Why do some communists hate "liberals"?

Submitted by timthelion on May 26, 2016

I recently had a strange experience here in Prague. I was at an anticapitalist conference in which there was a talk about the rise of the far right in Europe. The speakers basically were saying that the rise of the far right is such an urgent problem that all on the left need to join to stop it. At the end of the talk, a local communist stood up and said that "we need to look at the problem of racism from the stand point of class struggle and to continue focusing on class struggle" and that "there is no way we can support working with liberals in the fight against racism". Of course, I'm translating from Czech so perhaps something got lost there, but I left wondering "why such a harsh hatred of 'liberals'"?

The experience was especially strange given the context. He explicitly accused the local anarchist squat of being "liberal". I presume that this is just the case of the village idiot speaking up, but the guy seemed respected enough by his peers and I wonder if there is something more going on that I missed due to inexperience.

radicalgraffiti

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by radicalgraffiti on May 26, 2016

liberals are procapitalist

timthelion

7 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by timthelion on September 10, 2016

-

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Schmoopie

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Schmoopie on May 26, 2016

'Liberal' means bourgeois; what should we do: love them, whilst they hate us? Be reasonable!

timthelion

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by timthelion on May 26, 2016

Sorry, I only asked a question.

timthelion

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by timthelion on May 26, 2016

Having grown up in the US, I know two types of politics: Right wingers and liberals. And the liberals certainly were not "pro-capitalist". They may not have been radicalized, but do comunists only speak to radicals? If the building was on fire, and half the occupants were just waking up, rubbing their eyes, and asking why their alarms had gone off so early, would you become angry with them for denying the existance of the flames? Are those the liberals which marxists refer to?

Serge Forward

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Serge Forward on May 26, 2016

[YouTube]u52Oz-54VYw[/YouTube]

timthelion

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by timthelion on May 26, 2016

Serge Forward I see an empty comment from you. Is this intentional?

Serge Forward

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Serge Forward on May 26, 2016

It's a video. Might not be viewable to you. Try this: Phil Ochs - Love me I'm a liberal

You'll find communists and anarchists take a dim view of liberals. You might want to have a look at some of the Libcom intro pages to give you a better idea of the general political direction on here: introductory guides

radicalgraffiti

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by radicalgraffiti on May 26, 2016

timthelion

What exactly do you mean "procapitalist"? Is it inherent in the word "liberal" to be capitalist? Like in that you would like to forbid trade? AKA, be antiliberal in your revolution?

liberalism is a pro capitalist position, i'm an anarchist i wish to abolish capitalism and create a communist society, if this happened trade would be impossible, it wouldn't need to be explicitly forbidden because the conditions needed for it wouldn't exist

Schmoopie

'Liberal' means bourgeois; what should we do: love them, whilst they hate us? Be reasonable!

not really, liberalism is a political position, the bourgeois is the class that owns the means of production in a capitalist society

timthelion

Having grown up in the US, I know two types of politics: Right wingers and liberals. And the liberals certainly were not "pro-capitalist". They may not have been radicalized, but do comunists only speak to radicals? If the building was on fire, and half the occupants were just waking up, rubbing their eyes, and asking why their alarms had gone off so early, would you become angry with them for denying the existance of the flames? Are those the liberals which marxists refer to?

in the US the political spectrum is presented as varying between two different extremely right wing forms of capitalism, anti capitalists don't fit on this spectrum.

if you want to know what Marxists mean by liberals you'll have to ask Marxist

radicalgraffiti

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by radicalgraffiti on May 27, 2016

if your using firefox and viewing a https web page it hides all none https elements like embedded youtube videos, you can disable this from the padlock on the address bar

timthelion

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by timthelion on May 27, 2016

Thanks, yea, it didn't show up for me. Perhaps due to my lack of flash player.

I have read the intro. I understaind that your average "liberal" is far from communist, but it just seemed strange to me this hatred of them. I know that many liberals are just consumerist idiots, who like my father, want to buy a prius in order to stop global warming. However, that is not a problem with liberalism in and of itself. It is a problem with lazy comfortable people pseudocaring.

Somehow, I am reminded of Kaczinki's attack on "leftism" : "The leftist is anti-individualistic, pro-collectivist. He wants society to solve everyone's needs for them, take care of them. He is not the sort of person who has an inner sense of confidence in his own ability to solve his own problems and satisfy his own needs." (I have to say that admitting to having read Kaczinski makes me worried that the gladiators will be knocking on my door.)

But what really gets to me, is the impression one gets when one hears someone say that they will never work with a liberal. Since "liberal", derived from "liberty", in its core means someone who is tolerant. Do communists and anarchists not like tolerance, or is it just the overly comfortable pseudocaring of the mainstream left that gets to them?

Schmoopie

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Schmoopie on May 27, 2016

Schmoopie wrote:

'Liberal' means bourgeois; what should we do: love them, whilst they hate us? Be reasonable!

not really, liberalism is a political position, the bourgeois is the class that owns the means of production in a capitalist society

Historically, you are correct. Liberalism was originally one faction of the bourgeoisie and it's counterpart was protectionist. However, the liberal faction has proved victorious and hence liberal and bourgeois can now be viewed as synonymous. I think in the United States liberal has a different connotation but I would need enlightening on that matter.

Serge Forward

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Serge Forward on May 27, 2016

I'm not the most tolerant of people but will nevertheless work with all sorts, liberals included. I don't hate them but would never actually trust them. Still, what people call themselves is not always representative of how they'll act in a pinch. I know people who define themselves as liberals wouldn't dream of crossing a picket line and have encountered so called anarchists who have scabbed.

Schmoopie, I gather the term liberal in the US generally means vaguely leftish.

timthelion

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by timthelion on May 27, 2016

radicalgraffiti

timthelion

What exactly do you mean "procapitalist"? Is it inherent in the word "liberal" to be capitalist? Like in that you would like to forbid trade? AKA, be antiliberal in your revolution?

liberalism is a pro capitalist position, i'm an anarchist i wish to abolish capitalism and create a communist society, if this happened trade would be impossible, it wouldn't need to be explicitly forbidden because the conditions needed for it wouldn't exist

OK, but there is a difference between non-existant and forbidding. As an example, I don't like the idea of artificially imposed property rights, in which the state mandates the ownership of a song or a piece of land. However, that isn't the same thing as forbidding ownership. For example, in North Korea, they put people in jail for engaging in trade. I wouldn't want that. Indeed, I don't really see any problem with people exchanging vegitables on a street corner. Personally, I just want massive artificial legal structures like international megacorps to not exist. Right now, those structures are mandated by the state (I cannot go and squat the supermall, the police will kick me out). But even in a non-hierarchical society, a person could defend their own home against intruders. Would you forbid them from doing so?

Chilli Sauce

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Chilli Sauce on May 27, 2016

timthelion

But what really gets to me, is the impression one gets when one hears someone say that they will never work with a liberal. Since "liberal", derived from "liberty", in its core means someone who is tolerant. Do communists and anarchists not like tolerance, or is it just the overly comfortable pseudocaring of the mainstream left that gets to them?

Ya know, for someone who seems to invent words on a post-by-post basis, you get pretty caught up in semantics. Also, Kaczynski, WTF?

Anyway, I think most liberals have their hearts in the right place and - since in reality - most people are liberals of some stripe, of course most anarchists work with liberals once they break out of the mold of political organizing.

That said, establishment liberals and liberal organizations (the fucking Democratic party for fuck's sake) and tied up the functioning of capitalism and serve to channel class struggles into the realm of manageable politics. I mean, think about taking the anger and direct from Wisconsin a few years back and channeling it into a recall elections. Fuck working with those douches.

Chilli Sauce

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Chilli Sauce on May 27, 2016

timthelion

OK, but there is a difference between non-existant and forbidding. As an example, I don't like the idea of artificially imposed property rights, in which the state mandates the ownership of a song or a piece of land. However, that isn't the same thing as forbidding ownership. For example, in North Korea, they put people in jail for engaging in trade. I wouldn't want that. Indeed, I don't really see any problem with people exchanging vegitables on a street corner. Personally, I just want massive artificial legal structures like international megacorps to not exist. Right now, those structures are mandated by the state (I cannot go and squat the supermall, the police will kick me out). But even in a non-hierarchical society, a person could defend their own home against intruders. Would you forbid them from doing so?

Are you sure you're not an an-cap? Would you defend your rental property if I tried squat it?

jef costello

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by jef costello on May 27, 2016

timthelion : define liberal.

liberal as a catch-all term used by Republicans to criticise their political 'opposition' doesn't mean much and has already been dealt with by others.

Incidentally in France liberals are very right-wing.

The root of the word is interesting but it doesn't always affect the actual meaning. The word libertine comes from the same root (and in history was used to criticise free-thinkers as sexual deviants. Interesting from a historical point of view but I'm not going to start calling myself a libertine)

Serge Forward

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Serge Forward on May 27, 2016

.

.

Auld-bod

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Auld-bod on May 27, 2016

Agree with Serge #14

I’ve heard liberalism in the UK described as the political legacy of the aristocracy.

At base they have a contempt for anyone ‘in trade’, employers and employees. They feel it OK to use trade to further their interests as long as they do not have to dirty their own hands. They patronizingly feel there is no need for economic strife if only everyone honestly tries to see everyone else’s point of view. The cake is big enough for all to get a slice, if people were not so greedy.

So politics is reduced to a question of ‘morality’ with liberals as the arbitrators. See Bertrand Russell as an example, well-meaning and clueless. Someone described him as Britain’s wisest fool.

Schmoopie

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Schmoopie on May 27, 2016

I gather the term liberal in the US generally means vaguely leftish.

Thanks, good definition.

When we hate, we hate something within us; hatred only hurts our selves. When we can transform hate into positive action, it is no longer hate. Pompous ass!

timthelion

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by timthelion on May 27, 2016

Chilli Sauce

Are you sure you're not an an-cap? Would you defend your rental property if I tried squat it?

I am not sure what I am. Like many people, I cannot really imagine anything beyond "the revolution", just as many Christians have no concept of what heaven is actually like. Only blindly trusting forth in god to make it good. I suffer from capitalist realism, the mental state in which it is impossible to imagine a society which is not capitalistic.

As for my rental property, AKA, my basement, I think you might find the lack of a shower or bath to be limiting. But it does bring about a very good point, which we can discuss. The house in which I live actually WAS broken up into appartments by the communists (or as you would say, the state capitalists). They did so by force. 3 appartments were made. The one down stairs, that is currently rented out, is rather "moist" and the familly that lived down there moved out because their son grew sick. The dividing up of the house was a dramatic and traumatic experience for my familly. While to some extent, they were being pansies who couldn't accept the loss of servants, there really is an emotional attachment that one has to one's home. Having that home be violently broken into certainly feels like a severe violation. My home has enough space for more than just my wife and I, and so we are working on installing the proper facilites in order to let some of it out. However, most homes and appartments here, don't have any space to spare for squatters. Do you really want to traumatize all of the people who own or have long term rentals on homes and appartments, by violating their privacy? That hardly seems like a reasonable revolution to me. And if you are going to abolish the state, then there needs to be some means of maintaining that privacy.

I have a question for you. If you were to live in my basement for a number of years, would you, over time, gain a sense of belonging there. Would you feel violated, if, at some point, someone were to break in and start living there, or move your stuff around, or take something, or destroy it?

Auld-bod

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Auld-bod on May 27, 2016

I like this take on the absurd/hypocritical nature of liberalism:

‘Now, I’m liberal, but to a degree
I want ev’rybody to be free
But if you think I’ll let Barry Goldwater
Move in next door and marry my daughter
You must think I’m crazy!
I wouldn’t let him do that for all the farms in Cuba.’

(Bob Dylan, I Shall Be Free No.10)

Cooked

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Cooked on May 27, 2016

Liberalism was the ideology of the bourgeoisie. It's the ideology of property and parliament.

petey

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by petey on May 27, 2016

radicalgraffiti

if your using firefox and viewing a https web page it hides all none https elements like embedded youtube videos, you can disable this from the padlock on the address bar

thank you, i've long wondered why i can't see some posts on these threads.

radicalgraffiti

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by radicalgraffiti on May 27, 2016

timthelion

radicalgraffiti

timthelion

What exactly do you mean "procapitalist"? Is it inherent in the word "liberal" to be capitalist? Like in that you would like to forbid trade? AKA, be antiliberal in your revolution?

liberalism is a pro capitalist position, i'm an anarchist i wish to abolish capitalism and create a communist society, if this happened trade would be impossible, it wouldn't need to be explicitly forbidden because the conditions needed for it wouldn't exist

OK, but there is a difference between non-existant and forbidding. As an example, I don't like the idea of artificially imposed property rights, in which the state mandates the ownership of a song or a piece of land. However, that isn't the same thing as forbidding ownership. For example, in North Korea, they put people in jail for engaging in trade. I wouldn't want that. Indeed, I don't really see any problem with people exchanging vegitables on a street corner.

north korea has markets
http://carnegie.ru/2016/02/03/resurgence-of-market-economy-in-north-korea/ithc

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-change-insight-idUSKCN0SN00320151029

timthelion

Personally, I just want massive artificial legal structures like international megacorps to not exist. Right now, those structures are mandated by the state (I cannot go and squat the supermall, the police will kick me out). But even in a non-hierarchical society, a person could defend their own home against intruders. Would you forbid them from doing so?

obviously no one should be criticised for defending them self, but the american idea that its ok to shoot someone to "defend your property" is disgusting. But in a communist society why would someone even want to burgle someone house? or are you afraid they want to live in your basement? no one wants to live in you basement.

petey

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by petey on May 27, 2016

timthelion

Having grown up in the US, I know two types of politics: Right wingers and liberals.

hi tim, another yank here. i know what you mean, please remember that most of the posters here are from other countries and don't have this political history. they have had strong leftist/socialist (i.e. statist) political parties in a way that the US hasn't had in a century.

"liberals", as i define it, are concerned with individual liberties within capitalism. a liberal will be very satisfied that a guy with one african parent, or a woman, can be president. that's where it ends. there's no class analysis, or if there is it reaches only so far as claiming that "classism" is a bad thing, we should be respectful of the poor/unskilled laborers as well as anybody else, but the idea that the relations created by capitalist economics should be uprooted is quietly but firmly rejected.

i don't know that communists "hate" liberals but i at least certainly get fed the fuck up with them.

Chilli Sauce

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Chilli Sauce on May 27, 2016

As for my rental property, AKA, my basement,

Wait, you rent out your basement to a bank? And you make a enough money from this meager "moist" space that you don't have to work?

If you were to live in my basement for a number of years, would you, over time, gain a sense of belonging there. Would you feel violated, if, at some point, someone were to break in and start living there, or move your stuff around, or take something, or destroy it?

You mean like if my landlord decided to kick me out or sell the property on or something like that? Yeah, I'd be pretty pissed.

timthelion

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by timthelion on May 27, 2016

Chilli Sauce : I don't spend much, and actually, it is an interesting case of the extreme inequalities in this country. That land owners are so privilaged. I've heard that you aren't supposed to put more than a third of your income into rent, but here in Prague the average young person who rents puts more than half their income into rent. Its an absurd and unsusual situation the Keynesians would tell you, they say that it is due to the lack of access to capital. "If we just liberalized the banking system here," they say "than people would be able to take out a morgage and buy their own appartments. Then this rent problem would dissapear." Perhaps in a parallel universe, I'm making the world a better place, by assisting the bank in lending money to the poor renters, thus allowing those same poor renters to pull themselves out of the renter forever cycle.

Chilli Sauce

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Chilli Sauce on May 27, 2016

I'm making the world a better place, by assisting the bank in lending money to the poor renters, thus allowing those same poor renters to pull themselves out of the renter forever cycle.

Wow. And you judge others for eating palm oil, do you?

SRQ

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by SRQ on May 27, 2016

Liberals dont have limitations so as political ideology liberal person is narcissistic everything goes-attitude. Sexual perverts are liberal usually. Writing is fun, now I can analyse their personality when communist are forced to psychiatry, to talk to doctors, about their opinions. Vice versa, some cultural phenomenons are mirror images from others, and can be analysed as mental diseases but it is mean we cant control peoples minds what they talk, different thing what they publish in public, some limits to liberals toooooo

Schmoopie

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Schmoopie on May 27, 2016

Sexual perverts are liberal usually.

Finally, someone who can think outside of their soapbox; what a blessed relief.

SRQ

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by SRQ on May 27, 2016

Excusemua
social office force me to take student loan that i can go to doctor ND THEY COVER EXPENCES, I took loan for rent and social office bays bills. Came activist and give advice: loose your credit information, dont pay library loan book back inform it to lost, then social office has to give your rent money to you pay your bills and some get hobby too. Have you live in socialism where criminal is king ? I can give other this kind of go around the law whit social benifits examples, have not used them but can write book about it.

Schmoopie

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Schmoopie on May 28, 2016

Liberalism was the ideology of the bourgeoisie. It's the ideology of property and parliament.

The freedom that is referred to in the word 'liberal' is the limited sense of, freedom of trade, in contrast to the previous period of class society in which trade was restricted. From our perspective, the trade we are primarily concerned with is trade in our labour power.

The question is more properly termed: why do some communists hate the bourgeois?

And my answer to that question is: we don't; they hate us. The reason they hate us is because they fear us; and the reason they fear us is justifiable because we are going to kill them. However, we are not killing their flesh but their form of existence, and ours—wage labour.

Gulai Polye

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Gulai Polye on May 28, 2016

Classic liberalism is that there
- Should be a state protecting the capitalists privilege
- That people should be excluded from controlling the means of production and only a few privileged capitalists should have this privilege.
- That trade should be as free as possible, so that the capitalists can get as rich as possible
- And last that people has certain rights which would prevent the state from being too powerful (like freedom of speech) so the state doesnt interfere with the capitalists way of life.

I dont know if there is more. That would be classic liberalism

Then classic liberalism developed into social liberalism which is influenced by Keynes and
Neo-liberalism which is laissez-faire capitalism was influenced by Margaret Tatcher and Ronald Reagan with his trickle-down economics.

It can be concluded if you are against capitalism you are also against liberalism.
It can be concluded if you are libertarian you are also against liberalism

jef costello

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by jef costello on May 28, 2016

SRQ

but can write book about it.

That's debateable.
I'm sorry but it's very unclear what you are trying to say.

The Pigeon

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by The Pigeon on May 28, 2016

I think on libcom there is the view that rank and file liberals are unmatured socialistists. whereas the liberal philosophy, here, is tossed away as capitalist worldview, because that's what it is. there are some liberals who have socialist underbellies, and then there are dogmatic liberals who actually justify the market and institutions and law and such.

Chilli Sauce

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Chilli Sauce on May 28, 2016

So, I think there's a lot going on in that post.

The first is that action often precedes consciousness and, as such, we probably shouldn't get so caught up in how people self-identify politically - especially if we're actually looking to organizing with our fellow members of the workers class and not just other self-identified lefties/anarchists/activists/whatever.

The second, I guess, is what you mean by "rank and file". Do you mean politically committed liberals - members of the Democratic Party or whatever? Or do you mean people that hold reformist views of capitalism? Cause if it's the latter, we damn well better hope that those people can come to a class analysis of the world because those sorts of opinions, I would imagine, make up a huge majority of the outlook of the working class at this point history.

The Pigeon

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by The Pigeon on May 28, 2016

naturally, I meant the many people believing in reform. which means, those people who want a better world, but just do not have the same critical edge as communists do, but are possibly receptive to an anti-capitalist movement.

Gulai Polye

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Gulai Polye on May 28, 2016

The Pigeon

naturally, I meant the many people believing in reform. which means, those people who want a better world, but just do not have the same critical edge as communists do, but are possibly receptive to an anti-capitalist movement.

There has been people in the past who were critical of capitalism but didnt had a class analysis. What they believed in was class collaboration. Later these same folks became fascists.

petey

7 years 11 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by petey on May 29, 2016

SRQ

Writing is fun

it certainly is.
SRQ i went to the site in your profile. it appears to be in finnish (maybe estonian). are you from finland?

yourmum

7 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by yourmum on September 16, 2016

without going into psychology: communists - in their development of their ideas/insight/positions - usually start out as liberals.

Khawaga

7 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Khawaga on September 16, 2016

True that. I certainly was one.

NGNM85

7 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by NGNM85 on September 22, 2016

It depends entirely on context. 'Liberal' means something very different, in different places. I will be speaking strictly to the contemporary, American usage. In this context, it refers to the center-left. I can understand this to some degree. Liberals are not radicals. They also often play a significant role in establishing, and reinforcing the boundaries of 'acceptable' thought. However, as Yourmum points out, if the socialist left is to make converts, the most likely candidates are liberals. Also, if we are to build movements, and coalitions, liberals/progressives are primarily the individuals that we would be building those coalitions with. Furthermore, to put it in perspective, conservatives beliefs are significantly more incompatible with, and antithetical to our own, comparatively speaking, therefore if anyone is going to be the target of our ire, besides the ruling class, and the political class, and the functionaries of the state, it should be them.

Incidentally, I've noticed a weird phenomenon among the radical left, which is the total inverse of the opinions I've just articulated. For a certain category, or categories of radicals the degree of contempt actually seems to rise as one moves leftward, ideologically, with the greatest ire reserved for other ostensible radicals who have committed some perceived ideological sin. This type tend to obsess over abstract virtues like 'purity.' I think these people are deeply confused, and totally counterproductive. If one spends all ones' time attacking radicals, why not just become a cop, or something?

Noah Fence

7 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Noah Fence on September 22, 2016

I can't agree with all of the last post. As I see it the liberal class are far more prevalent and effective as the sturdy foundation of capitalism. This is what makes them so reprehensible to me.
I've never been a liberal myself although many comrades of mine started on their political path so I definitely agree with that part. But sure, in my long time as an 'anarchist' I have spent most of it as a holder of many views that are dubious to say the least.
Anyways, I was out walking with Mrs Fence the other day and we saw a gang of six skinheads kicking the shit out of a liberal. 'Are t you going to help?' She said. 'No' I replied, 'the skinheads seem to be making a nice job of it without me.'

Auld-bod

7 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Auld-bod on September 23, 2016

NGNM85 #44

‘Also, if we are to build movements, and coalitions, liberals/progressives are primarily the individuals that we would be building those coalitions with. ’

If your politics are based on a class analysis of capitalism it may be possible to work with liberals in very limited ways, though to be in a coalition with them will never work out well. As someone is being used as a useful idiot.

As far as working with other ‘radicals’, they come in all guises, to the right and left. This to me is not about maintaining ‘political purity’, rather it is political incompatibility with the politics of Leninists and other authoritarians. Libcom has many examples of how ‘comradely’ these people are in practice.

Chilli Sauce

7 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Chilli Sauce on September 23, 2016

Good post, Auld.

On a broader point, we're not going to achieve any sort of success by simply uniting politicos - no matter how broadly we're willing to define a shared set of politics.

We're gonna have to move beyond this sort of political organizing and, instead, find effective ways to reach out to those around us who have shared material interests. The politics can come later. If once we're organized, liberal or lefty groups want to offer support, that's fine, but it's in a supporting role, not by building a coalition of political groups with often contradictory goals and means for achieving them.

Noah Fence

7 years 7 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Noah Fence on September 23, 2016

Chilli Sauce

Good post, Auld.

On a broader point, we're not going to achieve any sort of success by simply uniting politicos - no matter how broadly we're willing to define a shared set of politics.

We're gonna have to move beyond this sort of political organizing and, instead, find effective ways to reach out to those around us who have shared material interests. The politics can come later. If once we're organized, liberal or lefty groups want to offer support, that's fine, but it's in a supporting role, not by building a coalition of political groups with often contradictory goals and means for achieving them.

Stunningly accurate. Well said old chap.