Chomsky on Marx, Lenin and Socialism

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
    @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  6 ปีที่แล้ว +123

    14:28 : "so what you have is the 2 major world propaganda agencies, for their own quite different reasons, were clainming this is 'socialism', this destruction of socialism is 'socialism'. It's very hard to break out the control of the world's 2 major propaganda agencies when they agree, they agree for different reasons, but they basically agree. Then became doctrine and dogma."😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀

    • @ramirosan145
      @ramirosan145 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      thanks for posting!

    • @nickhanley5407
      @nickhanley5407 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Dr.Gavagai false. It wasn’t opposite ends of the spectrums fighting each other. They were fascists and socialists both left wing ideologies.... no matter how many times you’re grand wizard says fascism and socialism are opposites.

    • @davidparry5310
      @davidparry5310 5 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      @@nickhanley5407 Your basis for your assertion that fascism and socialism are left-wing ideologies? Let me guess - 'MUH BIG GUBMINT'.

    • @joetotale6354
      @joetotale6354 5 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      @@nickhanley5407 No educated or informed person agrees with you on that. Which kinda means, you need to get (better) educated.

    • @nickhanley5407
      @nickhanley5407 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      David Parry yep you got it. Government control of economies. That’s pretty much what it comes down to. Good job, it is the “big government” paradigm vs the freedom of individuals paradigm.

  • @solidaritytime3650
    @solidaritytime3650 4 ปีที่แล้ว +244

    Can we give credit to our editor here, for piecing through hours of Chomsky to find his most illuminating points on the subject?
    Edit: And our editor's strength of judgement in choosing which segments made the cut.

    • @maxonmendel5757
      @maxonmendel5757 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      not to mention splicing that one cut in between those two other pieces. that seemed almost perfect like one video, but I think they had to take a second source, judging by the fade to black and the static.

  • @solidaritytime3650
    @solidaritytime3650 4 ปีที่แล้ว +156

    THAT WAS A HELL OF A QUESTION LADY

    • @hoogachoga
      @hoogachoga 4 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      Hell of a question, but I think Chomsky absolutely nails the retort.

    • @ragemsaid8697
      @ragemsaid8697 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Your Brother deep

    • @bendries4123
      @bendries4123 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I think she was a Trotskyist so believed that Lenin did nothing wrong/did very little wrong

    • @kevinlaing8712
      @kevinlaing8712 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And an extremely educational answer that explains how socialism was dumped in favour of totalitarianism and state capitalism

    • @spikethomas5503
      @spikethomas5503 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It was a helluva question. It was not a retort, it was a reply.

  • @yokilewis4894
    @yokilewis4894 4 ปีที่แล้ว +187

    I couldn't agree more with Chomsky. Grown up as a Chinese, I was forced to learn all the twisted version of Marxism. Seeing all the shit happening around me, I thought Marxism is a lie and it always brings evil things. Then in university, I got to know some real Marxists (who were actually arrested later for conductiong working condition surveys). And I started reading about the books myself, I made a U-turn and became a leftist. It is through the lenses that the "communist" party of China gave me, I finally see what it really is, a right-wing nationalism and state capitalism regime.

    • @antediluvianatheist5262
      @antediluvianatheist5262 4 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      Yeah. you can stick any label on anything, but if you are not vesting power in the people, it ain't left.

    • @markus3533
      @markus3533 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Now hold up. isnt china going by Mao's vision? (Correct me if im wrong, i learn only from hearsay) Wasnt Maos view that capitalism had to run its natural course, and society would then, naturally, turn into socialism? isnt this why China still have capitalistic elements in a socialist regime? and if i understood it correctly, china plan on turning into a full socialist state by 2050?

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Very interesting! Marx was a brilliant analyst and critic of industrial capitalism but he never wrote about the nature of the socialist state at all. Those who blame Marx for the state capitalism of the Soviet Union and Communist China have simply never studied Marx. Lenin and Trotsky and Stalin and Mao were brutal dictators who called themselves “Marxists” but their practices were not consistent with Marx’s writings at all.

    • @thomdrolet2624
      @thomdrolet2624 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@syourke3 how do you implement Marx's ideas without force?

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 4 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      A Fucking Leaf What do you mean by “implementing Marx’s ideas”? What “ideas” do you refer to? Marx was a critic of capitalism. He never wrote anything about socialism. He did believe that when conditions got bad enough, the working class (industrial proletariat) would rise up and overthrow the capitalist order and seize power themselves and would create a classless society. Obviously, that has not happened.
      If what you’re asking me is whether it’s possible to create a socialist society without resort to violence, I would say, “That all depends on how the capitalist state responds to a popular revolution”. The state will probably respond with violence to any popular uprising, no matter how peaceful. That’s how the state always responds to demonstrations of mass discontent. That’s why the police today are armed like the military - they have tanks and military firearms at the ready. They are dressed like soldiers. So state violence is to be expected the minute the people rise up in rebellion. Will the people respond with violence against the police and the armed forces? Done probably will. I don’t know. I hope not. But with all the guns in the USA Today it’s hard to imagine they won’t. Our best hope is if the soldiers and police come over to the side of the people and abandon their state masters. If that happens, the revolution will succeed. If it doesn’t happen, a lot of people will probably get killed. Sad but true. ,

  • @luisdavila1767
    @luisdavila1767 4 ปีที่แล้ว +195

    Chomsky practically poses the argument “tHat wAs nOt rEAl sOciALism” and I completely agree with him even if other people constantly mock this argument.

    • @antediluvianatheist5262
      @antediluvianatheist5262 4 ปีที่แล้ว +63

      Yep. Just because theyt called it that, doesn't mean they achieved it.
      Hell, Democratic People's Republic on North Korea, is neither democratic, for the people, or a republic.

    • @erniereyes1994
      @erniereyes1994 4 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      To say that Chomsky is basically the 20th century version of Karl Marx is not a farfetched comparison. Much, if not most, of Chomsky's ideas derive from Marx and classic Marxism.

    • @contrapranto7756
      @contrapranto7756 4 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@erniereyes1994 What are you saying comrade?! The video starts with him saying that Marxian thought was pernicious for the emancipaton of humanity.
      Chomsky always had the same political ideas, he just had to read 'Nationalism and Culture' by Rudolf Rocker, its all there.
      You can compare their influence, they also have in common their rejection of Philosophy as such, but it makes no sense to say hes ideas derive from him. Chomsky vindicates the 18th century - Enlightenment, not the 19th - violence, state power and revolutions.

    • @erniereyes1994
      @erniereyes1994 4 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@contrapranto7756 it must be clear that Karl Marx and Marxism can be seen as two separate entities. If Chomsky was living and operating within the time period and region as Marx, I'm almost certain that Chomsky would have the same views, theories and arguments (his arguments against a market economy is almost a copy-and-paste of what Karl Marx said about the American economy in relation to slavery and cotton-picking). Chomsky's views on mainstream media also seems closely aligned with the spirit of Marx: I can see Marx, if he was living and operating within the 1970s and 80s, writing his own version of Manufacturing Consent.
      I believe Chomsky (unlike, say, Hitchens) possibly outgrew his admiration for Marx and his ideas, but the residue is still there.

    • @j_freed
      @j_freed 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      And of course thats a setup to the retort "The first successful experiment in Socialism is always the NEXT one..."
      I'm patiently interested in social idea systems; though they frequently fail to account for human nature & bad faith in the execution.

  • @mikeisapro
    @mikeisapro 5 ปีที่แล้ว +289

    Just realized you're the person making the "Chomsky and Peterson on ___" stuff. I like what you're doing there. It really highlights the superficiality of some of Peterson's gesticulations when you compare his take on a given topic with Chomsky's far more educated, well read, articulate, and nuanced view(s) on the same topic.

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  5 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      thanks ;)

    • @erc9468
      @erc9468 5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      How about Chomsky on Stalin? Anyone who believes, like he does, that Stalin was "right wing" is an idiot.

    • @StefanTravis
      @StefanTravis 5 ปีที่แล้ว +38

      @@erc9468 Please name one "left wing" action of Stalin.

    • @spiritualeco-syndicalisthe207
      @spiritualeco-syndicalisthe207 5 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      @@erc9468 WTF Despite all his cruel massacres, Stalin WAS in fact right wing. The Soviet system was nothing but State Capitalism, and Stalin did it the most brutal way. Literally NOT Socialism!

    • @shawndoe3594
      @shawndoe3594 5 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@erc9468 You suck at making arguments. Pathetic.

  • @dinnerwithfranklin2451
    @dinnerwithfranklin2451 5 ปีที่แล้ว +97

    Such an important mind. Thank you Professor Chomsky.

    • @ragemsaid8697
      @ragemsaid8697 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Del Seibold i am a chomskyan for once n all

    • @dinnerwithfranklin2451
      @dinnerwithfranklin2451 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Maria Sintra You are, with all due respect, an imbecile.

    • @dinnerwithfranklin2451
      @dinnerwithfranklin2451 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      You mistake not being a Zionist with being an imbecile. Thanks for proving my point.

  • @tristenm1526
    @tristenm1526 4 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I love it, he’s like an aged anarcho-syndicalist Bill Nye who’s been widened horizontally.

  • @silverdragon710
    @silverdragon710 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    18:48 I was pondering the very question today! Thank you Noam, you’re a gift from god!🤍

  • @Jay_Flippen
    @Jay_Flippen 5 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    I'm surprised this Chomsky video has not been blocked in my country yet.

    • @BrunoLima-vh1eu
      @BrunoLima-vh1eu 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      What country?

    • @Jay_Flippen
      @Jay_Flippen 4 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @@BrunoLima-vh1eu Los Estados Unidos, aka EE. UU., aka The United States of America, Соединённые Штаты Америки, 美国, or 도널드 트럼프의 퍼레이드 부지.

    • @bucketiii7581
      @bucketiii7581 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      It's the 21st century. Get a VPN.

  • @ahh553
    @ahh553 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    It is official i am addicted to Chomsky.....he is such truth speaker

  • @ThatTigr
    @ThatTigr 4 ปีที่แล้ว +96

    Chomsky DESTROYS tankie college student

    • @nebojsag.5871
      @nebojsag.5871 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @ThisIsMyRealName It would be very nice if you could actually provide sources for that Chomskian claim of Lenin destroying worker soviets and unions. But you can't can you?

    • @bing4126
      @bing4126 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Salmon lol, does this have to do with the NEP?

    • @nebojsag.5871
      @nebojsag.5871 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @Salmon Parenti already debunked that. This wasn't the systematic destruction of workers' control, it was necessary disciplinary action against particularist greed in a time of great distress.
      It's no more "state capitalist" of Lenin than it was "socialist" of Hitler to expropriate and imprison recalcitrant capitalists during a war he was fighting for *their* class interest.

    • @bing4126
      @bing4126 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@nebojsag.5871 do you have the video of parenti debunking it?

    • @nebojsag.5871
      @nebojsag.5871 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@bing4126 It's not a video, it's in one of his books, I can't remember which one atm. I think it's "Blackshirts and the Reds"

  • @maazkhanyousafzai7800
    @maazkhanyousafzai7800 4 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Fan of Chomsky thumb up 👍

  • @williamdahm5176
    @williamdahm5176 6 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    this is great

  • @devinfaux6987
    @devinfaux6987 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I hadn't heard Chomsky's take on Lenin until very recently, but I gotta say that it answers a lot of questions I've had about the USSR and PRC. Hard to rebut.

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Long story short, parenti mad. So with avakian , and partially wolff

    • @FrancisSpaghetti
      @FrancisSpaghetti 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Nuclear Confusion I was a follower of Parenti when I was a teenager. After experiencing the reality of the world and this country, I see that his constant complaining is not justified. The problem with these leftists is that they are literally amoral (read: immoral) and therefore fundamentally justify anything and everything. In short, the Parenti paradigm is a house of cards built on sand.

    • @FrancisSpaghetti
      @FrancisSpaghetti 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Nuclear Confusion I understand Parenti better than you understand yourself, and I’m sure I’ve read and listened to him more than you. The problem with Parenti is that he identifies the problem(s) very well, but his solutions are way off. He is a full fledged communist which is a direct endorsement of AMORAL/IMMORAL actors and actions such as the murder of the Tsar and royal family, murder of the rich, etc etc, but the ends DO NOT justify the means. Moral posturing is necessary when the foundation of your philosophy is Godless nothingness.

    • @FrancisSpaghetti
      @FrancisSpaghetti 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Evan Richards see above. There is a difference between being a moral person, moral philosopher, or moralizing communist. True morality comes from God alone and without God there is NO morality

    • @devinfaux6987
      @devinfaux6987 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@FrancisSpaghetti I whole-heartedly reject the notion that morality springs from God and God alone, for a couple reasons.
      1: atheists are not all mass-murdering psychopaths
      2: the natural world exhibits too much built-in cruelty, suffering and pain for me to accept that any entity that deliberately created it is a moral authority
      3: many of the actions attributed to God in the Bible depict Him as jealous and vindictive, traits that are taught as sinful for Man.
      In short, even if I completely set aside the question of whether God exists in the first place and granted that He exists exactly as depicted in scripture, I would still reject His moral authority over me and mankind as a whole.
      So good luck at changing my mind with appeals to God.

  • @kennethmarshall306
    @kennethmarshall306 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    No one is better at analysis and explanation

  • @jnananinja7436
    @jnananinja7436 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Wish he had been our president. Think of a world like that for a minute...

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      i always imagine a world or a parallel universe, where Bernie + Chomsky are presidents, with counsellor/ strategist including Carl Sagan + Neil Degrasse Tyson LOL. watching youtube while travelling intergalactic powered by fusion energy in 2010 ...

  • @xemy1010
    @xemy1010 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Fascinating video.

  • @ubuntuposix
    @ubuntuposix 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Imo Einstein in his "Why Socialism" article best represented the Socialist ideas. And he, unlike Marx.., was honest enough to admit that they don't have yet a solution for HOW exactly would the proletariat rule (without falling into a Dictatorship of the "Representative").
    Imo they didn't had enough infrastructure back then. Just like if you don't have roads you can't even have a country, if you don't have communication you can't have a Democracy.
    Socialism is Democracy on steroids, thus you have to establish a better Democracy (than Direct Democracy which has the problem of the people being dwmb and easily manipulated by the rich who own the media, or Representative Democracy which also has the problem of Populism (like Direct Democracy) but also adds the hidden agenda of the "representatives").
    Imo we need a Rational Democracy, or I'd call it actually a Spiritual Democracy (because the aim is for the impersonal Human Spirit to rule). We have the internet to write and share and compare ideas, thus the Government could be a Forum for Policy Proposals (from anyone), where not the Popular Vote, but the Arguments are the deciding factor, and maybe we can agree on a Scoring System to transparently score all policy proposals. This score should give priority according to Maslow's table of human needs and be taken as a coefficient factor (multiplied with the number of people advantaged).
    Or any other idea of a Rational Democracy, where we agree on a scoring system and we, not some "Representatives" do the ruling.

  • @celestialteapot3310
    @celestialteapot3310 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Sorry Mr Chomsky, historical materialsm does not imply a view of the mind as a blank slate, in fact quite the opposite if you consider epigenesis.

  • @PeeedaPan
    @PeeedaPan 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Nice Bernie thumbnail. Feel the Bern!

  • @paulconnelly4050
    @paulconnelly4050 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Chomsky is 100% correct. It’s not complicated. Lenin and Stalin created a slave labour society with no worker rights. America has had labour unions for a long time...therefore the US was more socialist than at any time throughout the period of the USSR. The Soviet Union was a capitalists dream come true, powerful people having total control of the workforce, with maximum profits and minimal costs. Major US corporations opened up factories in the USSR while all this was going on. I wonder why?

  • @brassen
    @brassen 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Right, so... socialism under the USSR/Europe was something like Worker's Party versus Social-Democrats of Brazil selling the gospel to both casa-grande and the senzala, with Marx tweeting from a MST Organic football-luncheon.

  • @enverhoxha2698
    @enverhoxha2698 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Chomsky is an idealist. Dialectical materialism is proven my history. How can you disagree?

    • @matthewkopp2391
      @matthewkopp2391 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Anti-idealism is the ongoing blind spot of Marxist-Leninism.
      Lenin’s essay on Kant reveals a very crude man who believed that Kant‘s intentions were to simply obscure reality. Interestingly this assessment is similar to Ayn Rand Objectivists almost as if she appropriated it from Lenin.
      Kantian philosophy was the basis on which the structure of Marxism was built-particularly as it was developed by Hegel. Hegel's dialectical method, which was taken up by Karl Marx, was an extension of the method of reasoning by antinomies that Kant used.
      People think that because Marx created dialectical Materialism that he was entirely anti-idealist. This is a poor reading.
      There are foundational ideas in Marx which are idealist in nature most notably his theory of alienation. What does in mean to be alienated from oneself and one’s own nature, this implies that we are alienated ti something a priori to our social and historical conditionings.

  • @khurmiful
    @khurmiful 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Last sentence sums it up. Most of the industrialist populace has accepted its fate.

  • @pacingBlue
    @pacingBlue ปีที่แล้ว

    ..Greek subtitles in the first bit! I am curious which tv program was that

  • @mehrshadvr4
    @mehrshadvr4 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I'm not a socialist, but I knew from the beginning when I heard socialism means workers owning the means of production then USSR China Cuba and such were not socialist because workers don't own anything there. It sounds more like workers owned businesses.

    • @matthewkopp2391
      @matthewkopp2391 ปีที่แล้ว

      Workers and citizens could own a business but it was very restrictive. Read about Lenin’s NEP policy and under Stalin he ended NEP but some businesses were allowed and Artels (collective craft workshops) were permitted and tolerated, farmers after 1933 were given 40 hectors of private plot. And you could own a home and had patent right ownership could be owned and sold.
      But under Stalin things were mostly state collectivization.
      Different laws different periods.

  • @jeffmoore9487
    @jeffmoore9487 5 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Chomsky misses a prime reason for a dedicated (vanguard) party leading the overthrow of capitalism and the attempt at socialism. I'm not an expert!
    After the Soviets took power and deposed the Tsar, it was believed by most leaders (including the Bolsheviks) that Russia should form some kind of (US style?) constitutional or representative govt. Kerensky was to lead this till Oct 1917 (roughly 7 months). Two things happened that convinced a majority in the Soviets and the majority of workers to the Bolsheviks. 1. Kerensky wasn't awake to the situation and did nothing to defend the Soviets when White Russians were going to overwhelm the Soviets and when it happened he begged the Bolsheviks to fight Kornilov (the white Russian general). This made Kerensky look weak and uninformed. The workers and Soviets then celebrated that the reds organized a militia and beat Kornilov saving a immediate defeat of the revolution. 2. Kerensky would not think beyond a Constitutional democracy. In the months between Feb and Oct 1917 the Russian people could not help but notice that the Soviets were thinking, and acting like a government even though the Soviets had been formed to create a parliamentary govt. The Soviets ran food, phones, rail, and managed to keep Petrograd fed. The Bolshevik slogan "All Power To the Soviets" was at once shocking, and at the same time, merely pointing what was already happening. The Soviets held power, elected representatives and didn't need a Constitutional setup that might even divide the workers from policy. Again the Bolsheviks and Lenin in particular led in seeing the Soviets not as a transition to but an embodiment of govt. Kerensky was still head of the "Transitional Government" and trying issuing orders to the Soviets.
    The next and largest protest of 1917 was against Kerensky and the Provisional Government that had been set up by the Soviets. This protest, led by the Bolsheviks, consolidated the thinking (all power to the Soviets) necessary for the revolution to survive and that Russia no longer sought a parliamentary form of govt.
    It wasn't a coup, at least not in Oct 1917.
    Now comes the hard part for the revolution when Soviet democracy disappears - a huge backward country (and revolution) tries to survive WW! and a civil war that destroys factories and farms, and both kills and starves millions.
    The civil war (and any war) required central authority to succeed against 15 foreign armies on 5000 miles of border. The wars have reduced Russia to 1/4 its pre-revolution size. Famine resulting from the total internal disruption of a civil war leaves the Soviets depleted of energy both from fighting over vast area, and reduced life to mere survival for the most Russians. Lenin's response was the "war economy". This is where one decides where the last food and other surviving resources and labor will go. Also during the civil war new political factions (particularly those still wanting a parliamentary govt. and blaming the Soviets and/or Bolsheviks for the disaster that is daily life in Russia) form and a fight within the revolution itself fed by deprivation begins. Lenin decides that the revolution itself must be held together long enough that the revolution in Germany can save Russia. The drastic steps of forming secret police to fend off internal factions and draconian economic decrees to resurrect farming and industry begin. Soviet democracy is now dead and awaiting life support from abroad. Lenin was also dying himself at this time and has mistakenly has appointed Stalin. Before he dies he realized Stalin is not psychologically fit and appoints Trotsky, but Stalin is already Party Secretary, has more support at the top levels and wins the battle between himself and Trotsky to lead. The Russian revolution already largely dead (from todays point of view) becomes a shadow reality still able to defeat Germany in WW2 but no longer recognizable in its origins.
    My take is that Lenin and the reds saved the revolution from Kornilov and simply recognized the fact that the Soviets themselves were govt. Lenin was defacto leader of Russia because he had the thinking necessary for a totally new reality (Soviet rule) in the historical development of govts and in revolutionary Russia.
    Chomsky fails to lay out the quickly moving events and shifts in the Russian revolution between 1917 and 1922, and for that reason is too quick and unable to accurately judge events. He also is a proponent of one of the antagonist theories that vied for leadership in revolutionary Russia. He isn't being neutral, nor can anybody really, in looking at this revolution,

    • @twong689
      @twong689 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      Lenin died of syphilis.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      He says at 21:00 that by mid 1918 the Soviets and factories councils and constituent assemblies were destroyed and Lenin was instituted as the "leader" - of the army, etc.

    • @jeffmoore9487
      @jeffmoore9487 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 Trotsky developed and led the army, not Lenin. What was your point.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@jeffmoore9487 You didn't click on the hypertext link to get the actual quote from Chomsky? I can do that for you. First I'll repost the email response I received from Chomsky in 2001:
      From: Noam Chomsky
      Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 15:56:25 -0500
      To: Drew W Hempel (by way of Noam Chomsky
      Subject: Re: Minnesota
      Dear Drew Hempel,
      God save us from our friends -- not for the first time. I'm a little
      surprised that Brokaw would credit a source like that. Surely he wouldn't
      in the case of anyone who falls within approved doctrinal bounds.
      You're quite right about activists not being willing to read. I get a good
      measure of it when publishers send sales records or in the signing frenzies
      after I give talks. In both cases it's overwhelmingly the small pamphlets
      with interviews, etc.; easy reads, and short. But it's not just activists.
      Same with academic scholars. It's very rare for them to go beyond the
      limits of the guild, a practice far more pronounced in the social sciences,
      history, etc., than in the sciences, something I've observed from a lot of
      first-hand experience in the last 1/2-century. It's too bad about
      Guerin-Rocker, and in fact all of the rich literature on anarchism.
      Contemporary anarchists -- at least those who use the name -- seem to
      divide, mostly, between people who don't want to read and those who are
      immersed in often arcane scholarship. There are exceptions, of course, but
      the tendencies are noticeable. It was quite different in the days when
      workers education was a normal part of everyday life for great numbers of
      people, and labor-based media were common fare.
      No plans for reissue of At War with Asia or For Reasons of State, much to
      my regret. In fact, they were scarcely looked at in the first place.
      Wrong story. Even left academics don't want to hear such things, and it
      went -- and goes -- beyond the interests of most activists. How far the
      anti-war movement was from understanding anything that was going on was
      revealed pretty dramatically by the reception of McNamara's awful memoirs
      -- actually welcomed by leading figures as a vindication of their stand.
      Few could comprehend what an incredible display of apologetics it was.
      Wrote a few things about it, which I noticed could not be understood even
      by left academics, for the most part. The Party Line is much more
      influential than many think.
      Thanks for sending along the excerpt from what you've been writing.
      Interesting, and well done I think -- but then, I would. I've read some of
      what Zerzan has written, under various names. Occasionally, out of
      curiosity, I've written brief letters asking if he could supply some of the
      sources for particular quotes, which I know he has invented (though I
      didn't say so). I'm constantly promised that they'll be coming. They
      won't, of course. This is just a silly game, in my opinion, defaming the
      good name of anarchism -- not for the first time; there's a rich history of
      that.
      Noam

    • @jeffmoore9487
      @jeffmoore9487 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 I don't see a hyperlink. I read what you re-printed from Chomsky. He's a good writer but I don't get anything that applies to the vid. Maybe I'm being slow, and I'm certainly not real good with digital tools. Not sure why you said Lenin was the leader of the army. I don't think its a question anyway. It's a given. The kind of fact that can be agreed on pretty easily. I also don't know what your purpose was with your last post about the destruction of the Soviet infrastructure during the civil war?

  • @animepeople9161
    @animepeople9161 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I have not read many books on comminism but i always knew the core problem is curroption and personal agenda actually in any given system with almost any ideology if it's applied with intgrity everything will be fine .

  • @JAMAICADOCK
    @JAMAICADOCK 5 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Marx said socialism will take on different forms in different societies, based on means of production, history, political culture.
    In that sense, Marxism is little different to capitalism, democracy, Christianity, Islam or any other ideology. E.G. Capitalism the Catholic Church, Islam, even democracy - are very different in the Philippines, India, Egypt etc to what they are in the West. Brutal conditions, create brutal politics.
    So I think it's naive to believe Libertarian socialism would've lasted in Russia and China. Even today, Russia and China are not democratic, let alone when they were emerging from feudalism.
    In many developing countries, the forces of reaction are too strong to subdue democratically. In fact in developed nations we are reaching a point whereby reactionaries may need to be suppressed
    it's high time we deconstructed Liberalism and democracy, not seeing them as ideologies per se, but rather as superstructures of imperialism.
    Luxuries of the strong wealthy countries with large petty bourgeois populations trusted to vote in accordance with elite interests.
    As the West gets poorer, and reactionaries become more dangerous, the Western Left may need to exert more force. The consequences of not doing so could be catastrophic for the poor of the world.

    • @matthewkopp2391
      @matthewkopp2391 ปีที่แล้ว

      Original Liberalism was an Anti-capitalist populist philosophy. There are clear examples of this with Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson. I can’t go into everything but aside from guaranteed rights of citizens, both we’re vehemently anti-monopoly, and it’s important to know what monopoly meant: when the interests of the few dominate over the interests of the many. And both advocated for redistribution of wealth in two different ways but same principle. Look up Jefferson‘s letter to Madison in regards to taxing land monopolies and you get a clear idea of this but there are numerous writings on similar issues.
      Jefferson was intentionally not invited to the constitutional convention and Jefferson had many objections to the document.
      It is much clearer to say that by appealing to liberalism the new government could claim to be legitimate (consent of the governed).
      But in reality only half of liberalism was ever implemented, the half that did not threaten wealth.
      I personally believe that real original liberalism is archaic we no longer live in an agrarian society so a lot of its form is no longer tenable. But from liberalism we can extrapolate a set of important necessary ideas as to what an economically independent individual may look like and how it should be applied in modern society.
      The agrarian focus was that of self sufficient independent labor (sovereign individuals). Which could be translated now as the right to self sufficiency in the least and freedom from coercion of labor.
      So-called liberal democracies are obviously oligarchies which use liberalism and democracy as rhetoric to obscure reality.
      But certain aspects are in fact in the law and we benefit from them to some extent.
      But IMO any socialism which does not square fairly with the achievements of liberalism will in fact create just another tyranny.

    • @JAMAICADOCK
      @JAMAICADOCK ปีที่แล้ว

      @@matthewkopp2391 Adam Smith was the economic guru of liberalism and still is to a large extent. And the failures of Jefferson and Paine speak volumes, that's the way liberalism always goes. Everyone has free speech but the rich can afford more of it than anyone else.
      And liberal democracies are tyrannies, they just deploy money as a means of control rather than violence, but when the money stops working they soon opt for violence.
      But Marxism is a completely new paradigm in world history so is often misunderstood. Marxists don't see liberals as people with rights, they just see them as class enemies, as criminals out to swindle the poor.
      Liberals are seen as bourgeois enablers of fascism, by granting freedom to fascists they are fascist enablers. We saw what happened in Germany with liberals that took control in the 1920s -sorry but anyone protecting the rights of fascists after 80 million deaths, really are degenerates.
      And how is that opposed to tyranny, when black, Jewish, Latino, homosexuals have to live in fear of the revival of fascism?
      Sorry but locking up fascists is just locking up criminals as I see it.
      You see Marxists see property as tyranny, religion as tyranny; you don't get free from tyranny by having religious freedom or access to property rights
      So what you see as Marxist tyranny is really just a different jurisprudence. Don't break Marxist laws and there's really nothing to worry about. As in don't fright against the working class interest. Don't profiteer, don't support fascists, don't enable fascists, don't enable the forces of religion to swindle the working class. These are pretty simple rules, and make rational sense. Much what you call freedom is just freedom to commit crime from a Marxist point of view.

  • @christopherkeane2295
    @christopherkeane2295 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Don't know if Chomsky ever spoke much about socialism in East Germany. The German Democratic Republic (GDR) was arguably the most advanced socialist state until its annexation by the Federal Republic of Germany following the end of the Berlin Wall. Women in the GDR had more status, social equality and rights than their sisters in West Germany. The people of GDR were simply absorbed into greater Germany along with the country's significant industrial and commercial assets. Not exactly a democratic or liberal act by a reunified Germany.

  • @nyimboyahaki9843
    @nyimboyahaki9843 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Do you have the full video of whats going on at 13:00

  • @zinedino.fficial2030
    @zinedino.fficial2030 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    What kind of reasons does he say at 0:47 ?

  • @matthewkopp2391
    @matthewkopp2391 ปีที่แล้ว

    Although I largely agree with Chomsky in regards to democratic worker control of industries, his claim is that it didn’t exist at all, which is not true. For example the independent Artels during the Stalin era were cooperative craft workshops existed then and til the end. And the attitude was that of tolerating it because of its cooperative structure looked more like socialism than capitalism. It’s not like the ideas vanished completely. Also in the DDR the cooperatives that existed ended up suing the new United German government because the cooperatives were officially not state institutions but private institutions. And there were various other examples of this.
    The point I am making is the idea of the socialism that Chomsky speaks of never vanished but was marginalized to state collectivism.
    And when Gorbachev instituted his first reforms they were in fact cooperative industries.
    But here is one of the real issues. The cooperative industries under Gorbachev faced the realities of market forces, some failed and some succeeded. This instability worsened the conditions of the USSR, and the one’s that succeeded sowed resentment of a new semi wealthy class.
    Before the USSR, Bismarck instituted what was called Staatsocialismus which gave no power to workers but provided a very basic welfare state.
    So perhaps a better understanding would be to call the USSR and Eastern Bloc a type of Bismarck Staatsocialismus where instead of a monarchy aristocracy and capitalist class there was the Vanguard party and a much more generous welfare state.
    So, although it may not be the 19th century version of socialism, it had some similarities to social democratic states with truncated guaranteed rights in some areas and expanded guaranteed rights in other areas.
    The guaranteed right to housing, work, education, and medicine were something. Other rights like religion were in the constitution but often violated.
    The question is does the USA have anything to do with liberalism? The USA got a small fraction of liberalism when it was founded, for example it still had slaves, permitted monopolies, limited voting rights etc.
    So one could equally make the hyperbolic charge the USA has nothing to do with liberalism.
    And to be fair to Lenin, he said „we don’t have socialism we have to build it.“ the writers of the US constitution actually claimed it was liberalism.
    And the fact that the USSR and Eastern Bloc had some resemblance to Staatsocialismus and Social Democracy should imply that such forms can and often do fall into bureaucratic tyranny especially when it is outside of the populations control altogether.

  • @johnedwinoliver6842
    @johnedwinoliver6842 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Volume Not Loud Enough

  • @EdMcStinko
    @EdMcStinko 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Chomsky beast mode: 5:00

  • @clockfixer5049
    @clockfixer5049 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Seems silly arguing Lenin destroyed socialism when he himself understood what was going on and that it was the only way to oppose counter-revolution. I can hardly believe Noam is not aware of the intervention by a dozen countries after the revolution.
    Lots of points are not quite substantiated.
    > Says 'socialism can be built in the most economically developed countries'
    > Blames Lenin for building a temporary state capitalism (Russia at that point was still far from capitalism, most of capital came from abroad thus penetrating the economy.
    Lenin saved the country, plenty of evidence there, but Chomsky still lays yet more stress on 'AUTHORITARIAN'.
    Sir, it couldn't be otherwise. I mean, that's a ridiculous claim that the country would just slip into 'proper socialism' - it'd be gone within, if not days, than weeks.

    • @alexrock4113
      @alexrock4113 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nikolas Torn your mediocre understanding about what he said leads you into some woods not even you know how did you get into them. Let me simplify it for you. The core definition of communism does not include any word that says dictatorship, totalitarians or anything of that fashion. Left wing communists like Rosa Luxembourg and a anarco sindicalists understood very well that any hierarchy of power leads only to corruption. History prove them right. What is missing in this compilation is that communism as defined clearly was never implemented in any country ever.

    • @clockfixer5049
      @clockfixer5049 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Alex Rock god bless the child. Go read Communist Manifesto NOW, you undergraduate aspiring idealist. (Hint: not a word about hierarchy, you thought it up in your brainless heads when in reality nobody ever wrote about that).

    • @clockfixer5049
      @clockfixer5049 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Alex Rock to understand what I wrote, u need to do some homework anyway.

    • @juanmanikings
      @juanmanikings 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@clockfixer5049 LOL only stupid people like you think tha comunnism manifesto advocates for a totalitarian dictatorship i'm not a comunnist i'm social democrat but hilarous how the right wing brainless people think that anything from the left only results in totalitarian dictatorships that just shows how stupuid most right wing people are

  • @0MVR_0
    @0MVR_0 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Kind of surprised that Gramcsi believed in the tabula rosa.

  • @tracksuitjim
    @tracksuitjim 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    also, i've heard leninists say that for, at least a few decades, the ussr didn't have wage labor. they had a system where workers got a minimum pay and if they exceeded the level of production represented by that minimum the full value of that extra was added onto their pay (or something like that lol i only just learned that the other day, still shaky on it). so is chomsky wrong when he claims the ussr had wage labor or is he referring to a later time in the ussr (i think wage labor was reintroduced in the 60s?)?

    • @Pubhooligan74
      @Pubhooligan74 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      hhhhh They got paid according to the quantity and quality of their work. In practice this was “amount” based. Meaning, if you’re a coal miner, your quota is let’s say 1 ton of coal. You get a base salary for 1 ton of coal. Every percentage you mine over that (i.e 10% [1.1 ton], 15% [1.15 ton], 20% [1.2 ton] etc. It differs between different enterprises and fields) is paid as a particular percentage of your base salary on top of your already received base salary. For example, you got paid a base-salary of 300 roubles after meeting your quota, but you mined 1.2 tons (20% over your quota). 20% above quota is paid out as I.e 30% your base salary, so you get paid an extra 100 roubles. In the end, base salary 300 roubles + over fulfilling quota by 20% (100 roubles) = 400 roubles
      The USSR was Socialist, all it takes is learning some history to understand this.

    • @SEAL341
      @SEAL341 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Pubhooligan74
      So some thing like piece work, as we would say in the UK?

    • @mikeisapro
      @mikeisapro 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      ​@@SEAL341 Yes. Also, google is extremely helpful for this. Or use DuckDuckGo.
      However, whether or not that was how workers got paid has nothing to do with whether or not the USSR was socialist.

    • @SEAL341
      @SEAL341 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mikeisapro I wasn't making any such assertion, so I don't know why you had to say that last bit.

    • @mikeisapro
      @mikeisapro 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@SEAL341 Ah, I was referring to Biggie ventura8's last line. He concludes that "The USSR was Socialist, just read history" after spouting all those details about wages, as if it somehow followed from that.

  • @luigi-drums9002
    @luigi-drums9002 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    my main question is if Chomsky identifies two opposing stages of Marx's thought, i.e. the earlier socialist libertarian vs the later and more radical historical materialist (which by his own admission inspired orthodox Leninism), then how can he so conclusively deny the connection between Marxism and its more morbid derivations. Is he really saying the later Marx is not real Marxism, or that the later Marx is not real socialism, because as he mentioned it reduces humans to 'clay' that can be moulded by a radical vanguard, opening the ideology to authoritarian drifts?

    • @monkeymox2544
      @monkeymox2544 4 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Because one doesn't necessarily follow from the other. If Marxism conclusively led to Leninism by itself, then Lenin wouldn't have had to invent Leninism. Its just a simple fact that Marx had very little to say on what a post-capitalist society would look like. He did think that communism was an economic necessity, and had his own ideas about where and how it would develop, but there's nothing in any of his writing about gulags, dictatorships, or vanguard parties. In many ways, things like Maoism and Leninism are direct contradictions of orthodox Marxism, because they attempted to artificially bypass the productive forces of capitalism which were required to build a communist society - Marx thought that the first revolutions would take place in the most developed economies like Britain, after capitalism had run its course, not in states which were still basically feudal and didn't have the material base to even feed their own populations.

    • @VincentTroia
      @VincentTroia 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@monkeymox2544 “because one doesn’t necessarily follow from the other” is a perfect way to start that reply. it’s the crux of the explanation.

  • @MCUPW
    @MCUPW 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Amazing

  • @tracksuitjim
    @tracksuitjim 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    does anybody know where marx wrote about the revolutionary potential of peasants?

    • @whatshisname2497
      @whatshisname2497 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      His letters... Marx has a lot of writings. Sadly, most of it is dry and boring. If you can read it and understand it, kudos, because there is plenty of nuggets there.
      Some of the things he predicted were later proved wrong, but a great deal has been proved right.

    • @tracksuitjim
      @tracksuitjim 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@whatshisname2497 awesome thank you!

    • @whatshisname2497
      @whatshisname2497 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      No problem. ✊

    • @carmenhorn1620
      @carmenhorn1620 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Peasant War in Germany... later Lenin and Mao wrote a lot more on that

  • @landongonzales1143
    @landongonzales1143 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    where can I find the full video of the one that starts at 21:08?

  • @anthonykenny1320
    @anthonykenny1320 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Noam keeps saying that the workers need to be in charge of the means of production
    I wish he would enlarge on that and explain exactly how
    It seems so idealistic and impractical

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Have you ever heard of something like a Kibbutz?

    • @TheThreeStrikes
      @TheThreeStrikes 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I mean, it's just like worker co-ops but on the scale of entire societies. It isn't too hard to imagine, imo. It's just very different from what we've been taught to think of as normal and "natural"

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TheThreeStrikes The crux of the matter lies in our understanding of what society deems ordinary and innate. What truly defines 'normal'? Is family inherently natural, or does capitalism/socialism fit this description more aptly? Furthermore, is heaven or our earthly existence the true embodiment of 'God's country'? Are lofty, idealistic goals practical or meaningful in advancing survival and progress?
      Although uncertain, I do ponder the consequences of unproductive lines of thought and beliefs.

  • @kojipreston7662
    @kojipreston7662 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Fairly brand new to this topic and I can appreciate the nuances Chomsky is trying to draw out here.
    As I hear the back and forth from those for or against socialism I always hear people say that socialism failed miserably enough in the 20th for us to throw it away.
    Chomsky here is saying all those examples simply WERE NOT ACTUAL socialism if you consider the absolute dogma to be workers control of production.
    So my question would be for Chomsky, are there any examples of that ACTUAL socialism being practiced at some decent enough degree that we can analyze data from?
    Anyone have any examples they would like to refer me to?
    Thanks a ton, God bless you all.

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      noth korea is "democratic" by its own name, and recently china declared to be the most "democratic" state on planet earth.

    • @kojipreston7662
      @kojipreston7662 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@WeltschmerzvonGavagai Right right but those nation states don't practice the original socialism that Chomsky was talking about right? Workers ownership of production?
      Do you know of any examples where that core he was talking about has been practiced sir?

    • @DreBourbeau
      @DreBourbeau 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@kojipreston7662 the nearest thing we currently have to the kind of bottom-up, directly democratic socialism Chomsky refers to is in Rojava. there are lots of historical examples - anarchist Catalonia, Makhnovia in Ukraine, the Paris Commune, Soviet workers’ councils before 1918 - but none lasted very long, at least not long enough to be considered anything more than experiments

    • @kojipreston7662
      @kojipreston7662 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@DreBourbeau thank you for the reply, I'll take note of these examples and do my best to research/understand them. God bless

  • @patrickholt2270
    @patrickholt2270 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I believe Marx and Engels also called for central planning of the economy, which implicitly requires that the business decision of the workplace be alienated from the workers there, whether you call it a nationalised industry or a co-op, since the agricultural sector of Soviet model economies tended to be co-ops, officially. If I'm right, then there is a contradiction there from the beginning, that is a legacy of the Utopian socialists who advocated planned economy. Part of Marx's Critique of Political Economy is about the chaos of market economies and their intrinsic tendency to periodic crises which destroy livelihoods and production, and the need to overcome that chaos and irrationality in the course of bringing society under conscious collective control. To that extent I think Prof. Chomsky was exaggerating the difference between Marx's conception of socialism and the Soviet practice for the sake of effect. The other thing that he seems to be ignoring is the need for a strong state to secure the revolution, and this is any revolution with remotely socialist objectives or character, against Imperialist interference from outside, the inevitable and repeated attempts to impose counter-revolution by all the methods that the US and the European colonial empires which are subsumed within the US's global hegemony, habitually employ.
    Speaking of counter-revolutions, it is also worth remembering that popular uprisings of the people against their overlords and wealth-owning classes have always faced violent repression and slaughter going back thousands of years, and such unreasonable responses to demands for democracy and redistribution of wealth and vilification of those movements and leaders making those demands long preceded Lenin and the October Revolution, or Coup if you prefer. Lenin and the Bolsheviks are not to be blamed for arousing the hostility of capitalists and of imperialism as if everything would have been rosy and simple for socialists and the working class to take charge of society and steer us out of capitalism if only Lenin had never published his version of _What is to be Done?_ and split the RSDWP. Lenin was in nappies when the French ruling class, in collusion with Prussian imperialism, massacred the Communards in Paris. Anti-communist "historians" tend to want to backdate all atrocities against workers, peasants and millenarians to Lenin's account, justifying one wholesale massacre after another as necessary pre-emption of a Stalin Tyranny going back to the Reformation or beyond, and use Lenin's name to assert that revolution is necessarily nothing but terrorism aimed at creating dictatorship.
    The question is how to restore proletarian democracy and workers' control if and when the threat of external interference from Imperialism has been overcome? This is why Marx talked about world revolution, and hoped that the revolution would start in the most highly developed industrialised capitalist economies, which controlled the great empires of the 19th century, and why the question of whether the Russian Revolution was going to spread and be joined by other European states in solidarity with it, or was going to be isolated and forced to deal with its famine, underdevelopment, mass poverty and urgent defence needs on it's own and under global blockade was so decisive after February 1917 for the political discourse inside the Bolshevik party and across the whole revolutionary spectrum it was part of.

  • @TheDavid2222
    @TheDavid2222 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    What's interesting is that Chomsky only appreciates Marx's idealists phase. He has no comprehension whatsoever of Marx's scientific achievements.

  • @pietzsche
    @pietzsche 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Why is the sound always so fucking bad on Chomsky vids?

  • @dialecticalveganegoist1721
    @dialecticalveganegoist1721 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    "Trotsky was a mainstream Marxist untill 1917"
    Holy shit I can't 😂😂😂😂

    • @FrankCoffman
      @FrankCoffman 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Trotsky was an executioner, an evil fanatic.

  • @fasteddie4145
    @fasteddie4145 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Professor Chomsky should try some non-fiction for a change....

  • @HamzaKhan-br6lg
    @HamzaKhan-br6lg 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Classical criticism on classical Marxism. Those points which are highlighted by professor Chomsky as flaws or shortcomings are interpreted by the Neo Marxist in a way different from the classical Marxism.

  • @corneliuscorker4143
    @corneliuscorker4143 5 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Lenin may not have been perfect but he knew how to deal with royalty

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      no, he's just another dictator

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @King Hokum the saddest thing is u dont' know and u dont know u dont know . lol;. u have to take more redpills like a tone of them LOLOLOL

    • @Cd5ssmffan
      @Cd5ssmffan 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@Nuclear Confusion Ah, the crypto fascist shows himself.

    • @corneliuscorker4143
      @corneliuscorker4143 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Salmon pf course they did the same way all Royals do...it's the Kharma of oppression

    • @corneliuscorker4143
      @corneliuscorker4143 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      spare the children of course

  • @jayzbreemo
    @jayzbreemo 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I like Chomsky and believe he’s genuine, but it seems obvious that his prominence as an intellectual is owed to the impotence of his political convictions. It’s all well and good to criticize the powers that be, but you’re no threat to that power when you equally condemn any revolutionary movement the instant it gains any institutional power of it’s own.

  • @phylwx
    @phylwx 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Well, this explains why anarchists eat that much CIA narrative.

    • @tarasivashchuk1973
      @tarasivashchuk1973 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      phylwx Care to elaborate what you mean?

    • @phylwx
      @phylwx 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@tarasivashchuk1973 chomsky uses the same propaganda technics he criticize in "manufacturing consent " for capitalist interest here.
      Probably something to do with the CIA funding his MIT research.

    • @tarasivashchuk1973
      @tarasivashchuk1973 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@phylwx I'll have to look into that, never heard anything like that before

    • @dancode9738
      @dancode9738 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@tarasivashchuk1973 Don't, it's idiotic. The idea is that since MIT has done a lot of work in support of the Pentagon, you know research and development of high technology. That if someone teaches there, then they must secretly be a CIA operative that is saddled up to the state. Pushing liberal propaganda as some kind of leftist gatekeeper.

  • @nkenchington6575
    @nkenchington6575 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    i am the walrus?

  • @ThunderFire101
    @ThunderFire101 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Anyone else disagree around 25:30ish where chomsky says the fall of the soviet union is good for socialism? I get his argument, but does the place splintering, declining birthrate, sacking of the state and making it into an ultranationalist cesspool make it any better? Don't think so.

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Its a victory of socialism bcz a totalitarian anti marxism who self claimed communism state collapsed but it doesn't means the new regime is a socialism marxism state

    • @brandonhinojosa4202
      @brandonhinojosa4202 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Bertrand Russell was also a total hawk regarding the Soviet Union. He was deathly afraid of Soviet proliferation. Plus, it's historically accurate to compare the Bolshevik uprising to the Nazi uprising; all of the leftist originations were destroyed, & dissenters incarcerated or executed.

    • @dialecticalveganegoist1721
      @dialecticalveganegoist1721 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It was real socialism and was glorious, cope

    • @ssssssssss1638
      @ssssssssss1638 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      two things can be bad. te world isnt a binary

  • @maxheadrom3088
    @maxheadrom3088 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Those subtitles are like greek to me!

    • @christosbinos8467
      @christosbinos8467 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Same. I also happen to be Greek, so when something is like Greek to me, that's a pretty good sign

    • @maxheadrom3088
      @maxheadrom3088 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@christosbinos8467 People in Greece speak Greek from a very young age ... it's to fair! lol

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@maxheadrom3088 In Greece, even the dogs understand Greek.

  • @deptusmechanikus7362
    @deptusmechanikus7362 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Infantile trotskist at his best

  • @BrainInJar
    @BrainInJar 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    So his criticism of actual Marxism is 'Marx thought humans were like clay'. Great. Stunning refutation.

  • @peshawajalal2492
    @peshawajalal2492 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    *Confused Jordan Peterson voices*

  • @RJKYEG
    @RJKYEG 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Will we forever be arguing that this was not real Marxism, real socialism, or real capitalism, or real liberalism?

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  3 ปีที่แล้ว

      u don't have to if u agree with what they said. i mean propagandized. lol

    • @matthewkopp2391
      @matthewkopp2391 ปีที่แล้ว

      Well read Jefferson‘s ideas of taxing monopolies out of existence and ask yourself if we have real liberalism? The USA adopted some liberal ideas of guaranteed rights of man but the specific ones which were adopted were the ones which didn’t threaten wealth to much. Jefferson employed Madison to include freedom from monopolies in the Bill of Rights.
      The same issue can be said of the Soviets. Is communist vanguardism even remotely democratic? Lenin certainly had socialist ideas but he didn’t adopt the one‘s which threatened his power.
      Just like the federalist did not adopt the liberal ideas that threatened their wealth

  • @alsmith2431
    @alsmith2431 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    22:00

  • @enverhoxha2698
    @enverhoxha2698 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Chomsky also didn't read Capital. Marx looks at real data throughout the book, not some abstract ideal

  • @diegomoreno5927
    @diegomoreno5927 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    i'd love to hear his opinion of socialism in latin american countrys

    • @imavileone7360
      @imavileone7360 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Do you not know how to Google? And what "socialism" are you blabbering about? The only form of socialism I've seen in my lifetime is that of Corporate socialism.

    • @erc9468
      @erc9468 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@imavileone7360
      The nationalizations of industry in Venezuela don't count as socialist policies?

    • @imavileone7360
      @imavileone7360 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@erc9468 nationalization of what industries?

    • @erc9468
      @erc9468 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@imavileone7360
      Hm. YOu're not familiar with the nationalizations of minerals, oil, banking, etc

    • @MichelleHell
      @MichelleHell 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@erc9468 Venezuela has been a petrostate since the 1920s. It's always had a problem with corruption and capital flight, before the socialists took power. It got worse when they took power for the same reason any other country does when they elect a socialist - economic warfare. Latin America has a history of imperialism and class divisions between the light skinned compradores and dark skinned natives. Socialism for them was more about asserting autonomy over their affairs and helping the natives (themselves) who had been subjugated for so long.

  • @alvarcap8141
    @alvarcap8141 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    "working people take control of production". Easy to say when is someones else's production.
    I wonder if professor Chomsky has ever let people take control of his production. I guess he hadnt, because his name, his reputation, his money, his future was on the line. I assume a guy this smart doesnt want to have someone else speak for him or mess with this ideas. This is a major contradiction that i find with educated people defending socilalism. I would say, how about your first run a company, know what its like to come up with an idea, execute it, invest in it, hire people, assume responsibilities, have the government take 40% of your profit on a monthly basis and then listen to a charlatan who has never stepped inside a factory telling you how its supposed to be ran?

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      1st thing 1st have u finished the video and know waht u r talking about? lol

    • @alvarcap8141
      @alvarcap8141 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@WeltschmerzvonGavagai what is the part that i got wrong? educate me please

  • @mahnamahna3252
    @mahnamahna3252 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Fix the audio....

  • @CapybaraEnjoyer95
    @CapybaraEnjoyer95 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    "My god, I've never heard of a man who was more empirically wrong." - Zizek.
    Does he misunderstand Marx's background and evolution, or is he just being disingenuous? The speaker in the third clip has an excellent point.

    • @dancode9738
      @dancode9738 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Zizek is a bit of a troll imho.

    • @hans-joachimbierwirth4727
      @hans-joachimbierwirth4727 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      And as such not premium quality. More of the black friday Walmart offering quality "Buy two get one free" type. He is the free one.

  • @diegomoreno5927
    @diegomoreno5927 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    wait is chomsky a liberal or a marxist

    • @dillonhinkle6985
      @dillonhinkle6985 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Marxist

    • @hoogmonster
      @hoogmonster 5 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @@dillonhinkle6985 He's an anarchist.

    • @robertpirsig5011
      @robertpirsig5011 5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@dillonhinkle6985 He calls himself a anarcho-syndicalist. Google it, he explains it quite well.

    • @aleksandarcankulovski9070
      @aleksandarcankulovski9070 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I think they call them the regressive left now🤔

    • @dillonhinkle6985
      @dillonhinkle6985 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ThisIsMyRealName you lost me when you said Marx is a smart guy lol

  • @1Domenic1985
    @1Domenic1985 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is we're you are wrong! The first step was affordability and feed the hungry! The coup was not a coup but an uprising of the suppressed! The idea was to get everyone on the same page, create an army, create a work force, and equality across the board! Lenin was not a politician he was a lawyer and the goal was to fight for the people and since you where not their and I don't think you should comment. Don't forget the starvation the czar did or the execution of workers! Lenin laid the foundation of a great nation!

  • @namaan123
    @namaan123 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    FYI Milton Friedman’s and Thomas Sowell’s work handily dismantles socialism from a purely economic prospective

    • @Supernautiloid
      @Supernautiloid 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Except their work is completely demolished by the historic facts. If you examine the history of China and Russia from a purely economic perspective, putting aside the genocidal atrocities, what happened there was nothing less than economic miracles. Socialism turned the collapsed nation of Russia into an industrial powerhouse that went on to invent space travel. And China of course went on to drastically eradicate poverty and to rival the United United as their main economic competition. Sowell and Friedman are buffoons that cling to debunked nonsense for emotional reasons. No thinking person pays attention to them anymore.

    • @namaan123
      @namaan123 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Supernautiloid this is indicative of the new reality where basic facts of history are up for grab based on one’s ideological lens. I thought much like you until I considered that perhaps what I think is informed by an ideological lens that I happen to wear. Nations succeed economically, at least, when they adopt free market principles, regardless of the form of government.

    • @Supernautiloid
      @Supernautiloid 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @namaan123
      Except there is no evidence for that whatsoever. Everyone has an ideological lens, because we are only human. That’s why we rely on empiricism and verifiable facts to show us the pathways towards truth. And the objective reality is that the great economic successes of nations, including the United States, happened specifically because their markets were NOT free. The US is the prime example of this. It’s markets are not even remotely free and they never have been. That’s why it grew into an economic powerhouse. Conversely, when countries actually do try to apply free market principles, the few times it’s actually been authentically implemented, it has always ended in disaster and ruin.

    • @namaan123
      @namaan123 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Supernautiloid No, we hope our empiricism overcomes our peculiar ideology, but this is generally not the case. Your understanding despite all evidence to the contrary is testament to this. You may want to give Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell a try, even if it's just to prove me and him wrong.

    • @namaan123
      @namaan123 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Supernautiloid In fact I should say that empiricism and rationality falling prey to our ideologies, to our egos, is the human story throughout history. It's just now becoming central due to the vast proliferation and ubiquity of "facts" in this age of information.

  • @AynManRand
    @AynManRand ปีที่แล้ว

    Interesting that at 27:00 Chomsky ignores the Democratic party and Southern APOLOGISTS who used the term "wage slavery".

  • @Dasein2005
    @Dasein2005 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    21:07

  • @Solidfreeman01
    @Solidfreeman01 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    seriously. you have more to do with changing the volume and bass than listening....

    • @0MVR_0
      @0MVR_0 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      Headphones help, yet you are right.
      Adjusting the frequency levels could help eliminate the background white noise.
      This is very technical and time consuming, so for now we listen to the VHS quality.

  • @robertpoen5383
    @robertpoen5383 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Why so much editing? Suspicious.

  • @johncates6215
    @johncates6215 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Democracy propaganda vs Socialism propaganda

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  4 ปีที่แล้ว

      socisliam = democracy, except u've been "propagandize" LOL

    • @johncates6215
      @johncates6215 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@WeltschmerzvonGavagai Nope, I've no interest in Politics, I'm just here for Chomsky.

    • @johncates6215
      @johncates6215 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@WeltschmerzvonGavagai It's just two different systems claiming they are more superior than the other, it's an restless game which I grew tired to watch.

  • @kouroshmarx8646
    @kouroshmarx8646 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    He's talking that much shit about Lenin...unbelievable.

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      he didn't talk shit about lenin, lenin IS shit!

    • @kouroshmarx8646
      @kouroshmarx8646 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Einen der größten Männer der Geschichte zu beleidigen. XD
      Die Bolschewiki haben wenigstens was getan. Die Anarchisten kriegen nichts anderes auf die Reihe als alle anderen schlecht zu reden. Wer Lenin als Antidemokrat und Antisozialist bezeichnet ist dumm und schwachsinnig.

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@kouroshmarx8646 nein

    • @kouroshmarx8646
      @kouroshmarx8646 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@WeltschmerzvonGavagai "nein"? Ok da wissen wir Bescheid.

  • @mickelamanuel7330
    @mickelamanuel7330 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Anton Pancake

  • @loyisomalobola687
    @loyisomalobola687 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    To reduce what happened in Russia or the Soviet Union to few lines doesn't add any value to the socialist argument. In fact all he does is repeat the same argument over and over without elaborating on it. Nearly every Marxist agreed that a popular revolution that would sweep away tsarism was long overdue, they only disagreed on the nature of the revolution. the majority felt it was a bourgeois or democratic revolution, but Trotsky argued that since the Russian bourgeoisie was in its infancy and thoroughly reactionary they could never be expected to play a similar role like their French counterparts had done. Lenin and Trotsky both agreed that the Russian economy was too backward to build socialism, in fact it was Stalinist propaganda which claimed Russia to be a communist state (which by the way is an oxymoron), Trotsky wrote extensively on this and exposed it for what it truly was. My problem with Professor Chomsky is his failure to delve deeper into the Russian Revolution - I know he believes October was a coup, but what about February - and this is unfortunate because with his knowledge of socialism and anarchism he could've made a genuine contribution to our understanding of the 20th century. Its easy to point out what is wrong in society, the real work is when you trying to provide solutions for all these problems and I honestly feel here is were Chomsky has been found wanting.

  • @sotospeak415
    @sotospeak415 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Tankies are so weird

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  4 ปีที่แล้ว

      u r no better than the weirdest tankie on this planet lol

    • @sotospeak415
      @sotospeak415 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@WeltschmerzvonGavagai got me there boy

  • @cbraat27
    @cbraat27 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    So, Marx believed in peasants revolution? Like Khmer Rouge Cambodia?

    • @Raph42O
      @Raph42O 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Pol pot was a C.I.A. agent

  • @mattlowe1276
    @mattlowe1276 ปีที่แล้ว

    Bro speak up

  • @enverhoxha2698
    @enverhoxha2698 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    There it is: he says the rhetoric isn't helpful. It's somehow helpful to agree with anticommunist propaganda that socialism has never worked?? Lmao we Leninists will continue to organize while Chomsky sits in his ivory tower and cries about Lenin being too mean

    • @enverhoxha2698
      @enverhoxha2698 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Salmon Lenin was not a mass murderer. He saved lives the Tsarist regime would have taken. He pulled out of WW1, and freed the serfs.
      And about helpful, I think we agree about what he's saying, my point is that he's swallowing the MSM narrative whole, that people don't think socialism has ever worked. Why concede this gigantic point? People are not stupid, they have just been propagandized. So why agree with the media's lies?? Socialism has worked, everywhere it's been tried, but neither Chomsky nor the capitalists will ever say so.

    • @enverhoxha2698
      @enverhoxha2698 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @booseyhey I think this is arguing semantics. Chomsky says USSR wasn't socialist, I say it was, but we agree it was a socialist-oriented project, and our main disagreement is whether to accept the MSM narrative that it was an evil empire, or to take a critical stance and examine the Soviet Union holistically, and praise the gains in workers rights and standard of living.

    • @enverhoxha2698
      @enverhoxha2698 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Salmon just curious, would you call every US president a mass murderer?

    • @enverhoxha2698
      @enverhoxha2698 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Salmon I assume you're an anarchist. What should the Soviet Union have done during WW2 if it had splintered into chaos following the revolution? If you think any rule is unjust, then in reality you just get one leader overthrowing another repeatedly. You see this in countries like Burkina Faso

    • @enverhoxha2698
      @enverhoxha2698 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Salmon Your distinction between just and injust rule is antimaterialist. What colors a country's rule is the ruling class. In the Soviet Union the ruling class was the working class, judging by their focus and actions.

  • @xsvforce3335
    @xsvforce3335 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Its time for a new word for socialism. Same core principle, just a fresh start. Social democracy is one such word but it too long. How about Workmocracy, caplite, or something.

  • @StoryoftheEye
    @StoryoftheEye 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    x

  • @Booer
    @Booer 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is so lame. Parenti is more based

  • @younggotti8195
    @younggotti8195 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    This guy was a hipster before hipsters existed....bumbling around trying to sound intelligent without actually saying anything of substance

    • @WeltschmerzvonGavagai
      @WeltschmerzvonGavagai  5 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      i'm sure u r the only one had the red pill lol

    • @younggotti8195
      @younggotti8195 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@WeltschmerzvonGavagai what?

    • @hoogmonster
      @hoogmonster 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@younggotti8195 He said plenty of substance. Maybe listen harder next time.

    • @younggotti8195
      @younggotti8195 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@hoogmonster false...just ramblings of an old man

    • @hoogmonster
      @hoogmonster 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@younggotti8195 You haven't had a valid argument yet. Just a bald opinion. Please be assured I understand your opinion. Its just patently invalid as an argument or claim to evidence.