• psychothumbs@lemmy.worldOP
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    11 months ago

    Both of those examples are from shortly after WWI. And both involve attempts by armed communist groups to seize control of the state, which for good or ill is not something we’re going to be dealing with in the US for the foreseeable future.

      • psychothumbs@lemmy.worldOP
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        11 months ago

        Is there anywhere in particular you’re referring to? The US at least doesn’t really have a social democratic party, and the closest thing we do have, the Democrats, certainly don’t have any level of institutional control of the country’s labor unions.

          • psychothumbs@lemmy.worldOP
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            11 months ago

            What I mean about the US not having a social democratic party is that the Democrats are to the right of what we’d usually refer to as social democrats - at best a hybrid between a social democratic party and a liberal party. Classic European social democratic parties were born as socialist parties aiming at a gradual parliamentary transition to socialism, which through a combination of moderating themselves and being defeated electorally never actually managed to get there. DSA does have a lot in common with that earlier version of social democracy, though in the present day they’re more aligned with the further left parties like die linke or podemos than the official still existing social democrats.

            As for the union issue, you’re not distinguishing between unions being a major constituency of the Democratic Party and their being controlled by it. Democrats are obviously not as consistently pro-union as we’d like, but they for the most part accept them as a valuable part of their coalition who they need to keep happy, as opposed to Republicans who want to bathe in their blood.

              • psychothumbs@lemmy.worldOP
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                11 months ago

                What you’re calling “socialism” is not socialism You’re talking about capitalist reforms. Socialism is the end of private property and wage labor which can’t be established through parliamentary transition due to the class nature of capitalist society - ie. the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie.

                I haven’t described what my conception of socialism is, just described one mechanism socialists have used and are trying to use to enact the changes we want. So far we have not ever seen a developed capitalist society transition to socialism, so I don’t think parliamentarism has been ruled out as a mechanism for that happening any more than anything else has been.

                This is all very tangential to the actual issue. It doesn’t really matter from the point of view of the struggle whether they’re controlled directly or indirectly. You’ve been nitpicking very insignificant points the entire time without addressing the main points and it’s starting to look like trolling at this point.

                I think this point just seems insignificant because you’re not getting what it is. Unions are not controlled either directly or indirectly by the Democratic Party. Instead, unions are one of the social forces that control the Democratic Party, which is ultimately an incoherent mess of forces and agendas stuffed into a big tent by the oppressive American electoral system that only really allows for two parties.