Goat wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
Goat wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
^Pacify populaces much. What about all the revolutions that did turn out positive? American, British(to some degree), Indian. That sounds like some bullshit conservative ideology trojan horse to me.
Violence begets violence, whether it's Cromwell massacring the Irish or sectarian Indian violence. I'm not going to comment on the American revolution, because that's an open trapdoor. Personally, I'm nonviolent up to the usual boundaries. The French and Russian revolutions are good enough examples.
Sitting around and doing nothing begets violence as well so trying to fight systemic violence is worth any damages caused by a revolution. The French, American, Russian and Indian revolutions were all enlightening to some degree despite the damages caused; without them where would we be? Violence is prevalent in our society so why not direct that violence towards something you can support and be proud of. It beats sitting around and letting the violence of capitalism, neo-colonialism and social injustices simply be condoned.
Well, we just don't know where we'd be, do we? It's worth remembering that nonviolence had a great part to play in the fall of Communism, the marchers in Czechoslovakia and elsewhere... you're also ignoring the impact a man called Gandhi had on the Indians. Was it worth all the people killed in the French revolution, the rise of Napoleon and the subsequent wars, which didn't really change much for the average man and could be argued did more harm than good? Ha, "violence is prevalent"? It shouldn't be, might as well argue the legalisation of playground fights or underground boxing clubs, or a mandatory draft. And nonviolence doesn't mean 'sitting around', but fighting back without becoming as bad as the oppressor, damaging property but not life. The animal and earth liberation fronts are nonviolent, as is the Dalai Lama and his fight for Tibetan freedom.
Anyways, wrong thread, and too pertinent to personal philosophies to really make for a good argument. RW: some Japanese film about kids left on their own. Rather dull, even when one of them died.
Goat, you are right that violence begets violence, but you are inverting the situation. The French revolutionaries were trapped in a violent system- they were victims of violence, and as a result they were brutalised. Why is the leap to the Terror something that was begun by the revolution, and not the inevitable consequence of the original problem; i.e. the rule of the monarchy? Same goes for Russia. And let's not forget that these French revolutionaries were not a group of colonels and intellectuals; they were ordinary people. The revolutionary movement was an intensely democratic one, regardless of how violent it was.
What is totally written out here, is the role of the "non-violent" liberals/conservatives in both of those episodes. After the overthrow of Louis in France, and
before the Guillotine got wheeled out, there was of course the small matter of the
massive invasion of France by other European powers, with the aim of reinstalling the monarchy. In these wars, far more French people died than did so during the Terror. But who now has become the villain? Of course, it is Robespierre. Same again with Russia; remember the massive civil war/invasion of that country supported and carried out by supposedly enlightened Europeans. That's written out, and again the destruction of Russia becomes solely Lenin's responsibility.
I'm not trying to exonerate Lenin and Robespierre; but there is far more at work in those episodes. You will no doubt agree with that, but if you say that intolerable violence is the inevitable end of revolution, then you buy straight in to this very conservative conception of history that the only LEGITIMATE force is that of the civilised liberals against the insurgents.
Trapt, I disagree with some of your examples. There never was an American Revolution, IMO. There was a handover from colonial to local rule, but the social order in the US was never reversed.
As regards the English Revolution, it is wrong to see Cromwell as the revolutionary IMO. His faction, once the act of deposing the King had been accomplished, often acted as a conservative force, resisting, often violently, the genuine revolutionary sentiment that was rampant amongst ordinary English people at the time but which was never allowed to find political expression.
*has been reading Zizek a lot*