this post was submitted on 20 Apr 2025
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While I do like your writing style and think you're quite talented at it, that's just a bunch of ML revisionism/State capitalist (Dengist) apologetics that misrepresents Marx.
Not gonna thoroughly debunk it cause it's a wall of text, but ownership =/= mode of production. Marx never said that public ownership alone makes something socialist, what matters is how things are produced: Is it for exchange or use? Is labor still waged? Does surplus value still exist and get extracted? If yes - that's still capitalism therefore not Marxist.
You also claim that "Marx didn't think you could abolish private property by making it illegal" which is true cause else it would be idealism, but then you use this to spin it into "that's why we need to let firms develop then make them public" while in reality what Marx meant is that we should abolish capital relations, not co-exist with capital and preserve businesses until they're "ready".
You're also trying to spin the "by degrees" quote from the manifesto to act as if Marx argued for gradual market-led process of evolution from Capitalism to Socialism (or in other words, keeping Capitalism and Markets for decades after the revolution) and not a revolutionary process of abolition of Capital entirely.
That isn't Marxism, but maybe I'm just too ideologically pure and idealistic. Still, I think being more honest that it's not actually "classical Marxism" wouldn't hurt.
I'm very interested in how you think we should abolish capital relations?
I don't have enough hubris to say that I have all the answers, especially when it comes to the way forward - this is something that's up to the revolutionary party collectively to decide, but I do disagree with the ML's theory and methodology, especially with "Socialism in one state" or the 'worship' of State Capitalism. However, if you had a gun to my head, I'd probably manage to squeak out something possibly infantile like this:
When it comes to proletarian revolutions that attempt to build socialism, internationalism is a necessity (both to allow international trade to help meet everyone's needs and weakening of the capitalist global order and reducing them as a threat) - once proletarian and an international party takes power, the focus should be in coordinating/exporting the revolution worldwide mostly via the support of proletarian movements, else it will get isolated, start playing for survival, have to adapt to capitalism and eventually collapse or degenerate as seen historically.
Also, instead of treating state capitalism and markets as a transitional phase that is constantly expanded/built upon, it should instead not be viewed as legitimate and rather something residual, to be replaced as soon as possible. In theory, this should allow for a certain amount of goods to be produced for use, and goods that are more scarce could be produced as commodities and rationed through money.
Once sufficient economic restructuring for transition towards socialist mode of production is done, that's when the transition towards non-accumulative labor vouchers can be done, which should eliminate the law of value and capital relations.
Off the bat, I do usually agree with you more than disagree with you. I'm not saying anything out of a sense of malice or a desire to be "correct." However, I am entirely confident in my analysis here.
You're correct in saying that I'm a Marxist-Leninist, as are the majority of Marxists worldwide. The fact that Marxist-Leninists agree on this subject does not make it revisionist, nor does it misrepresent Marx.
Marx indeed did not say that Public Ownership alone makes something Socialist. Quite right, in fact, many Capitalist states like the US have sizable public sectors. However, at the same time, Capitalism is not Private Ownership. Capitalism itself can only exist as an interconnected system, trying to slice systems up and analyze each slice discretely is an error the pre-Dialectical Matetialists made, and it is an error because it obfuscates the movements and trajectories of the system.
The abolition of production for exchange-value is indeed the goal. However, saying any system that has not yet managed to do so is not Marxist, or not Socialist, is wrong. It may not be upper-level Communism that Marx describes as a future society, but in fact, Marx would call it "Lower-Stage Communism." We can observe this in Principles of Communism:
Engels was not in opposition to Marx on this. You say that it's idealism to say that we cannot simply outlaw private property, but then say we need to abolish capital relations. How do you do that without abolishing private property? You cannot, through fiat, declare Communism. Modes of Production are material things, not just agreements between individuals, the reason the Utopian Socialists such as Robert Owen, Saint-Simon, and Fourier failed is because they tried to create their systems through Utopia building, not through transformation of existing society along the laws of materialism. Marx himself explains in Critique of the Gotha Programme:
Marx clearly implies that in lower-stage Communism, contradictions from Capitalism still exist. Marxists post-Lenin call this transitional stage "Socialism," but the mechanics are still quite clear.
We build Communism through Socialism. That is, by revolution, smashing the bourgeois state, replacing it with a Dictatorship of the Proletariat, and firstly nationalizing all key industry and developed, large firms. Then, the process is to build up the productive forces as rapidly as possible, and that means the use of manipulated market mechanics at the lower-developed sectors, and public ownership at the higher, until the markets themselves do what Marx already observed and create an economy pretty purely of publicly owned firms. It is at this point the value form can gradually be erased, and higher-stage Communism built towards.
In the end, I maintain that it's classically Marxist because it is. Everything Marx wrote indicates this to be the general process he described. We can even observe the measures he and Engels proposed in the Manifesto of the Communist Party:
We can clearly see that even by Marx's original measures, markets would remain, and it would be the job of the Proletarian state to gradually appropriate Capital to the degree it develops, not simply go through a short restructuring period and then achieve full Communism. Such would be idealist Utopia-building.