Editing Stalinist Golden Center

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The '''Stalinist Golden Center,'''<ref>https://wiki.infrawiki.us/index.php/The_Golden_Stalinist_Center</ref> otherwise known as the "'''Golden Center'''", "'''Golden Stalinist Center'''", "'''Golden Path'''" or "'''[[Dialectics|dialectical]] centrism'''", is the pragmatic political strategy employed by [[Joseph Stalin]]. Fundamentally, it is the ''rejection of both left- and right-deviationism''.  
The '''Stalinist Golden Center,'''<ref>https://wiki.infrawiki.us/index.php/The_Golden_Stalinist_Center</ref> otherwise known as the "'''Golden Center'''", "'''Golden Stalinist Center'''", "'''Golden Path'''" or "'''[[Dialectics|dialectical]] centrism'''", is the pragmatic political strategy employed by [[Joseph Stalin]]. Fundamentally, it is the ''rejection of both left- and right-deviationism''.  


Deviationism can be understood as [[Revisionism|revisionism]], dogmatism, factionalism, economism, and other forms of inconsistent, distracting, malicious or self-serving thought within political movements. Stalin paved the path for ''an explicit, rational, dialectical appraisal of political tendencies/lines of thought, wherein the political [[Object|object]] is taken by the [[Subject|subject]] in both its objective historical development and its interrelation (or lack thereof) with the proper leadership of the dictatorship of the proletariat.''
Deviationism can be understood as [[Revisionism]], dogmatism, factionalism, economism, and other forms of inconsistent, distracting, malicious or self-serving thought within political movements. Stalin paved the path for ''an explicit, rational, dialectical appraisal of political tendencies/lines of thought, wherein the political [[Object|object]] is taken by the [[Subject|subject]] in both its objective historical development and its interrelation (or lack thereof) with the proper leadership of the dictatorship of the proletariat.''


Stalin upheld Marxism-Leninism as the tangentially congruent (identical but fleshed-out) successor to Marxism and dialectical thought as a historical phenomenon. In rejecting both "ultra-left" and right deviations from (tendencies arisen from) Marx and Engels' works, as well as both ultra-left and right deviations from Lenin's line of thought, he successfully synthesized Marxism-Leninism and lead the Soviet Union through some of its most difficult years. [[Trotskyism]], on the ultra-left hand, and Bukharinism and Menshevism on the right were both eschewed by Stalin, who eventually purged them and their followers from the CPSU in the 1930s. The ultra-lefts and the rights, in exile, settled in New York and began flooding authentic left-wing political organizations with their artificial subversive discourse as wreckers. Where they could not join organizations they founded their own, finding any old nook or cranny in which to stick their unpopular ideology/platform. This, along with the influence of the [[Frankfurt School]], monopolist NGOs, and others in American left-wing politics, converged as the foundation of the [[New Left]]-- a big-tent of highly-developed (and therefore highly complex, or "far-flung") deviant tendencies which lead the American masses away from Marxism-Leninism and class struggle. The obfuscation of the rationality and pragmatism of the Golden Path was precisely the goal of such ideologically and financially motivated activities. Thus Stalin managed to protect the U.S.S.R. from such wrecking and infiltration in his expulsion of political extremists and his rejection of bourgeois socialism, in keeping with Lenin's pragmatic political approach.
Stalin upheld Marxism-Leninism as the tangentially congruent (identical but fleshed-out) successor to Marxism and dialectical thought as a historical phenomenon. In rejecting both "ultra-left" and right deviations from (tendencies arisen from) Marx and Engels' works, as well as both ultra-left and right deviations from Lenin's line of thought, he successfully synthesized Marxism-Leninism and lead the Soviet Union through some of its most difficult years. [[Trotskyism]], on the ultra-left hand, and Bukharinism and Menshevism on the right were both eschewed by Stalin, who eventually purged them and their followers from the CPSU in the 1930s. The ultra-lefts and the rights, in exile, settled in New York and began flooding authentic left-wing political organizations with their artificial subversive discourse as wreckers. Where they could not join organizations they founded their own, finding any old nook or cranny in which to stick their unpopular ideology/platform. This, along with the influence of the [[Frankfurt School]], monopolist NGOs, and others in American left-wing politics, converged as the foundation of the [[New Left]]-- a big-tent of highly-developed (and therefore highly complex, or "far-flung") deviant tendencies which lead the American masses away from Marxism-Leninism and class struggle. The obfuscation of the rationality and pragmatism of the Golden Path was precisely the goal of such ideologically and financially motivated activities. Thus Stalin managed to protect the U.S.S.R. from such wrecking and infiltration in his expulsion of political extremists and his rejection of bourgeois socialism, in keeping with Lenin's pragmatic political approach.
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