Okay before I say anything else I should preface by saying that this is me researching for a socialist science-fantasy fictional world that I am creating, for writing stories. I know that “in Minecraft” and similar sayings are popular on Lemmygrad with topics like these but this is genuinely hypothetical and born from my desire to accurately represent Marxist values in my fictional writing. But also because I really do want to learn Marxist-Leninist philosophy and writing fiction is a way that I explore and try to apply theory that I have read.

Basically, in my plot which revolved around characters who are chemists, the revolution was helped greatly by the development of a hard to detect neurotoxin that would slowly kill the victim by shutting down their brains over a period of several weeks, symptoms included insomnia, memory loss, catatonia and coma before death. Not exactly a quick no-bullshit execution by firing squad but in-universe it’s not intended to make them suffer and it’s believed to at least be painless, but it was basically a covert assassination method that would not be detectable until it was too late. In my story it was only ever used for targeted assassinations of individual leaders in the fascist aristocracy and military. Obviously if they just released it into the general population it would be unambiguously immoral since it would cause tons of what the West likes to call “collateral damage.”

I don’t know of many famous sci-fi socialist/leftist stories so don’t really have a place to draw inspiration for that specific type of fiction, and none that actually depict a revolution, which is why I thought to post here (apologies if this post is not appropriate for this community). Would this be contradictory to a socialist revolution in Marxism-Leninism? Would it be something acceptable as the terrible realities of war/revolution or would it be totally immoral from a socialist point of view? I don’t need it to be totally moral, as I do want to explore the implications and basically what can happen in desperation fighting for a cause you believe right and facing imminent defeat, but as a socialist writer writing about a socialist world I really don’t want to depict something most socialists would consider completely unacceptable.

My choice to envision it as affecting the brain also plays into my motifs relating to sapience/intelligence and the mind in this story but that’s not really relevant to this post.

What do you think comrades?

  • Nocheztli ☭
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    13
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    I believe it all depends on context. For example, the KGB got Stephan Bandera in Germany using cyanide gas. So there’s an historic precedent on what you are thinking about. Every weapon has a different use due to the circumstances, that is why so many of them exist. In order to make a weapon viable in any given situation first it has to be effective and then it has to be the best option. A simple gun can be effective, but may not be the best option against a plane.