• refolde [she/her, any]@hexbear.net
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    3 days ago

    UMMMMM… but Qin Shi Huang qin-shi-huangdi-fireball did an imperialism and made imperial china therefore china was the first imperialist state ever and is inherently imperialist therefore i have destroyed it china has no choice but to explode now smuglord

  • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    3 days ago

    I wish we had more Fidels and Guevaras in the world today. I don’t think they would be preaching peaceful coexistence with the capitalists. I don’t think they would be so naive as to think that you can peacefully coexist with capitalism. It will seek their destruction and they will be forced to change path from this one way or another.

    I see it as an ideological mistake as large as democratic socialism is compared to revolutionary socialism. You can not expect them to not seek your violent destruction just because you played nicely. You have to seek revolutionary socialism because they will not allow a peaceful alternative. In the same line of thinking they categorically will not allow peaceful coexistence either, you have to seek revolutionary coexistence.

    • Tomboymoder [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      3 days ago

      I think it’s probably actually better for the world that China isn’t painting a huge target on it’s back by supporting every single revolution everywhere.
      The Soviet Union ran itself ragged with all the military spending, including to places that were basically socialist in name only to get weapons from them and it mostly resulted in a lot of violence and death and didn’t create any lasting communist governments for the most part.

      Beating capitalism by undermining the global economic systems seems a better way to go.

      • Droplet [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        3 days ago

        This is interpreting history with hindsight. Post-WWII was a very different world that culminated in mass decolonization as a result of a confluence of factors including the war bankrupting the British empire, and decades of independence movements that had been working toward national liberation.

        The USSR either let those independence movements fend off for themselves (which actually happened to some countries, under Stalin but in the European communist context) and be crushed by the bourgeois counter-revolutions, or provide weaponry and support their anti-colonial and anti-imperialist cause.

        There is a reason why even after 30 years of the USSR dissolution, the vast majority of the people in the Global South still throw their support behind Russia, even though it is no longer under a socialist government.

        Ask yourself this, what made them so appreciative of Russia even to the present day, if the aid from the USSR only caused unnecessary deaths and violence in their countries?

        • Tomboymoder [she/her]@hexbear.net
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          3 days ago

          I mean how else do you interpret history if not in hindsight?
          I’m not saying they shouldn’t have done it, or I don’t understand the context in which they are doing it, but it didn’t create a very long-lasting coalition of socialist countries and the USSR no longer exists.

          China is taking a different path, I think understandably, and we will have to wait and see if it works.
          It’s not as if in a similar vein a lot of Global South counties aren’t throwing their support behind China because of the BRI as well.

          • Droplet [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            3 days ago

            Today’s China already has a larger economy than the US. To think that China is still “too weak” to take on the US (which is inevitable because the US is already actively trying to take out China) simply don’t understand that on a real economy level, China already has the productive capacity to self-sustain if they orientate their industries immediately (actually, should have been done yesterday). What the US has is the power of its currency that is propped up in the virtual sector (real estate, finance, and likely soon, cryptocurrency).

            The problem with China is that their economy is still far too reliant on export (especially to high income countries like the US and Europe) which makes them a beneficiary of the status quo arrangement, and upsetting that status quo will adversely impact their own industries, which is why they have been reluctant on taking on the US directly.

            BRI is not a critical advantage for China right now because 70% of their infrastructure loans were denominated in US dollars, which really is just a consequence of China realizing they were accumulating junk papers from the US for giving them cheap goods made using Chinese labor and resources. China stopped buying US treasuries around 2013-ish and put those dollars into BRI investments, but all those dollars are still under the US banking system which means the US can seize them just like they seize Russia’s foreign reserves easily. Another reason why China is still scared of taking on the US directly.

            China needs to restructure those loans into yuan and cancel them altogether and the only way forward is really for China to re-distribute the global industrial capacity more evenly to the rest of the world (and at the same time, destroying the US’s ability to impose its imperialist ambitions on the rest of the world), otherwise there is no way out of this huge trade imbalance deadlock where the US gets total control over the global market that is the hallmark of neoliberal capitalism.

      • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        3 days ago

        China is painting a huge target on its back whether it does or does not.

        Several communist states today exist specifically because the USSR did that, and I am convinced that they still would have been targeted and defeated if they had not done it.

        If communists do not use their position to advance communism when the opportunity exists they will regret it when we enter a second period of retraction.

        • Tunnelvision [they/them]@hexbear.net
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          2 days ago

          Modern day socialism is not built by China picking a fight over every square inch of earth on the planet, it’s built by bringing up the standard of living for the global south and entering them into a separate economic block from the west.

          • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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            A second economic block that will either eventually turn to inter-imperialist conflict or to a new vessel of anticommunism.

            Turning what we can of it to communism sooner is to our benefit. I think it’s naive to believe we won’t see another period of retraction.

            • Tunnelvision [they/them]@hexbear.net
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              What reasoning do you have that this will happen? Or is this just a vibe? Also anticommunism sounds pretty harsh considering the biggest dog in that pen is China. Everyone on this planet understands that the “inter imperialist” conflict you’re talking about (which is mostly global south nations btw so wtf) is just nuclear war with extra steps. The only ones who don’t understand this are the Americans.

              • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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                What outcome do you expect from capitalist development? These countries all magically reform into socialism?

                They will develop along the same lines as capitalism always develops, and when the capitalist crises finally hits they will turn to fascism and a block will form to steer a fascist dog into attacking the communist opponent in the world stage. The level of unity that exists within this block will, in my opinion, be larger than it was last time because they will have learned from the mistakes they made, they have learned by now that nazi germany should have been their ally and not their enemy.

                • Tunnelvision [they/them]@hexbear.net
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                  What outcome do you expect from capitalist development? These countries all magically reform into socialism?

                  That’s my point, we don’t know what they’re going to do, but it doesn’t really make sense to say these places will at the drop of a hat start to commit acts of imperialism against each other when a not insignificant number of them already have access to nuclear weapons and do not follow a first strike protocol. China I would argue is capitalist, but I cannot deny they are making choices in line with Marxist thinking and overall they’re doing it to advance themselves and other much poorer nations. I cannot fathom why anyone wouldn’t follow Chinas lead. Ultimately this comment just sounds like “those savage browns will just start killing each other just you wait” when these places have literally never had a chance to develop without a cracker ass nation not on their neck. How about give them a chance to do something first before criticizing them? Also why are you comparing them to the axis? You understand I’m talking about BRICS right?

              • What reasoning do you have that this will happen? Or is this just a vibe? Also anticommunism sounds pretty harsh considering the biggest dog in that pen is China. Everyone on this planet understands that the “inter imperialist” conflict you’re talking about (which is mostly global south nations btw so wtf) is just nuclear war with extra steps. The only ones who don’t understand this are the Americans.

                and the other dogs are Russia, a post soviet gangster state; India, ruled by actual fascists; South africa, a state playing both sides to its advantage that hasn’t fixed their economic apartheid and descending into reaction. They are our allies against imperialism of the west, but i have almost no faith that they’ll become anything more than another economic imperialist force.

                • Tunnelvision [they/them]@hexbear.net
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                  Believe me I understand what you’re saying. No one is saying these nations are without problems, but

                  no faith that they’ll become anything more than another economic imperialist force.

                  The biggest and most powerful nation in this block is China and very little is going to change that. That right there will stop most of those ambitions for the most part in my opinion. On top of that nuclear war is the other factor to consider and unlike the west these places for all their faults generally don’t want to die so really the only path forward is economic prosperity, which China incentivizes. So far everyone has said that these places will act just like the west without really thinking of all the ways acting like the west is just going to ostracize them from a clearly better future. Could it happen? Sure, but I doubt it.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      3 days ago

      Thing is that revolutionary socialism can’t be imposed on others. I think that China’s approach of leading by example is the correct one to take. China does not seek conflict, and it does not seek to dominate countries, or to impose its values on them. However, China will defend its interests, and will push back when threatened. The capitalist world is tearing itself apart, and it will be up to the people living under capitalist regimes to find ways to build socialism domestically.

      • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        I didn’t say anything about imposing it. Supporting revolutions that come from the ground up within other countries is not imposition.

        • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.mlOP
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          2 days ago

          While supporting revolutionary movements is a principled stance, it necessarily leads to the formation of ideological camps, as demonstrated during the Cold War era. In a world where capitalism reigns supreme, socialists find themselves at a disadvantageous position. This was the predicament that the USSR faced, which made it an easy target for unification among capitalist regimes due to its threat to their collective interests. The Chinese approach, on the other hand, cleverly exploits this division by keeping the capitalist world fragmented and weak, allowing existing socialist countries to thrive without constant threats of annihilation.

          • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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            2 days ago

            Becoming a threat to their collective interests is an inevitable outcome whether they do or do not use their position to put a thumb on the scales of socialist movements around the world.

            This is an unavoidable contradiction. At some point or another the collective capitalist world WILL see unify around it. Periods of socialist growth and socialist retraction are going to continually occur until the contradiction resolves itself. Socialists should do everything in their power during the growth periods so that the effect of the retraction periods are lessened.

            • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.mlOP
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              2 days ago

              Capitalist world is in a crisis now, and we can see anti capitalist movements only getting stronger around the globe. Meanwhile, BRICS is a perfect example of the division in the capitalist world. It’s a bigger economic bloc than the G7 now, and it includes a mix of capitalist and socialist countries. Something like BRICS would not be possible with an ideologically driven geopolitical position from China.

              Furthermore, as the economic situation in the west continues to decline, we’re seeing people increasingly lose faith in the system. Western powers continue to weaken, and their ability to prevent socialist movements also weakens as a result. Recent events in Bolivia are a perfect illustration of this working in practice.

              The contradiction is unavoidable, but it’s possible to create a situation where socialists will be the ones who have the upper hand.

              • Awoo [she/her]@hexbear.net
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                The contradiction is unavoidable, but it’s possible to create a situation where socialists will be the ones who have the upper hand.

                It is arrogance to believe that will always be the case. The same arrogance that the capitalists had in believing capitalism had won with the defeat of the USSR and that capitalism would always be in hegemony thereafter.

                • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.mlOP
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                  What China is currently doing has objectively accomplished more to derail global capitalism than USSR was ever able to. It’s not arrogance, it’s making tactical retreats to achieve long term strategic gains. As Lenin very eloquently put it:

                  To carry on a war for the overthrow of the international bourgeoisie, a war which is a hundred times more difficult, protracted and complex than the most stubborn of ordinary wars between states, and to renounce in advance any change of tack, or any utilisation of a conflict of interests (even if temporary) among one’s enemies, or any conciliation or compromise with possible allies (even if they are temporary, unstable, vacillating or conditional allies)—is that not ridiculous in the extreme? Is it not like making a difficult ascent of an unexplored and hitherto inaccessible mountain and refusing in advance ever to move in zigzags, ever to retrace one’s steps, or ever to abandon a course once selected, and to try others? And yet people so immature and inexperienced (if youth were the explanation, it would not be so bad; young people are preordained to talk such nonsense for a certain period) have met with support—whether direct or indirect, open or covert, whole or partial, it does not matter—from some members of the Communist Party of Holland.

                  https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/lwc/ch08.htm

    • AssortedBiscuits [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      2 days ago

      As long as Chinese ATGMs somehow make its way to Hamas, it’s all good. I think this is going to be their playbook. They’ll just say a bunch of crap about peaceful coexistence while Chinese weapons and drones just mysteriously appear in the hands of people who hate the US.

      • Tunnelvision [they/them]@hexbear.net
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        2 days ago

        This is the one pretty much. This is not 1917 anymore, anyone saying world superpowers should not tolerate each other is just asking for nuclear holocaust with extra steps. China is making progress, China is surpassing the west, China knows what it’s doing. They don’t need your cracker ass to tell them what to do.

    • Barx [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      2 days ago

      I think it is very frustrating but I do appreciate China’s complete commitment to its own development to the point where it will be able to dictate terms to the imperialists.

      So many other socialist countries crumbled after the fall of the USSR. While on one hand this demonstrates how supportive the USSR was of their projects, it also demonstrates a key weakness, as it means they were unable to provide an alternative model for trade and development. A single partner goes down and suddenly North Korea, Cuba, Vietnam, Yugoslavia, Eastern Europe all go to shit. If they were robust and developed and had consistent trading partners they would be in a much better position today. Yugoslavia might still exist if it hadn’t tried to play both sides and depend on both the USSR and the IMF.

      China offers a path forward that I think is more robust, even though it has contradictions. When the imperialists try to fuck you, China will be there to trade. This is, by far, imperialists’ most powerful weapon and China is destroying it more and more every day. It is the only reason we can see pink movements in Latin America, the establishment of AES in the Sahel, of Russia (not socialist, but an opponent to Western imperialists) not immediately collapsing in response to getting cut off from the USD banking system.

      There’s a point missing from this, though. Why couldn’t China just do that and support revolution elsewhere? In my opinion… it could. It really could do more. I think a lot of this is a holdover from China considering itself to be in a very weak position (and it does still have many weaknesses) where it cannot take the anti-imperialist lead in a new cold war. It doesn’t want to take lead in a new cold war, it wants to develop itself as much as possible first, to weaken the imperialist empire and build its alternative (China-led multipolarity).

      I think it is reasonably perceived that stronger moves against imperialists will further the creation of two blocs that crystallize current geopolitical alignments. I think it is also reasonably perceived that the trend of those alignments is favorable towards China, so the more time before crystallization, the better. Maybe it will just be, literally, NATO vs. everyone else some day.

      I think that it is likely that we will see foreign policy change from China over the next few decades. Not necessarily into a firebrand supporter of revolution on ML principals, but I do think they’ll start to more openly flex muscle around arms shipments, sanctions, national sovereignty, etc. I think the policy of “we will trade with everyone” will begin to have exceptions. A lot of it will be prompted by an imperialist West looking to crystallize those blocs in their favor.

      Anyways I do also find their strategy frustrating even though I do see the value in it. I see a large nation led by a communist party that allows and even participates in the genocide of Gaza by trading with Israel and not rallying any kind of coercive international resistance. I see a large nation led by a communist party that fails to consistently ally with communist movements in neighboring countries and even generates opposition to China within them, as China makes deals with their oppressors. These are missed opportunities to forward our cause and they are missed due to highly sophisticated but still disappointing strategies developed in an era where China was a minor power.

      • Biggay [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        Why couldn’t China just do that and support revolution elsewhere?

        I definitely agree with this, but given the modern history of China and its local history (1980+) theres a lot of risk in losing these fights supporting revolution, and it crystalizes the international bourgeoisie against you. Especially like the Soviet war in Afghanistan, you stick your neck out for not a whole lot of gain (underdeveloped trading nations with shaky institutions) that the safer option is to just focus inwards, to not allow your population hear the siren song of liberalism, and then to work with and develop these countries, working with their institutions to maybe create a proletariat capable of wielding power that is hopefully ideologically allied to you a la the Belt and Road Initiative.

        I wont claim that China could see Western Powers devolving in the wake of the Soviet collapse but the West really didnt waste much time stretching their legs and continuing their wars of aggression, Gulf War, bombing Yugoslavia, and ultimately taking one too many risks that like in the USA left them to focused on foreign adventurism than keeping the lights on at home. America after the collapse also kept a list of enemies especially going into the 21st century that didnt have china on it. It had Saddam, Kim Jong-il and Khomeini. And that list got smaller and smaller and China only now is on that list.

        We also cant really say that the Chinese method has worked yet. We’re still a while out of the total collapse of Western Hegemony, and while China is ascendant, theres still doubt in my mind that BRICS could hold up the world economy in place of America. The world seems likely to change very fast in a very chaotic way, and China’s stalwart development seems like the only thing that could change without being destroyed by it.

        • Barx [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          2 days ago

          Yes this aligns with my general understanding as well. China’s relative passivity is part of a long game and is entirely intentional, considering very real failures of other states run by communist parties. I do think it can do more, as an important lesson is that capitalist countries, particularly the primary seats of capitalist empire, do not differentiate between real and imagined justifications for isolation. They will simply do it when they want to. I think there is more they could “get away” with, but I do understand and appreciate their more conservative commie perspective.

      • D61 [any]@hexbear.net
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        2 days ago

        Why couldn’t China just do that and support revolution elsewhere?

        The amount of terrorism that the USA can do against China is immense, either directly along its very huge land borders or indirectly through any other country that China is working with. As Biggay said, remember the USSR and Afghanistan? What if there were like 10 proxy wars against China going on simultaneously?

        Other things are kinda sucky though, like taking a backseat on openly supporting Palestine. Then again, Chinese weaponry is winding up in the hands of the resistance, so… shrug-outta-hecks

        • Barx [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          The US has already been doing that, of course. They’ll do whatever they can regardless of China’s posturing. Though material engagements do absolutely have costs, so actually participating in a resistance movement is far from nothing. At the same time it does align more or less perfectly with their massive industrial capacity. The key is to choose the right battles, e.g. Palestine, where participation is does not translate into, “China is going to fund revolutionaries in my country so I’ll prop up these right wing paramilitaries and get even more US bases”, as would definitely happen in India or The Philippines. Leading the charge on Palestine would probably improve China’s international position. Even just in their neighborhood this would be very popular in Malaysia and Indonesia.

          Of course, this is just expressing a frustration from a Western person in the imperial core. We should remind ourselves that when thinking about the possibility for even better outcomes by states controlled by communist parties, we are literally in the states fighting to ensure the imperialist system and the genocide of Palestine. We should spend most of our time thinking about how to position ourselves to best fight that system and that genocide, not nag about states for not doing enough.

          • D61 [any]@hexbear.net
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            The US has already been doing that…

            I’m more thinking of from the perspective of the Chinese people. Engaging in an open military operation in support of a state that seems like it would be open to the possibility allying with China or embracing communism with overt and direct material support from China and it turning into a 20 year war of attrition between imperial proxy forces and Chinese forces in 5 or 10 or 20 places… how long would the Chinese people be okay with that? Us USA-ians got tired of Iraq and Afghanistan after a handful of years and we’re supposed to be the blood thirsty ones, I’d think that the people of China might want to find a different strategy than “attrition and a prayer.”

            … frustration from a Western person in the imperial core…

            Definitely.

            • Barx [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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              Well I don’t want China to bog itself down in 10-20 locations, of course. I think it should strategically pick one (1) fight for national liberation and support it more fully and openly, e.g. Palestine. The US will of course try to make this as painful as possible for anyone daring to push back on them.

              I don’t even mean sending troops. Right now, the status quo with China internationally is that the capitalist empire is committing a genocide to keep its keystone to the domination of a subcontinent politically viable and the response of states with whom we are meant to have affinity are politely registering complaints. This is leaving all of the direct work to liberals and neighboring national liberation movements (or those who recently won national liberation). China’s contribution, which is massive, is to create the baseline of multipolarity that makes all of that possible. However, China could, for example, begin leading a push to isolate Israel. Outcomes that would substantially undermine empire in Palestine include fully funding UNRWA and doing a full push to sanction or even blockade Israel. China should be getting practice in doing PR on this because they suck at it. Hire Al Jazeera reporters and learn how to craft angles from them. Etc etc.

              I think they avoid this because the main good factions are well aware of how weak China was very recently and they understand that their project is overall still fairly fragile. They also see storm clouds in destabilizing the US. I think they have adopted an approach that is so conservative it is actually counterproductive, though.