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Hemispheres
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 22 2004
Location: Canada
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Points: 533
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Posted: December 19 2005 at 07:54 |
non prog but kind of prog ina way gang of four were huge commies
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[IMG]http://www.wheresthatfrom.com/avatars/miguelsanchez.gif">[IMG]http://www.rockphiles.com/all_images/Act_Images/TheMothersOfInvention/mothers300.jpg">
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DEzerov
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Joined: August 17 2005
Location: United States
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Points: 340
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Posted: December 19 2005 at 08:08 |
Lamont! You big dummy!
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The moon is made by some lame cooper and you can see the idiot has no idea about moons at all - Nikolay Gogol
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aprusso
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 16 2005
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Points: 312
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Posted: December 19 2005 at 08:35 |
Most Italian prog bands of the 70s, like Area, Banco, Osanna; some French bands, Heldon for sure; most kratutrock bands (Surely Faust); many Spanish bands rebelling against fascis, etc. That is, in most part of the western world there were not only prog band but generally artists and thinkers that would abide communist ideas. In fact the "weirdness" of being or feeling communism is very much an anglo-american thing, and the difference between the "real socialism" put in practice in Eastern Europe and a communist philosophy and ethic as embedded in a democratic state is neglected. I was born in a country (Italy) where the Communist party was the largest for long periods, excluded from national governments but ruling the wealthiest cities and regions with very good results. And I now live in a country (Spain) where Socialists and Communists are governng, also with very good results. Today communist ideas are "out of fashion", but they have simply been replaced by what is commonly known as no global movement, which preaches egualitarianism and justice at a world level instead than in one counrty. The context for this battle has not changed substantially after 100 years, only the dangers from unruled capitalism have become worse. I am also sure that many prog bands (not in UK or US, with some excpetion e.g. Radiohead) would consider themselves "no global" and therefore are communists with another name.
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aprusso
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Joined: June 16 2005
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Posted: December 19 2005 at 08:42 |
abyssyinfinity wrote:
Trouserpress wrote:
Ooh you beat me to it, Abyssy! Area were at one stage heavily involved in the Italian Communist movement, I believe.
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Perhaps over the Italian Communist Party, they were near to insurrectional movements as "Brigate Rosse" or "Lotta Continua", one of the reason as Prog was removed from Italian broadcasting and memory is because it remember those "Leaden Days" (Years of terrorism in Italy were about 1969-1980, when Prog was on the top...) |
To compare "Brigate Rosse" with "Lotta Continua" is simply ridiculous. I have many friends which were members of Lotta Continua, and they have absolutely nothing to do with terrorism. Area (apart from being a great band) were an anti-system band ina period in which the Italian Communst Party was blamed by young people for being old-fashioned, traditionalist, heterodox and willing to come to terms with right-wing ruling parties. I don't think prog was banned from broadcasting for this reason, anyway: otherwise one couldn't eplain the success of folksingers with much more outspoken leftist political ideas. Maybe it has been banned for the same reasons it has been banned everywhere else, that is lack of appeal for the superfical majority.
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aprusso
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Joined: June 16 2005
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Points: 312
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Posted: December 19 2005 at 08:49 |
Syzygy wrote:
Robert Wyatt was a memebr of the Communist Party of Great Britain for over 10 years, and this is refelected in some of his songwriting and the songs he chooses to cover. Nothing Can Stop Us, Old Rottenhat and Dondestan all have a lot of politically explicit material on them.
Henry Cow were also into left wing politics, a commitment which most of those involved retain up to the present day, Chris Cutler in particular.
The other RIO bands - Etron Fou, Art Zoyd, Stormy 6, Zammla Mammaz Manna and Univers Zero - all shared a similar political outlook, though the exact nature of their engagement varied considerably - Art Zoyd, for example, had a detailed manifesto to describe their art and politics, while to the best of my knowledge Univers Zero have never made any public statements about their political beliefs.
I've always though that most prog is inclined more to the left than to the right. can anyone think of any explicitly right wing prog acts?
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Rush are admittedly right-wing inclined or anyway anti-communist. I love them anyway. Some "dark" bands of the 70s like Jacula or Antonius Rex are certainly right-wing. Battiato was blamed to be so. He is certainly not a communist but a more radical "expressionst" thinker rather than a fascist or liberal. Many power-prog bands, and I bet Styx are in there, are right-wing, and so are most southamerican bands (white priveileged bourgeosie). Blue Oyster Cult is definitely left-wing for me. I'd love to think that Genesis are left-wing (but Phil Colins isn't).
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
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Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
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Points: 19535
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Posted: December 19 2005 at 21:00 |
aprusso wrote:
Rush are admittedly right-wing inclined or anyway anti-communist. I love them anyway.
Love them anyway? Have their political beliefs any relation with their music????? Would you like Rush even more if they were communists?
Some "dark" bands of the 70s like Jacula or Antonius Rex are certainly right-wing. Battiato was blamed to be so. He is certainly not a communist but a more radical "expressionst" thinker rather than a fascist or liberal.
Ok, so you're a communist or a Facist? Do you know Facist ideology is closer to Communism than to right oriented Democratic parties?
- Facism is corporativist and Communism is essentially State Corporativism
- Facist leaders were autoritarian as most Communist leaders (Stalin, Kruschev, Castro, Tito, Mao Tse Tung and of course the ultra radical Pol Pot)
- Facist and Communist leaders hate democratic elections (Read the same names).
So before using cliché words, better analyze them.
If I had a dollar for each time they called me a Facist in University for not being Communist I'd be rich,
Many power-prog bands, and I bet Styx are in there, are right-wing, and so are most southamerican bands (white priveileged bourgeosie).
Have you ever been in South America? I'm white and I never had a priviledge, my mother had to work 10 hours a day top pay my school and today if I don't work I don't eat, you surely don't have a clue about what you're talking,
BTW: Directly or indirectly I know most of Peruvian musicians and most of them are working people.
Blue Oyster Cult is definitely left-wing for me. I'd love to think that Genesis are left-wing (but Phil Colins isn't).
Again, why would you love to think they are communist? Would that make The Musical Box or Supper's Ready better? Probably Phil Collins created so much crap as a soloist because he's not a communist.
I really don't care if they are communists, anarchists (left or right oriented), Socialists or liberals, the music is the only thing that really matters.
I love the music of Sylvio Rodriguez and Pablo Milanés (Their lyrics make me sick because are created as an instrument to support Castro's Government) even when they sold their souls to a dictator and live as kings singing for the Revolution while Cuban population doesn't have freedom.
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Iván
Edited by ivan_2068
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Atkingani
Special Collaborator
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Joined: October 21 2005
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Posted: December 19 2005 at 21:31 |
ivan_2068 wrote:
aprusso wrote:
Many power-prog bands, and I bet Styx are in there, are right-wing, and so are most southamerican bands (white priveileged bourgeosie).
Have you ever been in South America? I'm white and I never had a priviledge, my mother had to work 10 hours a day top pay my school and today if I don't work I don't eat, you surely don't have a clue about what you're talking,
BTW: Directly or indirectly I know most of Peruvian musicians and most of them are working people.
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Iván
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Europeans and North Americans must know that modern societies in Latin America (with few exceptions) are very similar to their societies since we are inserted in the so-called Western World and the capitalist belt (chain?). The most noticeable difference is a greater percentage of people living below the poverty line (the 'poor') although there are local, national and regional characteristics also to be observed.
The 'old vision' of a minority of white previleged urban burgeoisie and a majority of illiterated peasants of amerindian or african ancestry have disappeared since the 50s-70s (depending on the nation). In all countries here there is a powerful middle-class with living standards at least equal to that of present Mediterranean Europe.
Fortunately we are (in South America) becoming more and more united and we may get good advances in all fields (although I still have restrictions to the globalization and other bleeding practices).
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Guigo
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Trotsky
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Joined: October 25 2004
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 03:14 |
Atkingani wrote:
ivan_2068 wrote:
aprusso wrote:
Many power-prog bands, and I bet Styx are in there, are right-wing, and so are most southamerican bands (white priveileged bourgeosie).
Have you ever been in South America? I'm white and I never had a priviledge, my mother had to work 10 hours a day top pay my school and today if I don't work I don't eat, you surely don't have a clue about what you're talking,
BTW: Directly or indirectly I know most of Peruvian musicians and most of them are working people.
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Iván
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Europeans and North Americans must know that modern societies in Latin America (with few exceptions) are very similar to their societies since we are inserted in the so-called Western World and the capitalist belt (chain?). The most noticeable difference is a greater percentage of people living below the poverty line (the 'poor') although there are local, national and regional characteristics also to be observed.
The 'old vision' of a minority of white previleged urban burgeoisie and a majority of illiterated peasants of amerindian or african ancestry have disappeared since the 50s-70s (depending on the nation). In all countries here there is a powerful middle-class with living standards at least equal to that of present Mediterranean Europe.
Fortunately we are (in South America) becoming more and more united and we may get good advances in all fields (although I still have restrictions to the globalization and other bleeding practices).
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OK, I don't know anything about the bands ... and I don't know about the situation in South America itself, not ever having been there ...
But in my life, first as a diplomat's kid then as a journalist I have met 80-100 South Americans ... almost without exception they seemed to be members of an oligarchy of European descent.
I"m not saying every South American of European descent is filthy rich ... and that there aren't non-Europeans who are wealthy ... but that externally my own experience from my travels and being in international schools indicate that this is true in general for Latin American nations (I include Cubans too, former Cuban ambassador to Mali Alberto Juarez was a family friend ... his aunt was Che's secretary) ... even my first love (from Chile) was born into a family of German descent and her father dated Pinochet's daughter ...
the most recent Brazillian journalist I met was a typical example, of Portugese and Italian descent, her parents landowners in Brazil, with a share in one of the Sao Paolo football clubs ... and a very Euro-centric direction (her fiance was European) ...
maybe the diplomatic circle is biased, although I don't think it should be ... but this sort of dominance, disproportionate to the racial groups of these countries, is certainly reflected in my own experience of South Americans ...
No accusations ... just a curious observation that from the outside, despite recently having had leaders of Asian descent in Peru, Argentina and Ecuador (for which I have great admiration for South America ... not the leaders themselves mind you ), the percentage of wealth that is in the hands of those of European descent seems heavily imbalanced.
Is that an unfair assessment?
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"Death to Utopia! Death to faith! Death to love! Death to hope?" thunders the 20th century. "Surrender, you pathetic dreamer.”
"No" replies the unhumbled optimist "You are only the present."
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Trotsky
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 03:24 |
ivan_2068 wrote:
Ok, so you're a communist or a Facist? Do you know Facist ideology is closer to Communism than to right oriented Democratic parties?
- Facism is corporativist and Communism is essentially State Corporativism
- Facist leaders were autoritarian as most Communist leaders (Stalin, Kruschev, Castro, Tito, Mao Tse Tung and of course the ultra radical Pol Pot)
- Facist and Communist leaders hate democratic elections (Read the same names).
So before using cliché words, better analyze them.
If I had a dollar for each time they called me a Facist in University for not being Communist I'd be rich,
Iván
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Back on topic ... I have no dispute that the authoritaranism of many countries calling themselves Communist and that of Fascism make the regimes similar ... both were police states after all, and I have stated that I prefer living under a relatively free, right-wing government like in Malaysia or US than what I experienced albeit from a diplomatic cocoon in Laos, the old Czechoslovakia and Hungary.
But I have just one question Ivan ... which do you admire more ... the democractically elected Socialist government of Salvador Allende ... or the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet?
I know there are many factors ... the instability of Allende's regime, inflation, unemployment, etc, plus Pinochet'e stablising of the ecomony and eventual handover of power ... I have met Chileans who prefer the stablility of Pinochet's rule even if they knew others were suffering ... but if you can give me an answer in just one word (without taking the easy option of neither ... not that I have seen you taking the easy option before ) I will appreciate it ... Allende or Pinochet?
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"Death to Utopia! Death to faith! Death to love! Death to hope?" thunders the 20th century. "Surrender, you pathetic dreamer.”
"No" replies the unhumbled optimist "You are only the present."
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Trotsky
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 03:32 |
ivan_2068 wrote:
[QUOTE=aprusso]
Rush are admittedly right-wing inclined or anyway anti-communist. I love them anyway.
Love them anyway? Have their political beliefs any relation with their music????? Would you like Rush even more if they were communists?
Blue Oyster Cult is definitely left-wing for me. I'd love to think that Genesis are left-wing (but Phil Colins isn't).
Again, why would you love to think they are communist? Would that make The Musical Box or Supper's Ready better? Probably Phil Collins created so much crap as a soloist because he's not a communist.
I really don't care if they are communists, anarchists (left or right oriented), Socialists or liberals, the music is the only thing that really matters.
I love the music of Sylvio Rodriguez and Pablo Milanés (Their lyrics make me sick because are created as an instrument to support Castro's Government) even when they sold their souls to a dictator and live as kings singing for the Revolution while Cuban population doesn't have freedom.
Iván
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Finally ... I agree with Ivan that a band's politics don't make that much difference in my appreciate of them ... I would rather listen to a good right-wing prog band then a bad left-wing punk band ... but I will say it has some effect ...
can you sing a leftist chorus with as much gusto as a non-political song, Ivan?
I do find that if message is abhorrent to me, then it makes it more difficult to accept the music ... however Rush is hardly a nasty, racist band, they (or at least Peart) just have some philosophical ideas that I disagree with ...
if some brilliant prog band had lyrics espousing violence, racism, fascism, etc ... maybe a pro-Hitler, anti-Jewish concept album ... then yes, I would have issues with it.
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"Death to Utopia! Death to faith! Death to love! Death to hope?" thunders the 20th century. "Surrender, you pathetic dreamer.”
"No" replies the unhumbled optimist "You are only the present."
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Norbert
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Joined: October 20 2005
Location: Hungary
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 03:56 |
Trotsky wrote:
ivan_2068 wrote:
Ok, so you're a communist or a Facist? Do you know Facist ideology is closer to Communism than to right oriented Democratic parties?
- Facism is corporativist and Communism is essentially State Corporativism
- Facist leaders were autoritarian as most Communist leaders (Stalin, Kruschev, Castro, Tito, Mao Tse Tung and of course the ultra radical Pol Pot)
- Facist and Communist leaders hate democratic elections (Read the same names).
So before using cliché words, better analyze them.
If I had a dollar for each time they called me a Facist in University for not being Communist I'd be rich,
Iván
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Back on topic ... I have no dispute that the authoritaranism of many countries calling themselves Communist and that of Fascism make the regimes similar ... both were police states after all, and I have stated that I prefer living under a relatively free, right-wing government like in Malaysia or US than what I experienced albeit from a diplomatic cocoon in Laos, the old Czechoslovakia and Hungary.
But I have just one question Ivan ... which do you admire more ... the democractically elected Socialist government of Salvador Allende ... or the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet?
I know there are many factors ... the instability of Allende's regime, inflation, unemployment, etc, plus Pinochet'e stablising of the ecomony and eventual handover of power ... I have met Chileans who prefer the stablility of Pinochet's rule even if they knew others were suffering ... but if you can give me an answer in just one word (without taking the easy option of neither ... not that I have seen you taking the easy option before ) I will appreciate it ... Allende or Pinochet?
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When you were able to visit Hungary, the regime was much softer than it was before 1963.Not to mention the early 50's. And you didn't like what you experienced, that shows your views are correct. I suppose you were here in the 80's.
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Trotsky
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 04:12 |
Norbert wrote:
When you were able to visit Hungary, the regime was much softer than it was before 1963.Not to mention the early 50's. And you didn't like what you experienced, that shows your views are correct. I suppose you were here in the 80's. |
Yes, I was there in 1987 very briefly on an Eastern European tour ... which was not an easy thing to accomplish back then ... Budapest was, and I hope still is very beautiful, and I met friendly people, whereas in Czecholovakia it seemed to be more grim ... of course as a leftist I have an interest in the governments of Bela Kun and Imre Nagy (which of course was the one crushed in 1956) but if the average Hungarian is better off now, then I am happy to hear it.
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"Death to Utopia! Death to faith! Death to love! Death to hope?" thunders the 20th century. "Surrender, you pathetic dreamer.”
"No" replies the unhumbled optimist "You are only the present."
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Norbert
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Joined: October 20 2005
Location: Hungary
Status: Offline
Points: 2506
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 04:41 |
Trotsky wrote:
Norbert wrote:
When you were able to visit Hungary, the regime was much softer than it was before 1963.Not to mention the early 50's. And you didn't like what you experienced, that shows your views are correct. I suppose you were here in the 80's. |
Yes, I was there in 1987 very briefly on an Eastern European tour ... which was not an easy thing to accomplish back then ... Budapest was, and I hope still is very beautiful, and I met friendly people, whereas in Czecholovakia it seemed to be more grim ... of course as a leftist I have an interest in the governments of Bela Kun and Imre Nagy (which of course was the one crushed in 1956) but if the average Hungarian is better off now, then I am happy to hear it.
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Overall, a lot of people are better of now than they were 20 years ago, but more people became poore. During the "Ancien Regime" there were not big social differences and many people
felt safer. The government of Béla Kun had a Soviet-like authoritarian system, but thankfully it lasted
only 133 days. They did quite a lot of damage in that short time. Hungary completely lost any sympathy by France and Britain because of being a bolshevist nation.This caused the loss many of our territory and our people. Among them there were a lot not-really-Hungarian ones, but what
happened in Trianon is anything but fair.
Imre Nagy is interesting.He spent a lot of time in the Sovietunion, his role in the Hungarian politics
is somehow surprising. There is a quite good movie about him called The Unburied Dead(A temetetlen halott), directed by Márta Mészáros. I don't know where is available beyond Hungary,
It has already been displaye somewhere abroad.
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captainbeyond
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Joined: December 05 2005
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Points: 84
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 10:21 |
Ivan is spot on. Ask anyone who had to actually LIVE in a far left government what they think of it. How many people have been slaughtered in the name of far leftist movements? Not that far rightist movements haven't done their share, but the consistency with which the leftist movements do so is worthy of discussion.
But the point I want to get to is another one that Ivan suggested and that is the societally received perception of the politics of various bands. While exreme leftism and extreme rightism are very close, as in the horse shoe analogy, one gets treated well and is given high praise by our media (and often by our societies), while the other is not. When you look at the punk movement, far left bands are idolized all the time while bands from the far right are vilified. This vilification is justified, but why are the leftist bands given a free ride and even complimented for "fighting the power?" Why is the far left (who vocally support regimes who kill people for a living) considered better than the far right (who kill people for a living). To my eyes, at least from living in New York City, much of the "power" IS ALREADY LEFTIST, making the claim of fighting the power bogus since the the left IS predominantly the power (ESPECIALLY on virtually any college campus you examine). Rather than fighting any power, they are merely holding hands and all joining the mutually agreed-upon laugh track. This may also hold true in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Washington, DC.
Lastly, someone mentioned (and perhaps in a complimentary way) that today's left is different from the murderous left of previous generations in that is now about "anti-globalism and equality." To me, anti-globalism is NOT about egalitarianism and justice as much as it is about isolationism and moral equivalence. Anti-globalism is the post-modern, head-in-the-sand ideology that states to murderous regimes that it's OK for them to continue butchering and intimidating their people as long as they don't do it in the anti-globalists' country. Anti-globalism's "egalitarianism" also suggests that everything is equal in that there is no right and wrong, merely grievances that have not been addressed.
There was a day when the Left stood up and actually faught against fascists, as they did in Spain. Today's Left holds up most Fascist leaders with praise and excuses while hypocritically casting down hail storms on the possibility of achieving liberal democracy--Freedom--in more of the world.
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Velvetclown
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 10:31 |
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cmidkiff
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 11:00 |
No country or government has ever achieved Communism, instead they managed to change the definition of the word to mean the same as socialism.
The definition should be:
An economic system characterized by the collective ownership of property and by the organization of labor for the common advantage of all members.
Instead they made it:
A system of government in which the state plans and controls the economy and a single, often authoritarian party holds power.
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cmidkiff
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Velvetclown
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 11:06 |
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Page to Squire
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 11:13 |
All music should steer clear of communism, in my opinion! It was okay in the 60's when no one knew better but it is blatantly obvious now that communism has been a blight on the world and caused just as much damge as Fascism! Democracy is the only way of government that should be promoted. Communism is unnatural and
Anti Artistic!!!!
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I talk to the wind... It tells me to burn things
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moodyxadi
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 11:52 |
All this talk about what does comunism really mean is absolute bulls**t. I totally agree with Ivan. What we need here in Brazil is just a decent social-democratic government, that doesn't sell the country to the "free market" but doesn't try to recreate the wheel and to insist in live without connections to the outside world.
With all its defects, western democracy is the better thing we could create to rule our lives. I'm talking more of the european conception of democracy than the north-american and its maniqueism. I know that everyone of us can see the flaws of our countries better than who looks from the ouside, but the coments of Trotsky about the upper classes of Brazil are absolutely true.
We can't praise Cuba or the USA either, 'cause the irrealistic situation of the first and the distorted view of the rest of the world from the last don't left space to a true dialogue between differentes, that could help to construct a better model.
My country is living a tremendous ethic disaster nowadays: the political group that carried the hopes of the lower classes was caught doing the same corrupt practices of his ideological oponents. The christian right is growing up in Brazil in a very sordid way, and I fear for a political future in my country that can be compared with that on the USA - but with a giant social exclusion of 3/4 of the population.
Solutions? We all know that there is no solution. I just think more in local actions connected with a global ethics than in traditional ways of classifying a political action. This can be seem as pure alienation, but I'm talking about reconstruct the relations between people, with self-respect and respect for the others, acceptance of the difference, etc. My greater concern is about the lack of laicism in the relations between the public and the private, and this is a problem so huge that I put the "wings" in a second plane. I hope I'm not totally wrong.
An ex-left-wing, non right-wing and ABSOLUTELY NOT christian or maniqueistic.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: December 20 2005 at 12:39 |
Trotsky wrote:
But in my life, first as a diplomat's kid then as a journalist I have met 80-100 South Americans ... almost without exception they seemed to be members of an oligarchy of European descent. |
Well, things have changed very much since the 70's in Prú, there's no more Aristocrats, the new aristocracy is formed by the industrials, most of them started as workers and are far from being white.
Look at our President Alejandro Toledo, he's an a$$whole who tried to be liberal but doesn't know a sh!t about anything, he's 100% native Peruvian from a small town in Cuzco, of course he married with an ex-communist French woman who now lives in luxury and forgotten about her dreams of youth.
As an example, the biggest market chain called Wong (An emporium), started placing their stores in San Isidro or La Planicie where the wealthiest people live, but their store in San Miguel (A zone for supossedly low middle class and with very very few white families) sells more than all thier other stores together, this is incredible.
People who have a stand in the fruit markett (wodden 2 X 2 Mts) sell an average of 10 or 20 grands a day, those stands cost more than US$ 100,000 each one, more than a 300 ms2 house in the best zone whre the quare meter costs US$ 1,000 (Built).
Trotsky wrote:
Back on topic ... I have no dispute that the authoritaranism of many countries calling themselves Communist and that of Fascism make the regimes similar ... both were police states after all, and I have stated that I prefer living under a relatively free, right-wing government like in Malaysia or US than what I experienced albeit from a diplomatic cocoon in Laos, the old Czechoslovakia and Hungary. |
Neither do I, but I hate people using the cliché of calling Facists to every person that doesn't dream with the Revolution and killing the rich b*****ds, giving all the food to the poor (I don't know how this utopic state will work without industrials to give job and a mega inflation), without knowing that Facist Populism offered exactly the same thing.
Of course those gus only dream in coffe shops drinking a 5 bucks Isrish coffee, but when they leave University and start gaining money, they become more capitalist than the most fanatic anti-communist.
Cmigkiff wrote:
But I have just one question Ivan ... which do you admire more ... the democractically elected Socialist government of Salvador Allende ... or the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet? |
None of them, Alende was an honest idealist, I give him that, but the chaos in Chile was terrible, the extremist who helped him reach the power were trying to take control, people had to stand in the front of the markets where you couldn't buy anything.
Pinochet is a bloody criminal.
Trotsky wrote:
can you sing a leftist chorus with as much gusto as a non-political song, Ivan? |
It's funny, in the University while witting for the results of elections I sat in the rotonda (Small plaza) with my cheap guitar singing revolutionary songs of Silvio Rodriguez, and enjoyed most of their lyrics, because even when I'm not a commie, I believe in social justice.
My mother laughed and asked me how could I sing this songs being a right oriented person, she said i was (and still am) contradictory.
I love The Knife which lyrics are about a Communist revolutionary, honestly I rarely listen a right oriented song, people of this political position rarely use music as propaganda.
Trotsky wrote:
I experienced albeit from a diplomatic cocoon in Laos, the old Czechoslovakia and Hungary. |
Have you ever heard how the Praga spring of 67 (If I'm not wrong about the year), and the Tian Nam Meng (Can't remember who it's written) plaza movements ended, that's Communist justice and re
action against people asking for democracy.
Cnidkiff wrote:
No country or government has ever achieved Communism, instead they managed to change the definition of the word to mean the same as socialism. |
Ib believe Communist has been achived as a form of state capitalism, what haven't been achieved is real Socialism except maybe in Sweden at some moment, where everybody has the same oportunities, but no one is given anything for free.
Captain Beyond wrote:
far left bands are idolized all the time while bands from the far right are vilified. |
That's exactly my point, if someoe sings the Fourth International Anthem is a dreamer, if someone sings the Giovenezza (Facist anthem) or Cara al Sol (Franco's anthem) is a criminal. Both are wrong, but it's beautiful to feel as the Robin Hood who steals from the rich to give it to the poor.
What they don't know is that when this Robin Hoods reach the power they steal from the rich, repress the poor worst than the Notingham Sheroiff and Prince John together and they stay with the stolen money.
Iván
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