yeah but i'm not sure that in obscuring that putin is doing anything different than his predecessors.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 12 November 2014 17:42 (eleven years ago)
and that Jacobin piece in general, idk, he's critiquing Snyder for implying that Hitler + Stalin were morally equivalent (I don't think that's a claim that comes through particularly strong in the book - which is more about how both were morally abhorrent in their own special ways) but what does Jacobin want? To explain how Stalin wasn't as bad as Hitler? This is some pretty sick stuff imho.
― Mordy, Wednesday, 12 November 2014 17:42 (eleven years ago)
both were morally abhorrent in their own special ways
I don't see how this is arguable really. obviously Putin's into rehabilitating/emulating Stalin to some degree, but that doesn't change this essential fact.
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 12 November 2014 17:44 (eleven years ago)
America is not a fascist country, at least not yet. oh god
― Mordy, Wednesday, 12 November 2014 17:46 (eleven years ago)
yeah i find my eyes rolling way up into my head with every other jacobin article. kind of the internet hardman (grad-school variety) of leftist media.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Wednesday, 12 November 2014 17:50 (eleven years ago)
sometimes they have really smart stuff, though, and i find myself frustrated when an intelligent piece suddenly descends into callow sloganeering.
And I don't understand what your pov here is - are you trying to rehabilitate Stalin or just excuse Putin's rehabilitation?
Neither - i don't think that, if Putin was seeking to rehabilitate Stalin there's a great deal of evidence of it in his comments to the students when seen in context. The point he seems to have been making is that Russia wasn't the only country at the time to seek to appease Hitler or opportunistically take land and they were not, in any way, logistically prepared for war when the deal was struck.
Turning those comments into a wider piece about Russia attempting to create a new Molotov-Ribbentrop pact with European Neo-Nazis to divide and conquer Central / Eastern Europe is transparently silly.
A stronger case for Putin following a Stalinist model or a far-right model could be made using the evidence of him curtailing the press or the appalling treatment of migrant workers but, again, it needs to be argued on solid ground.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Wednesday, 12 November 2014 17:58 (eleven years ago)
Has anyone seen Sergei Loznitsa's Maidan? Saw it a few days back, loved it. It really showed how much work goes into a revolution. And how much money it undoubtedly took. Some amazing imagery, and stirring moments when crowds sing or shout 'Glory! Glory!' Of course, now the whole thing looks bittersweet.
― Frederik B, Wednesday, 12 November 2014 22:19 (eleven years ago)
America is not a fascist country, at least not yet. oh god― Mordy, Wednesday, 12 November 2014 17:46 (Yesterday) Permalinkyeah i find my eyes rolling way up into my head with every other jacobin article. kind of the internet hardman (grad-school variety) of leftist media.
― Mordy, Wednesday, 12 November 2014 17:46 (Yesterday) Permalink
Nah, I reckon it's ok: Ferguson, Arizona, Supreme Court gutting the voting rights act, *electric fucking shocks routinely used in courtrooms* etc, etc. There's more than enough fascistic stuff going down, and indeed on the rise, in the US for this sort of wording not to seem hysterical.
― intelligent, expressive males within the greater metropolitan (Bananaman Begins), Thursday, 13 November 2014 09:55 (eleven years ago)
This is a much better article on the Putin comments and how they fit into his wider effort to 'control history'.
http://www.eurasianet.org/node/70906?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Thursday, 13 November 2014 17:58 (eleven years ago)
Ferguson, Arizona, Supreme Court gutting the voting rights act, *electric fucking shocks routinely used in courtrooms* etc, etc. There's more than enough fascistic stuff going down, and indeed on the rise
none of these things are historical anamolies, I hate to break it to you. So either the US has either always been a fascist country (ie back before there was a voting rights act, there were immigrant quotas, massive racial violence, institutionalized discrimination, lynchings) or your definition of fascism is v wrong.
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 13 November 2014 18:01 (eleven years ago)
'OK, what the fuck' about sums up this load of tosh.
― R. Stornoway (Tom D.), Thursday, 13 November 2014 18:06 (eleven years ago)
Kadyrov claims his units have killed Al-Shishani, which is likely to be equally dubious.
Russia has a long history of fictionalised accounts of white women mysteriously turning up to fight for its enemies.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Thursday, 13 November 2014 18:11 (eleven years ago)
Nah, I reckon it's ok: Ferguson, Arizona, Supreme Court gutting the voting rights act, *electric fucking shocks routinely used in courtrooms* etc, etc.
not sure what specifically you're referring to re: "arizona" but as someone who actually lives there i can attest that the right-wing nutjobs who live here are generally too lazy and smug to be "fascists."
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 13 November 2014 18:55 (eleven years ago)
o boy thx 4 schoolin me poindexter
Course there's a load of fascistic tendencies running right through US history. And there's a whole heap that continues into the present day. Therefore, *like I said*, it isn't hysterical to write something like "America is not a fascist country, at least not yet."
See? He's saying America isn't a fascist country! I agree!
― intelligent, expressive males within the greater metropolitan (Bananaman Begins), Thursday, 13 November 2014 20:18 (eleven years ago)
this is a useful argument, let's keep it going for another 2,500 posts.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Thursday, 13 November 2014 20:32 (eleven years ago)
tbh i'm not sure why i should trust a writer who's appalled by the suggestion that stalin was in the same category as hitler and then turns around and throws out the blithe suggestion that america is on the road to becoming 'fascist.'
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 13 November 2014 20:33 (eleven years ago)
Putin Sends his Leopard to the Battlefield of Eastern Ukraine: Sophisticated Russian weapons have been spotted near Dontesk, signalling a dangerous new phase of conflict may be underway.
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/files/images/cropsnar-10m1_1rl232-m2_ground_sea_battlefield_surveillance_radar_mt-lb_tracked_armoured_npo_strela_russia_640_001leopard.jpg
― Mordy, Thursday, 13 November 2014 20:54 (eleven years ago)
i find the residual soviet apologism among parts of the left kind of baffling.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Thursday, 13 November 2014 21:15 (eleven years ago)
even if it's just reflexive.
i was just thinking about that. is it just the consequence of a political ideology not sophisticated enough to distinguish categories beyond Western-Imperial hegemony and Other?
― Mordy, Thursday, 13 November 2014 21:17 (eleven years ago)
it isn't hysterical to write something like "America is not a fascist country, at least not yet."
it is hysterical, because the implication is that America was less fascist in the past and becoming more fascist now - and then you point to a bunch of examples of things that were actually *worse* in the past...
why do I bother, agree this argument is not worth having
xp
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 13 November 2014 21:18 (eleven years ago)
tbf we're talking about a tiny tiny slice of people here
yeah, but the fact that /anyone/ who wasn't invested in it once upon a time would still have a kind of reflexive semi-apologist stance is weird. like why would some 30something writer for jacobin try to mince words about stalin?
― I dunno. (amateurist), Thursday, 13 November 2014 21:22 (eleven years ago)
idk those Int'l Socialist Organization people are just insane, is how I more or less break it down
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 13 November 2014 21:28 (eleven years ago)
once one of them told me I was "reading the wrong histories"
(tbf at the time he was defending Mao, not Stalin)
― I dunno. (amateurist), Thursday, November 13, 2014 2:22 PM (8 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
zizek
― mattresslessness, Thursday, 13 November 2014 21:31 (eleven years ago)
If describing Stalin as a "bloody tyrant", a "super-tyrant" and a "monster" is mincing words then idk what the straight butter sauce, no marinara would be. The point is not that Stalin was anything other than a grotesque horror, it's that echoing the argument that the rise of Nazi ideology and, ultimately, the holocaust, was a response to the Soviet Union and not an organic German phenomenon is hugely loaded. It's a pretty popular argument on the German right and, as Lazare says, one that Snyder has constantly narrowly skirted around. It's not about excusing Stalinism, it;s about NOT excusing Fascism.
More importantly, Snyder's using his academic position to push a nonsensical and potentially dangerous position on the West's relationship with contemporary Russia.
Snyder's juvenile Stalin = Hitler = Putin = Lions = Tigers = Bears = oh my! argument which sees Putin as nostalgic for the Hitler / Stalin accord and aiming to push the idea that contemporary collaboration with European Fascists is on the cards is utterly absurd in the context of the mainstream Russian nationalism that Putin feeds off.
The Torbakov piece is absolutely correct in saying that Russia's view of its moral authority as a great nation stems from being the country that 'saved Europe from Fascism'. It's the single greatest cornerstone of Russian nationalism. It's not universally known as the "Great Patriotic War" for nothing. Focus on justifying the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact in a historical context isn't nostalgia, it's shoring up that idea that Russia bled for the rest of us when the time came to step up.
Putin has used anti-Fascism (cynically in most cases) as a justification for lots of Russia's domestic and foreign policy. Nashi - effectively the youth feeder group for United Russia - was supposedly set up as a bulwark against Fascist youth groups. More obviously, 75% of all the propaganda that Russia has been churning out about Ukraine is focused on the idea that they're a bunch of Neo-Nazis who worship Stepan Bandera. Bandera is one of the most loathed contemporary figures in Russia, not just because he fought against them but because he was a Nazi collaborator. It's pretty much literally the worst thing you can accuse anyone of being.
Putin is definitely trying to shape domestic and international views of Russian history to his own ends - not just in speeches to students but in the wholesale revision of Russian state textbooks but Synder's arguments would struggle to be more inaccurate if he was trying and only feed into the kneejerk leftist response that 'if the case against him is made in such a farcical way, it must be because he's sticking it to the west'. Bad political commentary about him discredits the good, negative coverage by association.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Thursday, 13 November 2014 22:51 (eleven years ago)
i got in no way from bloodlands the idea that stalin's behavior/actions ameliorated hitler's
― Mordy, Thursday, 13 November 2014 22:56 (eleven years ago)
It's not about ameliorating the actions themselves, it's framing where those actions stemmed from that's the issue. I'd agree that Snyder doesn't go fully down the Nolte route but it's not a million miles away.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Thursday, 13 November 2014 23:02 (eleven years ago)
Either way, agree or disagree, understanding his historical POV is important to understanding his writing on contemporary politics.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Thursday, 13 November 2014 23:03 (eleven years ago)
ShariVari, I complete agree that Snyder was misrepresenting the situation badly. but I also think that Jacobin publishes a lot of shrill and dubious stuff (in addition to some excellent stuff--sometimes in the same article!). those two positions are not incompatible.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Friday, 14 November 2014 03:43 (eleven years ago)
i hate how these threads often seem to gravitate toward polarization, and when you say that you disagree with someone on one point it's assumed that you're disagreeing with every point they've made and have chosen a "side" in a debate. frankly it's the most annoying feature of ILX to me. maybe it's endemic to internet discussion boards; i wouldn't know since this is the only one I've really ever read.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Friday, 14 November 2014 03:44 (eleven years ago)
I agree, and that whole post wasn't aimed at you. I was just taking issue with the idea that there was any apologism for Stalin in the Jacobin piece.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Friday, 14 November 2014 06:10 (eleven years ago)
Apologism for Stalin on the hard left is more repellent yet makes more sense than apologism for Putin, a nationalist and social conservative.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 14 November 2014 11:17 (eleven years ago)
I'm not sure many of the Putin fans on the left really care much about his domestic policies or pay attention to the increasing shift towards social conservatism and restrictions of the welfare state in Russia. His primary attraction is that he has sought to obstruct US imperialism by opposing the war in Iraq, the bombing of Syria, etc.
Those that are more involved in Russian politics would argue (correctly to some degree) that he also stands against the domestic political dominance of oligarchs and the domestic economic dominance of the IMF. Failing to do that without any recognition of the negatives is clearly NAGL though. I do think that, outside of Russia itself, the number of diehard Putin apologists is probably wildly overstated though.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Friday, 14 November 2014 11:51 (eleven years ago)
The Putin apologists I know are almost exclusively also Maoists, and they'll defend him alongside the likes of Assad.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 1 December 2014 16:24 (eleven years ago)
genocide is okay as long as you're an enemy of the western hegemony i guess
― Mordy, Monday, 1 December 2014 16:33 (eleven years ago)
Life is obviously too short to argue with Maoists but idk how they square that with anti-left policies like cutting free healthcare and brutal treatment of undocumented migrants.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Monday, 1 December 2014 16:55 (eleven years ago)
Uhhhhh Maoists still exist?
― Letsby Avenue (Tom D.), Monday, 1 December 2014 16:57 (eleven years ago)
unfortunately
― sleeve, Monday, 1 December 2014 17:02 (eleven years ago)
you want a treat? western maoists reviewing movies:
http://www.prisoncensorship.info/archive/etext/movies/
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 1 December 2014 20:43 (eleven years ago)
The thing about Maoists is that other leftists will spout similar rhetoric without ever thinking they're a Maoist.
Their attitude toward labor as "imperialist" is hateful and plays into the hands of everyone else who hates labor.
― Threat Assessment Division (I M Losted), Monday, 1 December 2014 23:35 (eleven years ago)
i once read a counterpunch article that argued without any ambiguity at all that the khmer rouge were good guys who had been wrongfully slandered by the evil western press. i know that website basically just consists of unedited rants by middle-aged leftist cranks but i still found that really shocking.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 1 December 2014 23:49 (eleven years ago)
pointing and laughing is the only proper response to modern maoists
― Οὖτις, Monday, 1 December 2014 23:56 (eleven years ago)
Badiou's position on Khmer Rouge was ambiguous until 2008 or so, as far as I know, although his major statement of support for the group (in Theory of Contradiction) was made in 1975, shortly after they'd taken Phnom Penh.xp
― one way street, Monday, 1 December 2014 23:59 (eleven years ago)
I don't get present-day Maoists either, but I never really encounter them in the leftist circles I know.
― one way street, Tuesday, 2 December 2014 00:02 (eleven years ago)
there might be more maoists in hyde park in chicago than in beijing these days
we had a maoist teacher in my high school! she ran a club for students of west indian origin (there were many).
― I dunno. (amateurist), Tuesday, 2 December 2014 01:42 (eleven years ago)
wasn't the khmer rouge fighting the north vietnamese, and therefore somewhat tolerated by the west?
― Frederik B, Tuesday, 2 December 2014 12:50 (eleven years ago)