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==[[File:AuthNeolib.png]] A Brief on Bourgeoisie power==  
==[[File:AuthNeolib.png]] A Brief on Bourgeoisie power==  
Let us imagine the bourgeoise as a familiar form - the party. We have been led to believe this party has been reduced in power over the years, we have been led to believe that the opposition (the proletariat) has gained a foothold within society. But this is far from the truth - this party has not been overthrown, not even slightly. The party has merely changed form for it has found more subtle ways of maintaining total control, ways other than direct rule - what we today would call “authoritarianism”. The party has molded itself into new institutions: the “free” market, or the “worker” unions (this mold is comparable to a virus, as it has co-opted a formerly proletarian institution). The party did not die, the party evolved. Now let us talk about authoritarianism. When you think of authoritarianism, you likely think of a 1984-esque setting - dark and gloomy, secret police and military all around, free speech dead. Very different to our western democracies, keeping this difference is a necessity to hold together a façade. Imagine authoritarianism as something different - cultural hegemony, silent destruction of opposing views through commodification and co-optation - all that is opposed doomed to become an ally. This is the reality we find ourselves in, under neoliberal capitalism. Whether it be the police state propelled by bayonets or the façade democracy, authoritarianism is central to all bourgeoise systems, for they are unnatural (despite how they love to pretend they aren’t).
Let us imagine the bourgeoise as a familiar form - the party. We have been led to believe this party has been reduced in power over the years, we have been led to believe that the opposition (the proletariat) has gained a foothold within society. But this is far from the truth - this party has not been overthrown, not even slightly. The party has merely changed form for it has found more subtle ways of maintaining total control, ways other than direct rule - what we today would call “authoritarianism”. The party has molded itself into new institutions: the “free” market, or the “worker” unions (this mold is comparable to a virus, as it has co-opted a formerly proletarian institution). The party did not die, the party evolved. Now let us talk about authoritarianism. When you think of authoritarianism, you likely think of a 1984-esque setting - dark and gloomy, secret police and military all around, free speech dead. Very different to our western democracies, keeping this difference is a necessity to hold together a façade. Imagine authoritarianism as something different - cultural hegemony, silent destruction of opposing views through commodification and co-optation - all that is opposed doomed to become an ally. This is the reality we find ourselves in, under neoliberal capitalism. Whether it be the police state propelled by bayonets or the façade democracy, authoritarianism is central to all bourgeoise systems, for they are unnatural (despite how they love to pretend they aren’t).
==[[File:Antilib.png]] Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness==
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness is a slogan oft associated with the classical liberal idea, so we shall take it as the 3 pillars of liberalism. Liberalism advertises itself here with this slogan as individualistic - allowing man to pursuit happiness. But, the liberal capitalist system does not suffice for this, for my pursuit of happiness lies outside of the worship of the deities of capital - this stance, the stance of the universally oppressed proletarian, is, despite it being majoritarian, considered an anomaly, and like in all systems, is thrown aside - the individual's liberty to pursuit their happiness is tossed. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness becomes merely a slogan worshipping the deities of capital, giving a false promise of self-liberation, trying to fit capitalism into the "liberation" slot when communism is in fact the social stage which belongs there. I see liberalism as merely a montage to subjugate the individual to the demands of capital.


==[[File:Struct.png]] Superstructure in the Capitalist Mode of Production==
==[[File:Struct.png]] Superstructure in the Capitalist Mode of Production==
Line 118: Line 121:
==[[File:Gay.png]] Why the Mainstream LGBT Rights movement is not far enough==
==[[File:Gay.png]] Why the Mainstream LGBT Rights movement is not far enough==
WIP: How I despise the mainstream LGBT right's movement idea of assimilation, the difference between liberation and assimilation, why queer liberation is proletarian
WIP: How I despise the mainstream LGBT right's movement idea of assimilation, the difference between liberation and assimilation, why queer liberation is proletarian
==[[File:Antilib.png]] Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness==
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness is a slogan oft associated with the classical liberal idea, so we shall take it as the 3 pillars of liberalism. Liberalism advertises itself here with this slogan as individualistic - allowing man to pursuit happiness. But, the liberal capitalist system does not suffice for this, for my pursuit of happiness lies outside of the worship of the deities of capital - this stance, the stance of the universally oppressed proletarian, is, despite it being majoritarian, considered an anomaly, and like in all systems, is thrown aside - the individual's liberty to pursuit their happiness is tossed. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness becomes merely a slogan worshipping the deities of capital, giving a false promise of self-liberation, trying to fit capitalism into the "liberation" slot when communism is in fact the social stage which belongs there. I see liberalism as merely a montage to subjugate the individual to the demands of capital.





Revision as of 00:40, 26 June 2024

Self Insert
"People can really believe anything these days!" - Ismism

This page is meant to represent NewMaritimeVistula's political views. Please do not make any major edits without their permission.

Work in Progress
"I'll be done any day now!" - Still-Being-Drawnism

This page is not done yet and may still contain inaccurate information or miss important details.




Psychocommunism (psychedelia + communism) is a communist, intersectional, and anti-parliamentarian ideology created by Maritime.

Here's my icons if you wish to add me: (///)

Goals Thingy (WIP)

Dictatorship of the Proletariat

  1. The destruction of the capitalist mode of production in its entirety and all that it has fed to us, to be replaced with proletarian control.
  2. An end to parliamentarian dictatorships of parties and a start to direct proletarian control through decentralised planning, assisted by new technology.
    1. Liberation of the proletariat from exploitative wage labour by the capitalist class
    2. Liberation of the woman from capital's expectations based on sex
    3. Liberation of LGBTQIA+ individuals from false corporate progress which holds their freedom back
  3. Mutual co-operation between proletarian states against capitalist neo-imperialism.

What is Discrete Authoritarianism?

WIP: Possibly explain the motives behind the bourgeoise to change their form, definitely explain how the market fits into authoritarianism, apparatuses of the bourgeoise state, religions upholding of private property, etc. etc.
Discrete authoritarianism is the cross-roads to libertarian totalitarianism - what I mean by this is a state of civilization in which a culture centered around a specific control society and a specific method of production is so prevalent that it has consumed all of its enemies - where indirect rule has become stronger than direct rule, or more specifically an indirect hegemony. It is like a cultural anarcho-totalitarianism, the most advanced stage of hegemony. Discrete authoritarianism can be found as an essential part of neoliberal capitalism's control society, which permeates at least slightly through everyone exposed to the rule of neoliberal(-adjacent) parties. Capitalist realism is in essence the cultural cult around the specific method of production (capitalism) and the control society which comes through the newest, "cushioned" capitalism - that being neoliberalism, the third way, and others.

A Brief on Bourgeoisie power

Let us imagine the bourgeoise as a familiar form - the party. We have been led to believe this party has been reduced in power over the years, we have been led to believe that the opposition (the proletariat) has gained a foothold within society. But this is far from the truth - this party has not been overthrown, not even slightly. The party has merely changed form for it has found more subtle ways of maintaining total control, ways other than direct rule - what we today would call “authoritarianism”. The party has molded itself into new institutions: the “free” market, or the “worker” unions (this mold is comparable to a virus, as it has co-opted a formerly proletarian institution). The party did not die, the party evolved. Now let us talk about authoritarianism. When you think of authoritarianism, you likely think of a 1984-esque setting - dark and gloomy, secret police and military all around, free speech dead. Very different to our western democracies, keeping this difference is a necessity to hold together a façade. Imagine authoritarianism as something different - cultural hegemony, silent destruction of opposing views through commodification and co-optation - all that is opposed doomed to become an ally. This is the reality we find ourselves in, under neoliberal capitalism. Whether it be the police state propelled by bayonets or the façade democracy, authoritarianism is central to all bourgeoise systems, for they are unnatural (despite how they love to pretend they aren’t).

Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness

Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness is a slogan oft associated with the classical liberal idea, so we shall take it as the 3 pillars of liberalism. Liberalism advertises itself here with this slogan as individualistic - allowing man to pursuit happiness. But, the liberal capitalist system does not suffice for this, for my pursuit of happiness lies outside of the worship of the deities of capital - this stance, the stance of the universally oppressed proletarian, is, despite it being majoritarian, considered an anomaly, and like in all systems, is thrown aside - the individual's liberty to pursuit their happiness is tossed. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness becomes merely a slogan worshipping the deities of capital, giving a false promise of self-liberation, trying to fit capitalism into the "liberation" slot when communism is in fact the social stage which belongs there. I see liberalism as merely a montage to subjugate the individual to the demands of capital.

Superstructure in the Capitalist Mode of Production

How Corporate Pride Month shows our Infatuation with Superficial Imagery

How Modern Capitalism killed the party-form

WIP: Explanation of neoliberalism's discrete authoritarianism, the transformation of bourgeoise control being a main difference between modern and past capitalism, and what effect this had on the party-form


Why the Mainstream LGBT Rights movement is not far enough

WIP: How I despise the mainstream LGBT right's movement idea of assimilation, the difference between liberation and assimilation, why queer liberation is proletarian


Reading List

Read

[1]

  • Karl Marx: Theses On Feuerbach
  • Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels: The Communist Manifesto
  • Friedrich Engels: On Authority
  • Friedrich Engels: Principles of Communism
  • Mikhail Bakunin: What is Authority?
  • Vladimir Lenin: The Three Sources and Three Component Parts of Marxism
  • Vikky Storm: The Gender Accelerationist Manifesto
  • Vikky Storm: Egoist Agorism
  • Vikky Storm: It’s Time For “Mad Anarchism”
  • Oswald Mosley: Fascism: 100 Questions Asked and Answered
  • Daniel De Leon: Syndicalism
  • TripleAmpersand: The Alt-Woke Manifesto
  • Murray Rothbard: Anatomy of the State
  • Mark Fisher: Capitalist Realism: Is there no alternative?
  • Mark Fisher: Left Hyperstition 1: The Fictions of Capital
  • Mark Fisher: Left Hyperstition 2: Be Unrealistic, Change What's Possible
  • Mark Fisher: Terminator vs Avatar: Notes On Accelerationism
  • Mark Fisher: Exiting the Vampire Castle
  • Robert P. Murphy: Chaos Theory: Two Essays on Market Anarchy
  • D. Z. Rowan: A Brief Description Of Egoist Communism
  • Nick Land: A Quick and Dirty Introduction to Accelerationism
  • Alex Williams and Nick Srnicek: Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics
  • xenogothic: A U/Acc Primer
  • Bobby Whittenberg-James: Economic Nihilism
  • smartistone: Ads are everything, not AI
  • Vincent Garton: Unconditional accelerationism as antipraxis
  • Edmund Berger: Unconditional Acceleration and the Question of Praxis: Some Preliminary Thoughts
  • Otto Rühle: The Revolution Is Not A Party Affair
  • Max Stirner: The Unique and Its Property
    • I Have Based My Affair on Nothing
    • Humanity
      • A Human Life
      • The Ancients
      • The Moderns
        • The Spirit
  • Ian Wright: Venture Capitalism versus Venture Communism

Currently Reading

  • Louis Althusser: Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses
    • Current segment: An Example: The Christian Religious Ideology

Want to Read

Thesis

  • Louis Althusser: For Marx
  • Ernesto Laclau: Hegemony and Socialist Strategy
  • Ralph Miliband: The state and capitalist society
  • Karl Marx: A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy
  • Karl Marx: Wage Labour and Capital
  • Karl Marx: Value, Price and Profit
  • Friedrich Engels: Anti-Dühring
  • Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels: The German Ideology
  • Karl Marx: The Civil War in France
  • Friedrich Engels: The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State
  • Friedrich Engels: Outlines of a Critique of Political Economy
  • Socialism: Utopian and Scientific
  • Group of International Communists: Fundamental Principles of Communist Production and Distribution
  • Antonie Pannekoek: Worker's Councils
  • Karl Marx: Grundrisse
  • Karl Marx: Contribution to a Critique of Political Economy
  • Isaac Deutscher: Socialist Competition

Marxism and Feminism

  • Alexandra Kollontai: The Social Basis of the Woman Question
  • Angela Davis: Women, Race and Class

Anti-thesis (Capitalism)

  • Henry Hazlitt: Economics in One Lesson
  • Benjamin Tucker: Individual Liberty
  • Milton Friedman: Capitalism and Freedom
  • Murray Rothbard: For a New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto
  • Murray Rothbard: What Has Government Done to Our Money?
  • Murray Rothbard: Man, Economy, and State
  • Murray Rothbard: The Ethics of Liberty
  • Samuel Edward Konkin III: New Libertarian Manifesto
  • Samuel Edward Konkin III: Last Whole Introduction to Agorism

Anti-thesis (Fascism)

  • Benito Mussolini and Giovanni Gentile: The Doctrine of Fascism

Left Opposition[2]

  • Joseph Stalin: Economic Problems of Socialism in the USSR
  • Joseph Stalin: Dialectical and Historical Materialism
  • Vladimir Lenin: What Is to Be Done?
  • Vladimir Lenin: Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism
  • Vladimir Lenin: The State and Revolution
  • Vladimir Lenin: The Tasks of the Proletariat in the Present Revolution
  • Vladimir Lenin: Left-Wing Communism: An Infantile Disorder
  • Mao Zedong: Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung

Utopian Literature

  • G. D. H. Cole: Guild Socialism
  • G. D. H. Cole: Guild Socialism: A Plan for Economic Democracy
  • Victor Considerant: Manifesto of Democracy

Misc

  • Jules Joanne Gleeson: Abolitionism in the 21st Century: From Communization as the End of Sex, to Revolutionary Transfeminism
  • Justin Sotos: Alexander Dugin: Theorist of Communization?
  • Leigh Phillips: The People’s Republic of Walmart: How the World’s Biggest Corporations are Laying the Foundation for Socialism

Suggestions

(Suggest books here, and no Volker i'm not reading your programme)

  1. Templars of the Proletariat by Alexander Dugin
  2. The Guattari Reader by Gary Genosko
  3. The Other Russia by Eduard Limonov

things i want to write eventually

  • The Capitalist Nature of Comedy in Politics
  • On the Thatcherite Reforms in the United Kingdom
  • The European Union
  • The Brezhnevite in Britain
  • On Reactionary Socialism


  1. Ordered by author...mostly
  2. I likely won't read most of these critically, as they are still a good learning experience. e.g. Imperialism, The Highest Stage of Capitalism by Vladimir Lenin I've heard to be an incredible book.