- cross-posted to:
- chapotraphouse@hexbear.net
- cross-posted to:
- chapotraphouse@hexbear.net
It was such a good book idk how I haven’t made this post yet. Just the introduction will have you hooked.
link to free download here or here
In summary, Ted Reese shows how Marxism Leninism is the way forward if we are to save the planet. It is largely a reaction to Fully Automated Luxury Communism and the general trend of people trying to reinvent socialism with utopian ideas in order to stop climate change. I actually read that right before, so it might be part of why I like this book. He explains how the TRPF is leading to the inevitable fall of capitalism in the near future. Anyone who denies that capitalism is reaching its final breaking point is in error. Labor theory of value continues to be vindicated. It’s counter-tendencies cannot help it. Humanity looks pretty screwed with climate change, but socialism can enable innovation, stop extraction, and plan our way to a healthy world. Socialism will also employ easy technology and methods that capitalism refuses because it will undermine it’s function. The path towards a new socialism is through studying the successes and failures of AES, not through trying to “discover” new forms, or repeating old forms. Principled Leninist tactics are the way.
This book gave me a lot of hope and I’ve recommended it to multiple libs (🤞). I highly recommend it.
Limitations:
It was published almost five years ago, so it’s not all up to date on the geopolitics and so on. As we all know, the past few years we’ve had many weeks where decades happened. Reese takes a neutral position on China’s socialistness, despite presenting evidence to the positive. He doesn’t talk about decolonization, which makes sense for a Br*t, but that means it’s not all encompassing. There is a lot of great info in there. It might not be easiest for complete newbies, but you don’t have to read too much other theory first.
Here’s some memes:
Long live ecosocialism!
The link leads to a page for Half Earth Socialism…
sorry, fixed it. This book corrects a lot of errors in that one.