Taken right from their very public PSL Party Platform online. You clearly are entirely unfamiliar with Marxism and PSL, why act like you know more than you do? I can make theory recommendations if you want, but don’t pretend to know what PSL’s goals and methods are without even reading the party platform, that’s silly.
What I’m saying is the Marxist statements are entirely irrelevant once they agreed to run in an election.
No. Lenin advocated participation in bourgeois elections for the reasons I gave, delegitimizing the electoral system and advertising strength and the platform.
They never grew up out of their Marxist phase in college, have no idea how any of this works, and it shows.
What is a “Marxist phase?” You have no idea what they are trying to do or why, and you make up in your mind palace contradictory positions they don’t hold because you haven’t read Marx.
You seem to think you’ve got Marxism all figured out for someone that can’t seem to grasp the basics of it. Mind explaining what about Marxism is “all nonsense?”
It’s great in theory, but it doesn’t actually work in real life. It never has. This is why people look at these Marxists trying to run in a Presidential election and just point and laugh.
It’s an angsty philosophy for young people who haven’t learned better yet.
It’s great in theory, but it doesn’t actually work in real life. It never has.
It does work, and continues to. Please explain exactly what you mean here, you’re just vaguely gesturing. What was Marx wrong about? What part of Marxism doesn’t work? Can you give concrete examples of trackable metrics?
This is why people look at these Marxists trying to run in a Presidential election and just point and laugh.
You do, sure. Marxism is rising in the US, though, as the contradictions within Capitalism Marx noted result in further wealth disparity. It’s also increasingly popular worldwide, the PRC is the largest economy in the world and is run along Marxist-Leninist lines. Less than a month ago, Sri Lanka elected a Marxist-Leninist president.
It’s an angsty philosophy for young people who haven’t learned better yet.
What’s better, in your eyes? What would you recommend a Marxist read or learn from to “grow out of Marxism?” Your “great in theory, not in practice” US State Department nonsense has been repeated constantly, every single Marxist has heard that before, I’m talking about actual points.
I suggest you read Blackshirts and Reds, it’s a great book debunking common anticommunist myths.
“Capitalism itself cannot be reformed. Its supreme law and driving force is the maximization of profit. The only force capable of putting an end to this criminal system is the organized working class. Capitalism cannot be voted out of power—it will take a revolution. The capitalist class will stop at nothing to prevent or overturn reforms by repressing, misdirecting or quelling any form of popular rebellion. Without a complete uprooting of the system that causes all the problems workers and oppressed peoples face, exploitation and oppression will still exist. The capitalist state will continue to rule. Capitalism is a failed system that, in its insatiable appetite for ever greater profits, threatens global ecological destruction on an unprecedented scale, with workers and oppressed people bearing the disproportionate burden of the environmental disaster. More than at any other time, it is the working class that holds the future for humanity. For the people and planet to live, capitalism must go. The Party for Socialism and Liberation is dedicated to building a revolutionary workers’ party in the United States. A party that can unite the multinational U.S. working class is an essential and irreplaceable element in the struggle for socialism.”
Taken right from their very public PSL Party Platform online. You clearly are entirely unfamiliar with Marxism and PSL, why act like you know more than you do? I can make theory recommendations if you want, but don’t pretend to know what PSL’s goals and methods are without even reading the party platform, that’s silly.
What I’m saying is the Marxist statements are entirely irrelevant once they agreed to run in an election.
They never grew up out of their Marxist phase in college, have no idea how any of this works, and it shows.
No. Lenin advocated participation in bourgeois elections for the reasons I gave, delegitimizing the electoral system and advertising strength and the platform.
What is a “Marxist phase?” You have no idea what they are trying to do or why, and you make up in your mind palace contradictory positions they don’t hold because you haven’t read Marx.
Marxist Phase - The typical college obsession before people actually grow up and realize it’s all nonsense.
See also: Randian phase.
Some people grow out of it, some don’t.
You seem to think you’ve got Marxism all figured out for someone that can’t seem to grasp the basics of it. Mind explaining what about Marxism is “all nonsense?”
It’s great in theory, but it doesn’t actually work in real life. It never has. This is why people look at these Marxists trying to run in a Presidential election and just point and laugh.
It’s an angsty philosophy for young people who haven’t learned better yet.
It does work, and continues to. Please explain exactly what you mean here, you’re just vaguely gesturing. What was Marx wrong about? What part of Marxism doesn’t work? Can you give concrete examples of trackable metrics?
You do, sure. Marxism is rising in the US, though, as the contradictions within Capitalism Marx noted result in further wealth disparity. It’s also increasingly popular worldwide, the PRC is the largest economy in the world and is run along Marxist-Leninist lines. Less than a month ago, Sri Lanka elected a Marxist-Leninist president.
What’s better, in your eyes? What would you recommend a Marxist read or learn from to “grow out of Marxism?” Your “great in theory, not in practice” US State Department nonsense has been repeated constantly, every single Marxist has heard that before, I’m talking about actual points.
I suggest you read Blackshirts and Reds, it’s a great book debunking common anticommunist myths.