Anti-Stalinism: Difference between revisions
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'''Anti-Stalinism''' is opposition to [[Joseph Stalin]], his ideas, his legacy, and [[Marxism–Leninism]] more broadly. Anti-Stalinism is an extension of [[anti-communism]], although some anti-Stalinists such as [[Trotskyism|Trotskyists]] and [[Left-communism|"left"-communists]] claim to be [[communists]]. Some [[Anti-revisionism|anti-revisionists]]{{Efn|Maoists are revisionists, this article is not referring to them}} object to the word "Stalinism", but they are not anti-Stalinist. | '''Anti-Stalinism''' is opposition to [[Joseph Stalin]], his ideas, his legacy, and [[Marxism–Leninism]] more broadly. Anti-Stalinism is an extension of [[anti-communism]], although some anti-Stalinists such as [[Trotskyism|Trotskyists]] and [[Left-communism|"left"-communists]] claim to be [[communists]]. Some [[Anti-revisionism|anti-revisionists]]{{Efn|Maoists are revisionists, this article is not referring to them}} object to the word "Stalinism", but they are not anti-Stalinist. | ||
A materialist analysis of the past several decades shows that anti-Stalinism (and [[De-Stalinization]] more broadly) led to the weakening of the international communist movement and the eventual degeneration of the [[socialist camp]]. It's also not a coincidence that anti-Stalinism was used to justify revisionist and opportunist positions. Trotskyism, which had been defeated as an ideology, made a comeback after [[Khrushchev]]'s "[[secret speech]]". Khrushchev himself was an ardent Trotskyist.<ref> | A materialist analysis of the past several decades shows that anti-Stalinism (and [[De-Stalinization]] more broadly) led to the weakening of the international communist movement and the eventual degeneration of the [[socialist camp]]. It's also not a coincidence that anti-Stalinism was used to justify revisionist and opportunist positions. Trotskyism, which had been defeated as an ideology, made a comeback after [[Khrushchev]]'s "[[secret speech]]". Khrushchev himself was an ardent Trotskyist.<ref>TheFinnishBolshevik (November 20, 2022). [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJ2s3YmKTrU&pp=ygUmZmlubmlzaGJvbHNoZXZpayBraHJ1c2hjaGV2IHRyb3Rza3lpc3Q%3D Sources of khrushchevite revisionism (just some thoughts)]. Retrieved April 23, 2025.</ref> | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
Revision as of 22:59, 23 April 2025
Anti-Stalinism is opposition to Joseph Stalin, his ideas, his legacy, and Marxism–Leninism more broadly. Anti-Stalinism is an extension of anti-communism, although some anti-Stalinists such as Trotskyists and "left"-communists claim to be communists. Some anti-revisionists[a] object to the word "Stalinism", but they are not anti-Stalinist.
A materialist analysis of the past several decades shows that anti-Stalinism (and De-Stalinization more broadly) led to the weakening of the international communist movement and the eventual degeneration of the socialist camp. It's also not a coincidence that anti-Stalinism was used to justify revisionist and opportunist positions. Trotskyism, which had been defeated as an ideology, made a comeback after Khrushchev's "secret speech". Khrushchev himself was an ardent Trotskyist.[1]
See also
References
- ↑ TheFinnishBolshevik (November 20, 2022). Sources of khrushchevite revisionism (just some thoughts). Retrieved April 23, 2025.
Notes
- ↑ Maoists are revisionists, this article is not referring to them