this post was submitted on 25 Mar 2026
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The Comintern and "socialism in one state" bother some people too much, especially Trots, for them to support Stalin. Idk what they were expecting from him and what they believe if Trotsky was the secretary instead.
Well, most people who criticize "Socialism In One State" don't actually understand what it means. But setting that aside because it's a longer theoretical discussion that is probably not worth getting into in 99.9% of cases, i find it amusing how the same people who criticize "Socialism In One State" for not being internationalist enough can simultaneously criticize the Comintern, when the Comintern represented precisely that internationalism which they claim the Soviet Union abandoned*.
It's very contradictory in my opinion, but the point of course is not logical consistency or theoretical coherence, it's that people need a excuse dressed up in the appearance of theoretical justification for disliking the Soviet Union.
Also the Comintern was founded by Lenin, not Stalin.
*(And to be completely fair, they did dissolve the Comintern for a few years around the time of WWII, again for reasons that probably made sense at the time but we don't need to get into now, but it was replaced soon after.)
One of the criticisms I hear about the Comintern is that USSR made it a Soviet-adjacent organization instead of a true International, like the first and second ones.
The USSR was the birthplace of the revolution and the only socialist state in the world at the time. Of course they were central to the Comintern. They had the most power to materially affect the course of world events.