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- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!nic.umass.edu!dime!chelm.cs.umass.edu!yodaiken
- From: yodaiken@chelm.cs.umass.edu (victor yodaiken)
- Newsgroups: ne.politics
- Subject: Re: State Socialism (last one, for sure)
- Message-ID: <58131@dime.cs.umass.edu>
- Date: 30 Dec 92 20:49:07 GMT
- References: <20472@ksr.com> <58077@dime.cs.umass.edu> <4269@mitech.com>
- Sender: news@dime.cs.umass.edu
- Organization: University of Massachusetts, Amherst
- Lines: 78
-
- In article <4269@mitech.com> gjc@mitech.com (George J. Carrette) writes:
- >In article <58077@dime.cs.umass.edu>, yodaiken@chelm.cs.umass.edu (victor yodaiken) writes:
- >> This is nonsense. The peak of Soviet economic growth appeared in the
- >> early 1930's when the Soviet Union was transformed, brutally, from an
- >> agrarian nation to an industrial one.
- >
- >Maybe you can help me with a serious problem. I cannot figure
- >out how to measure economic growth in an environment where millions
- >of people are dying. In particular:
- >
- > How do you value the output of the slave
- > labor as compared with the value of the slaves that died?
-
- The Soviet Union in 1918 was an agrarian nation, depending on others
- for industrial goods and capital. The Soviet union in 1935 was
- an industrial nation, producing its own industrial goods despite
- the hostility of the worlds most powerful nations. Most economists,
- I believe, would consider that evidence of economic growth.
- >
- Your questions are good ones, but apply to all industrial nations.
- How can we value the output of the African slaves whose labor
- powered the early development of the US industrial base? Or the value
- of the American Indians who were murdered to open up the forest which
- provided the raw material for the US shipping industry? Or the value
- of the lives of the children who pulled coal cars in British coal
- mines, or the Chinese who became addicted to opium courtesy of
- the British government. Clearly the creation of the US shipbuilding
- industry was no favor to the Africans who got crammed into 3 foot
- high storage rooms and were shipped over to work cotton fields or
- cut sugar cane, and the creation of the Soviet industrial system
- did no good for the millions who starved in the Ukraine. But I can't
- think of a nation that industrialized without committing some horrible
- crimes or getting foreign aid. Can you?
-
- >>[straw man where ...]
- >> pre-revolutionary Russia was well on its way to the capitalist paradise
- >> when the bad commies showed up and stole the cake.
- >
- >Was anyplace a "capitalist paradise?" Was the USA a paradise?
- >
- >Can anybody deny that "massive changes" took place in the UK, USA?
- >But were millions of people killed by the government, or even
- >by capitalist private armies during the industrial revolution?
- >Certainly not. The USA in particular was attracting millions of
- >people.
-
- certainly you know little about US history if you can make this
- claim. Millions of Africans did die, as did millions of American
- indians. The British industrial revolution immersed a huge section
- of the population in grinding poverty and slave labor work conditions,
- and those who dared to protest were murdered, and this does not
- begin to take into account the pillage of Africa and India.
-
- Look, if you just want to wave the flag around and cheer yourself
- with your brave stand against Stalin, go ahead. But, history is not
- as simple as some might like it. Russia in 1913 was not the same
- as America in 1830, it had different traditions, different neighbors,
- and existed in a different world economy. I'd like to understand what
- happened.
-
- >What was it about the Communist systems that made it possible,
- >convenient, or otherwise available to kill millions of people in order
- >to effect these "massive changes?"
-
- And what was it about the capitalist system that made it possible to
- enforce the enclosure laws, use human beings as property, put
- 8 year olds in coal mines, cut off the hands of conquered people
- who would not work nonstop (Belgium congo), .... ? The lenninist
- ideology is a pernicious one and Bakunin's critique of Marx in the
- 1800's has been shown to be horribly accurate, but the comic book
- "evil empire" level of analysis is not particularly informative.
-
-
- --
-
-
- yodaiken@chelm.cs.umass.edu
-
-