I'd be grateful NOT to be stalked and baited on this thread. Thank you.
In response to a comment by Calum elsewhere, I was thinking about the various tragic messes into which so many supposedly leftist regimes disintegrate. Several are listed here - it won't make happy reading for some, but those of all persuasions who are ready to accept reality will see the truths.
So, we have chaos due to corruption and incompetence and sheer evil. Nothing surprising there - it's exactly the same with extreme right wing regimes.
But then if we look at South America today, we see a slightly different picture, perhaps, emerging. It's an area that I'm concerned with through my work at the moment, and am likely to be for some time, perhaps - particularly Chile.
Allende was never the monster that the US made him out to be, and whilst of course he had his faults, it's my view that he might have made a good job of things. History and luck (with the economy) was against him, and he could and should have done more to differentiate himself from Moscow influence, which some in the US legitimately and sincerely feared. Some, of course, simply used that fear as an excuse, as the reforms Allende made were hurting US companies, which had (and still have) far too large an influence on US policy, in part at least through the Jewish network. I'd be with Calum here on his anti-Kissinger stance! I've stood in front of Allende's statue, spoken to numerous Chileans about him, and have got a feeling that his legacy may only now be beginning to be felt. And my assessment is that it could well be a legacy for much good. The Socialism in Chile that exists now is, arguably, one of the few that feels at least half real. Time will tell.
If, in the end, a socialist government can succeed, bringing the bourgeoisie/middle classes to its fold and enabling real economic and social benefits for all, then will itin be a first? Or is it impossible, as Hoxha would have had it, to build socialism through democratic means, without a revolution? (Not that he was over-bothered, of course - but some of his writings are illuminating, if insincere).
In response to a comment by Calum elsewhere, I was thinking about the various tragic messes into which so many supposedly leftist regimes disintegrate. Several are listed here - it won't make happy reading for some, but those of all persuasions who are ready to accept reality will see the truths.
So, we have chaos due to corruption and incompetence and sheer evil. Nothing surprising there - it's exactly the same with extreme right wing regimes.
But then if we look at South America today, we see a slightly different picture, perhaps, emerging. It's an area that I'm concerned with through my work at the moment, and am likely to be for some time, perhaps - particularly Chile.
Allende was never the monster that the US made him out to be, and whilst of course he had his faults, it's my view that he might have made a good job of things. History and luck (with the economy) was against him, and he could and should have done more to differentiate himself from Moscow influence, which some in the US legitimately and sincerely feared. Some, of course, simply used that fear as an excuse, as the reforms Allende made were hurting US companies, which had (and still have) far too large an influence on US policy, in part at least through the Jewish network. I'd be with Calum here on his anti-Kissinger stance! I've stood in front of Allende's statue, spoken to numerous Chileans about him, and have got a feeling that his legacy may only now be beginning to be felt. And my assessment is that it could well be a legacy for much good. The Socialism in Chile that exists now is, arguably, one of the few that feels at least half real. Time will tell.
If, in the end, a socialist government can succeed, bringing the bourgeoisie/middle classes to its fold and enabling real economic and social benefits for all, then will itin be a first? Or is it impossible, as Hoxha would have had it, to build socialism through democratic means, without a revolution? (Not that he was over-bothered, of course - but some of his writings are illuminating, if insincere).
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