On 14 Aug 2020 at 7:51, Louis Proyect wrote:

> 
> On 8/14/20 3:43 AM, Joseph Green wrote:
>     
>     He ranked Selassie alongside Cromwell or Robespierre, which for
> Trotsky -- who    ignores certain things about these "dictators", such as
> Cromwell's butchering of  the Irish people  -- was very high praise.
> So what?

If the slaughter of the Irish people doesn't seem to you to be relevant,  then 
nothing I say can possibly make a difference. But for the record, it doesn't 
help 
any progessive or revolutionary movement to simply say "rah, rah", and ignore 
the 
problems. And it strikes me as an obscenity to look at the Ethiopian empire, 
which 
was involved in repressing various subject nationalities, and dream of how 
wonderful it would be if Selassie turned out to be like Cromwell, given that 
Cromwell slaughtered an oppressed nationality. It's like wishing many happy 
returns of the day at a funeral. And unfortunately there were indeed many 
returns 
of the day this time, but not very happy ones, as the Empire ended up in a 
decades-long war against Eritrea.

> Trotsky wrote an article titled "Learn to Think" that I reference in my
> CounterPunch article today about the U. of Utah fiasco. Joseph might
> find Trotsky's article useful.

Louis, you cite the article, "Learn to think", even though it has nothing to do 
with 
the subject under discussion.  That's pathetic. At most, citing this article is 
a 
dog-whistle way to promote the slander that criticizing Trotsky's lavish praise 
of 
Haile Selassie meant opposing support for the Ethiopian struggle against 
Italian 
fascist invasion.

Of course in some other situations the Trotskyists say that they are capable of 
supporting the fight of a country against imperialist attack without glorifying 
the 
leadership. Indeed they suppose that they can provide "unconditional military 
support" to regimes, without providing any "political support". With regard to 
the 
Soviet Union, they put forward the Clemenceau Declaration. They were also able 
to separate support for the Soviet Union against Hitlerite invasion from 
support for 
the Stalinist leadership. And then they claim to find it incomprehensible that 
there 
was a difference between solid support for Ethiopia against Italian fascist 
aggression, and promoting his imperial majesty Haile Selassie, as a great 
anti-imperialist hero and revolutionary, whose victory would strike a blow at 
imperialism as a whole.

Now, it was essential to support Ethiopia, but it was not necessary to praise 
Haile 
Selassie to the skies. In this case, Trotsky was at least on the right side of 
the 
Italo-Ethiopian war. But his extravagant praise for Haile Selassie set a model 
that 
has corrupted the Trotskyist movement ever since. It has been used to justify 
support for Saddam Hussein or even the Taliban, where various Trotskyist groups 
haven't been able to recognize when a war was reactionary on both sides.

Now, the prerequisite for useful thought is to study the issue under 
discussion.Yet 
you apparently don't know anything about what happened in the Italo-Ethiopian 
war, what were the problems that divided the people in the face of Italian 
fascist 
invasion, who carried out the fighting in Ethiopia after Selassie fled, what 
happened to them after the war, etc.  You haven't devoted one second of thought 
to  whether Selassie's defeat of the reform movement  harmed the 
anti-imperialist 
struggle, and also helped pave the way for decades of warfare afterward. No, 
you 
don't need this knowledge. Your attitude is "so what?" All you have to know is 
that 
Trotsky is being criticized, and nothing else matters. And I observe the same 
thing 
with the RCIT and various commentators on this list. 

 I stand for a diifferent attitude to socialist theory. If one is going to deal 
with the 
issue of the anti-imperialist and socialist stand with regard to an African 
country, 
one should know something about that country.Revolutionary theory must be 
tested over and over again against experience. Trotsky replaced this with 
giving 
hypothetical examples, one after another. One can never test one of his 
hypothetical examples, because it is whatever Trotsky says it is; he can always 
suppose any outcome he pleases. With regard to Ethiopia, one can test what 
Trotsky said.  But the Trotskyist movement won't do it, and closes its eyes to 
that 
experience. It makes it into a hypothetical example. That's  learning how not 
to 
think.

African history matters! 

The experience of the fight against Italian fascist invasion and occupation 
matters!

What actually happened to the Amhara, Tigrayan, Oromo, Eritrean, and other 
peoples in or around Ethiopia matters!




-- 
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.

View/Reply Online (#471): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/471
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/76151064/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES &amp; NOTES<br />#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when 
replying to a message.<br />#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly &amp; 
permanently archived.<br />#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a 
concern.
-=-=-
Group Owner: [email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/8674936/1316126222/xyzzy  
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Reply via email to