Do You See Communism as a Threat?

by sammielee24 11 Replies latest jw friends

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    This was an interesting article (part of it) from the BBC website. sammieswife.

    Fists in the air

    Lined up on a set of steps near the Diet, wearing suits, red sashes and beaming smiles were officials from the Japanese Communist Party.

    They joined the protesters chanting and raising their fists in the air.

    The Communist Party has always had a surprisingly large role in Japan, the world's second biggest economy.

    But while it had been fading towards irrelevance, now as the recession bites it is on the rise again.

    The party already has more than 400,000 members and people are joining at the rate of 1,000 a month.

    In comparison, the membership of the Liberal Democratic Party, the largest member of the governing coalition, is twice the size. But its numbers are declining.

    "Many people are beginning to think: 'Is Japanese capitalism OK as it is?'" said Akira Kasai, a Communist member of the Diet's House of Representatives.

    "Living standards are going down. The gap between rich and poor is growing."

    Lost generation

    Communist ideology has been spread in Japan in unusual ways.

    There was a book, Kanikosen - The Crab Factory Ship, which raced back up the bestsellers' lists.

    A classic tale of proletarian fishermen uniting to rise up against their bosses, it had been almost forgotten since it was written in 1929.

    Party rally in Albina Some new followers discovered Communism on the internet

    Publishers have also produced a manga, or comic, version of Das Kapital, Karl Marx's treatise on how capitalism would collapse under the weight of its own contradictions.

    One new Communist Party member we met in a restaurant found out about Marxism on the internet.

    "I got interested in Karl Marx a few years ago," she said.

    "In capitalism now we are controlled by the capitalists, or capital. But I think in communism society we can think about whole of the society and decide our economic activities in democratic way."

    The woman, 34, did not want to be identified for fear her employers, whom she claimed disapproved of the Communists, would find out.

    But she had told her family.

    "My parents were very surprised that I joined the party," she said. "They are not supporters of the Communist Party. They don't understand correctly, I think."

    The woman said she was a member of a "lost generation" - people who came into the employment market during Japan's long stagnation in the 1990s and could not find proper jobs.

    As the economy picked up at the start of this century, employers picked graduates untainted by years of drifting.

    Job insecurity

    Now Japan's economy, which relies for growth on sales abroad of cars, electronics and machinery, is struggling again.

    Exports have fallen by nearly half compared to a year ago, and industrial production has dived.

    The traditional Japanese dream of a job for life has been further undermined by reforms of the labour market in 2004 that allowed manufacturers to take on temporary workers.

    Akira Kasai
  • OUTLAW
    OUTLAW

    NO!!.................LOL!!........................OUTLAW

  • mindmelda
    mindmelda

    Only to capitalism.

  • sspo
    sspo

    No, what's left, it will die out

  • Confession
    Confession

    "But I think in communism society we can think about whole of the society and decide our economic activities in democratic way."

    Lovely. Why don't we just give it a try, huh? It's always failed miserably. But maybe this time!

  • Witness 007
    Witness 007

    It's a dead issue with North Korea being the only strong Comunist country left....these losers can't even feed their own people and need food aid from the world to stop famine and starvation! The economy is a joke.

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    It worked great in Cuba.

  • jeeprube
    jeeprube
    It's a dead issue with North Korea being the only strong Comunist country left....

    Did you forget about China? The country where our capitalist masters have shipped all our manufacturing jobs in the past decade?

    In their rush to escape the "socialist" nature of union factory workers, the corporate masters of the universe have given the true source of our countries strength (our manufacturing base) to communist China. Way to go guys. If we went to war with China we'd have to beg them to sell us bullets.

  • garybuss
    garybuss

    I see the United States' version of a "republic" form of government as corrupt, outdated, and unreliable. In this age of instant communication, we don't need representatives. We have the ability to run a real democracy. That would be fun to watch.

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips
    Did you forget about China

    China is Communist in name only these days. It is more of a fascist state than a Communist one. They realized they needed a market economy to grow so they went that route while maintainting a totalitarian one party political system.

    BTS

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