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Hello there comrades. I am a left-communist in the Philippines and a member of a left-communist organisation International Communist Current (ICC). Our website is: https://en.internationalism.org/ We have an ICC section in the Philippines and also in India. We are happy to know (thanks from our anarchist friends in the Philippines informing us your presence in Vietnam) to know that there are elements in Vietnam interested in left-communist positions. We are hoping to have a fraternal correspondence and discussions with you on the history of left-communism in which our "forefathers" were the Italian Left and the Dutch-German Left. We also read your response to the Internationalist Voice in which the ICC is having a fraternal relation also.
We've recently had the opportunity to interview a Vietnamese Anarchist. Because Vietnam is a police state, we thought it would be best to not ask them too many questions which may be used by the State to incriminate them. Apologies in advance. If you would like to see something specific about Vietnam, please email us. Q: For our readers who are unfamiliar with the philosophy, could you explain what Anarchism is? A: Anarchism is an ideal where the autonomy of the individual is of most importance. Q: What methods of change are preferred by Anarchists? Could there be ballot-box Anarchism? A: Anarchism requires revolution, it's impossible to destroy societal hierarchical classes by submitting yourself to the game of the powerful. Q: And for social organization, how would society look if it was anarchist? A: I think there will be organizations within local communes, which will cooperate together on the basis of mutual assistance and free association. Q: What or who would you say was
Before we dive into the discussion of the bureaucracy which chokes Vietnam like a boa constrictor, it would be useful for us to define “bureaucracy”. Many Communists throw the word around but do not know what it means. We take our definition from Alexandra Kollontai. Writing for the Workers Opposition, she states: “ Bureaucracy is a direct negation of mass self-activity. [...] Restrictions on initiative are imposed, not only in regard to the activity of the non-party masses [...] The initiative of Party members themselves is restricted. Every independent attempt, every new thought that passes through the censorship of our centre, is considered as ‘heresy’, as a violation of Party discipline, as an attempt to infringe on the prerogatives of the centre, which must ‘foresee’ everything and ‘decree’ everything and anything. If anything is not decreed one must wait, for the time will come when the centre at its leisure will decree. Only then, and within sharply restricted limits, will one
The 1930s-1940s proved to be a period of intense social upheaval and proletarian action in colonial Vietnam. Faced with the Stalinist class-collaborationists of the Viet Minh, and the colonial empire of France, the proletariat in Vietnam tried to forge its own communist path. Proletarian elements grouped around the League of Internationalist Communists tried to push this path along, and help the proletariat realize it’s force as a distinct class. Although the struggle ended in victory for the bourgeoisie, and the League had most of its members liquidated by the Viet Minh, drawing lessons from the period is still crucial. That is what we have set out to do in this piece. The Proletariat as the Revolutionary Class The most immediate lesson one can draw from the period is that the proletariat is the only revolutionary class in the capitalist epoch. It was the industrial and rural parts of the proletariat which formed the embryos of a dictatorship of the proletariat. Notable among these
Hello there comrades. I am a left-communist in the Philippines and a member of a left-communist organisation International Communist Current (ICC). Our website is: https://en.internationalism.org/
ReplyDeleteWe have an ICC section in the Philippines and also in India. We are happy to know (thanks from our anarchist friends in the Philippines informing us your presence in Vietnam) to know that there are elements in Vietnam interested in left-communist positions.
We are hoping to have a fraternal correspondence and discussions with you on the history of left-communism in which our "forefathers" were the Italian Left and the Dutch-German Left.
We also read your response to the Internationalist Voice in which the ICC is having a fraternal relation also.
Internasyonalismo
ICC section in the Philippines