• ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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    4 months ago

    The Foxconn building had to put up nets around their building because so many employees were committing suicide due to their extremely poor working conditions.

    You’re suggesting that is simply a necessary evil on the long road to real socialism? Marx said there needs to be 100 years of capitalist industrialization before a communist revolution can succeed (which I disagree with, but let’s roll with it). China was able to enact a successful revolution without waiting 100 years of wage slavery, only to then become a wage slave accepting nation? To what end is this benefitting the proletariat? China doesn’t have free higher education, and they don’t have fully free healthcare.

    Meanwhile, Anarchists in Spain were able to liberate the working class and eliminate money mid-revolution. They lost the war due to lack of access to weapons/logistics, but nothing about enacting those social revolutions seemed to be terribly detrimental to their efforts.

    China seems to have willfully become capitalist itself (pretty lame of them), so, at least from the average worker’s standpoint, it seems relatively inconsequential whether they are a wage slave in mainland china, or in any other capitalist country.

    • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      some say dengism was a necessary evil, yes. i personally disagree, they should have been able to do better like others before. the results came for the next generation though, and it didn’t need all those 100 years.

      setbacks are part of history everywhere else too, and don’t paint the entire picture.

      • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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        4 months ago

        the results came for the next generation though, and it didn’t need all those 100 years.

        I assume you mean the current generation in China? If so, the results seem to be less than ideal, to put it mildly. I would posit that the Nordic countries (and possibly most of the EU) offer better living and working conditions to the working class, even under their neoliberal welfare state. I certainly don’t see where China is excelling in that regard.

        setbacks are part of history everywhere else too, and don’t paint the entire picture.

        The question is; now that China is a wealthy world power, what exactly is stopping them from enacting more radical social changes to make it actually look like a socialist country? How long do they have to wait before power is given freely to the proletariat and the state withers away? From my perspective, there does not appear to be any light at the end of the tunnel.