• @Munrock
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    131 year ago

    I guess it depends on how you interpret ‘hostile’.

    Considering that a DotP is a form of government, and that Anarchism seeks the abolishment of government, I imagine we have very different ideas about what hostility involves… or we have very different ideas about how hostile a pacifist would be to a DotP!

    • Anarcho-Bolshevik
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      31 year ago

      Before I can exist in anarchy, I would first have to abolish the conditions that make dictatorships of the proletariat historical probabilities (if not inevitabilities) in the first place… it does very little good for me to attempt to convince others of the advantages of decentralization if the reasons for establishing or preserving centralization are too compelling for people: whether I like it or not, many workers do want to keep dictatorships of the proletariat established, and demonstrating unambiguous hostility to them can be either useless or counterproductive.

      The material conditions that make dictatorships of the proletariat so probable are, I’m presuming, already familiar to you. Only by attacking those, and not the proletarian dictatorships themselves, can I hope to make proletarian dictatorships completely unnecessary.

      • @Munrock
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        21 year ago

        Isn’t the main difference between Anarchism and Communism the question of when the state should be removed? I don’t think anyone would disagree that government should be removed when it’s no longer necessary, it’s just that one of those necessities is ‘Capitalists exist and want to destroy us’. Which is a very pertinent one for Cuba with the US constantly breathing down its neck.

          • @Munrock
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            21 year ago

            Fair. So maybe the Cuban wikipedia should say some Anarchists are hostile to the Dictatorship of the Proletariat.

            So what’s the difference between an Anarchist that thinks State Socialism is an acceptable means to the end goal, and a Communist?