Node 4021
The Chuikov Report # 1
Ben Seattle -- February 2021
http://communism.org/node/4021
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(links, info and eye candy)
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He had a clear mission
 
Chuikov and Rodimtsev
Stalingrad 1942
..
See Appendix for more info about Chuikov
and the battle of Stalingrad
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The Chuikov Report # 1


Ben Seattle
February 10, 2021
(updated: Feb 12)

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Hi folks,

I intend to write about, on a regular basis, my work on what
I call the Chuikov Project, as well as related political
work.

------------------------------------------------------------
Contents:
------------------------------------------------------------

1. The Chuikov Project
Information wants to be organized
to serve the proletarian revolution

2. Trump's coup: farce today, tragedy tomorrow
A dress rehearsal for imposing martial law and
suspending the Constitution gives us insight
into the long-term danger of extreme repression
amid growing instability and echoes of the 1930's

3. The spectre of social media
Our ruling class will find itself in deep shit as
public opinion increasingly gets "out of control"

4. The Thread Manifesto
and the road to Trinity
(reply to CB, a WSWS supporter)

5. The Proletarian Blockchain
It will be under everyone's control because
it will be beyond anyone's control

6. Pragmatism and "The Marxist Line"
The leadership of the working class
cannot be separated from where
the working class needs to go

7. The Coming War between the U.S. and China
A war between the U.S. and China is not
inevitable, but it is becoming increasingly
difficult to see how it might be avoided

8. Let me hear from you

------------------------------------------------------------
Appendix A - Letter from CB
Appendix B - About Vasily Chuikov

Update added February 12:
Appendix C - Taiwan, Self-determination and
the struggle against Imperialist War
------------------------------------------------------------
(above and below) from "Appendix B"
of Spartacus Ex Machina







(above and below) Node 4002 --
Democratic Algorithms
for the Proletarian Mind

(below) Node 4005 --
Red and Green Projects -- work and play

..
(above)
The big commercial software platforms fuck with us in countless ways. They make important information hard to find and place a heavy tax on our attention.
..
(below)
Users must control the algorithms
instead of algorithms controlling the users

(above and below)
central nervous systems in nature


(above and below) The "Solar Model" of
an information machine, from Node 4012
Ben Seattle's comments on
the Komrade discussion forum
1. The Chuikov Project


Information wants to be organized
to serve the proletarian revolution


I am creating a software app that I am naming "Chuikov" (as
a dedication to the guy who was in charge of the defense of
Stalingrad).

Personal Information Manager

(1) Chuikov will help users write and organize notes,
of all kinds, and to combine these notes into other
notes. Notes will contain text, images, links, tags,
tables, scrollable content--and (of course) other notes.

In this way--Chuikov will function as a personal
information manager
.

Publishing Platform

(2) Users will also be able to use these notes to create
packages of public content (that I call "nodes") to be
posted at a location in common with other Chuikov users
(probably at communism.org).

In this way--Chuikov will function as a publishing
platform
.

Social Media Platform

(3) Chuikov will help users to easily find, filter,
organize, read
, and respond to other public nodes by
other people.

In this way--Chuikov will function as a social media
platform
.

A guide to the future evolution
of independent platforms

(4) In this sense, even if it was crude, even if the
platform was limited to 10 users, Chuikov would have
potential to show activists that there is a new way of
organizing
and making use of information.

If successful, on these terms, the ideas inherent in the
platform may help to guide the evolution of an emerging
generation
of prototype platforms that will eventually
connect with one another and (over time) coalesce into a
new kind of democratic social media platform, with
algorithms that are chosen by (or created by) the user.

In any event, this is my intent.

(5) At the least (if nothing else) Chuikov can serve as an
experimental platform designed to investigate the
usefulness of certain kinds of design principles used to
retrieve, display, recombine, or otherwise leverage
information.

Time to roll up my sleeves

(6) For many years, I have been advocating to political
activists that they should be considering the potential of
a common democratic social media platform.

(7) A common democratic platform would be built around the
mission of bringing essential knowledge of the class
struggle (and every other part of human and natural life)
to the proletariat--so that the proletariat would
understand its primary role in the struggle of humanity
to liberate itself from the terror and the tyranny of
capital
.

(8) For the most part, my words have had little impact on
few people. It would seem that there is nothing left for
me but to roll up my sleeves. I know what needs to be
done:

(9) I have made efforts in the past to create software to
prototype principles along these lines. My life fell apart
around me, but I persisted. Even so, my efforts came to
naught.

I have, since then, learned much. I may have time and life
enough left to make a second effort--if my focus and
priorities are clear
.

(10) And that, my friends, is why I have named this
project in honor of the memory of what Chuikov and his
soldiers did in the decisive days of 1942. These men were
focused
.

When I get tired or confused, and am not sure which
direction is up, I ask myself one simple question: What
would Chuikov do?


Current status

(11) For 6 weeks in a row, I have put most of my spare
hours (when I was not busy with my job) into creating
C# code to:

(a) help me create, edit and organize notes and

(b) create the html and javascript needed
to use these notes as the building blocks
of this webpage.

At this point, for the first time, I can post content to
the web without reliance on either a commercial platform
(ie: WordPress, Facebook, Reddit) or on manual coding of
html.

I used Chuikov to put this web page together. And I will
be able to use Chuikov to easily create other webpages--so
I can focus less on writing code and (at least for a
little while) more on writing words that might move the
hearts of men and women.

Next steps

(12) The next step, if I can catch my breath, will be to
eventually give other users the ability to post notes as
replies to nodes.

For example, this essay currently has two columns. The
formal column is mainly text. The informal column is
mainly images. The next step would be to add a 3rd
column
where comments from users would be posted.

The next step after that would be to give other users the
ability to create their own nodes.

Potential future development

(13) Even better (although something I would not be able to
do without help from other software worker activists) would
be to give Chuikov the ability to import from (and
export to) mainstream commercial platforms, so that (for
example) users could have the option of adding notes to
Chuikov by posting on twitter, and the option of posting
on twitter, Reddit or Facebook, and so forth, by using
Chuikov.

This would mean that a Chuikov user would be able to have a
single platform from where they would have the ability to
command and control all of their accounts on all social
media platforms
.

(14) How much of this will I actually be able to do?
Certainly a lot less than I would like. But if something
is important, and needs to be done, there will eventually
be plenty of other people helping. My role is not to do
everything by myself--but simply to do what I can:

If you want to build a ship, don't drum up
people to collect wood and don't assign
them tasks and work, but rather teach them
to long for the endless immensity of the sea.


-- Antoine de Saint-Exupery


Spartacus Ex Machina

(15) I wrote a somewhat detailed description of how
everything would look if I actually had time to turn my
ideas into code. My description appears in Appendix B of
"Spartacus Ex Machina", and I have written further in
nodes 4002, 4005 and 4012 (please see the links in
the next column).

The flow of information

(16) I have spent 50 years studying, in one way or another,
how information is organized in our brains, so that after
half a billion years of evolution, information can flow in
such a way that billions of cells can function as part of
a larger organism.

Modern life and technology have laid the basis for the next
step: billions of proletarians combining their actions as
part of a social class with the mission and destiny of
the liberation of humanity from the rule of capital.

The right to choose our algorithms

(17) The algorithms that determine what words and images
you see and hear, and what words and images of yours that
others see and hear--must be controlled by each user.

These algorithms must be liberated, so that information
can be free
to bring light and consciousness to the
proletariat. Only in this way can we break free from all
restrictions
on the vital flow of information our class
needs.

(18) Putting the choice of the algorithms we use in the
hands of greedy corporations or (worse) governmental
institutions (which are all controlled by our ruling class)
is a recipe for the eternal perpetuation of ignorance on
on a mass scale
.

Algorithms are the essential and decisive modern tool that
amplifies our ability to learn what is important--and
amplifies our ability to speak our mind.

Just as we must have the right to read what we want and
the right to say what we want, so we must also have the
fundamental right to choose the algorithms that make
these first two rights meaningful in the age of social
media.

A platform that serves our needs

(19) A gazelle on the African savanna that is scanning the
horizon for dangerous lions does not have its attention
broken up by ads for grasses and leaves, nor by the latest
news on which gazelles have been spotted together at trendy
nightclubs. Rather--the central nervous system of the
gazelle serves the real needs of the gazelle, 100%.

In a similar way, activists must create a common
democratic platform
--where users control the algorithms
rather than algorithms controlling the user.

The century of information war

(20) My work exists on the boundary between:

(a) the independent movement of
the working class that will
eliminate the rule of capital and

(b) the software and algorithms that
people can use to create, organize,
package and post shareable content.

The working class will organize information and
communicate this organized information in order to
transform it into consciousness and action.

At this time, software workers and political activists are
largely two separate communities. As our current century
of information war
continues to unfold, both of these
communities will recognize that they very much need one
another.

The algorithms that will be used to organize and
communicate information are associated with the names of
people like Turing and Shannon. The independent
movement of the working class is associated with the names
of Marx and Lenin.

I am a student of all of them, at least in the realm of
theory. In the realm of practice, I will do what I can to
be a student of Chuikov.


..
























2. Trump's failed coup attempt


Trump's proto-fascist MAGA movement stages
a dress rehearsal for imposing martial law

On January 6, a crowd that Trump had summoned to Washington
D.C., possibly as large as 10 thousand, stormed the Capitol
building, in an effort to change the outcome of the 2020
election.

The assault was led by the neo-fascist Proud Boys, and
included other fascist and neo-fascist gangs that Trump has
encouraged, as well as supporters of the bizarre QAnon
conspiracy theory, which holds that Democratic Party
politicians are cannibalistic pedophiles that Trump had
been sent by god to arrest and execute.

Some in the crowd were yelling "Hang Mike Pence". Early
reports claimed that kill-capture teams had lists of
politicians they were looking to execute, although this now
appears to be an exaggeration, based on the spear carried
by infamous QAnon Shaman.

Eight people died as a result (one woman was shot by the
police, one cop was beaten to death with a fire
extinguisher, one woman was trampled to death by the crowd,
there was one heart attack, one stroke and, so far, at
least 3 suicides in the aftermath).

1 - Echoes of the 1930's

The assault on the Capitol had plenty of support among
high-ranking security officials who--in the days before
the storming of the Capitol--repeatedly refused requests by
lower-level officials for more realistic security
preparations--on the excuse that this would be "bad
optics".

One out of seven of those arrested were current or former
soldiers, and the stormtrumpers included many current and
former cops as well as senior business executives.

Trump may have been inspired by Mussolini's March On Rome
in 1922, but the result was a confused and poorly organized
imitation of Hitler's failed Beer Hall putsch in Munich
in 1923. The right-wing gangsterism embodied in the calls
to hang Trump's Vice President bring to mind the atmosphere
in 1930's Japan, where Japanese militarists began to
systematically assassinate politicians who refused to
abandon constitutional government and go along with
military rule.

2 - Ruling class pulls the plug on Trump

The result of all this has been a fiasco for Trump and his
MAGA movement. The ugliness of the white supremacist and
neo-fascist thugs was shown in a way that was hard for
anyone to deny.

Trump's support among Republicans dropped, and support from
corporate and other big-money donors evaporated.
Right-wing talk radio stations told their broadcast
personalities that they would be immediately fired unless
they stopped promoting the lie that Trump actually won the
election.

And the main big-tech outlets which had been amplifying
Trump's racist poison, Twitter and Facebook, finally
had enough and shut him down. Further actions were taken
by Reddit, which closed one of the main Trump groups for
incitement of violence. Google and Apple pulled
Parler (a right-wing social media platform known for
incitement of racist violence) from their app stores for
phones. And Amazon shut down web services hosting for
Parler.
[Link 2.1 ] Zeynep Tufekci, Atlantic - Jan 5, 2021
This Isn’t Just Political Theater
Fascism in the 1930's led to the deaths of 40 million in Europe (above) and 30 million in Asia (below), The forces that led to fascism in the last century still exist in this one.
(above) Warsaw, 1943 (below) Shanghai, 1937

(below) using coups to overthrow election results is standard operating procedure for U.S. imperialism
(above) Countries where U.S. has organized coups (light green) or used the military (dark green or red)
(below) a section from map above
..
3 - We need to take this seriously

Zeynep Tufekci, writing in the Atlantic [Link 2.1] noted
that it is a serious mistake to dismiss a coup attempt on
the grounds that it is inept and disorganized. She
describes two coup attempts in Turkey, one in the early
1960's and the other in 1980. The first attempt, she
notes, was a farce, a spectacular failure with tanks being
sent to the wrong place at the wrong time, and so forth.
The second attempt was a tragedy for Turkey: hundreds of
thousands detained, more than 100 tortured to death, and a
new period of repression.

Hitler's attempted putsch in 1923 was also a farce. Ten
years later, the German ruling class, feeling threatened
by the growing popularity of working class parties and the
possibility of revolution, played the Hitler card and
installed him in power. It was not a good gamble. Hitler
set Europe ablaze, killing 40 million people.

4 - We cannot rely on
the Democratic Party

The Democratic Party has impeached Trump a 2nd time, and an
impeachment trial will soon take place in the Senate. It
would be good if Trump and other politicians and high
officials were held accountable for at least some of their
crimes. This would help open the eyes of millions of
people
who have been deluded by Trump's lies, and would
also help isolate the neo-fascist gangs. This would also
act as a deterrent to similar (and more competent and
successful) efforts in the future to toss aside the
Consitution and impose strong-man rule.

But don't count on it.

The Democratic Party may wish to preserve (at least
somewhat) the Trump/Maga card in order to (1) use it as a
foil--to make themselves look good in comparison--and (2)
as a counterweight against the vocal reformists (such as
"the squad") in their ranks--to provide a "bipartisan"
excuse for inaction on a range of issues.

More than this, the ruling class as a whole may also wish
to keep this card for use, so speak, on a "rainy day"
(ie: when the working class wakes up and learns how to
organize itself in a major way--see the section below on
how the ruling class makes use of fascism when it becomes
desperate).

Millions of people would like to see the Democratic Party
stand as a bulwark against the racist, pro-business and
anti-people movement that Trump has championed and that has
seized hold of much of the country. But we need to keep in
mind that it was the treachery of the Democratic
Party--and its support for similar policies under the
banner of neo-liberalism and austerity (ie: the open
subservience of Clinton and Obama to Wall Street) that
made it possible for an obvious demagogue like Trump to
become so popular in the first place.

5 - U.S. imperialism has long history
of using coups to overthrow elections

Democratic Party politicians are voicing hypocritical
outrage about Trump's attempt to overturn the election by
means of a violent assault on the Capitol. But we need to
remember that, for more than a century, using coups to
overthrow election results
has been standard operating
procedure for U.S. imperialism.

Both ruling class parties, Democrats and Republicans alike,
have a long and bloody history of organizing or assisting
coups to overthrow elections in Asia, Africa and Latin
America. There are dozens (if not hundreds) of examples.
The most well-known are Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954),
Congo (1960), Indonesia (1965), Chile (1973), and
(more recently) Egypt (2013) and Bolivia (2019).

The coup in Indonesia led to the slaughter of between half
a million and a million people. The coup in Bolivia (and
two associated massacres) appears to have been supported by
celebrity billionaire Elon Musk. There was also a notable
failed attempt to overthrow Erdogan in Turkey (2016) and
two failed attempts to overthrow Maduro in Venezuela
(2019 and 2020). (Both Erdogan and Maduro are despots, but
things are never improved when U.S. imperialism replaces a
despot with an obedient puppet.)

Why does U.S. imperialism organize coups in other countries
so that it can fatten its profits? Because it can. And
because coups are cheaper and easier than military action.

6 - Elections have always been rigged
to reflect ruling class interests

Trump lies when he claims that votes were miscounted, but
elections have always been rigged against the popular
interest in order to reflect the needs of our ruling class.

Originally, in the U.S., voting was limited to landowning
males (about 6% of the population). Over time (and the
course of popular struggle) voting rights have expanded to
include non-landowners, freed slaves, and women (who could
vote in the Soviet Union before they could vote in the
U.S.). There are still a thousand ways that the election
system is stacked against the working class and oppressed:

** Elections are based on big money and support from the
big corporations. Biden and Trump raised $2 billion each
for the recent election, and money for congressional
elections totalled $10 billion.

** The electoral college system is rigged in favor of small
rural states which typically vote Republican, and
presidential elections are generally decided by a handful
of votes in key "swing states". If elections were based on
the popular vote (as is normal in other countries) Trump
would have lost the 2016 election by 3 million votes.

** More than this, we live under an economic and political
system dominated by corrupt institutions and corporate
media that manipulate the truth and lie to us at every
turn. For example, Bernie Sanders was far more popular
among Democratic Party voters than Joe Biden, but got
dumped in backroom manipulations because his tame and
timid reformism was not acceptable
to the big money that
runs the Democratic Party.

7 - Elections promote
illusion of "democracy"

The role of elections in capitalist society is to
legitimize the rule of the representatives of capital, by
creating the illusion of "democracy", in which the
actions of the powerful supposedly represent the will of
the working class and oppressed. Every 2 or 4 years we get
to vote on who will rule us and fool us.

Within this framework we can and must struggle to show our
discontent and reduce our pain. I am not arguing that
there is never any point in participating in elections.
Elections can be important because they can be connected to
mass movements in either positive or negative ways. But if
we make them our main focus--we are lost.

We need to cast off the illusion that we live in a
"democracy" (where the actions of "our" leaders supposedly
reflect our will). We must instead create a class
independent movement
which is not restricted by alliances
with "the lesser evil". Our movement must aim at
mobilizing millions to get rid of the rule of capital
which is the ultimate source of all the misery in the
world.











Please note:
I am including a link to this "Fundamentals of Marx" video because it looks interesting and potentially insightful. However (as a caution to readers) I have not had time to study this topic, and (I will note) nearly every time I have looked at something which advertized itself as "Marxism" it managed to leave out the things which are most important. So I advise readers and viewers to ask themselves, often, "what is this explanation overlooking or leaving out?"



By the way, here is a video (from the same source as the video above) about Marx's dialectics . I have always been fascinated by dialectics, which is strongly related to Taoism. For example, here is another video (that I created) which uses these principles to gain perspective on brain lateralization: Our Brains are divided because the Universe is divided
8 - The reasons for increasing instability

It should be clear that the world is becoming more
unstable, with right-wing, nationalist demagogues coming to
power on every continent. Since this is a worldwide trend,
it is obviously taking place for deeper reasons than the
personalities or special abilities of any particular
strongman. It is important to understand the deeper,
structural reasons for this.

9 - Speculation ahead ...

I will make some observations here to give some background,
but will also note that normally, I only write about topics
I know something about. In this case, however, my
understanding of these deeper reasons may be shallow.

So what follows in this section represents an exception to
how I usually do things, and instead includes some
speculation, and brief mentions of some of the most common
ideas for the deepening global instability. The ideas I
sketch out below are not mutually exclusive, but rather are
connected to one another in various ways.

10 - Economic and financial crisis

The most common explanation for growing instability holds
that it is a product of economic and financial crises which
are (a) making it more difficult for the ruling capitalists
to make profits, and also (b) lowering the living standards
of the working class and oppressed.

11 - Growing inequality

As is shown in the chart, inequality in the U.S. has been
steadily increasing since 1980. At that time the share of
national income that went to the bottom 50% was nearly
twice the share that went to the top 1%. Now this is
nearly reversed.

In simpler words, in 1980, someone in the top 1% made about
25 times more money than someone in the bottom 50%.
Today it is closer to 100 times more.

It should be fairly clear that increasing inequality makes
society more unstable. Well-known billionaires such as
Nick Hanauer and Ray Dalio have noted that historically,
when inequality increases too much, the pitchforks (ie:
revolution) follow.

Also in this category are things like the loss of better
paid manufacturing jobs
. This is often blamed on other
countries "stealing our jobs", but 80% of the job losses
are due to things like automation (ie: machinery, robots
and AI software).

12 - Falling rate of profit

Another common explanation for growing instability is
related to what Marx called the "falling rate of profit".
Marx taught that, over time, as things like mechanization
and automation (which Marx called "organic capital")
increased, the ratio of organic capital to the capital
spent to hire workers (which Marx called "variable
capital
") increases. However it is only the variable
capital which creates profits--so as this ratio increases,
the rate of profit falls.

As the rate of profit falls, social instability goes up (as
I understand it) as the capitalists must resort to
increasingly risky things (like war) in an effort to
maintain their profit levels.
..
(above) graphic based on the video below
Ray Dalio (a representative of capital) gives his views on the long term debt cycle, what it is, and how it must be managed by decision makers in capitalist society. Also: An entertaining way to learn how the big capitalists turn debt into a form of fictitious capital is
to watch YouTube clips from "The Big Short" (2015):
13 - The long term debt cycle

Ray Dalio (see the video and the chart on "deleveraging" in
the next column) has given the view that economies
generally have what he calls "long term debt cycles".
These lengthy cycles (which usually include several cycles
of expansion/recession) involve a gradual build-up of
debt
until the weight of excessive debt bogs down the
economy and can no longer be overcome by normal means (for
example: you can't lower interest rates below zero without
making things worse).

Debt is related to what is sometimes called "fictitious
capital", which can make people with the right connections
very wealthy. But eventually the ratio of this counterfeit
money to the goods, services and real things that it is
supposed to represent becomes stretched beyond
practicality.

In simpler terms, there is a limit on how much air you can
pump into a bubble before it pops.

At that point capitalist society must make a number of
painful adjustments, in order to "deleverage" and get rid
of excessive debt. Deleveraging, per Dalio, involves a
combination of:

(a) austerity,
(b) wealth redistribution,
(c) debt default and
(d) inflation.

Dalio makes a strong case that conditions in the U.S. and
the world are similar in many ways to the 1930's. The
1930's were a time of growth in social movements in the
U.S., but were also a time in which fascism came to power
elsewhere.

14 - The changing world order

Dalio has also written on what he calls the changing world
order (see the chapter below on China). Basically, about
once a century or thereabouts, the ranking top dog in the
world economic and military order changes. Over the last
500 years we have seen the rise and fall of Spain, the
Netherlands, Britain, and finally the U.S.

It looks like the next top dog will be China.

These changes (more often than not) involve major wars.
War turns out to be an effective way to settle the question
of who is more powerful--and gets the lion's share of the
spoils.

15 - Ruling class reaction
to the threat of social media

Social media is also making the world more unstable.

It used to be that a ruling class in a powerful country had
the ability to largely shape the news, perceptions and
thinking of the majority of the population with a
more-or-less single unified narrative, or story, on the
most important topics. Government officials would make
statements, and the largely compliant corporate media would
simply echo them and back them to the hilt.

For example, in 1964 the fabricated story of an attack on
U.S. warships in the Tonkin Gulf (ie: the pretext for the
expansion of the U.S. war in Vietnam) was essentially
unchallenged at the time. More recently, there was little
challenge in 2003 to the claim that Saddamn Hussein was
building "weapons of mass destruction" (ie: the pretext
for the U.S. invasion or Iraq) even though most experts
understood that this was a lie.

However, imposing such a single unified view becomes more
difficult when it is easier for ordinary people to share
with one another news and opinion of their choice. Even
the lapdog corporate media must report the truth more
often or risk being outflanked by smaller but truthier
competitors, which face similar pressure from down the
chain
.

When the ruling class is faced with the threat of the
working class sharing opinions--and figuring out how
badly they are getting screwed by the rich (and
organizing to do something about it) the ruling class is
forced to resort to the tried and true tactic that has been
used since civilization emerged 5 thousand years ago in
Mesopotamia: divide-and-rule.

That is what Trump was about: divide-and-rule.

When the working class and oppressed learn to raise their
consciousness by generating a clear signal--the ruling
class must resort to drowning out the signal with a
high-volume of noise.

The beginning of the clear signal was represented by the
Occupy movement. Trump represented the noise.

I say more about the increasing power of social media in
the next chapter.

16 - The need for ruling classes
to step up repression

I have concluded that capitalist rule is unlikely to
survive this century--as the ability of the working class
everywhere to organize itself and raise its consciousness
increases.

Before the rule of capital is swept off the stage of
history--it is likely to react violently, with extreme
repression
.

But this may be decades from now.

Trump's coup failed because our ruling class has no need
at this time to toss aside the constitution and place a
"good sword" in charge.

But this situation may eventually change.
(above) YouTube - MAGA and Fascism - Renegade Cut
(above) "RWDS" (ie: Right-Wing Death Squads) patch
(above) Pinochet tortured and murdered
tens of thousands of progressive activists
(above) A reference to to the practice, in Vietnam,
of dropping prisoners from helicopters) .

[Link 2.2 ] Left Voice - Jan 9, 2021 - Scott Cooper
What Is Fascism? - The violent far-right assault on
the Capitol on Wednesday has raised the specter
of fascism. But what is meant by that term?
17 - Is there a danger of fascism ?

There has been a great increase of interest in the topic of
fascism in recent years for obvious reasons:

** The rise of far-right, repressive demagogues in
Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America

** Trump's 2016 election on an openly racist platform,
his open encouragement of violent white supremacist
gangs, and the resulting attacks on and occasional
murders of anti-racist and anti-fascist activists

** Trump's attempt in June to invoke martial law (which
was initially supported by the "liberal" New York Times)
in response to Black Lives Matter protests in Washington
D.C., and the January 6 storming of the Capitol

** The phenomenon in which nearly half the population
of the U.S. was deluded by "the big lie" tactic
common to demagogues everywhere

For many, the scariest part of the whole Trump presidency
(other than the global pandemic) was the fact that friends,
family members and loved ones could not see through the
lies of a obvious conman.

It may be a source of amusement if a small fringe of people
want to believe the earth is flat. It is something else if
half the population is deluded by someone who appears to
idolize Mussolini.

It was 99 years ago that Mussolini marched on Rome and
brought the word "fascism" into common usage. 17 years
later, fascism led to a world war that killed an estimated
70 million people. Today, the destructive power of modern
weapons dwarfs those used in the second world war. And the
surveillance and control capabilities made possible with
modern technology are approaching that described by George
Orwell in "1984".

So fascism is scary.

I have no deep knowledge on the question, but it may be
helpful to quickly sum up one or two things.

18 - First - what is fascism?

The word "fascism" is used in an informal sense, of course,
like when Seinfeld had an episode called "the Soup Nazi"
about a soup-to-go stand in New York with strict rules.
But the person it was based on had family from eastern
europe that had survived the nazi occupation. He did not
think there was anything funny about the word.

From a scientific perspective, the term fascism refers to a
situation where the ruling bourgeoisie (ie: what was called
the "1 percent" during the Occupy movement) is no longer
able to maintain the normal functioning of society by the
usual means--and decides to act decisively to crush the
workers movement completely--at whatever cost is necessary.

19 - Police and military
can become unreliable

In other words, passing repressive laws, and enforcing
these laws with police or even military forces pressed into
temporary service is not sufficient--because in the face of
sufficient popular unrest--the police and even military can
become unreliable.

Example # 1 -- during the 1979 Iranian revolution,
soldiers were ordered to shoot into crowds of tens of
thousands of protesters. The movement in Iran had grown
very large, and many of these soldiers had family or loved
ones in the crowds. The soldiers finally got fed up with
this--and instead shot their officers.

That was the end for the Shah.

Example # 2 -- Here in the U.S., during the war in
Vietnam, some units of the national guard were training to
suppress anti-war protests. So half the guardsmen were
assigned to play the role of protesters, while the other
half trained in how to herd them into arrest formations.
But this turned into a fiasco, as most of the guardsmen had
joined the guard to escape the military draft, and were
sympathetic to the antiwar protests. So the guardsmen
training to do the arrests had no enthusiasm whatsoever,
while the guardsmen playing the role of protesters--got
really into their assigned role.

You can imagine how that turned out.

The tendency of police and military forces to become
unreliable in these circumstances is the subtext in the
public warning given to Trump this summer (when Trump and
the lapdog New York Times wanted to use the military
against Black Lives Matter protesters) by his assistant
secretary of defense
, Mick Mulroy, who said:

“The decision to use active military forces
in crowd control in the United States should
only be made as a last resort. Active Army
and Marine Corps units are trained to fight
our nation’s enemies, not their fellow Americans.
American cities are not battlefields.”

20 - Ruling class has its back
against the wall

This is why the ruling class is essentially forced to
create special armed groups, indoctrinated with rabid
ideologies
and trained to suppress workers, political
activists and popular unrest--in the way certain breeds of
dogs are trained to hunt.

German fascism in the 1930's had the brownshirts and SS.
Trump's racist bully boys aspire to play a similar role
but, as is shown in an article by Louis Proyect (discussed
below) they have a long way to go before they can goosestep
in those boots.

The ruling bourgeoisie very much prefers the relative
stability
of normal bourgeois "democracy" (it is much
better for the smooth running of the economy and the
expansion of capital) and only resorts to extreme measures
during emergencies, which it hopes are temporary. There
is a useful article on this by Left Voice that was helpful
to me in writing this chapter. [Link 2.2]
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[Link 2.3 ]
Louis Proyect - some articles related to Bonapartism:
Fascism, Trumpism, and the left - October 2020
If Trump poses the same threat as Hitler in 1932, the only conclusion you can draw is that it is a counter-revolution without a revolution.
Does Donald Trump pose a fascist threat? - Feb 2016
Is Donald Trump a fascist? - December 2015
When the puppet talks back to the puppeteer - 2013
Lars Lih, Permanent Revolution - January 2021
Fascism and neofascism
[Link 2.4 ] Louis Proyect - January 10, 2021
No, America has not entered the Weimar era
[Link 2.5 ] -- D/SWV Jan 11, 2021
Demand that Trump and his accomplices
are held accountable!

[Link 2.6 ] D/SWV -- Nov 23, 2020
The twilight of Trotskyism (part one)
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(above) workers and soldiers defending a barricade during the Spartacist Uprising in Berlin, 1919







































































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21 - The relationship of fascism
to Bonapartism

Fascism is related to a phenomenon called "Bonapartism"
(after Napoleon) where a strongman comes to power and, in a
departure from how things normally work, has a fair amount
of independence from the ruling class. This is relatively
rare and takes place when the ruling class has limited
choices: the ruling class puts the bonapartist in power
because it needs a "good sword" against the working class
and oppressed--but the nature of the power arrangement
leaves the ruling class with very limited control of the
situation.

Many have argued that Trump was a Bonapartist. That is not
my view.

My view is that, from the perspective of our ruling
class--Trump was a bit of an accident as well as a bit of
an experiment; something like proto-fascism (like
dipping a toe in the water to feel its temperature) that
they can study and learn from so they will be more prepared
when the day comes that they need to take the plunge.

It appears to me that Trump was always on a leash of
sorts, although a longer one than usual.

The clearest expression of this was the moment when he
finally reached the end of this leash, after ordering his
minions to unleash their fury on the Capitol. The
Republican leadership, right-wing talk radio, his corporate
sponsors, and the big tech companies with their social
media platforms all finally pulled the plug on their
creation.

(22) In any event, Bonapartism is not the same thing as
fascism. What they have in common is the disruption to the
normal way of doing things, and the fact that the executive
has greater independence from the ruling class than
usual.

For example, the German ruling class eventually found they
had a big problem after Hitler was put in charge,
especially once he started losing the war he had initiated
and there was no way to get rid of him (they tried in
July 1944, by blowing up his headquarters, and Tom Cruise
eventually turned it into a movie).

(23) It is important to remember that it makes a big
difference whether a strongman comes to power:

(a) from the inside, by co-opting
a popular revolution that has failed
because it has exhausted its strength, or

(b) from the outside, as a result of crushing
a popular revolution at the direction of
the revolution's open enemies.

Both Napoleon and Stalin came to power by the first
route, while Hitler, on the other hand, came to power by
the second. When a strongman is placed into power for the
purpose of crushing a revolution--his role and his rule
will be vastly more reactionary.

(24) I am making an effort to sketch out a quick overview
of some of these topics, and hopefully I have not gotten
over my head in doing so.

Some of the best analysis I have seen on the topic of
bonapartism is from the blog of Louis Proyect.
Unfortunately, I read one of Louis' best articles on this
several years ago but did not have an effective system to
create reference notes, and now I cannot remember *which*
essay by Louis I read (because he writes a lot on these
topics). So I did a quick internet search just now and
have created links to some of his related articles, some of
which are likely better than others [Link 2.3].

25 - Proyect's conclusion:
The U.S. is a long way from Weimar

Proyect's wrote a good article [Link 2.4] on why the
comparisons between the U.S. today and the Weimar republic
in Germany that led to Hitler's coming to power--are (at
least at this point in time) much overdone.

(a) Proyect notes that the objective conditions in Germany
were far more severe. In 1932 the unemployment rate was 30
percent (twice that of the U.S.) and unemployment insurance
had been cut down by austerity after the 1929 markiet
crash.

(b) The Proud Boys or Boogaloos in the U.S. are miniscule
in comparison to Hitler's brownshirts, who numbered 400,000
men in 1932 and had years of experience attacking working
class demonstrations and rallies. By contrast, the murders
committed by Kyle Rittenhouse, or the Nazi who drove his
car into an antiracist demo in Charlottsville and killed
Heather Heyer, are relatively rare.

(c) Between 1918 and 1922, rightwing militias such as the
Freikorps murdered 354 leftist political figures in
Germany. The Freikorps was a predecessor of sorts to
Hitler's brownshirts and numbered more than 1.5 million
men, who joined for the sole purpose of beating up or
killing leftists.

(d) The relationship between the desperation of the ruling
circles and the right-wing terror they unleashed can be
seen in the timeline of events. This is a key point.
Proyect notes that, by 1925, conditions in Germany had
stabilized and the Freikorps had outlived its usefulness.
But only four years later, as a consequence of the Great
Depression, millions of Germans were plunged into poverty
to the point that they'd rally behind any group, right or
left, that promised to "make Germany great again."

(e) The battles for control of the streets between the
Nazis and the reds after 1929 resulted in 155 deaths and
426 injured in Prussia. Most of the deaths and injuries
were of reds, who had to face the combined forces of cops
and fascists.

(f) Finally, in this period both the fascists and the two
main German working class trends (the social democrats and
the communists) had a massive presence in Germany's
parliament, roughly equal in size to Germany's conservative
and liberal parties.

(g) One more point here. Proyect does not bring this up in
his article but I consider it relevant history: The German
ruling class installed Hitler into power at the time they
did because the popularity of Hitler's Nazi party had
started to collapse, and the popularity of the working
class trends was steadily growing. So, for the German
ruling class, it was a "now or never", "use it lose it"
moment to play the Hitler card.

26 - On the other hand:
Weimar may be closer than we think

On the other hand, if we take a longer term perspective,
Weimar may be closer than we think.

The Weimar government in Germany ruled from the end of WW1,
in 1918, until Hitler was installed into power, in
1933. Based on Proyect's article, we can see that Weimar
had three main stages:

(1) the period of instability from
the end of the war in 1918 to 1925
(this includes the workers'
uprisings of 1919 and 1923)

(2) the period of relative stability from
1925 until the Wall Street crash of 1929

(3) the period of instability from 1929
until Hitler was put in power in 1933

The U.S. may seem frighteningly unstable today--compared
to recent history--but we can see that it is in a period of
relative stability corresponding more closely to the
1925-1929 period in Germany--than the other two periods
above.

Louis is correct to say that the U.S. is not in period like
Germany was in from 1929-1933. But what happens if (or
when) the ever-increasing mountain of debt on which the
U.S. economic machine depends for its smooth
running--collapses like a house of cards?

Many people today are predicting economic upheavals on a
par with 1929. These kinds of topics, naturally, bring
forth a fair amount of uninformed commentary. But I did
read one thing which rang true and that I found somewhat
scary. It said that no one knows (or can know) how
close we are
to the point where a single additional
dollar of debt
, so to speak, breaks the camel's back.

We are in uncharted territory.

27 - "Middle road" leads nowhere

There is one more striking similarity with Weimar that we
must confront in a sober way. In retrospect, we can see
that Weimar was doomed. As the financial crisis
intensfied and instability increased--popular discontent
was bound to make itself felt one way or the other
.
Either the working class will rise up and overthrow the
ruling class--or the ruling class will first make a
preemptive strike.

In the big picture, the social democratic (ie: reformist)
attempts to reform the Weimar goverment--and transform it
into the solution the workers needed--failed to recognize
that this "middle road" would ultimately lead nowhere.

We have, today, a limited amount of time and
opportunity to create an alternative for the working
class that is real. For us, also, this is a case of "use
it or lose it".

Make hay while the sun shines.
..
28 - What is a serious alternative ?

The most important thing of all to understand about fascism
and extreme repression is that in the long term the only
way to prevent it us by giving the working class and
oppressed an alternative that is based on reality--with
a solid theoretical foundation.

Nature abhors a vacume, and so does political life. If
mainstream politics (both liberal and conservative) offer
the masses lies and excuses while making deals with the
powerful--then it is only natural that ordinary people will
be attracted to any trend that denounces the lies and
excuses (and those who make them) and promises change that
is real.

The overwhelming majority of "the left" (in the U.S. and
elsewhere) is enmeshed in what I call "food-chain
politics
". Usually this is called "reformism" or
"incrementalism" or (to use more precise language) social
democracy. There is nothing wrong with fighting for
reforms, of course. The problem comes up when the path to
these reforms involves making alliances with political
trends that are higher up on the "food chain" and closer to
power.

For example, in 2016, a group called "Socialist
Alternative" advocated that its followers look to Bernie
Sanders for inspiration and leadership. Bernie, of course,
ended up promoting Hillary. Hillary, after she lost the
election, said we need to "give Trump a chance". You see
the problem? At the bottom of this food chain is
(supposedly) something called "socialism". But if you
follow the chain of influence, you will see that at the
top of this chain is Wall Street.

If the left cannot unite around a genuine alternative that
refuses these kinds of compromising and subservient
alliances, then as our capitalist rulers continue to bring
misery to the masses--ordinary people will, sooner or
later, embrace charlatans who will burn them--and maybe
half the world.

There are left trends that reject food chain politics, of
course. But these trends overwhelmingly embrace what I
call "cargo-cult" thinking and practices (otherwise known
as sectarianism) in which their little grouplet entertains
a messianic vision of its role and is unable to engage in
the necesssary principled cooperation with other groups.

I have come to the conclusion that a good way to break this
cycle of self-deception and abuse is to take modest and
reasonable steps to bring the work, ideas and platforms of
all revolutionary trends to a common democratic
platform
--a database of articles, discussion and
debate that would represent a level playing field that
would bring transparency to our movement.

All the corruption, all the hypocrisy, all the subservience
to ruling class institutions, as well as all the
subservience to cargo-cult religions--would be exposed to
the light of day on such a level playing field.

On the other side of this equation--all of the good and
dedicated work, analysis and gathering of facts and news by
all of these trends--would be indexed and easy for anyone
to find
and to compare.

So if anyone is interested in finding either the good work
or the "dirt" on any leftist or working class
organization--there would be a place to go.

I discuss this proposal (which I call "the thread
manifesto") below.
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Have Trump's Lies Wrecked Free Speech? (NYT, January 6) - A debate has broken out over whether the once-sacrosanct constitutional protection of the First Amendment has become a threat to democracy.
Facts won't fix this: (Guardian, January 1) Experts on how to fight America's disinformation crisis
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3. The growing crisis
of social media


Our ruling class will find itself
in deep shit as public opinion
increasingly gets "out of control"

The ruling class in the US is beginning to recognize that
they have a big problem on their hands. Here is one of
their experts, Yale law professor Robert Post:

"The formation of public opinion is out of control
because of the way the internet is forming groups
and dispersing information freely"

Before the advent of the internet, Post noted:

"People were always crazy, but they couldn't find
each other, they couldn't talk and disperse their
craziness
. Now we are confronting a new phenomenon
and we have to think about how we regulate that
in a way which is compatible with people’s freedom
to form public opinion." (see links in next column)

The storming of the Capitol by a mob made up of (1) white
supremacists, (2) people who believe that Trump won the
election, and even (3) many who believe that the Democrats
eat children for breakfast--has reinforced a fear that has
been growing for a while.

It was not that long ago that our ruling class was laughing
at the problems that countries like China, Russia and Iran
would have when the internet gave people the right to learn
about and share ideas. They are not laughing now.

Built on a mountain of lies

The problem is that modern capitalist society is built on
mountains of lies, at every level. This was not that much
of a problem when a handful of trusted gatekeepers
controlled the information that was available to most
people. The worst and biggest lies were rarely effectively
challenged. When I grew up there were only 3 TV networks.
And most people got news that had been approved by people
who bought ink by the barrel.

I have been writing about the future impact of social media
since long before it was called "social media". This
report is already too long, so I will get to the point:

These lies are flammable

The impact of social media is steadily growing, and there
is no end in sight. Our society is structured on
lies--which will increasingly be challenged. These lies
are flammable, and will burn.

Ben's Law

I have concluded that the impact of social media is growing
in an exponential way, and there is an analogy here to
"Moore's Law" (which was an observation, rather than a law)
which holds that the number of transistors on a
semiconductor chip doubles about every two years. In an
analogous way, I have observed that the social and
political impact of social media is doubling about every
decade.

Fasten your seatbelts

As decade rolls after decade, it will become inceasingly
obvious that humanity is entering new territory. The war
of ideas in society has never been on a level playing
field. That is what's going to change.

All of the lies of our ruling classes, all of their tricks
and servants, are going to be exposed, like Harvey
Weinstein was when the internet made it possible for his
victims to share their stories. It will be like
that--times a million.

So, if you think the impact of social media is big
now--fasten your seatbelts.


[this section updated: March 6]





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4 - The Thread Manifesto
and the road to Trinity


Reply to CB
(a supporter of WSWS/SEP

Note to readers: This letter is part of
an ongoing correspondence with a supporter
of the "Socialist Equality Party" (better
known as the "World Socialist Web Site").
The letter from CB (as well as links to all
relevant material) is in Appendix A (below).

Hi CB,

First, since it has been 2 months, I would like to
apologize for the delay in replying to you. I first had to
write (and debug) the code that I used to create this
webpage. After I got that done, I got up the next morning
at 5 am, with a clear mind and determined to complete all
writing by noon.

Unfortunately, at that point, Trump turned his hordes loose
on the Capitol, and it was necessary to write about
that--including related matters (such as the nature of
bonapartism and fascism) that a lot of people are confused
about. Then the demands of my day-job kicked in, and I had
to put political work on the back burner for a few weeks so
that I could remain gainfully employed. But now (at last)
I have carved out a few hours to focus completely on you.

1 - A clear focus is encouraging

I will start by making clear that I am encouraged by your
response, because you have focused on the key issue:

> what I had hoped to see was an explanation
> of how your proposal would advance any of
> the struggles the working class currently
> faces, which I don't feel you have done.

That is a damn good question. I will sketch out some
thoughts here that I hope will at least begin to address
it. Hopefully you can follow up with more questions so
that I can be specific in ways you may find helpful.

2 - The struggles of the working class

The working class, of course, faces thousands of
struggles
, some more important than others.

(1) Some struggles are for specific partial
(and practical) demands:

For example:
emergency money to pay for rent or
food during the Covid pandemic, or
for the punishment of cops who murder
people with impunity.

(2) Other struggles are for less immediate and
more long-term demands:

For example:
Action to reduce global warming.

(3) Some struggles are for things that are somewhat
more abstract, and not necessarily tied to
any single set of partial demands:

For example:
the struggle for a class independent party,
or the struggle for consciousness so that
they can understand how this world came to be,
and how the real solution to all the problems
of our time will require that the world be run
by the proletariat as a class rather than by
the needs of capital.

Within the general category of consciousness,
there is also the struggle of the working class
to gain confidence in itself and in the power
of mass struggle, and to learn who are its
friends--and who are its enemies (such as
social democratic misleaders, or trade union
bureaucrats who make a career out of selling
out struggles).

3 - All revolutionary activists
need to get on the "same page"

You ask how my proposal would advance any of these
struggles. I want to be clear about what my proposal is,
because it appears that this is a source of many
misunderstandings.

My proposal to is make use of the internet and digital
technology to put all revolutionary activists on, so to
speak, the "same page".

Obviously there will need to be an intense process of
sorting out the genuinely revolutionary elements from the
elements which simply claim to be revolutionary. This
intense process must take place on a level playing field
and in conditions of full transparency--without any
self-appointed group having the ability to silence or
suppress their critics.

The above is the essence of what I propose, but it is too
abstract for many to understand. To make it more concrete,
I am putting together what I call "the thread manifesto":



4 - "The Thread Manifesto"

The thread manifesto is based on a common database of
articles
from all groups which claim to be revolutionary
-- as well as associated means of democratic discussion
and democratic moderation.

In my humble opinion, it is mind-bogglingly absurd that
such a database and associated democratic discussion does
not exist already
. We are in the 21st century. There is
no excuse for this.

5 - Ignorance rules -- because
we lack the democratic forum we need

Yes, there are plenty of "marxist" or "socialist"
discussion forums. But the moderation on all of the
large forums stinks, to put it charitably. Good posts
are deleted and good activists are banned--because they ask
intelligent questions that need to be asked--and say
intelligent things that need to be said.

The result of all this is a level of ignorance that calls
itself "marxism" that is so astoundingly immense--that in
comparison--it makes the QAnon theories look like a model
of sober and scientific inquiry.

You have complaints about the moderation of r/socialism?
Join the club. All of the forums are fucked up, to put it
bluntly. (The "forum" maintained by your group in the form
of comments on your online articles is no better, as my
experience having my comments deleted for supposedly being
"off topic" makes clear.)

By putting on one page links to all discussions about all
articles, the thread manifesto proposes a step that would
make it impractical for any group of moderators with
their heads up their asses to silence their critics.






























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Node 4005 -- (section 6)
Big Ships and Small Canoes
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6 - Everyone with resources must help

The need for something along the lines of what I am
proposing is so great that I have come to the conclusion
that at least some work along these lines is the
responsibility of all groups that have significant
resources and are genuinely revolutionary in character.

This is why I asked your group, the WSWS, to assist in work
along these lines. In makes no difference whether (or not)
I expect your group to behave in a revolutionary way.
Standard UFT hold that I should propose that you "do the
right thing". The rest is up to you.

Your group had just written an article bragging about the
high technical level of its web resources and your database
hosting hundreds of thousands of cross-referenced and
indexed articles. Your article had bragged about how your
little group
was going to use these resources to raise the
consciousness of millions of workers--but you neglected to
recognize that you have any obligation to make use of any
of the work of any of the many other similar groups in
the world.

I pointed out (in a diplomatic way, as a comment in
response to your article) that you could reduce this kind
of arrogant hypocrisy by working (in a very modest way) to
give workers a chance to get knowledge from broader
sources.

Did any other readers like my comment?

No. Because they never saw it. Because you guys decided
to make the conversation more "productive" by censoring my
criticism, on the bullshit excuse (I found out after months
of inquiry) that my comment was supposedly "off topic".

7 - Returning to your question

But I must return to your question, CB:

> how your proposal would advance any of
> the struggles the working class currently
> faces

In my view, this proposal would not advance "any" of
these struggles.

Rather, it would advance "all" of them.

Pick your struggle:

(1) struggles and actions for partial demands - would
become known to wider circles of people - and by this
means would enjoy more support. More than this, the
understanding of issues related to the particular
struggle (including such things as what forces are
reliable
--and what tactics are likely to be useful)
would be enhanced with deeper discussion and debate from
others who have experience in struggle.

(2) The bigger questions (such as what to do about
global warming) would be helped also with, so to speak, a
single page where an activist could easily find (and
compare) articles
on this topic from all sources which
claim a revolutionary perspective.

For example, I have seen articles on global warming from my
former comrades, who are part of the "Communist Voice
Organization". Their articles may (possibly) be amongst
the best on the topic. Or maybe not. I would like to see
what criticisms (if any) have been made of their articles
by other leftists. If articles from all revolutionary
currents were aggregated into a common site--this would
have the effect of increasing the discussion and
debate on these articles--which would no longer only be
accessible in their isolated silos.

(3) The deeper and more abstract questions--such as how
the working class will create the independent and
democratic organization
it needs--or how things came to be
the way they are--and what needs to happen for things to
be better--would obviously also be helped with greater
contact, common work, and collaboration from a larger
mass
of revolutionary forces.

I hope this at least begins to address your question.
Please let me know if there is further clarification that
may be helpful

8 - We need to put on our socks
before we put on our shoes

Let's continue:

> As you say "[ending capitalism by a mass
> movement] will be enabled by organization.
> Organization will be greatly helped by a
> democratic social media platform" - but your
> proposal is not to immediately establish a
> social media platform, it's for the WSWS to
> offer to host articles from any tendency
> who wants to address the audience it has
> attracted.

It is true that my proposal is not to immediately establish
a social media platform.

That is because I am constrained by reality. What are the
forces that would create such an independent and democratic
platform? What are the forces that would even understand
what such a platform would look like and how it would
function?

It appears to me that these forces do not (yet) exist.

What is possible at this moment is to undertake a project
that is more modest.

I am claiming that humanity needs to build an immensely
large ship. But, at this time, I am only advocating for
building a canoe, because we need to start somewhere so
that we can learn.

> A canoe is not a ship. But, in building canoes,
> we may learn about things like buoyancy, balance,
> stability, cargo load, ocean waves, currents,
> wind and weather, propulsion, navigation and
> sea-sickness. Much of this will be useful when
> we scale up to the next step. And small-scale
> projects will accumulate the experience around
> which a community can organize itself.
-- source: Node 4005 (section 6)

In my previous letter to you, I compared the project of
creating an independent and democratic social media
platform
to the Manhattan Project -- in terms of its
significance and power to transform the terrain of the
class struggle, raise the consciousness of the proletariat
and lead it to victory.

We need to realistically think about the likely stages in
the development of such a project.

(1) I used the phrase "Trinity" to refer to the immense
project of building an independent and democratic
platform--at scale (ie: reaching millions, not thousands)
and

(2) I use the "Thread Manifesto" to refer to creating a
common database of articles and comments from all trends
which claim to be revolutionary.

Hence:

Trinity = the ship we need

Thread = plan for a canoe
Manifesto that will help us
gain experience
and understand what
we are doing

The project of creating a common database would be
invaluable in helping activists understand the fundamental
idea that the project would be beyond the control of any
self-selected group which intends to silence its critics.

So this would be the first step in the larger project of
creating a democratic platform that will be under
everyone's control
because it will be beyond anyone's
control
.

9 - Word-twisting, time-wasting
cargo-cult trotbots

I hope that I have replied to your substantive comments. I
will now briefly touch on some of your complaints that I
have not treated you (or your group) with sufficient
respect.

First, I consider our correspondence to be important. And
you have done your best to reply to me in a principled way.
What is important to me is that you believe that you are
here on this earth to fight for the proletariat. If so,
then everything else is details.

Yes, I have called your group a cargo cult. And I was
part of one myself. This is nothing to be ashamed of.
Groups like this emerge when the level of knowledge is
too low for groups to emerge on a higher basis.

The term "cargo cult" is distinct from the term "cult".
Yes, there is a shared etymology, but it does not mean the
same thing. In an analogous way, the term "wage slave"
does not mean the same thing as the word "slave".

The term "cargo cult" describes a particular kind of
religion that emerges as a blend of science and myth
when the material basis for a fully scientific
understanding of the forces which govern our lives simply
does not exist. All of early humanity's world-knowledge
systems (ie: that developed before class society) were
mixtures of science and religion--because science and
religion had not yet split from one another. As such, this
represents a stage of knowledge that is transitional.

It is important, if we are to have a principled
conversation, that we be honest (with ourselves, with one
another, and with anyone who may wish to read it). This
means that we must have the right to say what we really
think
. Yes, we may sometimes hear things that fail to
flatter our self-image. There are worse forms of
hardship (read "Appendix B" about what Chuikov and the
62nd Army went through).

I make a reasonable effort to engage with other comrades
in a principled and honest way, and I do not actually go
out of my way to insult people (although I am confident
many feel otherwise). Many people refuse to accept the
hardships that come from engaging with me. That is their
right, but it is not my problem.

I want to talk to people who are not afraid of hardship.
And I am much more afraid that I may fail to speak the
truth--than I am afraid of being alone. I am on this earth
to fight and the truth (guided by humility) is my only
weapon
.

However, you really did twist my words in your previous
letter. It is ok with me if you have not yet reached the
stage where you have the ability to recognize this. But I
do want you to have an opportunity to understand my
feelings on this matter. Here is a short excerpt of your
reply:

> You claim "I have never said that the work
> to overthrow capitalism will only become
> possible towards the middle of this century."
> and that to suggest you did is "word twisting
> and time wasting".

> what is the reader to conclude other than
> that a party capable of leading the overthrow
> of capitalism cannot emerge until the middle of
> the century? It is not "word twisting" to put
> 2 and 2 together from your writings.

Readers would be correct to conclude that the independent
and democratic organization (ie: party) we need is unlikely
to fully emerge until a suffiently independent and
democratic communications platform exists to connect
activists
with one another and with the working class.

But this does not mean that we cannot do work to
overthrow capitalism today. It only means that we are
working in much less favorable conditions, in which our
main weapon (ie: our party) does not exist.

The work that we do today (and also what we learn from
this work) will form the foundation of the party that we
build tomorrow.

I hope this clears things up a bit.
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5 - The Proletarian Blockchain

It will be under everyone's control
because it will be beyond anyone's control

Note to readers:
Two months ago I posted this image (see next column)
to facebook along with a note explaining that I was
thinking of writing an essay on this topic and wanted
to know if anyone might be interested or have any
questions. There was little interest, and so I have
given up (for now) on the idea of writing an essay or
article on this. I include (below) some of the
comments that I wrote in reply to Art:

To my knowledge, no one has used the phrase "proletarian
blockchain" before, so I am coining the term to represent a
blockchain that is controlled by the proletariat and
which serves the proletariat.

This also brings up other questions--such as what does it
mean to be controlled by the proletariat?

A blockchain is simply a digital ledger that is
"immutable" (ie: impossible for anyone to erase or to
forge) because a great many copies are kept all over the
world, and the authenticity of the ledger can always be
proven by a simple mathematical code called a "hash". If
the CIA (or any other agency) attempted to counterfeit the
ledger--they would be defeated by the hash, because
mathematics is more powerful than all the computers they
could ever build or buy. Napoleon supposedly said that "god
is on the side of those who have the big battalions". To
revise that today, we can substitute mathematics for big
battalions.

The digital money people (ie: the bitcoin enthusiasts) use
their digital ledger to record transactions of various
kinds. The proletariat will use its ledger to create a
kind of public library that will contain public
contributions (ie: text, graphics, memes, video, etc) to a
public and democratic social media platform.

So the blockchain is simply a common and secure form of
public memory
that will provide the material foundation
of the social media platform. The fact that it will be
public and immutable will mean that everyone will be able
to read it
. Eventually everyone will also be able to
write to it also. Neither corporations nor governments
will be able to censor it other than by temporary (and
doomed to fail) efforts to block internet access.

By the same token, groups of self-interested careerists
and opportunists will also gnash their teeth at their
inability to fuck with (or control the gateway access to)
the proletarian blockchain. It will be under everyone's
control
because it will be beyond anyone's control.

The subtitle of my proposed essay (ie: "the emergence of
the proletarian mind") is simply a reference to a principle
which is widely understood: greater, more powerful and more
complex intelligence and consciousness can only emerge
from the free and bottom-up interaction of many smaller,
weaker and simpler forms of intelligence and
consciousness. Your brain and mind is made possible by (ie:
emerges from) the interaction of 100 billion neurons. The
proletarian mind will emerge from the free interaction (ie:
unrestricted by commodity friction) of the billions of
workers and oppressed.

Reply to questions and comments
from a blockchain enthusiast

My facebook post led to some private questions and comments
from people who have experience and knowledge of blockchain
applications.

Question: Have you investigated the idea of smart
contracts using blockchains such as Ethereum or Cardano?

Answer: No. I have no interest in that. All these
things may have some use, in some situations, to some
people, at some time. What I am interested in is what can
be done today to lay the needed foundation for the
independent and democratic social media platform that we
need. Please see my reply to CB (above) for more on this.

Q: Does something like Bitcoin make it possible for
working class people to find a little independence and/or
improved economic position?

A: Not in a way that is significant.

It is possible that someone might find financial
independence at the blackjack table in Las Vegas. But
that is not usually how the cards fall.

Q: To what extent will a socialist society require the
use of blockchain, and cryptocurrency?

A: It is important to distinguish for readers that
"blockchain" refers to technology that stores information
in a distributed and tamper-proof way, while
"cryptocurrency" refers to a specific use of the
blockchain technology for the creation and trading of
money-like tokens.

It is safe to assume that the transitional economic and
political system which will replace the rule of capital
will make use of money. So it is possible that something
like a cryptocurrency will be used. I don't actually know.
Nor do I care.

However the blockchain technology, in the sense of creating
tamper-proof storage, will have wide application.

Q: Is it fair to call cryptocurrency a classic pyramid
scheme wrapped in a high tech package?

A: I don't know. I never thought about that. But, now
that you mention it, it does remind me a bit of the classic
"Wolf Of Wall Street" scene with Matthew McConaughey (see
next column).

Bitcoin, in particular, is based on a clever algorithm that
is actually designed to waste energy. The people who
mine the tokens are actually in competition with one
another to waste the most energy.

Political activists and tech workers do need to assist one
another. And the most important fruit of this
collaboration will be various pilot projects that
experiment with independent and democratic social
media
. And the independent social media projects will (in
the long run) eventually merge--and eventually make use of
blockchain storage.

However the blockchain application will come later--when
the need for it emerges. For now--there is a need, for
everyone who knows the difference between a bit and a byte,
to re-think what is possible in social media when all
forms of money and commodity advertizing are removed from
the equation entirely, and those who use the platform can
create and use algorithms of their choice. This will
enable a whole new world.

For people who work in tech I would say this: As far as
the potential for synergy between (1) how we might make a
living in information technology, and (2) the application
of tech to important political projects--my view is that,
for the most part, for most people, and for most
situations, it is best to simply keep these things
separate.

Many who work in tech have little protection from
retaliation from employers for our expression of radical
political views (which may involve the need for the
expropriation of these employers). I write under the name
"Ben Seattle". But in my day job, I am known by another
name.

TheMarxistLine


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6 - Pragmatism and
"The Marxist Line"

The leadership of the working class
cannot be separated from
where the working class needs to go

The Marxist Line, a video podcast, is my favorite show.
Viewers can watch it every Sunday (at noon, Pacific time)
or view videos of recent shows (see link in next column).

The Marxist Line has been running for about a year and a
half, and basically reviews articles (and sometimes videos)
from groups (and people) who call themselves marxist. To
my knowledge, there is nothing else like it.

For about two or three months I was part of the show, but I
eventually felt uncomfortable being part of a program
which--it became clear to me--lacked the necessary
commitment to the theoretical integrity the working class
needs.

This lack of commitment was particularly objectionable
when it was part of a project which advertized itself by
using the name of Karl Marx. Plenty of groups and people
in the movement prostitute Marx's name to sell shit.
Particularly in light of my own history (as a former
supporter of Stalin and Mao) I believe we need to be
extremely careful about this kind of thing. We must take
responsibility for our own positions (and mistakes) rather
than attempt to pin the blame on Marx or Lenin.

I believe that revolutionary activists must develop the
habit of outlining, in clear, concise and public format,
their criticisms of one another. This is a necessary part
of developing the collective understanding and consensus we
need on the way forward. For this reason I will outline
here my perspective on the good, the bad, and the
ugly about the Marxist Line, and about what can happen
when fundamental principles get in the way of "success".

1 - The good

Art and Andrew, the hosts of the show, find many of the
most interesting articles in newspapers (and blogs) from
what they call "the marxist community". (There is no such
thing as a "marxist community", but that is a topic for
another day.) They give comments that are usually
relatively well-informed. They are not afraid to criticize
groups for errors of commission or omission. Their
criticisms are usually on target.

They are entertaining, and have worked out the kind of
co-host chemistry that makes a show interesting. Andrew
usually sets up one or more good questions about whatever
is being reviewed. Often these are the kind of questions
that a viewer might have. Art, with more experience in the
movement, usually gives an answer that cuts through a lot
of the usual bullshit and gives insightful perspective.

Any viewer can ask them questions or post comments on the
twitch interface. In the screenshot (next column) I show
the kinds of questions and comments that make a show
interesting and informative.

By the way, I agree with the commentator, Phil, that the
show in question (which discussed Trump's coup attempt a
few days earlier) was one of their best.

Their platform -- and ours

As far as Phil's question regarding the emergence of an
alternative social media platform for Trump--it would
be good to keep an eye on Parler--as it is essentially
owned by the Mercer family (which is Trump's biggest
financial backer, and also the family that gave its name to
the island in the middle of Lake Washington). We will
certainly see Parler emerge in some form (maybe with Trump
having an ownership share since that possibility has been
in the news).

The right wing certainly wants and needs its own platform,
and they will eventually have it.

But we also need to be thinking about our movement (ie:
the revolutionary movement of the working class) needing
its own independent and democratic platform. There is
nothing to stop us from creating this platform today other
than a general lack of recognition that we need it.

Corporate interests invest millions and billions of dollars
into creating their platforms. We don't need that kind
of money. As a movement, we will have access to free
labor
from progressive tech workers--who only need from us
a clear understanding of what tasks and what principles are
most important. The software we need is free (or can
be created for free). And the price of hardware, as they
say, is approaching the price of sand.

Once we have our our own independent and democratic
platform
, this will be like the moment Spartacus and his
group of fellow slaves escaped from their gladitorial
school. We will be in a position to capture the
imagination
of activists (and eventually workers)
everywhere.

Tension can be positive

But--getting back to The Marxist Line--for some years,
after we met at the local Occupy encampment, I was
something of a mentor to Art. Since that time, Art has
matured and developed his own views and practice, and our
relationship includes more tension. However these
interactions remains quite useful.

For example: Art criticized the design layout of one of
my web pages, and the result was that I put some effort
into a (hopefully) better design.

And (another example) I wrote the chapter on China in
this report partly to respond to some comments that Art and
Andrew made on their show. So these are definitely
positive things.
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2 - The bad

The bad (or weak) side of The Marxist Line can be summed up
in a single word: pragmatism.

Many people do not understand what pragmatism is or why it
is a problem (ie: "What's wrong with being practical?", as
if pragmatism simply means being practical).

Pragmatism, historically, has involved a relatively
short-term focus on achievable goals to the exclusion of
the principles that are decisive in the longer term.

The wikipedia excerpt (see next column) notes that
pragmatism rejects the idea that the function of thought is
to describe, represent or mirror reality.

In other words--the only thing that matters is the
success of your project. If your project is
successful--then you must have been doing the right thing.
Or, in other words: "nothing succeeds like success".

Theory is just a bunch or words
to excite and attract the rubes

This gets to the heart of my disagreement with Art and
Andrew about the need for a commitment to theoretical
integrity.

If the words we use, such as "socialism", have no meaning
apart from their usefulness, at the present time, in
building whatever project we are working on--then it does
not really make any difference what these words actually
mean--because they are just words--and we can use them any
fucking way we want.

This is the pragmatist view:

Theory is just a bunch of words we can use
to excite people and attract them to our projects.

Theory has no deeper meaning apart from that.

Theory is how we understand
our past, present and future

My work is based on the opposite view:

Theory is the key to understanding where we are,
how we got here, and where we need to go.

Theory is how we understand that we are part of a class
which has the mission and destiny of overthrowing the
rule of capital and creating a world of peace, abundance
and genuine community for everyone.

It is not enough to build successful projects. At some
point millions of people will need to dedicate their
lives to creating a world that is not ruled by capital.

Millions of people will need to understand--not simply
which "leaders" they should admire and follow--but how
and why things are they way they are--and what needs to
change.

Without reliable theory that accurately describes and
reflects reality we will be led by charlatans, hucksters,
fools, and the many careerist lackeys of our ruling class,
who will keep us spinning in circles until we are
exhausted.

How to channel activists
into reformism

Let's consider how our movement becomes a plaything when
charlatans are in command.

Nearly all the self-proclaimed marxist groups claim to be
working for something they call "socialism". If you look
at the fine print, however, 80 percent of them are really
working for social democracy (ie: a less-bad version of
capitalist rule).

But how about the rest of these groups? Most of them
define "socialism" as a party-state (ie: where a ruling
party suppresses organized criticism and opposition).

The result of this is that activists end up either:

(1) working to make capitalism less bad, or

(2) advocating for the creation of a police state

The first path (above) gives up on ending the rule of
capital
.

And the second path ends up in the same place via a
slightly different path--since it results in confusion,
demoralizion, passivity and an eventual collapse into
liberalism--because arguments for a police state don't
tend to do well against arguments that people need to have
democratic rights to express their views and organize.

If "socialism" requires that we give up our democratic
rights--then most people will naturally conclude that it
is better to attempt to reform capitalism.

The myth of the Party-State

The proponents of the "Party-State" usually claim that such
a thing was advocated by Lenin, and in common usage (inside
and outside the left) the term "Leninism" is considered
synonomous with a belief in the need for a party-state.

But this is untrue. It is nothing but a huge distortion of
history.

As a temporary emergency measure, in the most extreme
circumstances possible, Lenin recognized that combining the
party and state would give the Soviet government a chance
to survive long enough to make things right later.

But today, we have those who advocate the party-state as a
permanent solution to the problems of capitalism.

Luna Oi (a video blogger from Vietnam) is an example of
this. Her views about the party-state in Vietnam being a
possible example of "socialism" were promoted on The
Marxist Line.

Neither Art nor Andrew were able to see the need to take a
clear stand against this kind of nonsense.

That is their choice, of course. But that is not what the
working class needs. The working class needs clarity on
the road forward.

And, by the way, I have never argued that Luna should not
be allowed to be part of the show. I think it is fine to
cover her on the show. Rather I have argued that her views
need to be effectively refuted. Sometimes the best way
for people to learn about wrong views--is to see them
being confronted by views which reflect reality.

3 - The ugly -
Stalin and Mao as pragmatists

We have to ask, at some point, where pragmatism can lead.

The most well-known pragmatists associated with marxism are
Stalin and Mao. Both were quite successful on their
own terms: they were lauded as revolutionary heroes while
they lived, and mourned by millions when they died. Stalin
defeated Hitler in europe, and Mao stood up to both US
imperialist and Russian threats. Isn't that "success"?

But then we have to ask--where are the Soviet Union and
revolutionary China today? They are capitalist,
class-divided countries, based on exploitation, with
imperialist ambitions and behavior.

Defenders of Stalin and Mao claim that capitalism "was
restored" in Russia and China because Stalin and Mao died
and there was no one to prevent restoration. But, in that
case, this is a vision of "socialism" in which the working
class
is ignorant, passive and powerless.

Millions of people, today, need to understand that there is
an alternative to the rule of capital that is not
bullshit
.

Should it really be necessary for me to say that we need to
take this seriously? That is not my role. I will not
attempt to be a baby-sitter for comrades who appear to be
intoxicated with what (at the moment) may be fashionable.

Instead, I take solace from "Ben's Law of Sanity" (see
images next column) that we need to have a relaxed attitude
towards the mistakes of our comrades. I am a reporter. I
report the facts and I tell the truth. Then I can relax.
So, to tell the truth, I have issued the following "report
card" (next column) on the so-called "Marxist Line".

Potential future collaboration

The first step to fixing a problem is admitting you have
one. I have made my views clear. I would like to see Art
and Andrew make a decisive break from pragmatism and
recognize the need to make a commitment to theoretical
integrity. Whether I will live long enough to see this
happen is unknown. Other than this, I am washing my hands
of the matter.

I do intend to assist The Marxist Line in the form of
digital infrastructure: software that would (hopefully) be
easier to use and have more useful features than the google
docs spreadsheet they use to organize their review process.

I had hoped to have a prototype for them to play with
before the end of last year. My estimates, unfortunately,
are rarely even close to realistic.
(above and below) estimates of relative strength (combined economic and military) of great empires put together by hedge fund manager Ray Dalio. Areas in gray in the chart above represent major wars.

War was the result in 12 out 16 similar situations,
in the last 500 years, when a rising power was
viewed as a threat by an established power
(below) The position of Taiwan as a key strategic chokepoint in blocking China's access to the sea is evident in this chart of the 1st and 2nd island chains

Links for this chapter:
Online version of Ray Dalio's 2020 book: The Changing World Order -- Where we are and where we're going
Naval War College Review - Gabriel Collins - 2018
A Maritime Oil Blockade Against China
-- Tactically Tempting but Strategically Flawed

Journal of Strategic Studies - Sean Mirsky - 2013 Stranglehold: Context, Conduct, Consequences
of an American Naval Blockade of China

Rand Corporation -- 2016 -- War with China
-- Thinking Through the Unthinkable

Forbes - Zak Doffman - July 11, 2020 -- Is TikTok Seriously Dangerous—Do You Need To Delete It?
DailyMail, Australia -- November 30, 2020
Diplomat has built a career out of inflammatory tweets including horrific post about Afghan killings
(above and below) screenshots from a YouTube channel with shallow (but sometimes interesting) speculation


(above) Example of a global supply chain
(above and below) Google maps of Taiwan and China



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7. The Coming War between
the U.S. and China


A war between the U.S. and China is not
inevitable, but it is becoming increasingly
difficult to see how it might be avoided

I was born during the first war between U.S. imperialism
and China, which took place in Korea from 1950 to 1953. I
have a chance of living long enough to see at least the
beginning of the second war, which will take place under
quite different circumstances.

China is emerging as the manufacturing center of the world,
with the largest economy and its own imperialist ambitions.
China has the determination and ability to retake Taiwan,
and replace the U.S. as the dominant power in East Asia.

The era in which the United States has stood as the
reigning economic and military power in the world is
drawing to a close. This era began around the time of the
first world war, and will likely end sometime mid-century.

China will be the indisputable master of East Asia after it
reunites with Taiwan. This will take place either with or
without war with the U.S., although war seems more likely.
Either way, it will happen.

I have been watching this story unfold for a while. My
uncle was a colonel in the Marines and met Chiang Kai-shek.
I became a maoist around the time that Nixon went to
China, in 1972. I am no longer a maoist, but rather a
student of Lenin. But the story of China, its place in the
world, and the role of the Chinese working class in the
unfolding events of this century--which I believe will
witness the overthrow of the rule of capital--has always
held a fascination for me. It is one of those topics
that--the more we learn about it--the more we realize how
little we know.

I can claim no special knowledge of any kind, but I know
that, as China and the US move closer to war, the general
interest in this topic is bound to grow. Since so much
that is written about this and related topics is shallow
(for obvious reasons) I thought it would make sense for me
to sketch out a few notes here.

1 - The Century of Humiliation

Chinese civilization goes back to before the time of
ancient Greece, Rome and Persia--before the time of the
Bronze Age and the Trojan War--all the way back to the
Stone Age and the emergence of agriculture. For much of
history, China was the center of the world economy. But
capitalism developed first in Europe, and the European
countries became colonial powers which were able to use
modern weapons and technology to rape and enslave the rest
of the world.

China was not spared, and its century of humiliation is
often regarded as beginning in the 1830's, when Britain
ransacked whatever they could reach when the Chinese
government attempted to ban the sale of British narcotics
(ie: the "Opium Wars"). After this, China was carved up
like a melon.

The century of humiliation is regarded as ending when Mao's
armies chased the US imperialist puppet, Chiang Kai-shek,
to Taiwan in 1949, where he was protected by the US 7th
fleet. Taiwan, today, remains as "unfinished business".

2 - A bloody nose

China and the US went to war with one another in 1950, in
Korea. In many ways it was a battle between rifles and
jets, but US imperialism got a bloody nose, and learned
that it was unwise to underestimate China.

3 - Between 20 and 40 million
die in Mao's famine

The alliance between China and the Soviet Union
disintegrated in the 1950's, and under Mao's leadership,
the biggest famine in history led to between 20 and 40
million deaths between 1959 and 1961.

4 - "Hide your strength, bide your time"

The U.S. and China established a defacto alliance in the
1970's against their mutual enemy, the Soviet Union. After
the collapse of the Soviet Union around 1990, the ruling
class in the U.S. saw China as a source of cheap labor and
as a big future market, while in China the philosophy was
"hide your strength, and bide your time".

5 - The Thucydides Trap

"It was the rise of Athens and
the fear that this instilled in
Sparta that made war inevitable"

-- Thucydides,
"History of the Peloponnesian War"

China's economy grew and, around the time of the 2008
financial crisis, as the U.S. and European economies grew
unsteady, China saw that it was time to stop hiding and
biding, and became more assertive. Soon both the U.S. and
China began to openly talk about and prepare for an
eventual war.

As China asserted itself in the East and South China Seas,
Graham Allison, a Harvard professor, used the phrase
"Thucydides Trap", in a 2012 magazine article, to describe
a tendency towards war when a rising power (such Athens)
challenges the dominant status of an existing power (such
as Sparta). Allison followed up with a 2017 book "Destined
for War", which made clear that the US and China were on a
collision course. Allison did a survey that showed
that--12 out of 16 similar situations in the last 500
years--resulted in war.

You can find all kinds of shallow articles or videos on the
internet about a possible war with China. But deeper, and
more sober sources are also available.

6 - "Worse that the world wars
that ruined European civilization"

The first question many people want to know is whether, in
the event of war, the US and China would use nuclear
weapons. The answer is probably not--although no one
really knows. The problem with war is that, once it
begins, it tends to have a logic of its own in which
sometimes the only way to avoid immediate defeat is to
gamble on escalation.

In talking about a war between the US and China, Henry
Kissinger (who is both an insightful historian as well as a
war criminal who deserves to be hung) noted that not one of
the leaders who entered the first world war would have done
so if he had known what the outcome would be like.

Last November, Kissinger warned that such a war could
easily escalate (in particular because modern technology
tends to strongly advantage the side which escalates most
quickly) and slip entirely out of the control of those who
initiate it. The result could be a "catastrophic" war
that "will be worse that the world wars that ruined
European civilization".

If Kissinger's views were representative of the influential
strategic thinkers who guide U.S. policy--then this might
indicate that U.S. imperialism would be determined to avoid
war with China. But Kissinger and those who share his view
appear to no longer have influence.

7 - Accommodation vs. Containment

Strategic thinkers in the U.S. are commonly said to fall
into one of two camps: (1) those who favor the
accomodation of China, and (2) those who favor
containment.

The first camp recognizes, for example, that the U.S.
cannot stop China from taking Taiwan (and would be foolish
to try). I think of these camps as "realpolitik" vs.
"fantasypolitik" -- because it is a fantasy to think that
the U.S. will be able to contain China's ambitions over the
long term.

But when I look at journals (such as Foreign Affairs or
Foreign Policy) which represent the opinions of those who
have access to strategic experts, it seems clear that it is
the containment camp which has influence. Those who argue
against war with China appear to be aware that they are
considered naive.

8 - China's economy will be bigger

Worth reading are the view of Ray Dalio. I include a link
to the free online version of his book "The Changing World
Order" and show two of his charts, which make clear that,
in terms of relative power, the decline of the U.S. and the
rise of China appear to be unstoppable.

China's economy is already larger than that of the U.S.
when measured in terms of Purchasing Power Party (ie: one
of the ways in which national wealth is calculated).
Within ten years it will also be larger when measured in
terms of Market Exchange Rates (ie: the other way of
measuring).

9 - A naval blockade would fail

Studies and policy papers by various think tanks, and the
Naval War College, that I have looked at were much more
optimistic about the outcome of war with China ten years
ago than they are now.

One idea that used to be popular was that the U.S. could
win a "stand-off war" by simply staying out of range of
China's ship-killer missles and instead blockade China's
oil imports, and if necessary also China's trade.

But in more recent years it has become clear that this
would not work. China is prepared, and might be able to
withstand an oil blockade for years (by means of rationing,
substitutions, overland pipeline routes, and its strategic
stockpile).

And China's role in the world economy means that a U.S.
blockade against China's trade would amount to an act of
war against the economy of most of the countries on earth.
This would plunge the world into a depression and have
severe consequences in terms of damaging U.S. relationships
everywhere--and lead many countries to retaliate in various
ways against the U.S. This means that it would probably
not be realistic for the U.S. to maintain a blockade long
enough to win its objectives.

Efforts by the U.S to avoid or reduce the causalties and
other damage of a shooting war by, instead, slowly
strangling China from a distance with a naval blockade
would likely have another effect also: it would look, to
countries in the region that are caught between the U.S.
and China, like U.S. imperialism is afraid of a real
war
--and is not truly committed to maintaining its power
in the region.

10 - War in the realm of nanometers

China spends more money importing semiconductor chips than
it does importing oil. The worldwide semiconductor market
is about a half trillion dollars per year, and is growing,
as semiconductors become part of an increasing number of
both consumer products (such as cars) and weapons such as
planes, tanks and missles.

However, as semiconductor size has shrunk (and the
associated technology has gotten more complex and
expensive) the number of companies that actually
manufacture semiconductors has also shrunk. Today only 3
companies make the most advanced (ie: smallest)
semiconductors, and all are outside China.

China decided to end its dependency on critical technology
from US imperialism (and US allies in Europe and Asia) but
this will not be easy because they have united to embargo
from China the sale of advanced semiconductors (and the
equipment needed to make them).

This leaves China seriously behind "the West" (which at
this point includes Japan, South Korea and Taiwan). Taiwan
is producing 5 nanometer chips, while China is 3
generations behind, making 14 nanometer chips. Chips
become more powerful as the transitor size shrinks, because
more transistors will fit on a chip. Each generation of
chips has transitors that are about a third smaller than
before. So a chip with 5 nanometer transistors will be
nearly 10 times more powerful (or 10 times cheaper) than a
chip based on 14 nanometer technology (see chart).

Even assuming a "Manhattan Project" level of commitment, it
would likely take China at least 10 years to catch up to
the level of where the US and its allies are now. And, by
then, Taiwan will be making 2 nanometer chips.

In comparison to modern semiconductor manufacturing
equipment, nearly everything else is simple. Manufacturing
nuclear weapons? Simple. Creating missles to deliver
those weapons with pinpoint accuracy to the other side of
the earth? Not a problem. Sending a rocket to the moon
and back with rock samples? China has been there, done
that.

But creating 5 nanometer chips? The only thing more
difficult would be sustained fusion energy (which humanity
has never achieved).

The smallest features on a 5 namometer chip are about 10
nanometers (the advertized size has gotten out of sync with
actual size). 10 nanometers is about 50 atoms wide.
Creating chips with features that size requires starting
with a laser powerful enough to cut through 3 inches of
steel. That laser is used to zap microscopic droplets of
tin, 50 thousand times a second, creating a plasma that
radiates extreme ultraviolet photons, which are bounced off
mirrors and onto a lithography system that helps to etch
the silicon wafer. All this is in equipment that is made
by only one company in the world (in the Netherlands--see
video) and must be adjusted daily, more by the use of black
magic than technology.

11 - The only thing that scares them
more than the rise of China

The embargo on advanced semiconductors, associated
manufacturing equipment, and the disruption of tech supply
chains worldwide imposes a hefty tax on the entire world
economy. Foreign Affairs (Sept 11 2020, Adam Segal) cites
a report from Deutsche Bank which estimates this cost as
$3.5 trillion over the next five years. Readers can
understand what this means: a trillion here, a trillion
there, pretty soon you are talking serious money.

In 1941, the US attempted to use an embargo on oil to
cripple the economy of Japan. Japan responded, 6 months
later, by bombing Pearl Harbor. It is probably safe to
say that both sides have run war games to see how events
would unfold if China responded, to the current embargo, by
seizing the world's most advanced semiconductor
manufacturing facility (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing
Company) barely more than 100 miles from its shore, in
territory it considers its own. But, if there is going to
be a war, it is to the advantage of US imperialism that it
be sooner, rather than later. And it is to the advantage
of China that the war take place later, when victory
would be more certain.

Will China be able to catch up to "the West"? I think it
will. I would like to think that, when it does so, US
imperialism will recognize that it is "game over"; it
simply does not have the ability to contain China. That
would help to avoid a war.

More important, in avoiding a war, would be the development
of political movements here in the U.S. that make it clear
to the representatives of capital that a war with China
would likely lead to their revolutionary overthrow by the
US working class.

That is the only thing that scares them more than the
rise of China.

12 - U.S. imperialism
is frightened by TikTok

There is also another dimension here that is often
overlooked in the typically shallow articles and videos: a
war by U.S. imperialism to contain China would be unpopular
everywhere--even in the U.S. once the patriotic jingoism
wears off and the sober realities of war sink in.

This later factor would be amplified by the reaction to war
on social media. U.S. imperialism is already frightened of
TikTok precisely for reasons like this. Here is Forbes:

"TikTok is Chinese. ... It is now more viral
than Instagram and YouTube ... social media
is used to push propaganda out to users who
tap those platforms as a primary source of
news. When TikTok is described as a national
security risk, that is essentially what those
governments mean. ... TikTok and other apps
present a danger of mass manipulation and
social control and disinformation. The danger
may be minimal to the individual but serious
for society and democracy."

That sums it up well, except that, in the quote above, we
should substitute "the rule of capital" for the word
"democracy", and "the exposure of hypocrisy and lies" for
"mass manipulation and disinformation".

To understand how badly U.S. imperialism would get its butt
kicked as a protracted war plays out on social media--we
can consider the #ZhaoLiJian #Australia incident in
November.

A four year investigation in Australia revealed that
special forces killed 39 unarmed prisoners and civilians in
Afghanistan, with senior commandos forcing junior soldiers
to kill defenceless captives in order to “blood” them for
combat.

In response, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian
tweeted a photoshopped representation of an Australian
soldier slitting the throat of a child holding a sheep.
The Australian Prime Minister, Scott Morrison, demanded
Twitter remove the "doctored photo".

Twitter, of course, told Morrison to take a hike, because
the image was not a "doctored photo" but was simply an
artistic representation, after the fact, of a real event,
as was obvious to anyone who looked at it.

In response to this, another user tweeted an image of
Picasso's Guernica (regarded by many as the most powerful
anti-war painting in history) side-by-side with Zhao
Lijian's image, with the following words:

Q: What is the difference between Fascists
and Australians?

A: Hitler did not demand Picasso to apologize
for his painting.

13 - Which side will you take?

One of the most important questions related to a war
between a declining U.S. imperialism and a rising Chinese
imperialism is simple: Which side will you take?

But this does not mean that we must choose the "lesser
evil" of the imperialists. Marx taught us that the
proletariat has no country. A war between the U.S. and
China would fundamentally be a war between two competing
groups of capital (which is ultimately organized and
regulated on a national basis) represented by two competing
groups of capitalists.

The answer to this question is therefore that we must take
the side of the proletariat: the workers of the U.S., the
workers of China, and the workers of all the countries that
would be involved in this terrible war. All of these
workers are our class brothers and sisters and all of us
share a common interest in getting rid of the rule of
capital which makes these kinds of wars inevitable.

14 - Taiwan and self-determination

See also Appendix C (below):

Taiwan, self-determination, and
the struggle against imperialist war

Reddit Discussion:
  • (Mar 9 - 12) Atieh's fb post
    A facebook post (with tons of comments) related to how the left needs to use modern digital technology to create its own platform
  • (Mar 11) Ben replies to Andrew
    (1) Ben's Law
    (2) filters for hotheads and bullshit

    Some exchanges concerning
    the need to express our feelings
  • (Mar 8) Software Test Engineers at work
    Ben replies to TML for March 7
  • (Feb 25) The Augean Stables
    Ben expands his reply to Andrew
  • (Feb 23) Meet me halfway
    Ben replies to Andrew
  • (Feb 19) What does "socialism" look like?
    Ben adds 2 comments to his reply
  • (Feb 15) Pragmatism vs. truth
    Ben replies to Andrew
  • (Feb 14) Ben comments on TML-Feb14
    (Includes Feb 15 reply from Andrew,
    co-host of TheMarxistLine)
  • (Feb 10) Original Reddit post
    Ben asks for thoughtful
    comments, questions, and criticism
    The Big Picture:
    We need a proletarian party
    for the information age

    Ben gives an overview of "Fully Automated Luxury Communism" and how a proletarian economy based on the unfettered flow of of information will bring forth a vast increase in the productivity of labor. Ben also corrects the one-sidedness on this topic from Louis Proyect. And Ben sketches out how Trot groups disintegrate when their orbits around the left wing of the Democratic Party pass the Roche limit.

    ..

    A Relaxing Video:
    (below) Ben's video:
    "Our brains are divided
    because the universe is divided"
  • 8 - Let me hear from you

    I need your questions, comments
    and thoughtful criticisms

    I'll get to the point. I need to hear from you.

    I need thoughtful and considered comments, questions and
    criticisms.

    You can contact me by posting on Reddit (see link in next
    column) or via facebook (where I am "Ben Stevens") or by
    email.

    I need feedback from serious thinkers and activists (and
    even from less serious thinkers and activists).

    I would like to know:

    (1) what parts of this report you read
    and found of interest--or thought
    was full of shit

    (2) what you liked (or didn't like) about
    the layout and page navigation (and
    what you would like to see improved)

    (3) anything else that might be important
    to you

    In the meantime, for anyone interrested in my views on "the
    big picture", I recommend my lengthy essay "We need a
    proletarian party for the information age" (see link next
    column).

    Also, for something a bit lighter, I created a video (see
    next column) "Our Brains are divided because the Universe
    is divided".
    Node 4006 --
    Who is afraid of transparency?

    (Sept 2020)
    Node 4007 --
    facebook thread with WSWS supporter

    (Sept 2020)
    Node 4008 --
    Letter to the World Socialist Website

    (October 2020)
    Node 4009 --
    We will have our Trinity

    (November 2020)
    Node 4010 --
    Exchanges with moderator of r/Socialism

    (October 2020)
    Node 4013 --
    More exchanges with r/Socialism moderators

    Transparency will be based
    on a level playing field
    -- with equal democratic rights for all
    (October 2020)
    Reddit -- TML # 41 review of
    "Who is afraid of transparency?"

    (October 2020)

    WSWS Commenting Policy
    Link 2
    Link 3
    -- Appendix A --
    Letter from Comrade CB

    Letter from Comrade CB
    (a supporter of WSWS/SEP)

    December 6, 2020

    Hi Ben,

    Thanks for your reply Ben, but it really doesn't respond to
    my issues with your perspective. It may be my fault for
    failing to emphasise it sufficiently, but what I had hoped
    to see was an explanation of how your proposal would
    advance any of the struggles the working class currently
    faces, which I don't feel you have done. As you say
    "[ending capitalism by a mass movement] will be enabled
    by organization. Organization will be greatly helped by a
    democratic social media platform" - but your proposal is
    not to immediately establish a social media platform, it's
    for the WSWS to offer to host articles from any tendency
    who wants to address the audience it has attracted. You
    accuse the ICFI of believing ourselves to be "infallible"
    and of simply telling workers "who to clap for and who to
    boo", but I don't recall our ever having done this (yes, we
    criticise the pseudo-left harshly, but since we do that to
    convince workers of our analysis of the role of these
    groups, there would hardly be any point in doing it without
    providing an actual basis), and your insistence that we are
    guilty of (among your many accusations) "substitutionism"
    has precisely this character -- whether a group which says
    it aims to build itself as the leadership of the working
    class is "subtitutionist" is a matter of judgement, so to
    be anything other than a sectarian attack you ought to
    justify your accusation with some genuine details of why a
    force other than the ICFI should be built as that
    leadership. If we say to "boo" someone, we point to some
    concrete failing, not merely denounce them as a "cult", as
    "gullible", "in denial"... And yes, we do recognise in a
    principled way the contribution of others -- off the top of
    my head you should check out our interviews with a BRTUS
    founder about that parents' group, our campaign against
    internet censorship has collaborated with multiple
    non-Trotskyists (even recognising the principled stand
    taken by a faction of the DSA), we have recognised the work
    of the "International Marxist Tendency" in producing an
    excellent new edition of Trotsky's biography of Stalin.
    Perhaps you think we've failed to recognise the
    contribution some other group has played - please tell me
    which.

    I'll keep my main response short so as to only cover that
    one point.

    A few minor points:

    - I do see why you've had negative experiences of your
    previous interactions with WSWS supporters: it's very
    tiresome to engage in a civil manner while being called a
    cultist, "gullible", a "mindless trotbot" [and before you
    deny that one applied to me, it's no better if you were
    only describing my comrades] and a "rape apologist". I can
    stand to set that aside to reply to the substance, but
    that's a matter of personal preference, not principle. If
    comrades choose to spend their time in some other way than
    being insulted by an ex-Stalinist I don't blame them.
    - The WSWS comments section is a forum for discussion and
    even disagreement, but we do moderate it to ensure
    discussions are on-topic and productive. You can view the
    policy here: [see link next column]

    The comment you have sent to me seems to fall foul of the
    "stay on topic" requirement. Disagree with the notion of
    moderating comments if you like, but our policy contains
    none of r/socialism's censorship based on political
    disagreement.

    - The banning of the WSWS from r/socialism is over
    opposition to the "law and order" campaign supported by
    much of the "left" in the Brock Turner case, and the
    development of this into the current MeToo movement. Thank
    you for linking to your response again; I agree that
    readers ought to judge for themselves whether there is
    anything wrong with your response to that ban.

    - Yes, "objectivist" is a word -- take it up with Lenin (or
    his translator) [link 1] quoted in [link 2] . You claim
    "I have never said that the work to overthrow capitalism
    will only become possible towards the middle of this
    century." and that to suggest you did is "word twisting and
    time wasting". If I may quote from Spartacus Ex Machina, in
    which you lay out your perspective in detail, "It also
    appears likely to me that the core of activists which
    comes together to create this machine--will also be the
    core that creates the class independent party of the
    international working class--because I believe this party
    can only emerge in connection with this machine." Taken
    together with your insistence that the machine will emerge
    "towards the middle of the century", what is the reader to
    conclude other than that a party capable of leading the
    overthrow of capitalism cannot emerge until the middle of
    the century? It is not "word twisting" to put 2 and 2
    together from your writings.

    Best wishes,
    CB
    -- Appendix B --
    What would Chuikov do?

    Dedication -- the memory of Vasily Chuikov

    Every day, for 60 days in a row, 5 thousand men were
    ferried across the burning Volga river. Their mission was
    to die as expensively as they could in the fight that broke
    the back of Hitler's army.

    Every day, for 60 days in a row, was more than the
    equivalent of D-Day at Normandy beach. Life expectancy,
    for those who survived the ferry trip, averaged less than
    24 hours.

    Chuikov was the guy in charge. When given his orders, he
    replied: "We shall hold the city or die there."

    His HQ was a tunnel dug into the steep embankment on the
    Volga shore. The Germans, only hundreds of meters away,
    shelled the refinery at the top of the embankment, and
    flaming oil poured down over the entrance to his tunnel.
    Chuikov and his staff could hardly see through the hot,
    acrid smoke, and had to breath it for hours.

    The worst part of it was that every few minutes the phone
    would ring. Stavka was calling. They wanted to know if he
    was still alive. Two months later, Chuikov was told that
    he would not be getting his usual reinforcements the next
    day, as no further German offensive operations were
    anticipated. He understood what this meant: the
    long-awaited Soviet counteroffensive was about to begin.

    The software I am creating (a note-taking and content
    creation app) is dedicated to the memory of Vasily Chuikov.
    What we can learn from Chuikov is not to underestimate
    what people can do when they have a clear and compelling
    purpose.
    ..
    ..
    ..
    ..
    -- Appendix C --
    Taiwan, self-determination
    and imperialist war

    Taiwan, self-determination and
    the struggle against imperialist war

    (This appendix added February 12)

    When Nixon and Kissinger talked to Mao and Zhou Enlai in
    1972, they all understood that US imperialism would
    (eventually) have to give up Taiwan (the transcripts have
    all been declassified). They agreed to "kick the can down
    the road". But the road does not go on forever, and the
    probability of a war between the US and China exists in the
    context of several factors which are complicated, and may
    be confusing:

    (1) Taiwan, an independent nation of 24 million people,
    is being used as the lid, by US imperialism, for its
    efforts to contain China. It is doing this in two main
    ways:

    (a) militarily: Taiwan has a strategic location
    that would be useful in a naval blockade
    of China's access to the sea

    (b) economically: Taiwan is the world leader in
    advanced semiconductor manufacturing at a time
    when advanced semiconductors (and the equipment
    needed to make them) is being embargoed from China

    (2) The Chinese ruling class has a history of brutal
    repression of protest movements. The most famous
    example, of course, is the suppression on June 4, 1989
    of the Tiananmen protest movement. Some people have
    reported that hundreds were killed in Tiananmen square
    that day--but this is mistaken on two counts:

    (1) thousands (not hundreds) were killed and

    (2) the deaths were not in the square itself, but
    along the streets and avenues leading to the square
    where army reinforcements fought against residents
    who had obtained weapons from the first wave of
    military units who had surrendered them.

    (3) China has imprisoned (by most estimates) one or two
    million Muslim Uyghurs in Xinjiang, and is attempting
    to suppress or destroy Uyghur cultural and religious
    traditions. By some definitions, this amounts to
    genocide. There have also been reports of
    systematic mass rapes.

    (4) China has suppressed the protest movement in Hong Kong.

    (5) China denies its citizens the right to voice their
    opinion about, or even know about, a whole host of
    sensitive topics (including points 2 - 4 above)
    and denies its citizens the right to collectively
    organize independently (ie: without permission).

    Even basic trade union rights (which may exist on
    paper) are often a fiction.

    (6) US imperialism (which has its own list of current
    and former atrocities) makes use of the crimes of
    China's ruling class as (supposed) justification
    for its own preparations for imperialist war.

    For example: "human rights" is being used as an
    excuse for the current technology embargo against
    China.

    In these circumstances, we must recognize the basic
    principles
    that can guide our perspective and our actions.

    (1) We oppose imperialist war. We oppose preparations
    for war. We do not take the side of one
    imperialism against the other.

    (2) We support the right of people in any territory
    to decide for themselves whether to be
    independent or to be part of a larger territory.
    (This right is called self-determination.)

    (3) We recognize that activists in Taiwan and Hong Kong
    are in a difficult position, because, as they
    struggle for their rights, US imperialism is
    attempting to hijack their struggles and use
    these struggles for its own imperialist aims.

    US imperialism is not a friend of any of
    these movements: it is both unreliable and
    treacherous.

    Rather, activists must find ways to link up
    with and rely on activists in other struggles
    and the working class in every country.

    (4) We are not afraid to speak the truth about any
    of these things, and we do not allow ourselves
    to be intimidated by those who claim that
    speaking the truth means support for either
    US imperialism or the crimes of China's rulers.

    None of the points I have listed above are likely to be new
    to activists who have been following this unfolding story.
    I don't have much to add beyond what is already well known.

    We need to focus
    on solutions

    I will add one comment here: the revolution in
    communications
    , it appears to me, is destined to play a
    big role in the struggle of actvists and workers everywhere
    to (1) make connections with one another and (2) sort
    out the way forward
    and determine what forces are
    reliable (and what forces are treacherous) and develop
    organization, tactics and objectives on this basis.

    There are three stories which I believe will dominate this
    century:

    (1) the likely war between
    US imperialism and China,

    (2) the continual development of
    the revolution in communications and
    the use of this by the working class
    to raise its consciousness and
    organize its efforts, and

    (3) the overthrow of the rule of capital
    and the emergence of a transitional society
    that will lead humanity to an economic
    and political system that is not based on
    commodity production.

    These three stories appear to be bound up with one another.

    At this time, most activists who attempt to engage in
    long-term thinking are focused more on things like (1) the
    likelyhood of economic crisis and repression or
    fascism, and (2) global warming and (3) other things,
    such as ecological destruction and more pandemics. All
    of these things are real. I will not live to see many of
    them. But, as we create a movement that moves from
    object to subject, we will learn to focus, not simply
    on the problems--but on the solutions to these
    problems.
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