Goat wrote:
Dead Machine wrote:
EDIT- if you mean 'true commie' as in 'true classless state,' then there are no such states in existence currently.
Wheee, that's what I mean. Until then, they're just violent thugs holding onto power and propelling their ideologies onto the populace.
Rio, whether LBJ was moved after his stony heart was melted or due to pragmatism (Eisenhower desegregated the armed forces, after all) like you said, there was more going on, I'm not arguing with that. It's a combination, but arguing (as I am) that nonviolence played a good part in it (what if the Black Panthers had been a bit more Hamas-y, what then? They'd have been more akin to the IRA circa 1900).
Regarding the black panthers, given how they were systematically targeted and murdered by J. Edgar Hoover's COINTELPRO, I don't think it's really good to point to them when trying to make a point about nonviolent resistance being successful or whatever.
as for saying 'all communist states are illegitimate until they're classless utopias,' then that's classic 'liberal' twaddle that people use to dismiss communism; for one, it is entirely impossible to, in
one stroke, completely dismantle the class system and create the community where 'From each according to his ability, to each according to his need' is hung over the entrance. Ergo; any such action that could be reasonably interpreted as leading towards this is, to the minds of these 'liberals,' illegitimate! Especially if violence is employed.
for that matter, what makes a government of a country 'legitimate?' America was created by violent revolution; does that mean its government is illegitimate, that the current government is made up of jackbooted thugs oppressing the public? How was Britain created? How about any of the countries in South America? They were colonized; they fought violent revolutions and now they are independent. Are they illegitimate? If not, why?
What, then, justifies violence? Is any state-sponsored violence justifiable? Is all non-state-sponsored violence unjustifiable? Is all violence that is in response to violence unjustifiable? Is violence that is approved of by the majority of people in a state justified? Is there no circumstance you see, none on this planet, that would justify violent revolt?
Is Evo Morales a legitimate socialist leader because he was elected, or is he not a legitimate socialist leader because his state isn't a classless communist utopia? How about Hugo Chavez? If the U.S. employed regime change in Venezuela, would Hugo Chavez be justified in creating a resistance movement that violently fought against the U.S. sponsored government? If the answer is yes, then why are communist revolutions against imperialism and the horrors perpetrated by the IMF illegitimate, given that they amount to a form of government enforced by the promise of sweet, sweet money?