this post was submitted on 27 Jan 2026
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timekeeping is a tool of capitalist oppression and shit like not adjusting work hours like people did before electric lighting should be a crime.
Taylorism is the devil, and the embrace of it by the Soviets was the start of revisionism.
I'd argue that being able to optimize your workflow can be crucial if, say, you're being invaded by genocidal fascists and your very survival depends on being able to produce large numbers of tanks and aircraft quickly.
Taylorism was embraced and made central to soviet understanding of communism before Hitler had become head of the nazi party.
But not before 15 different countries intervened in their civil war on behalf of their enemy.
I mean you can look at Lenin's justification for taylorism yourself if you want.
https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1918/mar/x03.htm
Given that building socialism requires having the productive capacity to maintain armed forces capable of deterring the hostile foreign powers that want to strangle your movement in the crib, I'd say Lenin was right.
At no point is his argument for taylorism built around the invasion of the allied and central powers.
Nonetheless, the outcome remains. Even if his reasoning was wrong, he arrived at the right answer.
The USSR is no longer around and the primary espouser of Taylorism in the USSR was purged in 1939.
Are you seriously arguing that if the USSR had just never dabbled with Taylorism, it would still be around today?
I have no way of knowing. I am merely telling you your utilitarian argument of justifying something solely by looking at the results is flawed. Given that the outcome was bad.
How else are we supposed to justify things?
Is that a serious question? I don't want to sound condescending if it is. But it's just a very odd question. We are literally discussing a text now that is justifying something without a priori knowledge of the outcome. Or do you mean it in the broader sense of everything is justified solely by arguing for a potential outcome or looking to am achieved outcome? Because that's... i don't know man, like consequentialism is a fine enough philosophy but it's just odd to believe it's the only school of thought.
It is, as far as I know, a necessary part of materialist thought. It's why the common refrain of "that wasn't real capitalism" is laughable, because it appeals to some ethereal platonic ideal of capitalism rather than looking at how the system manifests itself in and impacts the real world.