If there’s already been discussion on this at length that someone knows of, feel free to link me.

I’ve been thinking this over because it’s one of those recurring talking points that comes up. I may have even talked about it here before in passing, but I don’t remember for sure.

But I wanted to talk about the core of how BS it is and the main way I see it get used. Which is that of someone saying “my [relative] lived in [socialist state] and fled it”, or they will leave out the first part and just say “people lived in [socialist state] and fled it.” And then the implication or outright stated, “Why aren’t you taking this as proof that communism bad? Clearly communism bad!”

The primary way I’ve seen people counter this is pointing out that those who were fleeing were sometimes, well… members of the former exploiting class. Which is true.

But I’m not sure the talking point is even worth entertaining to that degree. Because like:

  1. As far as I’ve seen, nobody provides actual hard numbers on people “fleeing communism” relative to other situations where people flee a conflict or just leave a country to go to another one in general. In fact, it’s often an anecdotal claim about a single person: “My relative.”

  2. Is there even such a thing as a major conflict/upheaval in a country at scale where it was possible for people to flee and nobody fled? Like big change can be scary and it’s always going to be somewhat disruptive of status quo, even if it’s an overall benefit going forward. Not to mention major changing of hands of power usually involves some violence.

So this leads me to: what is supposed to be different about communism that makes people “fleeing it” special? I’ve yet to see any explanation on that and so it makes me think that may be a point to push back on with people. That rather than even talking about the nature of why, first ask how it is supposed to be a special kind of “fleeing”.

And also, when it’s purely anecdotal, asking why they are supposed to be taken seriously over the opinions of the millions (or more) of people who make up X socialist state. In that regard, it sounds a lot like the “one of my closest friends is [racial minority] trope” in that they are sort of implying the people are monolithic and one or a few can speak for all of them.

Thoughts?

  • cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml
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    6 months ago

    I just think it’s funny how when westerners move to another country they’re never “fleeing” their country, they’re just “expats”. But when people from the global south do it they are never called that…

    • rando895@lemmygrad.ml
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      6 months ago

      Well, together we can change the narrative! From now on grandma is “fleeing” America for some country. Even if it’s just a vacation! Who cares? When someone trys to correct you call them a snowflake! Co-op all their language

    • MeowZedong@lemmygrad.ml
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      6 months ago

      This is the counter point I like to throw back, “what about the people who fled capitalism to communist countries?”

    • MarxMadness@lemmygrad.ml
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      6 months ago

      When people flee a poor capitalist country, they are economic migrants, not refugees from capitalism. When people flee a poor communist country, they’re fleeing communism.

    • DankZedong @lemmygrad.ml
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      6 months ago

      I fled the evil Dutch regime that prevented me from housing myself. I am a victim of capitalism! It doesn’t work!

    • 小莱卡@lemmygrad.ml
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      6 months ago

      when global south people migrate to imperial core countries, they’re chasing the american dream! (totally not fleeing capitalism).