this post was submitted on 07 Mar 2026
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[–] OwOarchist@pawb.social 2 points 2 days ago (5 children)

But also ... just because something is used by the US as propaganda doesn't necessarily mean it's untrue.

[–] Riverside@reddthat.com 7 points 23 hours ago

That's by definition of propaganda, though? The word "propaganda" doesn't imply "false", it just implies that it's propagated with a political goal in mind

[–] orc_princess@lemmy.ml 17 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Look into literally every war they supported, it's always false pretenses. They instigated Kuwait to get in trouble with Iraq, then told Iraq they wouldn't oppose them invading Kuwait, then after Iraq invaded the US media apparatus lied everywhere that Iraqis disconnected hundreds of babies from incubators, killing them.

Still with Iraq, they told the world that Saddam Hussein had WMDs, that they had to be stopped for the safety of all USAmericans. Even though the weapons inspectors said it was patently false. The US invaded, many European countries supported them. After a very painful invasion where it's estimated between hundreds of thousands to a million Iraqis were murdered by the US and their allies (and many, many more when you count those who died from other factors caused by the invasion, such as lack of infrastructure, hospitals, food, etc), after all of this did they find WMDs? Take a guess.

The US told us that Gaddafi was using mass rape against his enemies, and people believed it until after they bombed Libyans to rubble. Turns out, they lied.

Amnesty International curiously enough lied as well, they echoed the claims about Kuwait babies killed by the Iraqi army and the mass rape by Gaddafi's troops until after the US punished those countries and their peoples severely. Then they went back on their word, because as it turns out they were lying. So if even organizations that occasionally do decent work can't be trusted not to amplify imperialism, how can we trust those that are even worse?

Can you trust the same newspapers that have told us for years that no genocide is happening in Gaza? That we should condemn Hamas? That Israel has the most moral army? We saw with our own eyes what they did and still do to children in Gaza. And to this day BBC, NYT and others still frame Israel as victims of aggression, and the real victims as untrustworthy terrorists. We can't trust a word about anything involving politics because even now they lie through framing, through omission.

[–] OwOarchist@pawb.social 0 points 2 days ago (2 children)

True true, and their 'justifications' for war are entirely bogus.

But I just caution against over-correcting. Just because someone is an enemy of the US doesn't mean they're perfect. Or even good.

[–] AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.ml 11 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

Yes it does. Relative to the US they are good.

The primary contradiction in the world right now is US imperialism.

If you are talking about an enemy of the US in the context of anything the US is doing, they are the good guys.

[–] svcg@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 1 day ago (3 children)

A contradiction to what? You can't just say something is a contradiction unless it's contradicting something else.

[–] QinShiHuangsShlong@lemmy.ml 2 points 10 hours ago

Going to respond to all your comments in one go here for ease of reading.

It is understandable to a degree that dialectical terminology can seem opaque if encountered without context, but dismissing it as word salad without engaging the framework is ridiculous. You entered a space built by communists, for communists, using the conceptual tools developed within that tradition, and then criticized the vocabulary without first learning the grammar.

Let's start with the simplest example of a dialectical contradiction: the relationship between worker and owner under capitalism. These two classes are not merely opposed in the sense of having different preferences. They are bound together in a single productive relation, yet their fundamental interests are antagonistic. The worker must sell their labor power to survive. The owner must extract surplus value from that labor to accumulate capital. This is not a logical contradiction like A and not-A. It is a material contradiction: two forces that coexist, depend on each other, and simultaneously undermine each other. This tension drives wage struggles, technological change, crises of overproduction, and potentially, revolutionary transformation. Chairman Mao's 《矛盾论》(On Contradiction) explains this, showing how to identify the principal contradiction in any given period and how secondary contradictions shift around it. Applying that method today, many Marxists argue that imperialism is the principal contradiction of our era. Not because empires vanish by fate, but because globalized production, financialization, and interimperialist rivalry generate concrete antagonisms: between core and periphery, between capital's global reach and national political forms, between endless accumulation and ecological limits. These are the material tensions that shape war, migration, debt, and crisis.

Your "critique" leans on an idealist expectation: that theory should offer tidy, linear narratives or falsifiable predictions in the positivist sense. But dialectical and historical materialism are not idealist schemas imposed on history. They are methods for analyzing the material basis of social life. Historical materialism starts from the premise that the mode of production shapes social relations, politics, and ideology, not the reverse. Dialectical materialism adds that these relations are not static but contain internal tensions that propel development. This is not post-hoc storytelling. It is a framework for identifying which contradictions are principal at a given moment, how they interact, and where leverage for change might exist. Chairman Mao's 《实践论》(On Practice) and Engels' Socialism: Utopian and Scientific both emphasize that knowledge arises from material activity and that socialist theory becomes scientific when it grounds itself in the analysis of real contradictions, not moral aspiration.

Terminology matters because names define tools. Every field has its lexicon. Blockade in graph theory (as was already pointed out to you), work in physics, contradiction in dialectics. To reject Marxist terms in a Marxist space without engaging their defined meaning is equally as ridiculous as rejecting any of these other lexicons. The point is not obscurantism. It is precision. Contradiction in dialectical materialism carries a specific theoretical weight. It signals a dynamic, historically situated antagonism, not just any opposition. Using the correct term is how we avoid conflating distinct phenomena and how we build cumulative analysis.

For anyone seeking a structured introduction, the Chinese university textbook 《马克思主义基本原理概论》(Introduction to the Basic Principles of Marxism) systematically walks through these and more concepts with some concrete examples.

Finally, the charge that dialectical materialism is teleological belief shows a deep lack of understanding. Communism is not an inevitable endpoint guaranteed by history. It is a possibility opened by the resolution of capitalism's contradictions through conscious praxis. When developments do not follow a predicted path, the response of serious Marxists is not wait longer, but to re-examine the analysis. Was the principal contradiction correctly identified? Did secondary contradictions shift? This is scientific in the sense of being self-correcting, materialist, and grounded in practice, not in the positivist sense of generating lab-style predictions.

If you wish to engage dialectical materialism seriously, contemporary Chinese Marxist scholarship offers rich resources for seeing the method applied to current conditions. Journals like 《马克思主义研究》(Marxism Studies) and platforms like 求是网 (Qiushi Journal) or 人民网理论频道 (People's Daily Theory Channel) regularly publish analyses that apply dialectical materialism to issues from global supply chains to ecological crisis.

If you wish to critique dialectical materialism, we welcome that. But do so by engaging its actual concepts, its canonical texts, and its contemporary applications. Dismissing its language from outside the framework, in a space explicitly built around that framework, is again ridiculous.

[–] Cowbee@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 day ago

The contradiction is between the increasing interconnection of production and distribution, and the concentration of the profits of this system into fewer and fewer hands. The old system of imperialism is dying away, while the interconnected, post-imperialist world is rising, trying to overcome the old. The interconnection of production and distrubution creates the elements of the downfall of imperialism as the global south develops.

[–] mathemachristian@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 day ago (2 children)

the contradiction is between the imperialists and their subjects. That's what they meant by the primary contradiction. It's a term from dialectics.

"On contradiction" by mao zedong is a good introduction to the concept

[–] RiverRock@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 day ago

Seconding this, being a military guy Mao is very good at explaining concepts in clear, simple language

[–] orc_princess@lemmy.ml 13 points 2 days ago

Sure, but I'll defend any government protecting its people from being bombed by imperialists, after the war is over we can critique again.

[–] geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml 15 points 2 days ago

It means it's either heavily exaggerated or untrue.

[–] RiverRock@lemmy.ml 15 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Sure, reasonable: as long as we also apply that standard the next time someone says "Russian propaganda". If we apply this standard universally, then we're in a much better position to understand the world.

[–] mathemachristian@lemmy.ml 9 points 2 days ago

But it's a pretty good indicator