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Communization Theory: Difference between revisions

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'''Communization Theory''' or '''Communization''' is an [[File:LeftCom.png]] [[Left Communism|Ultra-Left]] political movement which views the dictatorship of the proletariat to no longer be a sufficient transition to communism, instead proposing a process known as communization which is the destruction of [[File:Cap.png]] [[Capitalism|Capitalist]] social relations and the replacement of them with communist ones. Despite their dislike of the dictatorship of the proletariat and the state, they dislike [[File:Ancom.png]] [[Anarcho-Communism|Anarcho-Communists]] for saying that the destruction of capital is immediate, instead imagining it as a process of insurrection. They take from a variety of tendencies such as [[File:LeftCom.png]] [[Left Communism|Bordigaism]], [[File:Councom.png]] [[Council Communism|Councilism]], [[File:Situ.png]] [[Situationism]], [[File:Auton.png]] [[Autonomism]], and [[File:Insarch.png]] [[Insurrectionary Anarchism]]. The crux of their theory is the dislike of workerism, proposing that the communist movement must be a movement by which the proletariat rejects proletarianism, as the proletariat is a class defined by its own oppression. This puts them at odds with many [[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism|Marxists]] who emphasize the worker in the dictatorship of the proletariat and in lower stage communism or [[File:Soc-h.png]] [[Socialism]]. Despite its [[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism|Marxist]] roots, the movement is very diverse, with it becoming aligned with movements such as the [[File:Anpostleft.png]] [[Post-Leftism|Post-Left]], [[File:Insarch.png]] [[Insurrectionary Anarchism]], [[File:Egocom.png]] [[Ego-Communism]], [[File:Meta-Anarchism.png]] [[Meta-Anarchism]], etc yet still keeping to its [[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism|Marxist]] roots.

Revision as of 22:50, 30 April 2023

Script error: No such module "Mbox".

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"Workers of the world, unite! Separately, in your own homes.!" - Asocialism

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Communization Theory or Communization is an Ultra-Left political movement which views the dictatorship of the proletariat to no longer be a sufficient transition to communism, instead proposing a process known as communization which is the destruction of Capitalist social relations and the replacement of them with communist ones. Despite their dislike of the dictatorship of the proletariat and the state, they dislike Anarcho-Communists for saying that the destruction of capital is immediate, instead imagining it as a process of insurrection. They take from a variety of tendencies such as Bordigaism, Councilism, Situationism, Autonomism, and Insurrectionary Anarchism. The crux of their theory is the dislike of workerism, proposing that the communist movement must be a movement by which the proletariat rejects proletarianism, as the proletariat is a class defined by its own oppression. This puts them at odds with many Marxists who emphasize the worker in the dictatorship of the proletariat and in lower stage communism or Socialism. Despite its Marxist roots, the movement is very diverse, with it becoming aligned with movements such as the Post-Left, Insurrectionary Anarchism, Ego-Communism, Meta-Anarchism, etc yet still keeping to its Marxist roots.