Ismail wrote: my last page was googled as i clearly stated, but you probably missed my actual link at the bottom/beginning of this thread. never mind opening it as it is nothing but vicious Yugoslav propaganda. Ismail wrote: yes, this is the book i'm mostly impressed about - from 1964 and by an author who is clearly not an Albanian by lastname. impartiality spelled all over it. Ismail wrote: Since you already labelled me i'm poking fun i have to stand up to that characterization so my reply to this question is "i didn't know Albania even had a priting machine". Ismail wrote: you're too kind indeed. thank you, comrade.
Edo,the (free-to-download) book Ismail gave you a link to is highly reccomendable for everyone who wants to know more about Socialist Albania.
It's actually written by (from what i know) an anti-communist but gives a very good basic overview of the country and history and politics (etc.) thereof. A Coming of Age: Albania Under Enver Hoxha James S O'donnell http://espressostalinist.files.wordpres ... of-age.pdf Loz wrote: Hey, Loz, how are you? I started this thread to learn of three major accomplishments by socialist Albania, nothing else. So far we've been doing some major ping-pong about irrelevant issues such as literacy in Albania (read further before jumping on this statement). I'm still waiting for three valid accomplishments. Let me define an accomplishment: it is something that other countries haven't succeeded in doing or have done it later than someone, that constitutes it as an achievement. Literacy jumped up all over Europe in the 20th century, therefore high literacy is a civilisation's accomplishment, not nation's, let alone Albania's. To give another example of an accomplishment: achieving manned spaceflight is an accomplishment since not many other nations mastered that skill or have done it later on. Also, achieving moon landing is an accomplishment. But if you feel that the above mentioned civilisation's achievement is at the same time Albania's accomplishment, I will no longer argue with you guys. And I will strongly disagree that one of ALbania's accomplishments is in producing marxist-leninst literature and contributing to the marxist-leninist thought (just trying to counteract any claims of this nature ahead of time).
Using that logic no country that isn't a superpower had any accomplishments. If being able to quickly eradicate illiteracy, marshlands, blood feuds, extreme inequality for women, etc. and to fairly quickly usher in things like basic industry, electricity, health care and education (plus being self-sufficient in things like grain) aren't accomplishments compared to earlier governments then I don't know what to tell you, except that I'm confident most everyone would disagree with your definition.
Also Ramadan Marmalluku is an Albanian name as well, does that mean I shouldn't trust him? Or are we only allowed to trust Yugoslav functionaries (of which he was one) as sources? Discounting Albanian sources (or even Albanian writers) is not only stupid but quasi-racist. I guess if you want an "accomplishment" by your definition, Albania had the world's most egalitarian wage structure in which the ratio was 1:2 or 1:1.5, but you'll probably find something to attack in that anyway. Britain had tons of accomplishments, achieved via colonizing half the world. The USA had tons of accomplishments via imperialism. Albania engaged in neither and had only gotten its independence in 1912 in circumstances which were more than unfavorable. You clearly made the thread to attack Albania and Albanians. You deny it all you want, but it's fairly obvious to anyone who looks at the sarcastic tone of your first post. Ismail wrote: As with my earlier suggestion to reach a consensus on a definition to finally start discussing the same thing and you rejected it as "no communist talks that way", we're obviously not coming any further with this one either. So I suggest we drop it. I will for sure. Ismail wrote: Didn't you say it took Albania almost 100 years to make a great leap in literacy? You mentioned 1912 as a reference point - that is hardly considered quick as 3 generations of people lived inbetween Ismail wrote: Comrade, there's a saying that in the kingdom of the blind a one-eyed person is a king. Ismail wrote: Please, show me my post where I quoted one Yugoslav source for anything that I said about ALbania. Please, do read at least once this thread from the beginning. THere's a link to a source which has got nothing to do with any Yugoslav government. I made a cynical remark (that I admit) that you will probably dismiss it as an example of vicious Yugoslav hate-propaganda. If you can't trust the source I put there, we have nothing more to discuss, sorry. Ismail wrote: Comrade, that is not true. You joined this thread after it was already started. And I started it because Loz and I were discussing the USSR economy vs. Yugoslav economy and we somehow started to discuss Albania. That's why I decided to open the thread. If that is not enough for you, kindly refer to Loz for more explanations. But beware, he's coming from Croatia which once used to be in SFRY (*gaaaaa*) To Loz: you know I'm kidding with gaaaaaa If my tone is sarcastic, then i have the right to label your rabid tries to find excuses for Albania really pathetic. EdvardK wrote:I used 1912 as a starting point, yes. That's when Albania went independent. In 1912 illiteracy was terrible. In 1939 illiteracy was terrible. In 1944 illiteracy was terrible. Then the communists came to power. In 1950 illiteracy was halved. By 1970 it was basically done away with. So uh, no, it took like 5 years to make a significant leap, and about 20 to do away with it for all practical purposes. Quote:Excuses for what? Actually developing a modernized economy? Draining swamplands? Having people read? Bourgeois sources (and yes, Yugoslav sources as well) praise Albania's economic development. This isn't controversial. FYI I haven't used Albanian sources either (unless Marmalluku counts.)
What exactly do hoxhaists like about Albania that makes them consider it a model? AFAIK it developed from shitholeness like the warpac states did, through foreign aid, usually from the soviets.
![]() Conscript wrote:Soviet (and later Chinese) aid was important, but it wasn't vital. The eradication of illiteracy for example didn't really involve Soviet aid. Also, unlike other Warsaw Pact states, Albania geared its industry towards being as self-sufficient as possible rather than being based on exporting what the Soviets wanted them to export. Albania being a model consists in its principled defense of Marxism-Leninism and in its refusal to convert its economy into state-capitalism à la the rest of the Warsaw Pact. It was, as Hoxha himself noted, the last socialist country on earth. Ismail wrote: Now, now... calm down. If one assumes that as time goes by things usually develop and progress, correct? So, how come Albania is still nowadays being considered backward as this (non-Yugoslav) article from mid-July 2011 claims http://bit.ly/rE9r3D? Here's a vicious quote from that article, must've been influenced by some hard-core Yugoslav "So, historically, USA has helped and continues to help Albanians and Albania with the will to be converted from a backward state in a western legal state, where the democratic principles and the human rights will not be violated anymore." To explain what this means: by saying "historically, USA has helped and continues to help Albanians.... from a backward state..." the article states that Albania has been bakcward all along and that USA has been helping it in the past and currently as well. Or, to quote this article http://bit.ly/sQoirj "The report pointed to areas such as the work of parliament, elections, judiciary, anti-corruption policy, property rights and improving the living conditions of the Roma. " Explanation: so, if we Yugoslavs are so racist and nationalist, how does this no-improved-conditions-for-the-Roma-people look on Albanians? "The EC did note that action was taken to combat organised crime, improve the treatment of detainees, and guarantee children's rights. " Explanation: so, if something was done to guarantee children's rights, imagine what was happening 30 years ago on that subject, let alone 50 or more! I rest my case. Ismail wrote: Indeed, it was the last, yes, i fully agree with you, comrade. And a great accomplishment would be for Albania to achieve the second-to-last status.
How does albania's M-Lism differ from, say, the GDR's, other than a having different clique preference in the USSR (I.e. being 'anti-revisionist')? It seems like Hoxhaism is nothing more than the post-stalin 'old' M-Lism, which boils down to just an unusual opinion on the stalinist succession crisis.
Also, would you say Albania developed along lines that let it 'skip' the capitalist stage because of revolution in more advanced countries? Or did it build itself up like the Stalin-era USSR, 'socialism in one country'? ![]() EdvardK wrote:I guess you forgot that Albania's economy collapsed in 1991. The government of Sali Berisha is very, very pro-USA and basically demonizes the socialist period at every opportunity. Also children's rights were quite bad after 1991, yes. Many schools have since closed up and mass organizations for the youth no longer exist. Quote:That's because US President Wilson forced the other Great Powers to not divide Albania amongst themselves after World War I. Also in the 1920's and 30's there was an American school in the capital. In 1946 the USA cut off all diplomatic relations with Albania. Quote:Pretty bad. Sure does suck that socialism was replaced with petty nationalism with the rise of capitalism. Anyway, why are you talking so much about modern-day Albania? This is about socialist Albania, not corrupt and impoverished modern-day Albania. Conscript wrote:The GDR had so-called "consumer socialism" and followed the post-Stalin USSR's revisionist foreign and economic policies. The Albanians never proclaimed themselves as having a "unique" brand of socialism. They just called themselves Marxist-Leninists. As you said they are "old MLists." Quote:About 90% of industry was in the hands of the socialist sector of the economy by 1947. There was not much of a "capitalist" stage. In 1960 the government proclaimed that it had constructed the basis for socialist construction to be made possible. You might find this article by the Albanians themselves of interest: http://www.revolutionarydemocracy.org/archive/mara.htm
Foreign and economic policies are decisions based on pragmatism and strategy. They have nothing to do with Marxism. Having a stupid foreign policy does not make you a non-Marxist, it makes you a stupid Marxist.
Can you explain how Albania was more socialist than the GDR without using the word "revisionism"? Also how does this thread have any other meaning than "let's pick on Albania"? "Don't know why i'm still surprised with this shit anyway." - Loz
Soviet cogitations: 3765
Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 11 Nov 2009, 07:13 Ideology: Other Leftist Politburo
Interesting how all the Hoxhaists have Stalin avatars
![]() Quote: How can a party claim to be Marxist while directly giving support to enemies of the people,like China did in the case of Chile where it supported Pinochet etc? Quote:E.Hoxha (Reflections on China Vol. II, pp. 129-130.) Mabool wrote:Why would I want to avoid using the word? Revisionism leads to the restoration of capitalism. Albania achieved more or less complete collectivization, industrial targets weren't based on profit, there was no "consumer socialism," the economy of Albania was not bound up with that of the USSR, and wages were the most egalitarian in the world. There was also no "decentralization" of enterprises à la Khrushchev and Brezhnev, which gave power to managers and strove to make enterprises operate on the basis of commodity relations with other enterprises, among other things. Mabool wrote:This was indeed the line taken by Gorbachev, who argued that Marxism-Leninism must be "creatively" applied in a way that just so happened to deprive it of its revolutionary content. This was also the line of Brezhnev. And Khrushchev. And Bukharin. And Kautsky. And Bernstein. Tell me how "peaceful coexistence" can be reconciled with Lenin and Stalin's noting that imperialist war is unavoidable so long as capitalism exists as a power. Explain how countries like Guinea, Guyana and India were valiantly engaging in "non-capitalist development" as the Soviets claimed. Last edited by Ismail on 15 Nov 2011, 19:24, edited 2 times in total.
Soviet cogitations: 3765
Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 11 Nov 2009, 07:13 Ideology: Other Leftist Politburo
And how did the GDR do in comparison?
![]() proletarian wrote:It had a nice welfare state, but then again Albania had an even bigger social net. The GDR also accrued a gigantic debt that if 1989 didn't happen would have seriously undermined its economy a few years later.
Soviet cogitations: 3765
Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 11 Nov 2009, 07:13 Ideology: Other Leftist Politburo
A "welfare state" is not the definition of socialism. If the only way that Albania was more socialist than the GDR is because of a better "welfare state" than I have reason to believe neither was socialist.
Albania also accrued a large amount of debt after Hoxhaists iirc. ![]() |
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