Communism

2248 readers
101 users here now

Welcome to the communist Lemmy community! This is a community for all Marxist.

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
1
 
 

Lemmygrad is a collection of Marxist communities, for memes, learning, news, discussion, media, or anything you like.

There's a big chance that your instance blocks Lemmygrad, so the best way to interact with the community is either joining there or creating an account on an instance that doesn't blocks us. You can check this on the instaces section of your instance. This is what it looks like for Lemmy, but you can basically add /instances to the URL and it will take you there.

Due to the huge influx of users after the Reddit debacle Lemmygrad got a lot of account requests so it takes time for approval, be patient.

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
 
 

Modded Minecraft Java 1.21.5 server, at thecomm.apexmc.co. discord.gg/89UuZtZEpx to get the mods installed. Supports cracked clients and has instructions. Not my own server

10
11
12
13
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/8386779

She's to the left of Boric, according to some Chilean comrades.

The "authoritarian" tag makes me wince though, however, I understand the relatively recent history of the country as well.

Here:


Voters in the presidential primary of the Unity for Chile (Unidad por Chile) coalition have selected the Communist Party’s Jeannette Jara as their candidate to face off against the right-wing candidates José Antonio Kast and Evelyn Matthei in November’s general election.

Jara scored a stunning 60% total in a four-candidate race on Sunday. Her next closest challenger was Carolina Tohá of the Democratic Socialism party, who took 27.7% of the ballots. The parties in the Unity for Chile coalition pledged to support whichever candidate won the primary, however, so all the left and progressive forces in the country are now rallying behind Jara.

“Today begins a new path that we will walk together, with the conviction to build a fairer and more democratic Chile,” Jara declared on social media after the Electoral Service announced her win. “In the face of the threat from the far right, we respond with unity, dialogue, and hope.”

At a rally with supporters Sunday, she urged her compatriots to “hold on to each other and not let go, so we can face Chile’s far right with the broadest possible front.”

She was immediately congratulated by President Gabriel Boric, who is barred from running for re-election due to constitutional limits on presidents serving consecutive terms.

“Jeannette Jara immediately steps up to lead the forces of progressivism toward the future,” Boric said Sunday evening. “What lies ahead will not be easy, but Jeannette knows about tough battles. Now, let’s all work together for unity to rally the majority of our compatriots to continue building a fairer, safer, and happier country.”

Jara, 51, is one of the most prominent political leaders in the country. Before stepping down to run for president, she served as Minister of Labor in the Boric government. In that position, she spearheaded successful efforts to reduce Chile’s workweek from 45 to 40 hours and raise the minimum wage.

Opponents hail from fascist families

Kast, her main opponent in the general election, is making his third try for the presidency. Last time around, he lost to Boric, capturing 44% in the second round after having led in first-round balloting.

Kast is part of the right-wing royalty of the Chilean ruling class. His parents were German immigrants who arrived in Chile in the early 1950s. His father, Michael Kast Shindele, was a member of the Hitler’s Nazi Party and a lieutenant in the military of the Third Reich.

He escaped from U.S. custody and then fled the de-Nazification campaign in Germany after World War II. He settled in Chile, where, together with other relatives, he set up a sausage factory that made the family one of the richest in the country.

The fascist politics brought over from Europe were passed down through the generations. One of Kast’s brothers, Miguel, was a “Chicago Boy” economist and labor minister for the former Chilean dictator, Augusto Pinochet. He helped impose neoliberal policies that crushed the Chilean working class, with an emphasis on privatization, deregulation, and attacks on unions.

As a politician, Kast has consistently pushed a reactionary platform premised on giving free rein to big business and handing over control of social policy to ultra-conservative forces. He advocates major tax cuts on the wealthy, a rollback of labor and other progressive legislation, a halt to immigration, and bans on things like emergency birth control and same-sex marriage.

Former Chilean dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet reviews his troops in Las Vizcachas, Chile, on Sept. 7, 1995. Both of Jeannette Jara’s main opponents, José Antonio Kast and Evelyn Matthei, have long family connections to the fascist Pinochet dictatorship and actively defend its legacy. | Santiago Llanquin / AP

His frequent praise for the years of the Pinochet dictatorship have generated controversy but also endeared him to leading capitalists, the military, and the religious base of voters who all fondly remember the years of tyranny that saw tens of thousands of trade unionists, students, Communists, socialists, democracy activists, and indigenous people murdered.

In 2021, running against Boric, Kast framed the election as “a choice between freedom and communism.” With an actual Communist as his main opponent this time, the red-baiting is expected to reach new extremes.

Also in the race is right-wing candidate Evelyn Matthei of the Independent Democratic Union, who has earned the endorsement of some sections of the capitalist class and the foreign business press. The Economist magazine in 2024 proclaimed her “The woman who will lead Chile’s counter-revolution.”

She served in the government of former President Sebastián Piñera, is a consistent defender of the Pinochet dictatorship, and also comes from a fascist pedigree. Her father, Fernando Matthei Aubel, was the son of a German military officer and was trained by the U.S. Air Force in the 1950s.

After the Pinochet coup in 1973, he returned to Chile and was promoted to the rank of general. During the dictatorship, he served as a government minister and was implicated in campaigns of political repression and trafficking of bacteriological weapons, which were tested on political prisoners.

In the last years of the dictatorship, Evelyn Matthei was head of a government body tasked with privatizing Chile’s pension system. During the struggles to democratize the country’s political system and overturn military rule in the late 1980s, she was the leader of the campaign that sought to continue the dictatorship and was elected to parliament as a pro-Pinochet deputy.

The latest opinion surveys have her in third place, at 10% support.

Unity and hope

The platform of the Unity for Chile coalition has put the issues clearly on the table for voters. It declares: “Chile must decide where to go in the coming years: Deepen the path of change or enter an authoritarian drift.”

Jara and the coalition make the case that the far-right is seeking to “roll back our rights” and promotes an “exhausted free market model that makes life precarious.” The alternative, they argue, is a coalition of “those who have historically fought for profound social change: the communities, unions, feminists, youth, indigenous peoples, socio-environmental movements, and cultural figures.”

It recalls the Popular Unity coalition that elected socialist Salvador Allende to the presidency in 1970, who was killed during the 1973 U.S.-backed Pinochet coup, but the left program seeks to go beyond the past to build an even stronger progressive front to address the economic challenges of today.

The Jara candidacy is sparking excitement among grassroots forces. At a meeting of activists just before the primary election, leaders from a number of movements spoke about the nature of the Jara campaign.

“We women support those who have stood by us,” said Karen Palma, a vice president of Chile’s main labor federation, the Workers’ United Center of Chile (Central Unitaria de Trabajadores de Chile, CUT). “Jeannette promoted the 40-hour work week, pension reform, and the minimum wage.”

Jeannette Jara is the presidential candidate of the Unidad por Chile (Unity for Chile) broad front coalition for the Novemeber elections. | Photo via Communist Party of Chile

Lautaro Carmona, president of the Communist Party of Chile, praised the united front stance taken by all the parties currently participating in the government. “A new step has been taken, a very important step, which reflects the will, determination, and conviction to contribute decisively to a single and united candidacy within the governing coalition,” Carmona said.

“We have an experienced leader, with proven capabilities in state affairs, with social leadership and a deep commitment to training, development, and empathy regarding major national issues.”

Carmona said Jara’s nomination “reaffirms that this leftist force is not limited to a single party, but rather formalizes its willingness to build a new government supported by a broad coalition, composed of eight parties committed to the transformation and rights of the vast majority, especially workers.”

**Struggles ahead **> Jara’s campaign will face a tough battle against Kast and Matthei. Economic conditions remain tough for many Chileans, and opinion polls show crime is on the minds of many voters—issues which her right-wing opponents will surely try to latch onto as their main appeal.

She is also seen as the would-be successor to the current Boric administration, which has been playing defense on several fronts ever since losing a referendum vote to replace the Pinochet-era constitution in 2023.

Constitutional reform was a major part of Boric’s campaign for the presidency, so losing that vote—coupled with economic headwinds—have allowed the business-controlled press in Chile to paint a picture of a flailing government.

However, the Communist Party and its allies are jumping into the fight with a program that they believe the Chilean people will support. It centers on public security with a social focus, combatting organized crime by returning control of neighborhoods to communities.

On the health front, it seeks to strengthen the public system via direct investments in primary care and reduced waiting times, and supporting health workers to ensure they can provide what their patients need. It says that more resources are needed in health care, not privatization.

On the economy, the Communists say it’s necessary to “redistribute to grow.” A Jara presidency will push for more progressive taxation, increasing taxes on the super-rich while boosting public investment in infrastructure, education, and technology.

“What is often presented as grand ideological debates,” the Communist Party said in its platform, “is translated here into simple and profound issues: having a fair salary, living in a safe neighborhood, feeling that the state respects and listens to you. It’s a program that doesn’t stop at abstract promises, but offers tangible responses to real life.”


^ Frankly, I have a good feeling about this.

14
15
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/8380033

Syria most notably and maybe Gaza and Iran, with the former being a genocide against Gazans that Hamas seems incapable of stopping, though there is a growing movement against volunteership and the draft in Israel right now, which may help a year or two from then, but do they even have that much time?

Iran closed the strait of Hormuz but got a recent high-stakes meeting bombed.

The Russian Federation doesn't want to give their advanced ballistic missile systems to Iran, or seems reluctant to do so, to remain in good standing with Israel and maybe Turkey and the Gulf States, hoping to court them.

I don't even know just how well they're doing in Ukraine; there was that "drone attack" by Ukraine that was launched into Russia, perhaps all across it, at military facilities, but I don't know. I was told that they're gaining 10 miles a day, I think? But I don't know where those miles or square miles are as Ukraine is still a big country with NATO behind its back.

I don't doubt that many geopolitical powers are arising and increasing bourgeois infighting, like between Musk and Trump, may result in, well, interesting results. Indeed, it may be that Saudi Arabia will one day turn against the West, but for now, it's gaining its strength and gaining power over the Western imperialist system, them and their Wahhabi allies. If they smell blood in the water, Iran's toast, at least maybe...

Don't get me wrong, I see many positives nowadays... but also many negatives and things are in flux.

It could be like the 1980s where everyone thought the Soviet Union was "winning" until it didn't (during the very late 80s, at least).

We'll see what happens.

16
17
5
Council Communism and Organic Centralism (criticallycommietechgeek.substack.com)
submitted 5 days ago by Provinto@lemmy.ml to c/communism@lemmy.ml
18
19
 
 

Today I’m talking to Joti Brar, one of the leaders of the Communist Party of Great Britain, the editor of the party’s publication, and the Spokesperson for the World Anti-Imerialist Platform.

Joti Brar of CPGB-ML is the daughter of the late Harpal Brar.

“Neutrality Studies” is some Swiss nonsense, but at least they’ll listen to communists and anti-imperialists.

What makes a man turn neutral? Lust for gold? Power?

20
21
 
 

Part of our mission is to introduce MMTers to socialism and socialists to MMT. We’ve had a few metaphorical doors slammed in our faces along the way. Former friends from the MMT community now delight in slinging accusations worthy of a HUAC hearing, while some socialists suspect modern monetary theory is just a sideshow of bourgeois economics. So, we didn’t know what to expect when we reached out to Justin and Jeremy, co-hosts of a podcast we’ve long admired. Compared to the vicious rejection we sometimes encounter, their good faith skepticism felt like a warm embrace. They invited Steve and Virginia to come onto Proles Pod and make a case for the radicalizing potential of MMT.

The conversation goes into the role of the state in currency issuance, the coercive nature of taxation, and how MMT can critique and unveil the inherent power dynamics within capitalism. Austerity, that devastating weapon of class warfare, is not a glitch; it’s a feature.

Virginia asks that listeners stop using the expression taxpayer money. “Even if you’re not ready to wrap your mind around MMT, just start calling it public money. You might not believe where it comes from but just stop. It's public money.” Given the classist, racist implications of relying on taxpayers to fund the government, a change in language is a good first step. Steve adds: “Whatever you tax, you immortalize. Whatever you tax, if you believe it's funding, you need forever.” The state is the source of currency; let’s stop elevating billionaires.

They look at the relationship between currency manipulation, inflation, and global economic dominance. They also touch on Gramsci and the impact of cultural hegemony. Ultimately, they agree on the necessity of a class-based analysis as a prerequisite for revolutionary change.

Proles Pod is a podcast about history, politics, and culture... without the liberalism

22
23
24
25
view more: next ›