Similar Posts

- Advertisement -

3 Comments

  1. Ah … That takes me back. One reason I avoided the far left was the fact that they seem to concentrate more on arguing about who was the most ideologically pure than actual practical politics. If my memory serves, not many of them were workers either, although I’m willing to be corrected on that – I didn’t know all of them.

  2. Thank you for an excellent article. For those wanting to understand Leon Trotsky thoughts, I would recommend reading Paul Le Blanc book on him. It is easier to understand the Trotsky motivation from others rather than to plow through Trotsky’s own works.

    What stymied the revolution was the need for the PMC (or secretariat in Trotsky’s description). You cannot transform the peasantry into collectives without guidance and rules.

    Problem was that the peoples parliaments (soviets) were supposed to be the rules setters for the PMC to follow. That never happened (thanks to Stalin) and the method to control to peasantry was the gulag. Or for the french, to lop a few heads.

    Nowadays the PMC uses “woke” to control the peasants. You will never reach socialist utopia whilst the secretariat (PMC) is in charge. I include the judiciary in the PMC as they are the tools for the PMC to maintain control along with “woke” cancel culture.

    Now the anarchist or socialist will say we need the peoples parliament; but how will they function without the PMC? They cannot so how will the PMC be kept as servants not masters?

    For the PMC rules the peoples parliament, not our elected representatives (no matter which party is in charge of the treasury benches). Sure they make it look like our representatives are in charge but in actuality the PMC is a master at the game of deception.

  3. I agree. Fortunately, I was innoculated against Trotskyism through fortuitous early exposure to British socialist feminism and libertarian socialism, so I kept my distance from them through my university days. I didn’t tend to think much of them, except appreciate them for turning up to bulk up the numbers during anti-apartheid, abortion rights and LGBTQI+ rights demos during the eighties. And then I got into conflict with the Socialist Action League during the Gulf War over their cackhanded “Anti-Imperialist” approach to Iraq and refusal to engage in any critical analysis of Saddam Hussein and Baathism. For much the same reason (I’m gay), I was rather cool on their cultish admiration for Fidel Castro’s Cuba. Fortunately, that was about the time that the USSR went bung and marxist-leninism in general dead-anted.

    It’s quite amusing watching libertarians go through exactly the same paroxysms of sectarian recrimination and mutual excommunication, primarily because the Cult of Ayn Rand imported the whole psychological apparatus of Maoism and simply inverted its ideological orientation ie anathematise your ideological opponents and excommunicate anyone who isn’t a true believer. There’s a lot of bad faith going on when they accuse the whole left of politically correct behavioural control, y’know.

    As for the whole “Woke” thing, I’ve noticed that it’s frequently resorted to by abject populists, whose mental processes can be summarised thuswise: “I will repeat this word Woke like a mantra and avoid exposing my unsubstantiated prejudices and biases to factual verification and critical inquiry and hope no-one realises that I’m actually a lazy bastard who can’t think for themselves.”

    And the identity politics v class false dichotomy? Frankly, these folks need to read their Gramsci more. Hegemony. Neoliberalism grabbed control of capitalist states because it colonised its institutions and political parties. It isn’t just about class, because neoliberalism has just as destructive effects on other social constituencies than working class individuals. Take LGBTQI+ rights, for instance. I watched aghast as millions of gay and bisexual men died during the US HIV/AIDS epidemic because the United States didn’t have a proper public health infrastructure, which reinforced my socialist inclinations no end. It’s the same with socialist feminism, class and abortion rights- working class women were the ones who died from backstreet abortions under anti-abortion laws. In the United Kingdom, brutal and inhumane cuts to their version of the Incapacity Benefit radicalised large sections of their disabled communities as they experienced the full inhumanity of hardcore neoliberal attacks on their sector of the welfare state.

Comments are closed.