Following the onset of the Russia-Ukraine war in February 2022, the Ukrainian government arrested and imprisoned communist youth leaders Aleksander Kononovich and his brother Mikhail Kononovich, accusing them of holding pro-Russian and pro-Belarusian political views
From what I’m seeing support was voiced for the state, not for it’s communist party. In Russia they have 57 out of 450 in the lower chamber and 4 out of 178 in the higher chamber, in Belarus it’s 11 out of 110 and 17 out of 64 (thanks to over-representation of state sanctioned trade unions, independent ones were destroyed after last elections). So what exact power over state politics do you expect they have and how representative is these states policy for communism?
I get the NATO bashing, but thinking either Russia or Belarus have anything in common with the concept of communism, other than history, is hilarious and strongly encourage you to discuss this with Russia-based communists. Wont go into discussing the nature of post-soviet communist parties as I have no time to educate westeners on the complex realities of this region, please do find someone from the region who you will trust enough to actually consider what they tell you.
My point was that you said there wasn’t any communism in those countries, not about the statement of the Ukrainian brothers, which seemed wrong since they have pretty big parties considering the state of affairs in other places. I’m not a Westerner and I have a Belorussian friend with whom I talk about the political situation of the region. I never claimed those countries are still communists.
Then ask them about the average age of these party members and their actual influence on social life and state policy. Like what actual policies they got through. In reality these parties are walking corpses of state sanctioned mostly ruled by yesteryear’s apparatchiks.
I’ve been living under one roof with Belarusians and Russians for over 10 years in a country bordering both, but love hearing explanations of what I’m seeing from such very well informed sources like your comments.
Also love your play with semantics, but could just as well claim there’s anarchism in this countries, since there are active anarchist groups. Or they are antifascist states, since there’s armed antifa militants in them, as that was the only way not to get killed by kremlin-aligned neonazi groups.
I’m not a statist (neither an anarchist), but these people you are trying to defend are traitors of their people, their communities, and their class. Russian mafia oligarchy is not better than the one thats being fought against in Ukraine by it’s social movements. Its worse, for it’s imperialism even if you imagine it has Soviet rather than it’s true Tzarist sources.
From what I’m seeing support was voiced for the state, not for it’s communist party. In Russia they have 57 out of 450 in the lower chamber and 4 out of 178 in the higher chamber, in Belarus it’s 11 out of 110 and 17 out of 64 (thanks to over-representation of state sanctioned trade unions, independent ones were destroyed after last elections). So what exact power over state politics do you expect they have and how representative is these states policy for communism?
I get the NATO bashing, but thinking either Russia or Belarus have anything in common with the concept of communism, other than history, is hilarious and strongly encourage you to discuss this with Russia-based communists. Wont go into discussing the nature of post-soviet communist parties as I have no time to educate westeners on the complex realities of this region, please do find someone from the region who you will trust enough to actually consider what they tell you.
My point was that you said there wasn’t any communism in those countries, not about the statement of the Ukrainian brothers, which seemed wrong since they have pretty big parties considering the state of affairs in other places. I’m not a Westerner and I have a Belorussian friend with whom I talk about the political situation of the region. I never claimed those countries are still communists.
Then ask them about the average age of these party members and their actual influence on social life and state policy. Like what actual policies they got through. In reality these parties are walking corpses of state sanctioned mostly ruled by yesteryear’s apparatchiks.
I’ve been living under one roof with Belarusians and Russians for over 10 years in a country bordering both, but love hearing explanations of what I’m seeing from such very well informed sources like your comments.
Also love your play with semantics, but could just as well claim there’s anarchism in this countries, since there are active anarchist groups. Or they are antifascist states, since there’s armed antifa militants in them, as that was the only way not to get killed by kremlin-aligned neonazi groups.
I’m not a statist (neither an anarchist), but these people you are trying to defend are traitors of their people, their communities, and their class. Russian mafia oligarchy is not better than the one thats being fought against in Ukraine by it’s social movements. Its worse, for it’s imperialism even if you imagine it has Soviet rather than it’s true Tzarist sources.