this post was submitted on 26 Jan 2026
93 points (98.9% liked)
The Deprogram
1722 readers
153 users here now
"As revolutionaries, we don't have the right to say that we're tired of explaining. We must never stop explaining. We also know that when the people understand, they cannot but follow us. In any case, we, the people, have no enemies when it comes to peoples. Our only enemies are the imperialist regimes and organizations." Thomas Sankara, 1985
International Anti-Capitalist podcast run by an American, a Slav and an Arab.
Rules:
- No capitalist apologia / anti-communism.
- No bigotry - including racism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, or xenophobia.
- Be respectful. This is a safe space where all comrades should feel welcome; this includes a warning against uncritical sectarianism.
- No porn or sexually explicit content (even if marked NSFW).
- No right-deviationists (patsocs, nazbols, Strasserists, Duginists, etc).
- Use c/mutual_aid for mutual aid requests.
Resources:
founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Do you have a successful socialist project?
I think China is as close as we can get in its context.
Edit: I also don't appreciate the way you just responded with a bait level answer. I think this space lacks analytical debate on China. The fact you think you "got me" is funny to me, as I have studied chinese development for the past few years and have found no contemporary equivalent to its successful policies in practice. Therefore, it is the closest to socialism I personally can envision in the current real-political situation. But I argue that this is a result of the limits of both this context and of chinese errors. Do I think things could be done better? Yes. Do I think supporting the PRC is essentialy correct? Yes.
No no no, I am not trying to bait. I seriously want you to do better! I want more socialist projects to pop off that are closer to Marxist principles. Because if we don't build better and more successful AES projects, we have no right to tell people of one nation on how they should 'pursue socialism'. Especially a country that had the largest illiterate and the poorest population on earth at the start of its socialist state.
I understand your angle. I think, however, that you persistently mistakenly believe that I am "telling" anyone on "how to pursue socialism". I believe that you have me for a reactionary, and that what you are basically telling me is: abandon marxist analysis for the sake of critical support.
I already "support" the PRC, as far as anyone that isn't a Chinese national and lives thousands of km away can. It is an abstract, fetishistic support, and I recognize it as such. I still offer it, because I recognize the mobilization power of "debunking".
But, my attempt is to do marxist analysis. Whether I support the PRC or whether I would hate them, it means nothing. Not to the chinese, not to the party. What I am trying to abstract are the lessons of governance we can take from china's development. It is, afterall, each nation's problematic that takes the forefront when pursuing a revolution. Each nation has their fundamental contradiction, their secondary contradictions. Studying China helps us, by analysing their contradictions, to navigate our own.
We cannot abandon criticism. Do you believe Mao had no right to criticize Stalin's writings on the economic problems of the USSR? If yoh see this through a prism of debatelordism, yes, it can appear as detraction. In practice, this is the essence of marxist analysis.
So, the fact you still approach me as if I were a detractor is confusing to me. Particularily in light of your readings of Mao's essays, which you mention in the post.
What you call 'Dengism' is just MLM. You're more focused on the 2nd part of "Unity -> Criticism -> Unity" than the 1st one.