I visited the commie bookstore in town today and I picked up a copy of Manufacturing Consent because it seemed appropriate for the current times. I also got a copy of Motorcycle Diaries.
On the way home I also passed a Falun Gong stand. They were doing some dance.
Just now getting to Blackshirts and Reds, got to Chapter 6 today. His criticisms of the Soviet Union are making me believe that China and Deng Xiaoping were correct, so perhaps I need to read some Deng next, lol.
Yes actually, it's a sobering reminder that communism isn't a utopia, and that there's a lot more to people's needs after the basics have been covered.
I do think he might have been a little too harsh on Stalin though, the man tried to quit four times (and they wouldn't let him! some dictator lol) and was at the head of a socialist state that was constantly under siege from capitalist and reactionary forces in and out. Mistakes were made but that's just cause nothing is perfect, if the USSR really had a major flaw it was that it was unable to understand the needs of the people and learn from their mistakes.
That's funny... in both the book and at the end of "Friendly Feudalism", his essay on Tibet, Parenti bashed China for being a hair too capitalist-roaded for his liking.
Yeah he said China was "sliding" down the path of free market reform but the book was written in the late 90s so there's a bit of outdated information there.
Nearly all western leftists coming up in the 70s and 80s got it wrong on China, or didn't understand the strategy, probably because there was a dearth of translated materials. Parenti and Sakai for example.
The autobiography of Malcolm X is so damn good. I read it a few years ago, and re-read it when they released the audiobook with Lawrence Fishburne as narrator.
I have finally gotten around to reading Settlers and I've also slowly working through Losurdo's Liberalism and Fanon's Wretched of the Earth. I find Fanon particularly hard to read which makes getting through it quite slow.
I also like easier to read fiction, especially when my head is too full or cloudy for theory. Recently finished Decoded by Mai Jia and am about halfway through Raybearer by Jordan Ifueko, both of which are enjoyable.
For serious stuff I’m currently rereading Super Imperialism by Michael Hudson cause my brain hates remembering stuff now. Also started a bit of Arab Spring, Libyan Winter by Vijay Prashad.
Also finally gotten back into reading fiction and have polished off about seven Sarah J Maas books in the past couple months, guilty pleasure
It's an account of USSR by an American journalist back in 1930s. It's just really full of optimism, and she does a great job showing how Soviet democracy worked.
Killing Hope by William Blum, and Dark Alliance by Gary Webb. Lot of overlap between them lol. But both are very good so far, the second one is incredibly entertaining, like better than any HBO show about narcotraficantes.
Simultaneously reading this and If We Burn. I'm close to finished with If We Burn so I decided to start Losurdo's Stalin since I was too excited. I only read up to the second chapter of Losurdo's but I've really enjoyed both so far.
I found it a bit tedious to read at first. It was lying around for a solid month after I finished the second chapter. Came back to it like a week ago and I'm getting used to Loaurdo's writing now. Been really enjoying it the last few days, managed almost 50 pages today. 120 more to go. I'll probably read some more Losurdo after this, specifically looking at "Liberalism, a counter history". Reading feels good.
I'm in the middle of Against Empire by Parenti. It's good, but I enjoyed Blackshirts and Reds more. Parenti is a great writer, and he is easy to understand, so I will continue to read his stuff. As for novels, I ordered 2001: A Space Odyssey not too long ago and will try to read it sometimes. I have manufacturing consent sitting on my bookshelf, plus some others from Chomsky I haven't read yet. I bought them during a short anarchist phase I had and grew out of very quickly after reading Lenin's stuff. Often, I buy books and end up never reading them. Uhh I should stop doing that and download them illegally instead.
I finished Palo Alto and found it to be really well written and interesting. Currently reading Vulture Capitalism, it’s a recently published book too like Palo Alto and I’m roughly 1/3 through it. I think after this I want to dig into some Michael Hudson books, either Killing the Host or Destiny of Civilizations.
Karl Marx's letter to Vera Zasulich, there are several drafts. In the letter, Marx is discussing the conditions of Russian peasants, specifically their communities - and the potential of said communities to transform into a more modern, communist mode while skipping the pain and misery of capitalist stage - that is, destruction of the peasant communities.
Looking back, it's frankly frightening how near prophetic his writings ended up being. Specifically, Marx writes that should the transition to communist mode fail, the small minority of peasants will be turned into private landowners, while the majority will be made into proletariat. Which is exactly what ended up happening
I'm reading the English translation of 三体. I wanted to wait until my Chinese literacy was good enough to read the original, but now that there's a Netflix version out I had to give up that goal to avoid spoilers.
I just started Forces of Production the other day. It's interesting.
The other day I started reading a Chinese scifi novel 猫城记 Cat City/Cat Country. I thought about trying to translate it even though it's above my reading level by just looking up all the words as I go. But I'm below that threshold of 95% understanding or whatever and have to look up many phrases on each page.
The German Ideology and I just just just started Black Reconstruction. Finished Moby Dick yesterday, fucking awesome book. I think I'll start the Grapes of Wrath soon but I want to get through some more of these Marx texts before taking on too much. I've read a good deal of Marx but a lot of his philosophical stuff I haven't read, and they aren't that long so I might just try to push through them.
Groene Waterman. It's not explicitly communist but in the back you find a big wall filled with communist books and other left wing radical writers. Our party has meetings there quite often.