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It's not even about being a communist. It's about being a tankie.
Would you be willing to explain the difference? I don't know and I did do a google on it awhile back and I guess if I learned anything it didn't stick....
Signed: idiot on the internet who wants to know these things.
As far as I am aware, the primary difference is that tankies are authoritarian. They got their name because they supported the USSR sending tanks into Hungary in 1956. I've seen many express positive opinions towards China and North Korea while ignoring or denying things like mass censorship in both countries, China's concentration camps of Uyghur Muslims or the fact that people and their families risk death if they try to flee North Korea.
I typically add a user note to all tankies I encounter or I just block them.
Edit: I originally incorrectly cited that they got their name because they deny the tiananmen square massacre (which they claim was either peaceful or non-existent). It is still true that they deny it, but it is not the origin of their name.
The name actually came from British communists that supported the USSR sending tanks into Hungary in '56.
Ok that does seem correct. I've just always heard from others that it was the tainanmen square massacre that gave them their name.
I continue to say: Wikipedia itself states that between 0 and 1 people died in Tienanmen Square. Nobody denies protests happened elsewhere.
That's not even remotely true.
Here is what wikipedia actually says
"Tankie" is a derogatory term for Marxist-Leninists. We support AES or "actually existing socialist" states, in contrast to left idealists who support every revolution except the ones that actually succeed, which can always be imagined as perfect because they never had to confront practical reality. We're known for our opposition to war (except class war) and belief in multipolarity, which is the idea that one nation shouldn't be the lone superpower with hegemony around the world, and we treat the media with reasonable skepticism when it tries to tell us who to hate - ironically, these traits cause us to be characterized as militaristic, authoritarian, and blindly gullible.
People who have never read any communist theory beyond the Manifesto (if that) don't think we're real communists because they have no idea what they're talking about.
Someone else already commented how tankies got their name.
Tankies in the comments can generally be recognized by:
The last point especially for Hexbear. Holy shit you have to see it. It's like walking into 4chan if it were a highschool with their endless meme train circlejerk and single image replies all the while being shitheads in bad faith.
Their entire thing is "dunking" on people. It's all harassment and bad faith acting.
Tankie was initially someone who didn't have an issue with running over protestors in a tank in support of their beliefs, and has grown to include anyone willing to use violent means in support of communist ideals.
Current examples include supporting Russia or blaming Ukraine for the conflict, or supporting China invading Taiwan.
you don't seem to have an issue when it comes to running over Palestinians with tanks, most 'tankies' seem to actually be opposed to sending in the tanks.
I don't think it has grown to include that (or I don't think it should have grown, if it actually has and I didn't notice).
Any revolution will require violent means. That doesn't inherently make it bad, just sad. It depends who is the target of the violence.
There aren't many Americans who condemn the American revolution for it's violence against the British, for example.
You can have non violent revolutions.
Revolution varies in the quantity of violence required, but requires at minimum threat of violence. You can't have a revolution by asking politiely and tying your hands behind your back.
Of course not, you do it sneakily in the shadows gradually until it's too late.
You see the beauty of my proposal is It needn’t wait on general revolution. I bid you to a one-man revolution— The only revolution that is coming.
That's a coup, not a revolution, and as such has no real historical examples of representing the interests of the Working Class. The point of revolution is that it is a mass movement of an organized working class, not some random hero commanding the masses into a better existence.
A coup is sudden, I am an agorist. No random heros but bottom-up & decentralised / voluntary.
So you want a bottom-up, loosely organized revolution but don't think it requires any threat of violence to pull off? Has that ever happened anywhere and lasted more than a year or two? Even Anarchists, who espouse decentralization, recognize the necessity of violence in revolution.
Not yet. We haven't all been connected for very long.
Say we fast forward. How do you pull off a non-violent revolution?
build the new world in the shell of the old
By fostering parallel institutions such as community run markets, local production systems, and peer to peer financial services, people can begin meeting daily needs outside the state's control. Engaging in counter economics, including black and grey market, mutual aid networks, decentralized governance tools, and local methods of conflict resolution. Things like local exchange trading systems, local currencies, and more exotic monetary/post-monetary ideas could fundamentally shift how we exchange and interact with each other. Robust tools to aid in resistance, communication networks, seamless ways to effectively organise and resist that can't be stopped, mutual aid networks,etc. As modern technology continues to empowers communities to self organize and fund projects that was previously impossible, they gain resilience and independence from official channels. If enough people see that decentralised solutions genuinely improve their lives, they will choose to opt out of the state's apparatus and voluntarily support these alternative systems. Over time the state loses both moral and practical support, culminating in a peaceful transition rather than a violent upheaval.
Sure, and you think the Bourgeois state will sit back and watch it happen? And that workers won't have to defend themselves? You're not even taking an Anarchist position, Anarchists believe that violence is necessary in prefiguration.
They'll be powerless to stop it. No point of attack.
Plenty of anarchists believe in non-violent revolution, including ya know, Proudhon.
Even in prefiguration, Proudhon emphasized nonviolent methods as the foundation of societal transformation. He advocated for workers to establish cooperatives, mutual credit systems, and other self-managed institutions as a way to model and embody a future society based on reciprocity and equality. These institutions would exist alongside the state and capitalism, gradually eroding their necessity without requiring violent overthrow. He proposed the creation of federations of autonomous communities and associations, emphasizing voluntary cooperation and self-management.
He believed in economic transformation via mutualist exchanges rather than seizing power through violence. He saw the expansion of non-exploitative economic practices as a way to delegitimize and outgrow the capitalist and state systems. He was critical of revolutionary violence and abrupt insurrections, arguing they often resulted in authoritarian regimes or chaos. Instead, he focused on evolutionary change that mirrored anarchist principles, allowing society to "prefigure" a stateless future without upheaval.
He did recognise the reality of entrenched power dynamics and systemic oppression could lead to conflict or resistance from those in power. However, he consistently argued that violence should not be the primary tool for change, as it risks undermining the very principles anarchists aim to achieve. In 1840, I would have agreed with him entirely. But technology will give us the upper hand in the modern world.
In what manner has a bourgeois state ever been powerless to try and stop usurping its power? Revolution has always garnered hostility. Again, you aren't taking an Anarchist stance, you're taking a Utopian stance like the Owenites.
In the P2P world where everyone has a phone in their hand and we can iterate and codify better systems however we like.
There'll be resistance, they'll try and block things, points that become too centralised will be targetted, but eventually, there will be no stopping it. Just like they were powerless to stop torrents and the failure on their war of drugs with darknets.
I'm not too fussed about what kinda label my stance is, but seems pretty aligned with Proudhon who I'd think would have some authority on the matter?
Coding is only one aspect of Capital, the overwhelming majority of necessities runs on industrial Capital. You can't P2P that, just like you can't torrent food or a brand new phone.
As for Utopianism, it refers to "model building," ie trying to think of a perfect society and trying to convince everyone to adopt it, rather than analyzing existing society and its trajectories to predict what can come next. It's like trying to completely reinvent computers, rather than looking at how they exist and trying to use that knowledge to make a better system. I suggest reading Socialism: Utopian and Scientific for why Utopianism is largely looked down upon by practicing Leftists, Marxist and Anarchist alike.
Why not? We can and we must to reverse the damage we've done to the planet or not much will matter.
The critique assumes that envisioning better systems and working toward them are mutually exclusive, but they’re not. Both are needed. Without imagining and striving for what could be, we risk being confined to the boundaries of what's already been normalized, even when those boundaries are actively destructive or unsustainable.
How do you P2P a smartphone factory? Are you trying to suggest we revert to less developed production methods and reject manufacturing?
Secondly, you're not understanding the critique of Utopianism at all, Utopianism is specifically when your model building becomes the focus and thus you separate it from sociological analysis. You should read the essay I linked, you'd benefit from it greatly.
P2P crowdfunding where contributors have a stake, built like https://www.fairphone.com/nl, what part of the production process do you foresee as being a blocker here that wouldn't lead to a better solution anyway?
I'm not misunderstanding the critique I'm saying it's not Utopianism just because it doesn't align with your preferred sociological analysis. Agorism is a pragmatic application of dialectical materialism. It recognizes the inherent contradictions within capitalism and the state, and utilizes those contradictions to create a pathway towards a stateless, free market society. To label agorism as utopian is to disregard its inherent dynamism and its grounding in a materialist analysis of societal structures, a misunderstanding that undermines the very essence of Engels' argument.
Do you think the entire production process of Fairphone is cooperative? Further, Fairphone is nowhere near on track to destabilize the larger firms like Samsung and Apple that wield immense power as owners of hundreds of billions of dollars of industrial Capital, who can always outcompete. To overthrow Capital, you need revolution.
As for Engels, I think if you're trying to twist him into somehow being in favor of a cooperative-based economy without revolution and that you've successfully applied Dialectical Materialism, I encourage you to read Anti-Dühring, where Engels applies Dialectical and Historical Materialism to take down such a system as Utopian. You don't have to agree with Engels, but to twist him into being in favor of Agorism is odd.
As for me applying Dialectical Materialism, such a system has no roots in popular trajectory of the evolution of Capitalism, which has proven the dominance of the centralizing nature of Capitalism. Better to sieze and democratize so we can produce along a common plan for the common good.
Not at all, early stages. Just don't see any reason we couldn't do it properly. To genuinely challenge these entrenched systems of industrial Capital, systemic revolution is essential. However, such a revolution cannot be reduced to a singular event. It is a fundamental reorganization of production, exchange, and social relations. This involves moving beyond isolated ethical consumption and instead fostering systemic alternatives that redistribute power and resources while dismantling the material basis of capitalist dominance.
Agorism engages directly with the evolution of capitalism by addressing its inherent contradictions, particularly the conflict between the centralization of capital and the decentralized potential of human agency and voluntary exchange. Dialectical materialism reveals that these contradictions drive historical change, creating the conditions for resistance and alternative systems. Agorism exploits these contradictions through counter-economic activity, building decentralized systems of exchange and production that bypass and undermine state-capitalist structures. While the centralization of capital may appear dominant, it simultaneously creates vulnerabilities and opportunities for agorism to flourish. Agorism’s focus on creating alternatives outside of centralized systems reflects the dialectical process of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis, where counter-economic resistance develops into a stateless, cooperative society. This prefigurative model aligns with dialectical materialism’s emphasis on transformation through the resolution of contradictions, showing that agorism is not only compatible with but also a practical application of dialectical materialist principles.
This isn't historically accurate nor does it appear to be working. Building up dual power is a proven method of revolution, but it requires millitancy. We don't actually have widespread examples of cooperative production outperforming organized industry, nor a reason to predict that will happen. FOSS has the foothold it does because the Capital required to build it is relatively inexpensive, but dogmatically transfering that to other industries goes against Dialectical Materialism.
Mondragon Corporation, Spanish Civil War, Syrian Revolutionary Left, and countless mutual aid initiatives illustrate that cooperative production is not only viable but can outperform centralized systems when given the opportunity to scale. The historical limitations of cooperatives were largely due to their isolation and the hostile environments in which they emerged, often as localized responses to crises. Today, however, the situation is fundamentally different. This is no longer about isolated groups trying to set up decentralized systems in panic or under siege. Instead, we are witnessing the emergence of a global network of tools, practices, and knowledge being built, shared, and iterated upon. This network allows for unprecedented collaboration and scalability, making it a unique historical development that reflects an evolutionary leap in social organization. No widespread examples because this has never happened before, and it is only going to happen once.
FOSS demonstrates how decentralized, cooperative production can scale and compete with centralized industry in a domain traditionally dominated by capital-intensive models. While the material conditions of other industries differ, the dialectical process suggests that emerging contradictions, such as the inefficiencies of centralized production and the growing accessibility of decentralized technologies, create opportunities for cooperative systems to expand. The failure to consider these material developments and their revolutionary potential itself goes against dialectical materialism, which emphasizes historical progression through contradictions and their resolution.
Agorism, by fostering decentralized, counter-economic systems, aligns with the principles of dual power and dialectical materialism. It recognizes the importance of building alternatives while confronting and undermining the dominant structures of power. This does not negate the need for militancy but broadens its scope to include economic and social resistance as critical components of systemic transformation. The present moment is not just another iteration of past efforts but the culmination of a dialectical process where global connectivity, shared knowledge, and cooperative innovation provide the material basis for a stateless, cooperative society. Far from being at odds with dialectical materialism, agorism embodies its principles by addressing contradictions in the current mode of production and building the groundwork for an unprecedented societal (r)evolution.
Mondragon isn't outscaling large manufacturing, and the Spanish and Syrian Anarchists are violent revolutionaries, not your mythical peaceful ones.
Again, there is a case to be made of cooperative production with low barriers to entry for Capital, not for large-scale manufacturing, despite your insistence otherwise.
I'm skeptical of that claim, but it's not really important.
To say that any communist that supports violence as a means is a tankie is to say all communists are tankies.
But given that violence alone doesn't make a revolution bad, and that tankie is a perjorative, then that definition isn't fair or even really meaningful.