I don't see them as having contempt for democracy. Lenin's slogan, after all, was 'all power to the soviets'. That was the basic unit of democracy in Russia at the time, far more relevant than stuff like the constituent assembly.
I also think that it's normal to have a democratic deficit during an extremely chaotic situation, and a lot of the people 'standing in the way of their ideals' were also trying to kill the Bolsheviks. German armies were literally rolling through Russia at the time. All of these guys were raised on the history of the french revolution and the paris commune, both events in which the far left had an almost complete mortality rate.
It's also the case that leftists simply have a different definition of democracy to liberals. They would call what we call democracy an oligarchy, an 'bourgeois democracy', etc. So, obviously, they wouldn't have any patience for its trappings. I don't think you can simply call them anti-democratic on the simple grounds that their idea of democracy differs from yours.
> I don't see them as having contempt for democracy. Lenin's slogan, after all, was 'all power to the soviets'.
Do you usually just straight up buy propaganda served to you by dictators?
> I also think that it's normal to have a democratic deficit during an extremely chaotic situation, and a lot of the people 'standing in the way of their ideals' were also trying to kill the Bolsheviks.
Yes, but many were not in the way of 'all power to the soviets' but the Bolsheviks killed them anyway.
> German armies were literally rolling through Russia at the time.
German are the ones that helped put the Bolsheviks into power. This is well known fact. And not just transport, but also money and political protection.
> It's also the case that leftists simply have a different definition of democracy to liberals.
Yes, the Bolsheviks definition of democracy of 'democracy' was 'what the people want' and the way to figure that out was to consult their own opinions.
So whatever Stalin/Lenin or later Mao wanted was by definition 'democratic'.
Everybody else calls that sort of thing a dictatorship, but I guess if you are far enough left you can transform language to use all the popular words to fit whatever you want to do.
> I don't think you can simply call them anti-democratic on the simple grounds that their idea of democracy differs from yours.
Yes actual that's exactly what you should do. Because we can not allow a group of extremist to simply change definitions of words that actually had a meaning for 1000s of years.
Do you also accept the Nazi opinion that they were Socialist? Do you just accept anything violent groups say in their propaganda?
At the end of the day, call it whatever you want, all this arguments about semantics is pointless. The simple fact is, they wanted power and control. And they killed literally everybody who opposed them. Its that simple and its fundamentally evil.
> Their 'definition' of democracy is not a democracy.
I think people are way too black-and-white about these things. Democracy is supposed to be a mapping of the people's will to the people's living conditions. It's very obvious that some states are way better at this than others. The amount of control the US voter has over the specific policy regime they live under is almost nonexistent. That's quite normal in western democracies.
To put it in context, an Athenian democrat would call every one of our modern democracies an oligarchy, and we in turn would call their democracy an apartheid state.
I don't think you're right about the Soviets, but my observation is that a large part of western misunderstandings of the Bolsheviks come from failing to understand them on their terms. In my eyes, a state based on soviet sovereignty, even with a strong executive in emergency situations, would be a very democratic state. That's what the Bolsheviks said they wanted to deliver, and I don't see why we shouldn't believe them.
Well, there are a lot of things one can say about these countries, but we're talking about the Soviets here. The Western flaws don't excuse the 'idealistic' Soviets.
>In my eyes, a state based on soviet sovereignty, even with a strong executive in emergency situations, would be a very democratic state.
A pity the Communists never ever tried to implement soviet sovereignty.
>That's what the Bolsheviks said they wanted to deliver, and I don't see why we shouldn't believe them.
I also think that it's normal to have a democratic deficit during an extremely chaotic situation, and a lot of the people 'standing in the way of their ideals' were also trying to kill the Bolsheviks. German armies were literally rolling through Russia at the time. All of these guys were raised on the history of the french revolution and the paris commune, both events in which the far left had an almost complete mortality rate.
It's also the case that leftists simply have a different definition of democracy to liberals. They would call what we call democracy an oligarchy, an 'bourgeois democracy', etc. So, obviously, they wouldn't have any patience for its trappings. I don't think you can simply call them anti-democratic on the simple grounds that their idea of democracy differs from yours.