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Reformist Marxism - Polcompball Wiki
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"The aim of all socialist measures, even of those which appear outwardly as coercive measures, is the development and the securing of a free personality. Their more exact examination always shows that the coercion included will raise the sum total of liberty in society, and will give more freedom over a more extended area than it takes away."[7]

Reformist Marxism, also called File:EvolutionarySoc.png Evolutionary Socialism,[8] File:Bernst.png Marxist Social Democracy[9] or File:Bernstein.png Bernsteinism is a type of File:Marxflag.png Marxism which seeks to achieve communism through the use of File:Social Reformism.png reformist means. Reformist Marxism is the precursor of modern File:Demsocstar.png Democratic Socialism and Social Democracy,[10] as well as File:Liberalsoc.png Liberal Socialism. Reformist Marxism today is practiced by the File:JapCom.png Japanese Communist Party.[11]

History

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The Original Communist Party of Australia was founded on the 30th of October 1920 by multiple Australian Communists. Although starting out as an Marxist–Leninist party, the party in its later years descended into File:Eurocom.png Eurocommunism.

Reformist Marxism has its origins in the writings of File:Bernstein.png Eduard Bernstein, who, while identifying with Marxism, felt that there were significant errors in Marx's writing, and often criticized significant parts of Marxist theory such as the idea of revolution to achieve a socialist society. His work would prove influential to later Marxist revisionists and what would later come to be known as Social Democracy.

Japanese Communism is an ideology based off of the Japanese Communist Party. It is a form of File:Ormarxf.png Marxism with major influences from File:Demsocstar.png Democratic Socialism and strong opposition to File:Necon.png Neoconservatism in Japan and a focus on maintaining Japan's national sovereignty.

The UK Labour Party was first formed on the 27th of February 1900 by the Labour Representation Committee (a pressure group that focused on workers' rights) and was initially socialist and the abolition of private property was included in the party's platform but by the 1940s, in accordance with many other socialist political parties in Europe, the abolishment of private property was dropped from their party platform and they swiftly won elections after this. However despite this moderation many groups within labour have still claimed Marxist and Bernsteinist traditions such as File:Bevanism.png Bevan, Independant Labour and McDonnell these figures and party are often called in the UK "hard left" because of their often extreme beliefs. File:Bevanism.png Bevan was characterised by his strong support for continuing the mass nationalisations post world war two despite the large debt that was piling up, and his opposition to Gaitskell's efforts to remove clause four from the labour party constitution (defining labour as a socialist party). Independent Labour was a separate party but often affiliated with labour throughout the early 20th century (disbanding in the 1970s) they refused to abandon their Marxist routes like the larger labour party, members included the famous writer File:AnTory.png George Orwell.

Starting under File:CPGBStalin.png Harry Pollitt the File:CPGBStalin.png Communist Party of Great Britain and its successor the File:CPGB.png Communist Party of Britain adopted a reformist stance of advocating for voting for the File:UKLab.png Labour Party. They, following the beliefs of File:Karl Marx.png Marx and File:JosephStalin.png Joseph Stalin, believe that socialism in the File:Cball-UK.png UK is possible through elections.

Beliefs

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Eduard Bernstein argued that Marx had been wrong in his economic predictions, but right in his approach to social analysis. He observed capitalism was not failing, so the best path for the working class was to work within the political system to alleviate capitalism's failings. He believed that a worker's revolution required capitalism's collapse. That collapse was not forthcoming which left the working class to use political power to alleviate its own situation.


W.I.P.

Variants

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Bernstein's revisionism developed from a series of articles he wrote for the SPD's theoretical journal, Die Neue Zeit, between 1896 and 1898, under the title Probleme des Sozialismus ("Problems of Socialism"). These culminated in his landmark book, Die Voraussetzungen des Sozialismus und die Aufgaben der Sozialdemokratie (1899), translated into English as The Preconditions of Socialism or Evolutionary Socialism. The book created an immediate storm of controversy within the international socialist movement. His central argument was that the reality of late 19th-century capitalism had diverged significantly from Marx's forecasts. This "moulting", as he called it, required socialists to reconcile their theories with the facts.

Bernstein rejected the Hegelian dialectic that formed the philosophical core of Marxism, viewing it as a "snare" and a "treacherous element" that led to dogmatic and inaccurate predictions. He argued that the dialectical method, with its emphasis on contradiction and violent transformation, was a remnant of radical Utopianism that had no place in a scientific socialist movement. Instead of dialectical materialism, he advocated for a return to the critical philosophy of Immanuel Kant and a greater emphasis on ethics.

For Bernstein, socialism was not a historical inevitability but an ethical ideal. It was something that ought to be, a goal to be striven for based on a commitment to justice and equality, rather than something that must be as a result of impersonal historical laws.

Economics

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Bernstein's economic revisionism was based on his observation that capitalism was not collapsing but adapting and stabilizing. He presented statistical evidence to refute several key Marxist predictions:

Concentration of capital: While Marx predicted that capital would become concentrated in fewer and fewer hands, Bernstein argued that the number of property owners was growing, thanks to the rise of joint-stock companies and a more differentiated class structure. He showed that small and medium-sized enterprises were proving resilient, not disappearing as Marx had forecast.

Collapse theory (Zusammenbruchstheorie): Bernstein rejected the idea that capitalism was doomed to collapse through increasingly severe economic crises. He argued that the development of the credit system, cartels, and an improved world market had given capitalism greater adaptability and flexibility, making general crises less likely.

Immiseration theory: The Marxist theory of the "growing misery" of the proletariat was, according to Bernstein, incorrect. He pointed to evidence that the working class in advanced industrial countries was experiencing an improvement in its standard of living. He also argued that the middle class was not vanishing, but rather changing its character, with the rise of a "new middle class" comprising white-collar workers, technicians, and public officials.

Based on this revised analysis of capitalism, if capitalism were not on the verge of collapse and if democracy were expanding, then the path to socialism would not be a revolution, but relatively gradual, peaceful, and parliamentary reform. He argued that the SPD should "dare to appear what it is today: a democratic-socialist reform party."

Bernstein saw democracy as both the means and the end of socialism, advocating for the File:Social Reformism.pngexpansion of political and economic rights within the existing state, championing trade unions and cooperatives as key "democratic elements in industry." He rejected the concept of the "dictatorship of the proletariat" as a "barbarian" and "atavistic" idea, arguing that socialism could only be achieved democratically. While he saw the necessity for the mass strike as a defensive weapon to protect democratic rights, such as suffrage, he fundamentally believed in the power of gradual, "organic" evolution over violent upheaval.

How to Draw

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Bernsteinism

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File:Bernstein flag.svg
Flag of Reformist Marxism

The main design of Reformist Marxism, Bernsteinism uses a variant of the Social Democracy design. The white rose on the red background is replaced with a gold rose on a red background, as to evoke communism.

  1. Draw a ball
  2. Fill it with red
  3. Draw a golden rose in the middle
  4. Add eyes and you're done!
Color NameHEXRGB
 Red#CD0000rgb(205, 0, 0)
 Gold#FFD800rgb(255, 216, 0)


Japanese Communism

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File:Japanese communism flag.svg
Flag of Reformist Marxism (Japanese Design)

Another alternate design Polcompballers use for Reformist Marxism is the design of Japanese Communist Party, or Japanese Communism for short.

  1. Draw a ball
  2. Fill it with red
  3. Add a silver gear in the middle
  4. Draw a golden wheat in the middle of the gear
  5. Add the eyes (preferably slanted)
  6. Add a tan straw hat to the ball and you’re done!
Color NameHEXRGB
 Red#E3213Crgb(227, 33, 60)
 Silver#BAE1E6rgb(186, 225, 230)
 Gold#F5AD00rgb(245, 173, 0)


Relations

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Friends

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Frenemies

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Enemies

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Further Information

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Literature

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Wikipedia

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Videos

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Citations

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  1. To Orthodox Marxists, human emancipation within Communism is equal to Humanistic society. From that point of view, revising the theories of Marx to be more humane technically isn't Humanist.
  2. Bernstein never identified as a Zionist, believing assimilation to be the answer to the "the Jewish Question", but post World War I his attitude toward Zionism became considerably more sympathetic.
  3. The PCdoB supports conservative fiscal reforms of the Lula government, such as the 2003 Pension Reform.
  4. The PCdoB has already been criticized for supporting and forming coalitions with center and center-right parties, including the PP, a party that originated from ARENA, the party of the Military Dictatorship.
  5. https://en.prolewiki.org/wiki/Communist_Party_of_Spain#Ideology
  6. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Governments_of_Imre_Nagy
  7. Evolutionary Socialism, Chapter 3
  8. Evolutionary Socialism (1899), Eduard Bernstein
  9. Lenin Rediscovered: What Is to Be Done? in Context, pdf p.495 and pdf p.660 by Lars T. Lih
  10. The Quest for Evolutionary Socialism: Eduard Bernstein and Social Democracy by Manfred B. Steger
  11. How the Japanese Communist Party Developed Its Theory of Scientific Socialism by Tetsuzo Fuwa
  12. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolay_Kharitonov_2024_presidential_campaign
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zh:改良马克思主义 pl:Marksizm reformistyczny