody got brainworms around that time, and then they never left. Yeah sure Denmark you can beat fucking Prussia lol. Okay you lost what will you do? Oh fuck up all the ecosystems, water streams and other, just so some farmer can get even more land? Super.

          • aport@programming.dev
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            10 months ago

            You can’t pretend to be altruistic when your idea of peace is letting Putin forcibly annex all former Soviet states. Come off it.

            A counteroffensive is Ukraine’s prerogative, right, and in many senses an obligation.

            • Egon [they/them]@hexbear.net
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              I think Ukraine should negotiate for the best peace settlement it can get, and take it. You strawmanning me into thinking something else isnt really surprising, but it is disappointing that none of you delusional bloodthirsty armchair generals can even handle a differing perspective. This is further proved by your failure to answer a single one of my questions, instead once again choosing to soapbox to some imagined audience. Answer my questions you weak-willed little ingrate.

              A counteroffensive is Ukraine’s prerogative, right, and in many senses an obligation.

              Obligation??? They’re obligated to throw thousands to their death? Fuck you, go volunteer. That’s your obligation. You have a moral obligation to go fight for Ukraine, you obviously think it is wrong for Russia to invade, so you are obligated to go do your duty in Ukraine. Or are you a coward, only willing to cheer on the death of others in a far away land?
              You’re doing the Shrek meme, but unironically.
              Go give your life for the cause you snivelling little coward. You have an obligation to fight for glorious Ukraine.

              • aport@programming.dev
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                10 months ago

                I think Ukraine should negotiate for the best peace settlement it can get, and take it

                And what do you imagine that settlement would be, other than a complete surrender of every square kilometer of their land, their people, and their lives?

                • edge [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                  You’re just making shit up instead of looking at Russia’s stated, implied, and material goals.

                  a complete surrender of every square kilometer of their land

                  Russia doesn’t want to annex all of Ukraine. There’s nothing for them in the north. At the very most they would annex Novorossiya, but if Ukraine were to go to the negotiating table right now they likely would get away with only losing the four oblasts that Russia already annexed, plus Crimea ofc. Aside from that land, Russia wants guarantees that Ukraine will stay out of NATO and the EU.

                  their people, and their lives

                  There is absolutely no evidence that Russia wants to or is carrying out a genocide of Ukrainians. There has been no rhetoric from Russia that the Ukrainian ethnicity as a whole are some untermensch and/or threat to society that needs to be removed. In fact there’s been the opposite, that Ukrainians are their brothers, “little Russians”. The only genocidal/ethnic cleansing rhetoric I’ve seen has been from Ukraine’s side, celebrating when a random Russian civilian is killed by a shark, calling all Russians “orcs”, wanting to remove Russian civilians from Crimea (who have been living there long before it was transferred to Ukraine in 1954), anti-Russian language laws which Human Rights Watch reported concerns about just a month before the invasion.

                • Egon [they/them]@hexbear.net
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                  Jesus Christ where do you people get these ideas from? Do you never go check anything for yourselves? Is your worldview shaped by scary bedtime stories told by your nana The Us State Department?
                  When has Russia ever claimed it wanted to annex all of Ukraine? Why would it even?? Why would it want to occupy a large region that would resist it’s rule, why would it want to get embroiled in countless territory conflicts and battle out hundreds of mini quagmires, when it could just annex the autonomous regions that do not have these issues?
                  https://hexbear.net/comment/3845791

                  Now answer my questions you unimaginative impotent rat. Get off your condescending dead rhetorical horse and answer my questions, if you have any intellectual integrity.

                • fuckiforgotmypasswor [comrade/them,any]@hexbear.net
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                  I’m just curious – why are you so concerned with the nation-state of Ukraine maintaining its border, at apparently any cost? You virtue signal all day long that you’re just concerned for the poor Ukranians, and yet you seem to conflate land, people, and constructed imaginary borders like they’re interchangeable. Does “surrender of every square kilometer of their land” mean the same as them “losing their lives?” Is there a giant killswitch that just obliterates every inhabitant of a country when the arbitrary name associated with that land changes?

                  The point is this: I’ve got cousins fighting on the frontlines who can’t wait to get the fuck out of that warzone, and you seem to have more of a perfectly liberal, purely aesthetic disgust for the idea of land changing ownership than you do for the notion of hundreds of thousands of people dying in a fucking trench in a needless war.

                  Fuck Putin, fuck Zelensky, fuck Ukraine and fuck Russia, fuck the United States, and fuck the bourgeois scum who pump out all the vile propaganda you’re regurgitating, that tell you a piece of land is worth more than your family’s life.

            • tuga [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              You can’t pretend to be altruistic when your idea of peace is letting Putin forcibly annex all former Soviet states.

              You’re a child

            • FortifiedAttack [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              Peace follows once the war ends, regardless of whether you win or lose said war.

              And you shouldn’t fight battles you have no chance of winning, and which won’t benefit you at all in the long run. Doing so anyways is lunacy.

        • Tankiedesantski [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          Yes. The point is to put an invading force on the defense. Even if Ukraine does not regain a centimeter of land it has a duty and obligation to try.

          This sounds like the kind of cope that Manstein, Model, and Guderian would have said to Hitler, hats in hand, after getting obliterated at the Battle of Kursk.

          In fact I think the Ukrainian generals knew long ago that they were setting themselves up to get Kursk’d. Most of them had served in the Soviet military and there’s no way they made it through Soviet officer school without learning the ins and outs of that battle.

          The fact that they ended up going through with it anyway speaks to something unspeakably fucked up going on behind the scenes.

        • tuga [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          Yes. The point is to put an invading force on the defense

          I think the russians are quite confortable being on the defense right now, seems like the defensive position has an inherent advantage in this war, ukraine had it at first.

          You’re an idiot