They were???
I'm still arguing they were being imperialist. Invading
invited
as you well know by now.
They were???
I'm still arguing they were being imperialist. Invading
Being invited, and then doing a massive host of repressive, imperialist garbage entirely outside of the remit of that invitation, doesn't make it all fine and dandy. As you well know.They were
invited
as you well know by now.
Now you're just using the word 'imperialist' as a synonym for 'bad'.Being invited, and then doing a massive host of repressive, imperialist garbage entirely outside of the remit of that invitation, doesn't make it all fine and dandy. As you well know.
Nah, no one cared about that in the socialist countries. US internal politics is not really that relevant to others.Given the timing I suspect McCarthyism played a much greater role.
No. Murder is bad, but it's not imperialism.Now you're just using the word 'imperialist' as a synonym for 'bad'.
The invasion you must be talking about was followed by two decades of occupation.No. Murder is bad, but it's not imperialism.
Invasion followed by a decade of occupation and looting of the native population for the enrichment of the occupying force is both bad and imperialist.
No.The invasion you must be talking about was followed by two decades of occupation.
Internationalism has its benefits. But whatever way, I'd prefer a more live and let live view of the world. The co-operation between Communist and capitalist countries was greater than we might immediately think: during the Cold War, my father-in-law worked for a British firm that helped construct a chemicals plant in Poland: hardly the stuff of total incompatibility. Detente and better co-existence was possible. The Soviets are every bit as much to blame for this not occurring. You might not like that conclusion, but it is true.I'm not sure what is supposed to be the problem; internationalism sounds fine to me. My argument is that the surrounding context of global capitalism explains and potentially even justifies much of the questionable behavior of the Soviet Union and People's Republic of China. Undermining imperialist nations and their puppet regimes in exploited nations pretty directly means relieving pressure at home as well as moving closer to giving the working classes of the entire world a chance to take control of their own destinies. "Socialism in one country" only makes any sense to me if it's exceedingly difficult to pursue literally any other path with respect to building socialism which, to be fair to Stalin after Germany didn't have its expected proletarian revolution, it was.
I think the people get the government they deserve. The British lack the will to defend their interests from being sold out from under them. The voices are out there for them to listen otherwise (my own small opinion included), and they choose not to. So be it.You're witnessing the vultures circling over the NHS and still saying this?
Yes. And to be fair, the USA is unusually bad on that score. But it is what it is. Again, if people would rather repeatedly vote in those who sell off their rights to the highest bidder because they are offended someone dark skinned moved into their street, they get what they deserve. And eventually it will probably circle back round to a new socialistic flowering as the strains become too much to bear.The key is taking away the power of the capitalist class to manipulate elections, legislation, and public opinion, which means taking away their ill-gotten money and control over the means of production. It also means reducing the threat from abroad to take away the justification for allocating the surplus to maintaining a military and intelligence service. This seems to require a world revolution.
Again, take a look at the deaths in custody in the USSR and China during the Cold War, their execution rates, the mass deaths, the disappeared : even with its flaws the USA still looks superb by example. And lets face it, although the US prison population exploded thanks to the Reagan era, before then it was far lower than the USSR. Even Republicans have started realising that their punitive experiment with mass incarceration is a failure.And in the public: 22% of the world's prison population is in the United States. People are murdered by cops in the streets, assassinated by the FBI, and so on.
In America, maybe, but that doesn't explain Europe.Given the timing I suspect McCarthyism played a much greater role.
Not sure about that. A lot of people aren't aware of the creeping privatisation because it's constantly being obfuscated and denied, and it doesn't get reported.I think the people get the government they deserve. The British lack the will to defend their interests from being sold out from under them. The voices are out there for them to listen otherwise (my own small opinion included), and they choose not to. So be it.
It is fundamentally a public that is too apathetic or fixated on tangential issues that facilitates the press selling them triviality and bullshit.Not sure about that. A lot of people aren't aware of the creeping privatisation because it's constantly being obfuscated and denied, and it doesn't get reported.
It's not wilful laziness. It's a state of ignorance intentionally fostered by a tremendously wealthy governing party and its media allies.
???
People are a product of their environment. That a large number of people are obsessed with trivial bullshit by the design of the manipulators of public opinion should not be allowed to hold back the rest of us.It is fundamentally a public that is too apathetic or fixated on tangential issues that facilitates the press selling them triviality and bullshit.
Is Europe's culture not influenced to a large extent by America's ruling class (to some degree because a good share of America's ruling class resides in Europe?)In America, maybe, but that doesn't explain Europe.
Well, that's nice, but we're about to roast ourselves in the (too often literal) fires of climate change.Internationalism has its benefits. But whatever way, I'd prefer a more live and let live view of the world.
At the time that was going on our black population lived in terror of lynchings by KKK and police and our intelligence agencies were fomenting fascist coups d'etat elsewhere.Again, take a look at the deaths in custody in the USSR and China during the Cold War, their execution rates, the mass deaths, the disappeared : even with its flaws the USA still looks superb by example.
American culture is so infectious that large parts of Europe just echo US talking points. Ireland is becoming indistinguishable from the US politically. We mimic the exact same anti socialist sentiment despite the fact that the vast majority of the people who fought for our freedom were socialists and explicitly fought for a socialist country. Our country went from a third world country because of things like public housing, free education and free healthcare for low income families to one where all of the people who were able to make it out of poverty entirely thanks to these systems now want them gotten rid of because they have drank the American rugged individualism kool aid.In America, maybe, but that doesn't explain Europe.
They were invited by the Communist Amin administration, which they immediately proceeded to betray. The first act in the Soviet-Afghan war was the storming of the presidential palace by Soviet forces who smothered Amin with pillows. They did this because they did not trust Amin to remain loyal to the Soviet Union and the Brezhnev's foreign policy encouraged the use of violent intervention to prevent states from trying to leave the USSR's sphere of influence. I'm not all that bothered that the Soviets overthrew Amin, he was an arsehole, and the guy Amin overthrew to get power was also an arsehole, and the guy the Soviets installed as a puppet ruler in his place was also an arsehole. The Cold War was not a conflict between empires in the traditional sense of the word, but it was a conflict over the geopolitical hegemony of two state entities, the United States of America and the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. (Because ultimately the other constituent republics of the USSR were also imperialised states under a Russian hegemony and you don't have to look very hard to find the evidence of that. See also: Scotland, Wales, and Ireland in the British Empire, non-Han people in the PRC) Three western empires have launched military adventures into Afghanistan hoping to consolidate their position in a broader geopolitical conflict; Britain against Russia, the USSR against America, and America against Islamic fundamentalism. The People's Republic of China are the other great imperial power of the modern era and I will not be surprised to see them have a go in my lifetime and get much the same result as the last three that tried.They were
invited
as you well know by now.
Speaking of that as "the first thing they did" is vacuous; they had a presence there before that and it was doing things. What you're saying is as good as "the arbitrary point we decided to mark as the beginning of the war was the beginning of the war". But yes, they murdered a murderer. And the treaty which demanded their presence in Afghanistan was negotiated at a time when Amin was somewhat subordinate to Taraki (at least to the extent that people would speak of the leadership of "Taraki and Amin" rather than "Amin and Taraki") and so far as I can tell the Parcham faction hadn't yet been purged, or at least not as completely.They were invited by the Communist Amin administration, which they immediately proceeded to betray. The first act in the Soviet-Afghan war was the storming of the presidential palace by Soviet forces who smothered Amin with pillows.
Amin had assassinated a rival to achieve his position, was purging other factions in the PDPA, was unpopular and regarded by the Afghan people as a murderer and apostate, and he'd let the insurgencies grow out of control; there were plenty of much better reasons to want to be rid of him; arguing that the Soviet Union only cared about his loyalty is silly.They did this because they did not trust Amin to remain loyal to the Soviet Union
Were Moscow and Leningrad getting rich from exploitation like London and New York? Or is "hegemony" just a matter of being large and populous?(Because ultimately the other constituent republics of the USSR were also imperialised states under a Russian hegemony and you don't have to look very hard to find the evidence of that.
Because there are lots of Han and not that many everyone else? Or what? Anti-Chinese propaganda likes to paint China as "Han supremacist" to try to muddy the waters for the United States with respect to white supremacism, but evidence, especially evidence of a kind that would be anywhere near comparable to white supremacism, seems scant.(See also... non-Han people in the PRC)
Not really sure how to respond to this low-effort reply malarkey. The following words of the same post you quoted (which you edited out) provide an explanation. If you have an actual response, I'm all ears, but "the US invaded Afghanistan, maybe you were thinking of that instead, eh?" isn't an argument, it's a lazy deflection.
Literally every single description you've given of Amin here applies to the Soviet occupying force as well, interestingly.Amin had assassinated a rival to achieve his position, was purging other factions in the PDPA, was unpopular and regarded by the Afghan people as a murderer and apostate, and he'd let the insurgencies grow out of control; there were plenty of much better reasons to want to be rid of him; arguing that the Soviet Union only cared about his loyalty is silly.
Oh yeah they replaced Amin with Mohammad Najibullah who was a paranoid mass murdering drug addled nutcase. Tens of thousands of people were disappeared, tortured, and executed under his leadership.Literally every single description you've given of Amin here applies to the Soviet occupying force as well, interestingly.
They don't. They suggest that there is an invasion that you're talking about that isn't the American one. Which was also conveyed by "No."The following words of the same post you quoted (which you edited out) provide an explanation.
They put up with similar behavior from the Parcham faction because it would hardly do to kill the political leadership of Afghanistan *again*. And "we want revenge" is not entirely without merit as a motivation. If the Soviets had intervened and stopped the Parcham faction from doing all that stuff? According to you, that would have been more imperialist.Literally every single description you've given of Amin here applies to the Soviet occupying force as well, interestingly.