The secession of Donetsk and Luhansk maps neatly with how Donetsk and Luhansk voted prior to 2014:
It’s fairly clear that the Donbass region did not appreciate the Banderites couping the president supported by the Donbass.
As for imperialism, it isn’t the pursuit of a single state over many nations, in the modern era it is a stage in capitalist development characterized by the dominance of finance capital (the merger of bank capital and industrial capital) and the proliferation of global monopolies. This forces a system of international extraction in the form of capital export, through systems like the IMF, and backed militarily by systems like NATO. Europe, the US, etc. are imperialist, Russia is not.
As for what you claim to experience, it’s largely government propaganda from capitalist dictatorships. Fascism is rising in Europe because of the decay in imperialism, and fascism needs an enemy. Russia is not interested in attacking Europe and has no reason to do so, unless imperialist organizations like NATO continue to encircle and entrap it.
Funny enough, war with Europe is even less likely now, as Russia has increased economic ties with prospering countries like China, and the US/Ukraine blew up the Nordstream pipeline. Europe has a real potential to gain from Russian LNG, as Europe still needs it, but Russia is doing just fine economically thanks to working with more stable business partners. Russia has nothing to gain from war with Europe.
How do you distinguish the truth from European / capitalist propaganda and Russian propaganda?
I’m happy to re-examine my views of the situation here, but the claims you make do not correspond to any media or state reporting in my region, which includes publicly owned sources, corporate sources and independent sources. Some of that is capitalist propaganda for sure, but a lot of it is clearly aligned against capitalist interests. Yet they report similar hostilities from the Russians, and similar reports on imperialist (in the definition I gave above) agenda from the Russians.
If none of those can be trusted, what can? Only sources outside the EU?
What kind of source on Russian hostilities would change your mind on the matter?
What’s “true” is based on facts and evidence, how we interpret truth causes stark disagreements. How we highlight, omit, and even falsify information all plays a role in changing viewpoints and presenting the same information in different ways. Which sources are reported critically vs. uncritically, etc.
In the context of capitalist states like those found in Europe, both the public and private sectors serve the capitalist class, and as such are not aligned against capitalist interests. The state is not outside class society, but within it.
Independent media is more likely to be anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist, such as The Grayzone and Liberation News. Sources from socialist/progressive governments, like CGTN, TELESUR, and Granma are also obviously anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist. I’m sure there are socialist orgs in Europe doing their own reporting, such as PTB in Belgium.
I’m not sure what you think you can change my mind on, what specifically do you disagree with that I’ve said? Which claims do not correspond to the reality you believe you are seeing?
I’m not sure what you think you can change my mind on, what specifically do you disagree with that I’ve said? Which claims do not correspond to the reality you believe you are seeing?
Not so much interested in changing your mind on something specific, but I think the only valuable version of this conversation is dialectical. Theredore I’m very interested to hear what ways you imagine changing your mind on matters such as the role of Russia in international politics.
If you can’t imagine changing your mind, then I can’t really learn much from the conversation, but if you can, I’d love to hear how, and reconsider my own view.
For clarity, you are referring to dialectics in the traditional Greek sense, and not in the Marxist sense, dialectical materialism? For me, analysis needs to be on the basis of dialectical and historical materialism, and the facts and evidence need to be indisputable.
At the present moment, because Russia doesn’t have the same imperialist role that the west has in the world, the periphery is siding with Russia at increasing rates (though mostly China), and is therefore charting an alternative that allows the periphery to escape the underdevelopment traps the imperial core has set out for them. In this manner, Russia is playing a progressive role in undermining imperialism, not advancing it.
Ukraine, as a tool used by the west without care for the lives lost, is presently under a Banderite regime engaged in repressions against the Donbass region. The west is harvesting Ukraine for resources and using it as a battering ram to weaken Russia, in order to get Russia to concede to imperialist domination like what happened in the 90s after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
For clarity, you are referring to dialectics in the traditional Greek sense
Yes, in the sense that a good faith conversation between people of opposing understandings of the world can lead to a synthesized, higher understanding.
The facts and evidence need to be indisputable.
Would a source be automatically untrustworthy if it disputes your claims? If a source reports that Russia is currently undertaking an aggressive campaign of hybrid warfare in Europe, or if it claims that Russia is an authoritarian regime currently engaged in a war of choice and aggression in Ukraine, what could make you take that source seriously? Would that mainly be if the source is sponsored by a communist state?
People can certainly say things, but this is all analysis and opinion based on underling facts. Do you disagree with what I have said? Do you agree with the factual basis, but not my analysis?
Further, all states are instruments of class authority by which the ruling classes cement themselves, so to speak of one in particular as an “authoritarian regime,” it implies European countries are not also “authoritarian regimes” dominated by capitalists. The major difference is that Russia is dominated by the Russian nationalist bourgeoisie, while European countries (especially Germany, France, and the UK, but all are complicit and benefit from it to different degrees) are dominated by finance capital and the big imperialists.
Do you disagree with what I have said? Do you agree with the factual basis, but not my analysis?
It’s a little unclear to me. For example, you so far appear to have denied the fact that Russia is engaged in a hybrid warfare campaign against Europe. Do we agree that this is a true statement?
Another fact I’d like to agree on is that Russia invaded Ukraine, attacked it’s capital and started a war has led to the meaningless slaughter of hundreds of thousands of common working class people who could have otherwise contributed to the fight for global justice.
Do you agree that these are factual statements? Then we can discuss analysis.
If not, what type of source could change your mind?
What is a “hybrid warfare campaign against Europe?” Russia is not at war with Europe, except through Ukraine, which NATO is supplying heavily. This sounds like a divergence in analysis, rather than facts.
As for Russia starting the war, no, the West did in 2014 when they backed the Banderite coup. The civil war has been going on since then, and Russia joined in 2022. The war was avoidable if the west had not provoked it, and Ukraine would be better off had the west not supported the coup.
Authoritarian is a largely meaningless pejorative. All states/countries/political groups etc. must be authoritarian by necessity in class society.
Does it make sense to distinguish the degree of authority that a state wields over its citizens? And by extension, does it make sense to distinguish to which extent citizens can act to hold the state accountable for its actions?
Does it make sense to distinguish the degree of authority that a state wields over its citizens
Not particularly no. More or less authority is largely inconsequential in comparison to the actual important question of class character of the state. Authority of who wielded against who, for what purpose. A workers state that violently represses fascists and the bourgeoisie and a fascist state that violently represses labour organisations are both “authoritarian” however I hope you can agree in reality in every way that matters are in fact diametrically opposed.
does it make sense to distinguish to which extent citizens can act to hold the state accountable for its actions?
Yes but this is not a question of authority but again of class content. For example China is “authoritarian” but we have for more control over our state than for example Amerikans or the British.
Authoritarian obscures for more than it explains and is so broad as to be largely useless for meaningful analysis thus leading it in the modern day of hegemonic liberalism and capitalism to being used as shorthand for “enemy of the EuroAmerikan hegemony” much like regime.
The secession of Donetsk and Luhansk maps neatly with how Donetsk and Luhansk voted prior to 2014:
It’s fairly clear that the Donbass region did not appreciate the Banderites couping the president supported by the Donbass.
As for imperialism, it isn’t the pursuit of a single state over many nations, in the modern era it is a stage in capitalist development characterized by the dominance of finance capital (the merger of bank capital and industrial capital) and the proliferation of global monopolies. This forces a system of international extraction in the form of capital export, through systems like the IMF, and backed militarily by systems like NATO. Europe, the US, etc. are imperialist, Russia is not.
As for what you claim to experience, it’s largely government propaganda from capitalist dictatorships. Fascism is rising in Europe because of the decay in imperialism, and fascism needs an enemy. Russia is not interested in attacking Europe and has no reason to do so, unless imperialist organizations like NATO continue to encircle and entrap it.
Funny enough, war with Europe is even less likely now, as Russia has increased economic ties with prospering countries like China, and the US/Ukraine blew up the Nordstream pipeline. Europe has a real potential to gain from Russian LNG, as Europe still needs it, but Russia is doing just fine economically thanks to working with more stable business partners. Russia has nothing to gain from war with Europe.
How do you distinguish the truth from European / capitalist propaganda and Russian propaganda?
I’m happy to re-examine my views of the situation here, but the claims you make do not correspond to any media or state reporting in my region, which includes publicly owned sources, corporate sources and independent sources. Some of that is capitalist propaganda for sure, but a lot of it is clearly aligned against capitalist interests. Yet they report similar hostilities from the Russians, and similar reports on imperialist (in the definition I gave above) agenda from the Russians.
If none of those can be trusted, what can? Only sources outside the EU?
What kind of source on Russian hostilities would change your mind on the matter?
What’s “true” is based on facts and evidence, how we interpret truth causes stark disagreements. How we highlight, omit, and even falsify information all plays a role in changing viewpoints and presenting the same information in different ways. Which sources are reported critically vs. uncritically, etc.
In the context of capitalist states like those found in Europe, both the public and private sectors serve the capitalist class, and as such are not aligned against capitalist interests. The state is not outside class society, but within it.
Independent media is more likely to be anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist, such as The Grayzone and Liberation News. Sources from socialist/progressive governments, like CGTN, TELESUR, and Granma are also obviously anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist. I’m sure there are socialist orgs in Europe doing their own reporting, such as PTB in Belgium.
I’m not sure what you think you can change my mind on, what specifically do you disagree with that I’ve said? Which claims do not correspond to the reality you believe you are seeing?
Thanks, I’ll look into it!
Not so much interested in changing your mind on something specific, but I think the only valuable version of this conversation is dialectical. Theredore I’m very interested to hear what ways you imagine changing your mind on matters such as the role of Russia in international politics.
If you can’t imagine changing your mind, then I can’t really learn much from the conversation, but if you can, I’d love to hear how, and reconsider my own view.
For clarity, you are referring to dialectics in the traditional Greek sense, and not in the Marxist sense, dialectical materialism? For me, analysis needs to be on the basis of dialectical and historical materialism, and the facts and evidence need to be indisputable.
At the present moment, because Russia doesn’t have the same imperialist role that the west has in the world, the periphery is siding with Russia at increasing rates (though mostly China), and is therefore charting an alternative that allows the periphery to escape the underdevelopment traps the imperial core has set out for them. In this manner, Russia is playing a progressive role in undermining imperialism, not advancing it.
Ukraine, as a tool used by the west without care for the lives lost, is presently under a Banderite regime engaged in repressions against the Donbass region. The west is harvesting Ukraine for resources and using it as a battering ram to weaken Russia, in order to get Russia to concede to imperialist domination like what happened in the 90s after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
Yes, in the sense that a good faith conversation between people of opposing understandings of the world can lead to a synthesized, higher understanding.
Would a source be automatically untrustworthy if it disputes your claims? If a source reports that Russia is currently undertaking an aggressive campaign of hybrid warfare in Europe, or if it claims that Russia is an authoritarian regime currently engaged in a war of choice and aggression in Ukraine, what could make you take that source seriously? Would that mainly be if the source is sponsored by a communist state?
People can certainly say things, but this is all analysis and opinion based on underling facts. Do you disagree with what I have said? Do you agree with the factual basis, but not my analysis?
Further, all states are instruments of class authority by which the ruling classes cement themselves, so to speak of one in particular as an “authoritarian regime,” it implies European countries are not also “authoritarian regimes” dominated by capitalists. The major difference is that Russia is dominated by the Russian nationalist bourgeoisie, while European countries (especially Germany, France, and the UK, but all are complicit and benefit from it to different degrees) are dominated by finance capital and the big imperialists.
It’s a little unclear to me. For example, you so far appear to have denied the fact that Russia is engaged in a hybrid warfare campaign against Europe. Do we agree that this is a true statement?
Another fact I’d like to agree on is that Russia invaded Ukraine, attacked it’s capital and started a war has led to the meaningless slaughter of hundreds of thousands of common working class people who could have otherwise contributed to the fight for global justice.
Do you agree that these are factual statements? Then we can discuss analysis.
If not, what type of source could change your mind?
What is a “hybrid warfare campaign against Europe?” Russia is not at war with Europe, except through Ukraine, which NATO is supplying heavily. This sounds like a divergence in analysis, rather than facts.
As for Russia starting the war, no, the West did in 2014 when they backed the Banderite coup. The civil war has been going on since then, and Russia joined in 2022. The war was avoidable if the west had not provoked it, and Ukraine would be better off had the west not supported the coup.
Not particularly interested in the rest but,
Authoritarian is a largely meaningless pejorative. All states/countries/political groups etc. must be authoritarian by necessity in class society.
Regime again is a meaningless pejorative. Might as well say designated bad country ™.
Does it make sense to distinguish the degree of authority that a state wields over its citizens? And by extension, does it make sense to distinguish to which extent citizens can act to hold the state accountable for its actions?
Not particularly no. More or less authority is largely inconsequential in comparison to the actual important question of class character of the state. Authority of who wielded against who, for what purpose. A workers state that violently represses fascists and the bourgeoisie and a fascist state that violently represses labour organisations are both “authoritarian” however I hope you can agree in reality in every way that matters are in fact diametrically opposed.
Yes but this is not a question of authority but again of class content. For example China is “authoritarian” but we have for more control over our state than for example Amerikans or the British.
Authoritarian obscures for more than it explains and is so broad as to be largely useless for meaningful analysis thus leading it in the modern day of hegemonic liberalism and capitalism to being used as shorthand for “enemy of the EuroAmerikan hegemony” much like regime.
If this was the case everyone on the lower democracy index should be called authoritarian, like Russia, Ukraine, France, Paraguay and Indonesia.