• @illume@lemmygrad.ml
    link
    fedilink
    172 years ago

    This first line essentially just says “Stalin believed in progress.”?? accidentally based??

    There’s always this weird need to alienate communism from reality; somehow they need to be esoteric and convoluted, so whenever we describe anything related to socialism they always make it sound like its incredibly removed from any reasonable understanding of the world, as though it can only be understood by so-called “Sovietologists”. In reality, the ideas and processes that drive socialist states are anything but idealistic or abstract, but rooted in practicality and were understood by the people writ large.

    It is somewhat surprising that this article actually does shockingly little psychoanalysis of Stalin; usually, libs love to claim that Stalin was paranoid, evil, and deranged.

  • Anarcho-Bolshevik
    link
    fedilink
    142 years ago

    The kind of socialism under which everybody would receive the same pay, an equal quantity of meat, an equal quantity, of bread, would wear the same kind of clothes and would receive the same kind of goods and in equal quantities—such a kind of socialism is unknown to Marxism. All that Marxism declares is that until classes have been completely abolished, and until work has been transformed from being a means of maintaining existence, into a prime necessity of life, into voluntary labour performed for the benefit of society, people will continue to be paid for their labour in accordance with the amount of labour performed. “From each according to his capacity, to each according to the work he performs,” such is the Marxian formula of socialism, i.e., the first stage of communism, the first stage of a communist society. Only in the highest phase of communism will people, working in accordance with their capacity, receive recompense therefor in accordance with their needs: “From each according to his capacity, to each according to his needs.”

    J.V. Stalin, 1931