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Post a Comment On: Understanding Society

"Who was Leon Trotsky?"

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Blogger Mike Ballard said...

Deutscher's observation is spot on, "When Trotsky now urged the Bolshevik party to 'substitute' itself for the working classes, he did not, in the rush of work and controversy, think of the next phases of the process, although he himself had long since predicted them with uncanny clear-sightedness. 'The party organization would then substitute itself for the party as a whole; then the Central Committee would substitute itself for the organization; and finally a single dictator would substitute himself for the Central Committee.' The dictator was already waiting in the wings. (522)" But the rot set in way before the 10th Party Congress in 1921. The suppression of democratic, grassroots forces amongst the working class took place almost from the get-go in 1917...see Maurice Brinton's THE BOLSHEVIKS AND WORKERS' CONTROL. Trotsky's complicity with Lenin, Stalin and the rest of the Party in slaughter at Kronstadt sealed, not only his own fate; but the fate of all non-Stalin loyal Bolsheviks.

October 20, 2012 at 4:06 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yes, I think the suppression of the Kronstadt was the crucial test for Trotsky and he failed it. Supposedly, Nikolai Sukhanov, shortly afterwards, reminded Trotsky that just three years previously he had told the people of Petrograd: "We shall conduct the work of the Petrograd Soviet in a spirit of lawfulness and of full freedom for all parties. The hand of the Presidium will never lend itself to the suppression of the minority." Trotsky lapsed into silence for a while, then said wistfully: "Those were good days."

October 21, 2012 at 5:08 PM

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