this post was submitted on 30 Oct 2024
30 points (96.9% liked)

Ask Lemmygrad

812 readers
93 users here now

A place to ask questions of Lemmygrad's best and brightest

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] redtea@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 3 weeks ago

Maybe think of it as more like engine than car. There are circumstances where you would add a qualifier to be more specific: jet engine, combustion engine, steam engine, etc.

I'm an ML but I'll call myself ML, Marxist, or Leninist depending on the company and environment. Usually for emphasis and specificity. Marxist or Leninist aren't quite accurate but they can be useful.

If I'm trying to bring someone along who might be converted, I'll use Marxist. It's softer. In some circles, Marx is only known as a generic philosophical thinker. The revolutionary aspect is forgotten or not known. It can be less threatening, which can get someone to listen. Engels can work like this, too. This also explains why 'Marxist' isn't quite accurate – it includes too many revisionists, western Marxists, etc.

Leninist is good for conservatives who don't know wtf they're talking about but who are unrepentant libs. Putting the Leninist up front puts the revolutionary element right in their face. It can be a relatively hostile manoeuvre with those who will not give an inch even to progressive liberal reforms, nevermind revolution. Sometimes that's needed and if there's a crowd it can be fun to get onto it.

Leninist is also good for all types of libs who might hear the M of ML and think of tame western academic Marxism. Some people need to know that sensible people have read and respect Lenin. But then I'll need to go back and explain the diamat and himat of Marx and Engels. I.e. 'Leninist' on it's own feels incomplete because it only really refers to Lenin's contributions to Marxism, rather than to the whole of Marxism.

With anyone, the full ML description must come at some point, when they're ready for it and it's subtleties. Lenin is still safer than Stalin and Mao despite the obvious connection to revolution. Lenin is slightly more rehabilitated because he didn't live through the mid and late USSR. (Have a look at Tucker's editorial comments in his Reader on Lenin to see how 'Leninist' might imply a distance from Stalin's USSR.)

If you start with ML and have to talk about Stalin to explain the synthesis, you might just lose people. But if you can first explain some Marx and/or Lenin, you can get round to Stalin later and people might actually read all three – or promise to do so, anyway.

It does depend. I've had some luck starting with a critical defense of the purges but only after developing a relationship entirely without talking about politics until they already think I'm 'normal'. That way they can't dismiss me as a conspiracy theorist/extremist.

Deviating from the label ML is just a way of indoctrinating people with whatever rhetoric will be most useful. The deviation does mean implying a difference from ML as M and L are different to ML. For me, that might be to lure people into it with a false sense of security. Depends on how much you will interact with someone and how much you're willing to work with them.