From: Doğan Göçmen (dogangoecmen@aol.com)
Date: Wed Jul 02 2008 - 07:17:59 EDT
I just want to enforce this. I at any rate prefer Republic Cuba to monarchic Netherland.
Dogan
----------------------
Doğan Göçmen
Author of The Adam Smith Problem:
Reconciling Human Nature and Society in
The Theory of Moral Sentiments and Wealth of Nations,
I. B. Tauris, London&New York 2007
-----Original Message-----
From: ope-bounces@lists.csuchico.edu
To: Outline on Political Economy mailing list <ope@lists.csuchico.edu>
Sent: Wed, 2 Jul 2008 13:12
Subject: Re: [OPE] Socialism in Cuba and Scandanavian social democracy
Well said Jerry.
paul B.
----- Original Message -----
From:
GERALD
LEVY
To: Outline on Political Economy mailing
list
Sent: Sunday, June 29, 2008 2:33 PM
Subject: RE: [OPE] Socialism in Cuba and
Scandanavian social democracy
>
This is a defence of the violent way to Socialism and the alleged
>
extraordinary role of one man, Fidel Castro. Have we learnt something
>
from the Soviet experience?
Alejandro:
What
we should have learned, not just from the Soviet experience but
from
all of
modern history, is that the capitalist class will not voluntarily
hand
over power to workers without a fight. That was a lesson that
Harnecker
learned:
after all, she lived through what happened along the
path
to the "peaceful road to socialism" in Chile.
There
are many people which are "extraordinary". To think that a single
individual
is incapable of affecting history is the worst kind of
mechanistic
and deterministic Marxism.
>
It is a pity that socialists have not arrived to a consensus on this
matter.
Agreed
- reformism should have been rejected by socialists as
far
back as the
19th Century. The demise of the Meidner Plan in
Sweden
is yet another
example of what happens when a legislative path to
socialism
alone is followed. The capitalist class in Sweden did
exactly
what
Marx would have predicted - they forced the withdrawal
of
the plan.
I
guess in _your_ world the ruling class can be expected to give up
without
a fight. That's
not the world _I_ live in or the world Castro
lives
in.
Had the Cubans not been vigilant for sabotage, then the
Bay
of Pigs and a counter-revolution might have been successful and
there
would
have been another bloodbath - probably one that would have
made
what happened on and after September 11, 1973 in Chile look like
a
minor incident. Happily, the Bolivarian revolutionaries in Venezuela
have
made it clear that they will, if necessary, fight to preserve and
extend
their gains and prevent international imperialism and the
corrupt
oligarchy that had owned and plundered the wealth of that nation
from
derailing the revolution. A positive sign there is that workers
and
peasants in poor communities have been armed (and armed
intellectually
as well with the creation of a much more extensive
college
system that it open to all). After the failed coup,
and
the continuing provocations by the US and the reactionary and
privileged
domestic elite, this was a necessary and logical step.
In
solidarity, Jerry
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