this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2026
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Slop.

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For posting all the anonymous reactionary bullshit that you can't post anywhere else.

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Entirely unsurprising, but I’m still very tired

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[–] Jabril@hexbear.net 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Mark Plier did a similar thing to what I described with his movie's success. Your solution is more of a hypothetical, since it's not possible for all workers to be a member of the unions you are describing per the union's own structural mandates. They are actually quite difficult to join with many locals pretty much not accepting applicants unless they have friends with leverage in the local. So while it is very easy for every YouTuber who makes a movie using their capital, social or otherwise, to choose to split profits with crew, your solution to just get a union contract isn't actually available to the majority of workers in the industry until a revolutionary party leads the defeat of capitalism and creates a society where all workers are inherently in a union in one way or another.

[–] Juice@midwest.social 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

Ah Marxism-Leninism-Markiplierism.

More union busting apologism, just advocating for conscientious capitalism. Instead of siding with the workers, side with the youtubers. What a confusing time for people.

[–] Jabril@hexbear.net 1 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) (1 children)

You are a very confused person, lmao. I said the only way to secure worker's rights is by defeating capitalism because unions themselves literally don't accept all the workers who need them as members. Somehow I'm advocating for union busting by pointing out that unions won't take in workers as members. Yes, the person pointing out the issue is the problem, not the issue itself.

Marx, Engels and Lenin tore apart economism over a century ago, showing clearly why reducing the worker's movement to mere unionism is ultimately reactionary but here we are over a century later and the biggest losers on the Internet are still advocating for "unions" as a solution when the unions themselves are reactionary tools of capital that refuse to represent workers. You prefer to throw the majority of an industries workers under the bus and blame them for not joining a union they aren't allowed to join.

I provided the mark plier example because you said my comment about what a better contract could look like was just a hypothetical and it is a recent example of the type of thing I'm talking about. It would be easier for people to pressure those youtubers into better contracts through boycotts and other tactics because they have an unusually high amount of control over the films they make than an average new filmmaker, especially since, again, you literally can't join the industry unions most of the time. Which is why I added the caveat that the real solution is not relying on unions or YouTubers but on revolution. Reading comprehension has plummeted, I really hope you get a tutor or something

[–] Juice@midwest.social 3 points 18 hours ago* (last edited 18 hours ago) (2 children)

Come on, comrade

You're seriously going to check my Marxism card? Which debate rabbit hole do you wanna take this down? How much more should we confuse this issue?

Lenin discusses the role of consciousness in the formation of the vanguard party in "What is to Be Done?:

Social-Democratic consciousness among the workers… would have to be brought to them from without. The history of all countries shows that the working class, exclusively by its own efforts, is able to develop only trade-union consciousness.

This line, influenced by Kautsky before he went "renegade," is about the need for a worker's party capable of organizing the working class. It's a deeply important line to Marxist thought. However, as Lenin notes in the preface to "12 Years," it has generated much confusion:

My second comment concerns the question of economic struggle and the trade. unions. My views on this subject have been frequently misrepresented in the literature, and I must, therefore, emphasise that many pages in What Is To Be Done? are devoted to explaining the immense importance of economic struggle and the trade unions. In particular, I advocated neutrality of the trade unions, and have not altered that view in the pamphlets or newspaper articles written since then, despite the numerous assertions by my opponents. Only the London R.S.D.L.P. Congress and the Stuttgart International Socialist Congress led me to conclude that trade-union neutrality is not defensible as a principle. The only correct principle is the closest possible alignment of the unions with the Party. Our policy must be to bring the unions closer to the Party and link them with it. That policy should be pursued perseveringly and persistently in all our propaganda, agitation, and organising activity, without trying to obtain mere “recognition” of our views and without expelling from the trade unions those of a different opinion.

So it's clear to me that the socialist movement, having organized ourselves as a revolutionary party opposed to capitalism is, according to Lenin, to show solidarity with unions, to work with them in order to promote revolutionary consciousness beyond the "trade union consciousness" that develops out of organic worker struggle against their conditions. However, whether or not this later quote is a refutation of the first is another area of confusion. This view was promoted by Hal Draper, and ultimately led to even more confusion in subsequent years. Was Draper a socialist? Or was he actually the left wing of the bourgeoisie? I am familiar with analysis on both sides of this debate. However, the point is, its all very confusing.

Engels, in Anti Duhring, describes the Utopian communism of Robert Owen:

To them, therefore, the fruits of this new power belonged. The newly-created gigantic productive forces, hitherto used only to enrich individuals and to enslave the masses, offered to Owen the foundations for a reconstruction of society; they were destined, as the common property of all, to be worked for the common good of all.

Owen’s communism was based upon this purely business foundation, the outcome, so to say, of commercial calculation. Throughout, it maintained this practical character. Thus, in 1823, Owen proposed the relief of the distress in Ireland by Communist colonies, and drew up complete estimates of costs of founding them, yearly expenditure, and probable revenue. And in his definite plan for the future, the technical working out of details is managed with such practical knowledge – ground plan, front and side and bird’s-eye views all included – that the Owen method of social reform once accepted, there is from the practical point of view little to be said against the actual arrangement of details.

This, in my opinion, is similar to the Markiplier example you described, although in extreme. Sounds great! A bourgeois who internalizes the materialism of Saint Simone and Fourier, uses his extensive knowledge and experience of industry to create communism for the workers. Unfortunately, when his project moved from a model of benevolent capitalism to Utopian communism, the situation changed drastically for Owen.

His advance in the direction of Communism was the turning-point in Owen’s life. As long as he was simply a philanthropist, he was rewarded with nothing but wealth, applause, honor, and glory. He was the most popular man in Europe. Not only men of his own class, but statesmen and princes listened to him approvingly. But when he came out with his Communist theories that was quite another thing.

Banished from official society, with a conspiracy of silence against him in the press, ruined by his unsuccessful Communist experiments in America, in which he sacrificed all his fortune

Engels holds Owen in high regard, and even says:

Every social movement, every real advance in England on behalf of the workers links itself on to the name of Robert Owen.

However, the point that Engels makes is that these concessions from individual individual capitalists, is not a form of worker organization, but a source of confusion:

from this nothing could come but a kind of eclectic, average Socialism, which, as a matter of fact, has up to the present time dominated the minds of most of the socialist workers in France and England. Hence, a mish-mash allowing of the most manifold shades of opinion: a mish-mash of such critical statements, economic theories, pictures of future society by the founders of different sects, as excite a minimum of opposition; a mish-mash which is the more easily brewed the more definite sharp edges of the individual constituents are rubbed down in the stream of debate, like rounded pebbles in a brook.

To make a science of Socialism, it had first to be placed upon a real basis.

Marx, in the 18th Brumaire of Louis Napoleon, describes what happens when the interests of lower classes and enterprising individuals create contradictions that resist the supremacy of the ruling class (emphasis by Marx):

Every common interest was immediately severed from the society, countered by a higher, general interest, snatched from the activities of society’s members themselves and made an object of government activity – from a bridge, a schoolhouse, and the communal property of a village community, to the railroads, the national wealth, and the national University of France. Finally the parliamentary republic, in its struggle against the revolution, found itself compelled to strengthen the means and the centralization of governmental power with repressive measures. All revolutions perfected this machine instead of breaking it.

So can we please prevent any further ridiculousness where one or the other of us starts proving who is more or less Marxist? I can defend my position, and argue against yours with sources and a deep familiarity of Marxism from about a decade of practical organizing experience, with an emphasis on building the worker's party. I'm sure we could go back and forth disputing caricatures of each other's politics until the wheels fall off. This does not interest me, and I find it impractical.

So here is my position: I believe that the promotion, if not the entire process of the creation of the movie Obsession has the effect, whether intentional or otherwise, of harming the unionization of workers in the entertainment industry. I am sorry if I described your argument as "apologism" if that characterization felt to you as a personal attack.

Yes I believe you have some confusion around this topic, however I think confusion is something that can be remedied. I was adhering to the pro-union message, despite my own criticisms of the union form, particularly the bureaucratic and collaborationist nature of craft unions, and institutional capture of many industrial unions by the capitalists who own the means of production within these industries. I believe that expanded participation in unions by workers is a systematic improvement over the current situation, evidenced by the difference between the pre and post neo-liberal turn of the late 70s, particularly where it concerns the break between increases in real economic productivity while wages stagnated, that occurred after that period, a trend that has only magnified since then.

I do not believe that participation in unions alone is a viable road to revolutionary socialism, without the creation and influence of a real mass workers party to represent the long term interests of the class over the immediate interests of individual unions. I believe that once In a union, workers need to struggle to reform their unions. A good example of this is UAW, as the reform movement that successfully elected Sean Fain (not Sean O'Brian of the Teamsters) has negotiated better contracts for workers, and recently totally divested from Israeli genocide bonds. The UAW reformers are also promoting more radical class demands, like renegotiating union contracts to expire on May 1 2028, in order to bridge the gap in consciousness between workers who dont want to break the law, since general solidarity strikes are illegal. But if everybody's contract expires at the same time, across many major industries and unions, and the unions and workers movements prepare for radical solidarity actions, a sort of legal general strike can be carried out, to force changes in the system.

I dont appreciate my pro-union position being mis characterized as being anti-revolutionary party. I just think your one example of Markiplier doing the right thing this one time doesnt prove that greater involvement of the IATSE crew trades union would have been bad for the workers who were screwed over by Obsession. In fact it proves that while there is nothing that forces people to do the right thing, as Markiplier did, that the trend will be a further deterioration of wages and worker power within the entertainment industry.

Continued

[–] Juice@midwest.social 2 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

Lenin, Marx and Engels all were for organization of the working class, not for individual owners of property to provide bonuses for the workers. No a union is not enough, but its better than Markiplier. We still need to organize the class politically in the form of a mass party.

So no offense, but your comment about getting a tutor is so, so, so wrong headed. I didn't want to get into the real political difference between our positions, but please, in good faith, explain to me where ive gone wrong here or if there is some common themes and practical actions we can agree on

[–] Jabril@hexbear.net 0 points 17 hours ago (2 children)

explain to me where ive gone wrong her

See my other comment. You didn't read what I said or try to understand it, you just latched on to an idea of something to fight against that you created unilaterally and then went for it while communicating in a snide and disrespectful tone for no reason. I simply provided an example of a different type of contract agreement and youve written walls of texts about unions, which I pointed out isn't really that useful for a bunch of workers who literally won't be accepted as IATSE members. You seem very spirited maybe turn that focus inward and investigate why you're doing so much for so little

[–] Juice@midwest.social 2 points 17 hours ago

I was never fighting you. I was sticking to a pro-union message because of the Obsession movie's anti-unionism. Sure I made some snarky comments, this is c/slop on Hexbear. I understand what you're saying better, now that I talked myself through it what your point was, but what connection the necessity for socialism has with Markiplier still eludes me. Engels and Lenin examples I quoted both show examples of the confusion that arise out of, from my perspective, the exact ways that you framed your argument. So maybe it isn't that my reading comprehension is low, but that your examples are confusing. In any case, I'm glad we were able to come to some understanding, comrade

[–] Juice@midwest.social 1 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

I do plenty. This was nothing. Please disengage

[–] Damarcusart@hexbear.net 2 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

Just FYI, you can't really call for a "disengage" while also giving out a last paragraph of text in the argument. It's to stop people using the disengage rule as a kind of "parting shot" where they get the last word in.

Sorry this person is being so hostile and obtuse here. No idea why this thread in particular has multiple people on our instance blowing up so much. I guess people get weird when an internet celebrity makes a movie.

[–] Juice@midwest.social 1 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

Sorry I wasn't trying to abuse the disengage rule. I remember it from when I used to have a HB account, but its been a couple years. I legit didn't see the final line until a second read, at which point I asked for the disengage. I'll be more careful about it in the future. I was just really done with it, esp after reading the last little dig.

[–] Damarcusart@hexbear.net 2 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

I know you weren't trying to abuse the rule, it's usually pretty obvious when someone tries to abuse the rule, sorry if I sounded a bit hostile or accusatory there.

[–] Juice@midwest.social 1 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

No I appreciate it! I appreciate how important it is for HBs to maintain your community. Its imperfect sometimes, but its special. Thanks for chiming in, I was kinda put off by the other conversation. I know it is unusual behavior for HBs, but I think understandably, it got under my skin. Its nice to have a more friendly, relatable experience. Not hostile or accusatory at all!

[–] Damarcusart@hexbear.net 2 points 11 hours ago

Yeah, that's mainly why I'm reaching out, I don't really want to do the "not all of us are like this, I swear!" thing, but this article seems to have brought out the worst in a few people here, sometimes people get so convinced that someone else is wrong, that they stop actually listening to what they're saying and stop trying to explain things to them, instead just getting mad at them and accusing them of saying things they aren't trying to say at all.

[–] Jabril@hexbear.net 0 points 17 hours ago

So can we please prevent any further ridiculousness where one or the other of us starts proving who is more or less Marxist?

Until now you've only clung to some kind of labor reductionist argument implying that all workers in film should just join a union, despite that not being a real option for most of those workers. I brought up Lenin because of your snide, underhanded remarks calling me a union buster. Why you are then clutching your pearls after initiating this tone and method of communication while writing a giant wall of text is beyond me. You completely misunderstood what I said and latched on to a made up idea of what I said to attack and now are backpedaling hard and trying to seem reasonable by doing, again, way too much:

I just think your one example of Markiplier doing the right thing this one time doesnt prove that greater involvement of the IATSE crew trades union would have been bad for the workers who were screwed over by Obsession

Since you summarized the thing you made up to fight against so well I'm just quoting it here for posterity