nerdculture.de is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
Be excellent to each other, live humanism, no nazis, no hate speech. Not only for nerds, but the domain is somewhat cool. ;) No bots in general. Languages: DE, EN, FR, NL, ES, IT

Administered by:

Server stats:

1.1K
active users

#RussianRevolution

0 posts0 participants0 posts today

#Leon_Trotsky was highly critical of the #Stalinist_USSR for suppressing #Democracy and the lack of adequate coherent #EconomicPlanning. :skp904:

In Results and Prospects, written in 1906, #Trotsky outlines his theory in detail, arguing: "History does not repeat itself. However much one may compare the #RussianRevolution with the Great French Revolution, the former can never be transformed into a repetition of the latter."
In the #FrenchRevolution of 1789, France experienced what Marxists called a "bourgeois-democratic revolution"—a regime was established wherein the bourgeoisie overthrew the existing French feudalistic system. The bourgeoisie then moved towards establishing a regime of #DemocraticParliamentaryInstitutions.

However, while democratic rights were extended to the bourgeoisie, they were not generally extended to a universal franchise. The freedom for workers to organize unions or to strike was not achieved without considerable struggle.

Trotsky argues that because a majority of the branches of industry in Russia originated under the direct influence of government measures—sometimes with the help of government subsidies—the capitalist class was again tied to the ruling elite. The capitalist class was subservient to European capital.

*** 21st century - What has changed is the capitalist class has divided, unequally, creating Hyper-Capitalism. Hyper-Capitalists (#Billionaires and #Trillionaires) influence elections (Mass Media and Campaign Fund Raising), so that the political class become subservient to them. In time, they become directively and publically involved in government. #HyperCaptitalists #HyperCapitalism
#Musk #TrumpRegime #TrumpCoup #Trump

The state often makes use of its former opponents once they are safely dead and no longer the threat they were in life. The Ukrainian state and its media have done this with the legendary anarchist communist Nestor Makhno.

Makhno, a native of Huliaipole in the Zaporizhzhia region of Ukraine, was a lifelong anarchist revolutionary. The son of poor peasants, he joined his local anarchist communist group in 1906, subsequently spending nine years in prison for his involvement with the killing of a district police officer. Whilst in prison he developed his politics and when liberated by the Provisional Government in 1917, he returned to his home town and was elected chair of the local carpenters and metal workers union and the local Soviet of Peasants and Workers Deputies and threw himself into the maelstrom of the Russian revolution in Ukraine. He has become most well known for leading the Revolutionary Insurgent Army, also known as the Black Army. This politico-military force combatted the White counter-revolutionary armies and, eventually the Red Army. But it also vigorously fought Ukrainian Nationalists, a faction of whom had murdered Makhno’s brother, Omelian. Makhno was no friend of any sort of nationalism – neither Ukrainian or Russian. The ‘Makhnovist’ movement attempted to create free territory based on self-managed communes. The largest of these was named after Rosa Luxemburg, the Polish Marxist of Jewish descent. Hardly the actions of Ukrainian nationalists!

But that hasn’t stopped Makhno being claimed as a Ukrainian patriot, despite all the evidence to the contrary. Whilst this started before the Russian invasion, it has increased during the war with many fighters claiming to be in the tradition of Makhno and with nationalists using imagery associated with the Makhnovists. This took an interesting turn with the destruction of the Huliaipole Museum on August 23rd this year, following a Russian missile attack. This local museum centres Huliaipole’s most famous son and the movement associated with his name, with displays and permanent exhibitions. The exhibits, however, were moved into central State storage facilities for safekeeping away from the frontline town the day before the attack.

The destruction of the museum, seen as a direct attack upon Ukrainian and Zaporozhzian culture, has been used to whip up patriotic sentiment and Makhno’s memory, reimagined as a national hero – a sort of national anarchist – has been used to mobilise support for war at a time when resistance to conscription is at its highest point since the beginning of the conflict.

Added to this, the Huliaipole’s statue of Makhno, which was partially destroyed by a Russian attack on May 23rd, has recently been replaced with fanfare with the addition of a Ukrainian national flag in the hand of a man who never would have held it in real life. The replacement has hoped to raise morale in a town where the only civic building still fully functioning was the museum. Since May 2023 no ATMs, no doctors, with only 1 shop open 2 hours per day accepting only cash, and only 600 civilians remaining from a pre-war 14,000.

Odessa based historian, Vyacheslav Azarov gives some background to attempts to co-opt Makhno to the nationalist cause:
“The first campaign to privatise Makhnovism by nationalists began during the “orange” demonstrations of 2004 and the subsequent rule of Victor Yushchenko. The organizers of the first Maidan tried to compare their political technology events with the people’s liberation of Huliaipole, and the patriotic grant activists led by Oles Doniy actively called for the “posthumous Ukrainisation” of Makhno. They did not hide the fact that the appropriation of Makhnovist heritage was necessary for the purpose of promoting nationalist ideology in the territories of the South-East, which was hostile to the Banderist movement. The peak of this campaign was the ceremonial installation of the monument to the Batko in Huliaipole, which was organized by the then Minister of Internal Affairs Yuriy Lutsenko with the financial support of a well-known oligarch from Zaporozhye. The monument is certainly good – but the fact that the police minister stood behind it, who then dropped the phrase: “if you want, call me a racist!”, gave the events an absurd character. This political privatisation has been seen at the Independence Day with Makhno festival, which was held in Huliaipole for several years in a row under the patronage of the same Lutsenko. Banderist flags were flying over the concert venue, anti-Semitic and xenophobic slogans were heard from the stage, the organizers forbade performing Russian-language songs and generally speaking Russian on stage – the native language for the absolute majority of Huliaipole residents. Uncommitted guests of the Makhnofest noted the dominance of nationalists and reactionary rhetoric – suffice it to say that the cult Odessa Nazi Maxim Chayka took part in it. And all this completely contradicted the ideas and views of the outstanding Ukrainian anarchist.”

Sad and bitter days in the birthplace of Makhno.

Source: Anarchist Communist Group

https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/post/2024/09/25/makhno-in-the-service-of-the-ukrainian-war-effort/

Replied in thread

⬆️ @oatmeal

Even ignoring the biblical account of #FirstExodus prior to 12th c. BCE, we have documented history of MULTIPLE #JewishDisplacements

740 BC: #FirstJewishExile
586 BC: #SecondJewishExile
540 BC: Fall of #Babylon; Return to #Judah

1881: #RussianRevolution; #FirstAliyah
1904: #SecondAliyah

And the virulent #antisemitism in #EasternEurope and #Germany that climaxed in the #Holocaust in the early 20th century — ALL happened before your #cherryPicked date of 1948.

@lukevanin
⬇️

All #chess sets have a story. Some tell us some history, as well.

The #RussianCivilWar (1917-1923) was the bloody culmination of the #RussianRevolution. Hundreds of thousands died on the battlefield and in concentration camps. The main contestants were the "Reds" - the army assembled by the #Bolshevik party - and the "whites" - an assemblage of anti-Bolshevik forces seeking to remove the Bolsheviks from power.

"The Reds and the Whites" (also known as "The #Communists and the #Capitalists") was created in in the final years of the conflict. It was modeled by Natalya Danko, a sculptor who worked at the State Porcelain manufactory in 1922. Her sister, Elena Danko, decorated them. (https://www.apollo-magazine.com/famous-chess-sets/)

History is written by the victors. The black pieces depict the Soviet ideal citizenry. The #king is a worker wielding a #hammer. The #queen, #bishop, and #pawns are serfs or farmers wearing traditional #Russian clothes. (The pawn bears the Soviet #sickle). The rook is a star aboard a traditional Russian vessel. The white king is the personification of #death and #monarchy - a #skeleton wearing a crown. The white pawns are serfs, too - but they are in chains.

History is complicated. At various points, in order to survive, the #RedArmy conscripted peasantry into the fight. Lacking experienced fighters, they drew many from the Tsar's army - by the end of the war, 83% were ex-Tsarist soldiers. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Civil_War#cite_note-:1-30)

Learn more: https://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2013/russian-works-of-art-faberge-and-icons-l13113/lot.631.html

Image sources: chessantiques.com and christies.com