Stalinism

StalinsimWhat is the balance sheet of the October Revolution and the great experiment in planned economy that followed it? What implications do they have for the future of humanity? And what conclusions should be drawn from them? The first observation ought to be self-evident. Whether you are in favour or against the October Revolution, there can be no doubt whatsoever that this single event changed the course of world history in an unprecedented way. The entire twentieth century was dominated by its consequences. 

We regard the October Revolution as the greatest single event in human history. Why do we say this? Because here for the first time, if we exclude that glorious but ephemeral event that was the Paris Commune, millions of ordinary men and women overthrew their exploiters, took their destiny in their own hands, and at least began the task of transforming society.

That this task, under specific conditions, was diverted along channels unforeseen by the leaders of the Revolution does not invalidate the ideas of the October Revolution, nor does it lessen the significance of the colossal gains made by the USSR for the 70 years that followed.

The enemies of socialism will reply scornfully that the experiment ended in failure. We reply in the words of that great philosopher Spinoza that our task is neither to weep nor to laugh but to understand.

It was not the degenerate Russian bourgeoisie, but the nationalised planned economy that dragged Russia into the modern era, building factories, roads and schools, educating men and women, creating brilliant scientists, building the army that defeated Hitler, and putting the first man into space.

Despite the crimes of the bureaucracy, the Soviet Union was rapidly transformed from a backward, semi-feudal economy into an advanced, modern industrial nation. In the end, however, the bureaucracy was not satisfied with the colossal wealth and privileges it had obtained through plundering the Soviet state. As Trotsky predicted, they passed over to the camp of capitalist restoration, transforming themselves from a parasitic caste to a ruling class.

– From the introduction to Russia: From Revolution to Counter-Revolution

(For a detailed analysis of the actual events in 1917 and afterwards, please visit our dedicated In Defence of October website.)

Title Created Date Author
The truth about Stalin and Trotsky: a reply to Boris Stremlin 10 July 2017 Alan Woods
[Video] In Defence of the Russian Revolution - Part two 17 February 2017 Alan Woods
[Video] In Defence of the Russian Revolution - Part one 03 February 2017 Alan Woods
What the Russian Revolution achieved and why it degenerated 27 January 2017 Alan Woods
Communists against Stalin: the massacre of a generation – Preface to the book 25 November 2016 Alan Woods
The Truth about Stalin - a Reply to the Morning Star 08 November 2016 Alan Woods
In Defence of Lenin 21 January 2014 Rob Sewell
[Video] The Russian Revolution: Triumph or Tragedy 07 November 2013 Marxist Student Federation
[Audio] The Rise and Fall of the Communist International 11 December 2012 Marie Frederiksen
Wage differentials under Lenin and later under the bureaucracy 29 July 2011 Rob Sewell
[Audio] Alan Woods speaking on Bolshevism 29 July 2011 Alan Woods
[Audio] Fred Weston on Stalinism 29 June 2011 Fred Weston
[Audio] In Defence of Leon Trotsky 29 January 2010 Alan Woods
Bolshevism and Stalinism 13 January 2010 Rob Sewell
The Stalin-Hitler Pact 24 August 2009 Ben Peck
Alan Woods on the Russian Revolution 07 November 2008 Alan Woods
Czechoslovakia (1968): Stalinism rocked by crisis 09 June 2008 Alan Woods
Leon Trotsky - Revolutionary Martyr 20 August 2007 Rob Sewell
Religion in the Soviet Union 17 April 2006 Paul Dixon
Sixty-five years since Trotsky's Death 22 August 2005 Rob Sewell