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Category:Stalinism ontology: Difference between revisions

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m Trotsky can speak about what is morally right in the Soviet Union
 
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</li><li class="field_trotsky" value="618" data-dimension="S2">Inside fascism, Trotskyist revolution is moral
</li><li class="field_trotsky" value="2284" data-dimension="F2">Trotsky can speak about what is morally right in the Soviet Union
</li><li class="field_trotsky" value="618" data-dimension="S2">Inside fascism, Trotskyist revolution is moral
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Latest revision as of 01:26, 18 September 2025

"Stalinism" is a particular concept within Trotskyism which roughly refers to the failure to realize a Trotskyist workers' state. At some times, it may appear to be synonymous with "Stalin's Marxism", but one thing that must not be forgotten is the conspiracy-theory undertone of the concept — "Stalinism" is less the act of realizing Stalin's Marxism than the failure to remove imperial culture and The Bureaucracy. This can be a costly mistake when Trotskyists bring up "Stalinism" as the obstruction to Trotskyism and center-Liberals show up assuming that "Stalinism" is precisely the same thing as horseshoe theory and the generalized dictator.

Stalin's government as obstructor[edit]

Anti-Stalinists as progressives[edit]

  1. Trotsky can speak about what is morally right in the Soviet Union
  2. Inside fascism, Trotskyist revolution is moral

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