Not just here, but also on reddit and other social media.
Sure, there is a propaganda war brewing wherein a lot of Western media are pushing exaggerated narratives, Adrian Zenz is a theological dope of an academic, and the CIA has a vested interest in accelerating conflict, etc. but surely there’s got to be room to also address the shortcomings of China as well? Whether it’s about LGBTQ+ issues, or the exploits of Chinese capitalism, or being able to criticize or make fun of Xi, I see posts here routinely and systemically brigaded and comments downvoted to oblivion that even sniff at criticism of China.
I consider myself a free agent, and China’s meteoric rise gives me some hope for a brighter tomorrow (in contrast to the US), but this blatant campaign of social media manipulation gives me pause for concern. It just screams insecurity and makes me not trust what feels like a counter-propaganda narrative. (Mods, please never get rid of the downvote counter.)
Anyway, here’s hoping for a brighter future, but please let ideas breathe.
Thanks for listening.
STOOOOP YOURE DOING IMPERIALISM QUESTIONING AN IMPERIAL POWER
No, you’re aiding an imperial power by wasting time questioning its greatest enemy, which it actively tries to exploit. China does shitty stuff, I’m American, I can’t solve it. I can help solve the problems in our country though, and our country is actively killing civilization, it’s citizens, and anyone brown it sets its sights on.
The narrative sometimes feels like media spin from corporate HR.
I remember a comment where someone was asking if making social media posts in China comparing Xi to Winnie the Pooh are banned or met with penalty, and the response was
I assure you Winnie the Pooh is not banned in China.
It’s like, bro you totally ignored the question. Creepy stuff.
They act like if you criticize a socialist state you’re helping the CIA which is I guess true in a negligible way, but that ignores that the anarchists, trotskyists, immediatists, left coms and maoists criticizing socialist states are the same folks who are often the first to smash up career centers, blockade arms fairs and burn their draft cards.
It adds to the red scare that is currently occurring, and is a waste of time. Like, nothing we say can affect China, so why waste the energy that should be spent organizing?
Because our aspirations are the guiding myths for our organizing. If our aspirations are the end of the division of labor, the end of commodities, life for its own sake our organizing is going to be a lot more ambitious than if our goal is to create another capitalist state with good welfare and less imperialism. Welfare and anti imperialism are fantastic goals, but the Christians were fighting for heaven and the Bolsheviks for the end of class society. These are the kinds of myths that move masses.
There might be a healthier way of doing this, without uncritically supporting the CCP.
We pull the baby from the bathwater, pointing out the obvious benefits of the positive aspects: not having landlords, central economic planning, and state-owned enterprises have allowed the PRC’s economy to shut down to actually quarantine covid patients and come out a couple months later smelling like fucking roses, not to mention their desert greening project and slow march towards decarbonization which might be worth emulating in western Green New Deal programs. We can point to the Cubans thriving despite decades of sanctions and blockades, providing healthcare, housing, and education and living incomes to all, and contributing to the cutting edge of medical research. There are probably numerous other positive elements in currently existing not-quite-socialist states which we can also point to as worth emulating and preserving in a completely socialist state.
We can do all of this and argue they have pieces of the puzzle needed for socialism that western and fully-capitalist economies are so often missing, while acknowledging the objective obstacles to full socialism and remaining critical of the subjective shortcomings of workers’ states that emerged from objective pressures (e.g. the Dengist turn).
Is it already the time for this one again?
Western leftist criticisms of China are largely completely pointless, and only contribute (however slightly) to harmful propaganda narratives.
Many western leftist have lost their faith in the people in their own countries and seek hope from identifying with China. This creates the reactions you can see online, but way more importantly is misanthropic and reactionary. Not good.
Conclusion: please stop chinaposting.
Many western leftist have lost their faith in the people in their own countries and seek hope from identifying with China.
This is what makes me think the western Xi stans are fooling themselves and that this is just a massive cope. The alternative is an extremely hopeless scenario in which there is no immediate prospect of the restoration of a true socialist hegemon to counterbalance the US’s batshit scorched-earth imperialism. This is the reality western Trots have been living in for almost a fucking century (and some western Maoists, for nearly half a century) and they still attempt to organize and party-build in the belly of the beast in conscious spite of the extremely bleak conditions in front of them, trying to cobble together the post-Cold-War ruins of old working-class coalitions in the firm belief that world socialism is still demonstrably possible, without any expectation of aid from a friendly foreign power.
I would love to be proven wrong about my pessimism w.r.t. Xi walking his talk, purging the Dengists as soon as possible, cracking down on the CCP’s billionaire members, and playing an active role in aiding international revolution as the US collapses. But I have a hard time imagining any counterfactual scenario in which the western Xi and CCP stans don’t spend at least a couple decades in denial, and march right into the same opportunist pitfalls the old Capital-C Communist Parties did (opportunism, entryism into succdem and neoliberal coalitions, popular frontism, etc.), followed by further Dengist degeneration under the weight of capitalist siege and a collapse triggering the same existential crisis and sense of crushing defeat that followed the destruction of the USSR in the '90s.
By the way, side question: what’s the difference between a Marxist-Leninist and a tankie? I’ve heard some say they’re interchangeable and others strongly object to the comparison.
you got three good answers but here’s a detailed pasta (by /u/fatpollo of reddit) relevant to the whole thread
in case anyone’s curious what a “tankie” is
Tankies don’t usually believe that Stalin or Mao “did nothing wrong”, although many do use that phrase for effect (this is the internet, remember). We believe that Stalin and Mao were committed socialists who, despite their mistakes, did much more for humanity than most of the bourgeois politicians who are typically put forward as role models (Washington? Jefferson? JFK? Jimmy Carter?), and that they haven’t been judged according to the same standard as those bourgeois politicians. People call this “whataboutism”, but the claim “Stalin was a monster” is implicitly a comparative claim meaning “Stalin was qualitatively different from and worse than e.g. Churchill,” and I think the opposite is the case. If people are going to make veiled comparisons, us tankies have the right to answer with open ones.
To defend someone from an unfair attack you don’t have to deify them, you just have to notice that they’re being unfairly attacked. This is unquestionably the case for Stalin and Mao, who have been unjustly demonized more than any other heads of state in history. Tankies understand that there is a reason for this: the Cold War, in which the US spent countless billions of dollars trying to undermine and destroy socialism, specifically Marxist-Leninist states. Many western leftists think that all this money and energy had no substantial effect on their opinions, but this seems extremely naive. We all grew up in ideological/media environments shaped profoundly by the Cold War, which is why Cold War anticommunist ideas about the Soviets being monsters are so pervasive a dogma (in the West).
The reason we “defend authoritarian dictators” is because we want to defend the accomplishments of really existing socialism, and other people’s false or exaggerated beliefs about those “dictators” almost always get in the way - it’s not tankies but normies who commit the synecdoche of reducing all of really existing socialism to Stalin and Mao. Those accomplishments include raising standards of living, achieving unprecedented income equality, massive gains in women’s rights and the position of women vis-a-vis men, scaring the West into conceding civil rights and the welfare state, defeating the Nazis, ending illiteracy, raising life expectancy, putting an end to periodic famines, inspiring and providing material aid to decolonizing movements (e.g. Vietnam, China, South Africa, Burkina Faso, Indonesia), and making greater strides in the direction of abolishing capitalism than any other society has ever made. These are the gains that are so important to insist on, against the CIA/Trotskyist/ultraleft consensus that the Soviet Union was basically an evil empire and Stalin a deranged butcher.
There are two approaches one can take to people who say “socialism = Stalin = bad”: you can try to break the first leg of the equation or the second. Trotskyists take the first option; they’ve had the blessing of the academy, foundation and CIA money for their publishing outfits, and controlled the narrative in the West for the better part of the last century. But they haven’t managed to make a successful revolution anywhere in all that time. Recently, socialism has been gaining in popularity… and so have Marxism-Leninism and support for Stalin and Mao. Thus it’s not the case that socialism can only gain ground in the West by throwing really existing socialism and socialist leaders under the bus.
The thing is, delinking socialism from Stalin also means delinking it from the Soviet Union, disavowing everything that’s been done under the name of socialism as “Stalinist”. The “socialism” that results from this procedure is defined as grassroots, bottom-up, democratic, non-bureaucratic, nonviolent, non-hierarchical… in other words, perfect. So whenever real revolutionaries (say, for example, the Naxals in India) do things imperfectly they are cast out of “socialism” and labeled “Stalinists”. This is clearly an example of respectability politics run amok. Tankies believe that this failure of solidarity, along with the utopian ideas that the revolution can win without any kind of serious conflict or without party discipline, are more significant problems for the left than is “authoritarianism” (see Engels for more on this last point). We believe that understanding the problems faced by Stalin and Mao helps us understand problems generic to socialism, that any successful socialism will have to face sooner or later. This is much more instructive and useful than just painting nicer and nicer pictures of socialism while the world gets worse and worse.
It’s extremely unconvincing to say “Sure it was horrible last time, but next time it’ll be different”. Trotskyists and ultraleftists compensate by prettying up their picture of socialism and picking more obscure (usually short-lived) experiments to uphold as the real deal. But this just gives ammunition to those who say “Socialism doesn’t work” or “Socialism is a utopian fantasy”. And lurking behind the whole conversation is Stalin, who for the average Westerner represents the unadvisability of trying to radically change the world at all. No matter how much you insist that your thing isn’t Stalinist, the specter of Stalin is still going to affect how people think about (any form of) socialism - tankies have decided that there is no getting around the problem of addressing Stalin’s legacy. That legacy, as it stands, at least in Western public opinion (they feel differently about him in other parts of the world), is largely the product of Cold War propaganda.
And shouldn’t we expect capitalists to smear socialists, especially effective socialists? Shouldn’t we expect to hear made up horror stories about really existing socialism to try and deter us from trying to overthrow our own capitalist governments? Think of how the media treats antifa. Think of WMDs in Iraq, think of how concentrated media ownership is, think of the regularity with which the CIA gets involved in Hollywood productions, think of the entirety of dirty tricks employed by the West during the Cold War (starting with the invasion of the Soviet Union immediately after the October Revolution by nearly every Western power), and then tell me they wouldn’t lie about Stalin. Robert Conquest was IRD. Gareth Jones worked for the Rockefeller Institute, the Chrysler Foundation and Standard Oil and was buddies with Heinz and Hitler. Solzhenitsyn was a virulently antisemitic fiction writer. Everything we know about the power of media and suggestion indicates that the anticommunist and anti-Stalin consensus could easily have been manufactured irrespective of the facts - couple that with an appreciation for how legitimately terrified the ruling classes of the West were by the Russian and Chinese revolutions and you have means and motive.
Anyway, the basic point is that socialist revolution is neither easy (as the Trotskyists and ultraleftists would have it) nor impossible (as the liberals and conservatives would have it), but hard. It will require dedication and sacrifice and it won’t be won in a day. Tankies are those people who think the millions of communists who fought and died for socialism in the twentieth century weren’t evil, dupes, or wasting their time, but people to whom we owe a great deal and who can still teach us a lot.
Or, to put it another way: socialism has powerful enemies. Those enemies don’t care how you feel about Marx or Makhno or Deleuze or communism in the abstract, they care about your feelings towards FARC, the Naxals, Cuba, North Korea, etc. They care about your position with respect to states and contenders-for-statehood, and how likely you are to try and emulate them. They are not worried about the molecular and the rhizomatic because they know that those things can be brought back into line by the application of force. It’s their monopoly on force that they are primarily concerned to protect. When you desert real socialism in favor of ideal socialism, the kind that never took up arms against anybody, you’re doing them a favor.