This whole system is purely designed to keep a few people in power and it is fucking insane. We wouldn’t even have the internet if a governmental institution hadn’t created it, because the free market deemed it unprofitable. How can we as a society achieve progress like that?

I am constantly surrounded by people that defend free market capitalism without questioning it nor having independent thoughts about it, even though they are not stupid. I feel constantly alienated because I have to discuss the most ridiculous thing with me peers when I try to show them the massive amount contradictions of this system, and they just reply that it does not work. Without having a single grasp of how politics work. I don’t mean to say that the general population is stupid, but it feels like they are constantly influenced by pro-capitalist information sources. I don’t know, I regularly question my beliefs and apply constructive criticism to my thoughts, but I always come to the same conclusion. Am I getting insane, or am I just to alienated?

  • CarlMarks@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    There is horror in understanding the way capitalism functions to create and reinforce so much deprivation and violence, no doubt.

    Having comrades helps, though! And there is some value in revolutionary optimism and seeing where revolution worked, how the struggle evolved, and what we can build together. It took nearly a millenium for capitalism to dominate production, and yet look at how many victories have been won in such short time. Life expectancy in China alone is incredible and was wrought from, at minimum, a coherent anti-imperialist project that (partially) shields the people there from the cold sociopathy of global capital.

    I also want to validate the frustrations you’ve shared about hegemonic capitalist psychology, of the power of propaganda so pervasive that it’s simply accepted as fact and common knowledge that is rarely investigated, but is still raised in contradiction to better-informed views. I don’t know if it makes you feel better, but this is something commies have recognized, highlighted, and battled against since at least Marx, and in the imperial core it’s certainly gotten worst as we have reached much more advanced stages of capitalism. On the other hand, revolutions still succeeded, revolutions that succeed occurred in countries where there was substantial liberal resistance and these same tired (and usually implicitly racist) capitalist arguments were everywhere, and we will accomplish the same through prolonged struggle, just as they did. Not that it will be easy or fast - just that the system itself breeds its own primary contradiction (a self-liberating working class) that can only be resolved resolved through revolution or fascism, and fascism will increasingly run out of frontiers to exploit.

    Solidarity, comrade.

    • Better Red Than Dead@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      Thank you, that was very uplifting. But what exactly do you mean with the last sentence? Do you seriously think that fascism is a solution for ending this, just because it could accelerate the change to communism? Did I get that right? It sounds like a very dangerous (and to me, disgusting, no offense) theory. Sorry if I am being rude, please explain if I misunderstood you, but there is nothing more in this world I hate more than fascists.

      • CarlMarks@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        Capitalism is full of contradictions that, among other things, lead to nascent class consciousness and powerful action by the proletariat. I say nascent because it really does take organising and explanations to get them organized - without socialists and so on teaching, it doesn’t necessarily go in the direction of revolution. Marx was aware of reaction and more subtle social relations getting in the way of revolutionary activity, but could not fully foresee the forces of fascism under more developed capitalist, and particularly imperialist, conditions. So we, as socialists, sometimes hear ideas of the inevitability of revolution, but this needs to be tempered by an understanding of the strengths of the enemy.

        Namely, fascism can steer nascent class conciousness and action, which liberals simplistically refer to as populism, away from socialist understanding and revolution. Rather than beginning a process of resolving contradictions through proletarian control, fascism resolves the contradictions through destruction: of humanity and capital. Capitalist crises, fundamentally driven by crisis in profit, has that final escape hatch of just killing a ton of people and infrastructure so that there must then be repopulation and rebuilding, like a reset button.

        This is a horrible realization that can get in the way of revolutionary optimism, but we can move past it through the recognition that fascism has survived primarily through colonial and neocolonial mechanisms, exploiting psychologies, economic mechanisms, and military tendencies that will wane over time due even just to simple demographic shifts, but most importantly, through a multipolar world order. This is why China and alliances like BRICS are so important: when revolution does come, the oppositional forces, i.e. fascists, will be inherently undermined.

        Fascists are fundamental opponents of humanity, the left, and revolution, and nothing done to them is wrong.