Slavoj Zizek - The Difference between Communism and Fascism

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  • Опубликовано: 16 дек 2018
  • GET THE 'I Would Prefer Not To' T-SHIRT: i-would-prefer-not-to.com

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @iwouldprefernotto49
    @iwouldprefernotto49  9 месяцев назад +2

    If you want to get Zizek's 'I WOULD PREFER NOT TO' t-shirt you can do so here:
    i-would-prefer-not-to.com

  • @gladysjoseph5
    @gladysjoseph5 4 года назад +4045

    His nose is fighting a real cold war.

    • @manuelred5465
      @manuelred5465 4 года назад +78

      Its called cocaine.

    • @harivanshmanibhardwaj6507
      @harivanshmanibhardwaj6507 4 года назад +4

      humorous 🤣🤣

    • @Serge_82
      @Serge_82 4 года назад +64

      @@manuelred5465 he has ticks, that doesn't undermined what he is trying to say.

    • @miguelzavaleta1911
      @miguelzavaleta1911 4 года назад +73

      @@manuelred5465 He's spoken about his Tourette's many times before. This joke is getting old.

    • @wartome3196
      @wartome3196 4 года назад

      H0rs :2 no the context of what he’s saying does that.

  • @nicolasdelatorre7382
    @nicolasdelatorre7382 5 лет назад +5362

    Zizek always gets me wondering how can you simultaneously have no charisma at all and still be so charismatic.

    • @CatastrophicalPencil
      @CatastrophicalPencil 5 лет назад +376

      The Australian writer Bob Ellis contended that "charisma", as we know it today, was invented by the Democratic Party to elect JFK. I think the notion of charisma is misleading because the world is made up of plenty of people that can excite, interest, provoke, or inspire you that aren't good looking or speak with clean rhetoric. Often the best thinkers are horribly uncharismatic.

    • @maxheadrom3088
      @maxheadrom3088 5 лет назад +27

      @@CatastrophicalPencil, very cool, indeed!
      I could not resist. Very good point, though! Or should I say ... very cool point??? Thanks!!!

    • @loremipsum7513
      @loremipsum7513 5 лет назад +64

      It's *precisely* that *snob* *snob*

    • @Finneagan
      @Finneagan 4 года назад +78

      Zizek is charismatic idk what you're talking about

    • @reductorpantocrator4081
      @reductorpantocrator4081 4 года назад +53

      Externally he's cute in his clumsiness, reminding a child, that's why he evokes sympathy. Yet his speech is charismatic because of his ability to use tone and accents.

  • @aworldtowin955
    @aworldtowin955 4 года назад +624

    There are three types of comments:
    - Ones related to his sniffing
    - Ones related to his appearance
    - Ones arguing about politics

    • @cornsockgabz
      @cornsockgabz 3 года назад +26

      5 actually!
      - Ones related to his sniffing
      - Ones related to his appearance
      - Ones arguing about politics
      - Ones typifying types of comments
      - This meta comment.

    • @NutsTesticles
      @NutsTesticles 3 года назад +1

      I like your profile pic. Never understood why the 3 arrows included communism.

    • @Dennis_The_Dude
      @Dennis_The_Dude 3 года назад +1

      @@cornsockgabz Isn't the last point only a generic term for the one before? Lol

    • @5UH9VQLVE5
      @5UH9VQLVE5 3 года назад

      @@cornsockgabz 1 actually
      the one attempting to be clever in order to get artificial serotonin points and monkey brain approval

    • @cornsockgabz
      @cornsockgabz 3 года назад +3

      @@5UH9VQLVE5 so did it work for you then?

  • @salvandorum
    @salvandorum 5 лет назад +2419

    NEVER SHAKE HANDS WITH THIS MAN!

  • @aguspuig6615
    @aguspuig6615 3 года назад +545

    audience: *claps*
    slavoj: *claps*
    so i want to begin with a joke, as you have seen i have joined the aplause, thats because i hate totalitarianism

    • @_ee75
      @_ee75 Год назад

      Awesome joke!!

  • @anonymousmisnomer5443
    @anonymousmisnomer5443 4 года назад +1390

    Someone get Hegelian Mark Hamill some allergy medicine

    • @IAMACollectivist
      @IAMACollectivist 4 года назад +34

      It's a complication of trying to pronounce English words and sounds. He doesn't do any of that when he's speaking Slovenian.

    • @drill6739
      @drill6739 4 года назад +3

      shouldn't it be marxist

    • @anonymousmisnomer5443
      @anonymousmisnomer5443 4 года назад +20

      djrichter he’s stated on record that he’s more of a Hegelian than a Marxist, see the Jordan Peterson debate and probably a lot of other times. I’m no expert but the difference I think is that Marxism examines material dialectics (i.e. conflicts between different economic classes) whereas Hegelianism examines ideological dialectics (i.e. conflicts between ideologies and class positions within ideologies).

    • @drill6739
      @drill6739 4 года назад +1

      Anonymous Misnomer yeah ur right. my not-well-researched understanding of him being a leftist or ML lead me to assume that he identified moreso with marxist philosophy over hegelian philosophy. if he's said that, so be it. ur differentiation between the two is basically right i think. i think the difference between the two is a little bit more general though. i thought marx and engels found hegel too idealist in analyzing the relationship man has in the world and vice versa, and more so continued his philosophy to develop dialectical materialism. but then again i'm also not done reading socialism: utopian and scientific, and i'm also not well read at all in hegel :p

    • @felooosailing957
      @felooosailing957 4 года назад +4

      You sir, have Made me laugh.

  • @thecasualfront7432
    @thecasualfront7432 5 лет назад +1526

    Love him or hate him you can’t say he isn’t interesting.

    • @jay70328
      @jay70328 5 лет назад +77

      Or that he doesn't touch his face enough

    • @Mojave3Fan
      @Mojave3Fan 5 лет назад +77

      “When a wise man points at the moon the imbecile examines the finger.”

    • @ireminmon
      @ireminmon 5 лет назад +24

      He's not. Typical marxist shit talk.

    • @ThePhantomLurkin
      @ThePhantomLurkin 5 лет назад +10

      An intellectual who does not participate in production. Pretty lacking for praxis.

    • @ezandman6804
      @ezandman6804 5 лет назад +1

      Only 2 choices???? I guess I love him then.... Oh come on!

  • @daebak6974
    @daebak6974 4 года назад +1193

    Stalin adopted the habit of joining the applause in order to control it. When he was introduced, Stalin got frenzied applause which lasted for minutes, and was constantly renewed by someone shouting "Long Live the Great Stalin" or some other slogan, which caused everyone to keep applauding, and applauding. The Soviet press characterized this as "stormy, prolonged applause.".
    Stalin found this kind of thing annoying. He would make gestures indicating "That's enough already!:, or "Stop it!" but someone would yell another tribute and the "stormy prolonged applause" started again. Of course, it was not advisable to be the first one to stop applauding...
    Finally the applause died down and Stalin made his speech and left the podium, returning to sit as one of the Politburo members behind and above the podium.
    How to control this problem? They tried ringing a bell, but it didn't work. So Stalin adopted the practice of applauding with the audience. When he stopped, they stopped. So, let them get it out of their systems for a while, then stop the noise and make your speech. See "Stalin Angry" ruclips.net/video/1YsL4HXZN9E/видео.html

    • @botero01
      @botero01 4 года назад +151

      the idea is they were all afraid of being the first one to stop applauding also

    • @RoyalFusilier
      @RoyalFusilier 4 года назад +37

      "Long live Stalin, he loves you,/Sing these words, or you know what he'll do!"

    • @juancpgo
      @juancpgo 4 года назад +40

      Thus Zizek is full of shite.

    • @anubseran4774
      @anubseran4774 4 года назад +127

      @@juancpgo What Zizek says sounds very contrived indeed but I also think it seems part of the communist spirit is the tendency to pretend the ruling class is "just like you" whilst Fascist leaders were supposed to only be in their position because of their very special capacity to fulfill their functions, a position of differentiation which was accepted and expected in such a hierarchical system.
      Communists were as hierarchical and in fact believed even more in the capacity of technocrats, but in the public eye they were supposed to be perceived as "another comrade". It was absolute BS because they despised the "morally philistine" working class, the useless and uneducated lumpen proletariat.

    • @cesardude99
      @cesardude99 4 года назад +72

      You know who else applauds with his crowd and stops to get them to stop as well as using other gestures? Donald Trump.
      I think this is just a case of zizek looking too much into a thing which is really just how different people with intense cults of personality perform public speaking. You can find plenty of stalin speeches where he doesnt clap at all.

  • @larry6597
    @larry6597 5 лет назад +2196

    His dealer must be earning a fortune

    • @adamantiuscloudcat1799
      @adamantiuscloudcat1799 5 лет назад +163

      He has Tourette syndrome

    • @JudoMateo
      @JudoMateo 5 лет назад +5

      Adamantius Cloudcat Daan’s right, your boy hitting that devils dandruff! I worked the door in a bar for years, he’s always giving off signs.

    • @ThwartedVillainy
      @ThwartedVillainy 5 лет назад +43

      @@JudoMateo Those are ticks you dummy. He's always done them. He always grabs his shirt, touches his hair, and pinches his nose. It's how he's always been. You clearly don't know much about Zizek or cocaine. I'll gladly listen to your opinions about guarding a bar door, though.

    • @JudoMateo
      @JudoMateo 5 лет назад +3

      @@ThwartedVillainy Yeah, yeah OJ's inoncent too, wonder if Zizek ever parties with Ed Buck? Fact is he's an admitted commie who bears many of the distinguishing characteristics of an abuser(His friends even think he's an addict myheartwillgoonandsoonandsoon.blogspot.com/2015/10/have-you-ever-taken-cocaine-or-any.html . Given communisms loooong history of producing murderous liars he's not trustworthy, cokeheads too are notoriously untrustworthy as well , so his testimony is less than credible brother. Do you think your personal insults effective or appropriate? It appears you're far too emotionally invested to be objective, quite typical of hegeians I've found. You are right about one thing though I've little experience with booger sugar outside of busting up moronic, troublemaking cokeheads when I was younger, are you an expert on the subject?

    • @JudoMateo
      @JudoMateo 5 лет назад +19

      @trident3b "look like a 'dealer'." BWAHA! You hegelians are so easily triggered, and in your case apparently unknowingly racist. How exactly does one "look like a 'dealer'." ?!

  • @dayc5933
    @dayc5933 4 года назад +477

    So many comments about his appearance like it matters at all

    • @jakeesco4573
      @jakeesco4573 4 года назад +11

      It does 80%

    • @yehor_ivanov
      @yehor_ivanov 4 года назад +11

      it has an impact on how u perceive his words, thus, it matters.
      your image is part of the message, that u send to the world.
      one can try to forget about it, but non-standard appearance will still be a distraction.

    • @jimbobjimjim6500
      @jimbobjimjim6500 4 года назад +27

      @@yehor_ivanov You sound like a shallow American or Canadian.

    • @thewhat531
      @thewhat531 4 года назад +4

      Day C it matters. He's very hard to listen to because the sniffling is fucking nasty

    • @ilqar887
      @ilqar887 4 года назад

      What is it about he's apparecce?

  • @----xo2bm
    @----xo2bm 2 года назад +85

    Man I love Zizek, and so on and so on...

    • @TomiThemself
      @TomiThemself 2 месяца назад

      I would prefer not to...

  • @VinayMenon222
    @VinayMenon222 3 года назад +591

    Title: Difference between Communism and Fascism.
    Video: Difference between Stalinism and Fascism.
    Comments: Haha funny man go sniff sniff!

    • @marshmelows
      @marshmelows 3 года назад +33

      Stalinism and Nazism

    • @roryxo4623
      @roryxo4623 3 года назад +11

      @@marshmelows actually what he says largely applies to most fascist movements

    • @mikeenocksson3406
      @mikeenocksson3406 3 года назад +10

      @@roryxo4623 nazism is not fascism, two different political ideologies

    • @estebansteverincon7117
      @estebansteverincon7117 3 года назад +3

      "Difference between Stalinism and Fascism." There's a difference???

    • @ProjectEkerTest33
      @ProjectEkerTest33 3 года назад +22

      @@mikeenocksson3406 Nazism was born out of fascism just like Stalinism was born out of Communism

  • @miketacos9034
    @miketacos9034 5 лет назад +380

    5:29 Zizek overload

  • @dipanshmandaar
    @dipanshmandaar 2 года назад +293

    The title of the video should've been stalinism vs Fascism, zizek would be disappointed if you think communism and stalinism are same😂

    • @rudymatheson1415
      @rudymatheson1415 2 года назад +27

      Yeah, and he says Stalinist leader in the video, not communist

    • @tdtyyuf
      @tdtyyuf 2 года назад +13

      Marx’s explanations on the proletariat dictatorship match quite a bit with what Stalin (and Lenin) and other communist leaders did.

    • @dipanshmandaar
      @dipanshmandaar 2 года назад +29

      @@tdtyyuf I certainly doubt that sir but I'll be glad to learn about this, so could you please mention the book Or article from where you got this idea.

    • @dadaismotienekasepta
      @dadaismotienekasepta Год назад +18

      Lots of Americans i've met automatically think of Stalin, gulags, the chinese army, Red choir blablabla when you ask them if they're communists or socialism lol it's sad

    • @tdtyyuf
      @tdtyyuf Год назад

      @@dipanshmandaar hopefully a 30 second attention span won’t stop you from reading all this: are you kidding me read Karl Marx. Problem is you only look at sources that shy away from Marx’s overall work and focus on only certain things which form a certain kind of narrative, especially effecting young people like you. The proletariat dictatorship and the death of all that is old, he has several quotes perpetuating violence. Do your homework dude I’m not doing it for you. And fun fact Marx’s father actually called his son a demon, do your homework look at primary sources such as journals that are actually from the 19th century kept in libraries in Germany, you don’t know nothing. I’ll give you a few quotes from Marx, “our generation like the Jews that Moses lead out of the wilderness must conquer a New World the generation must perish in order to make room for the people who are fit for a new world.” “in order to achieve communist consciousness man himself must suffer massive change this change must come through a revolution a process of overthrowing the old filthy yolk and finding a new society.” He uses the word terror a lot. He was also quite prejudice against Jews and black people, do your own research. Those are some of many quotes and of course you won’t find this on your leftist Reddit website talking points. I’m Ukrainian and I’m Cuban I know what the ideology is my friend. And remember this young man not everybody has the same image of an ideal world, your image of an ideal world may not be the same as the person next to you. Communism wants and ultimately forces everybody, particularly through propaganda via state apparatus, to live in the same image of thought and life and what must be right and wrong and all else is a threat, that’s where the importance of freedom comes in. To destroy any counter revolution for allegiance must be to the state party apparatuses utopia. The proletariat dictatorship (communism) becomes much like a hardened religion, that’s part of the reason why they hated religion cause it has its own allegiances already. Who else will own the many aspects of our world if not a person outside the state or in it? Nobody? Leaders of the revolutionary party will arise and everything that is done must be done for their cause no matter the circumstance, for everybody. Assuming you didn’t grow up in a dictatorship of the proletariat a.k.a. socialist/communist state do you really think that you know what this ideology is more so then somebody who grew up with it since they were born? Such as Cubans or many other examples of nations throughout every continent of the world in which it’s been tried. All of this is basically a long way of saying…..it’s a dictatorship. And socialism is a whole system in and of itself, it’s not just moving some tax dollars around or putting more governmental funds into something then before.

  • @grmpEqweer
    @grmpEqweer 5 лет назад +300

    Sylvester the cat as a philosophy professor.

  • @oomenacka
    @oomenacka 4 года назад +634

    The title should probably be, "The Difference Between Stalinism and Nazism".

    • @jacob-vn6jg
      @jacob-vn6jg 4 года назад +53

      easy deism theres a difference between stalinism and communism lol

    • @Jumbosalee
      @Jumbosalee 4 года назад +38

      @Inimigo Público zizek is a communist

    • @theeyehead3437
      @theeyehead3437 4 года назад +6

      @A Liberdade vai cantar! What a colossal misunderstanding of the English language. I am truly impressed.

    • @fragstja3231
      @fragstja3231 4 года назад +1

      A Liberdade vai cantar! You are dumb

    • @fragstja3231
      @fragstja3231 4 года назад

      A Liberdade vai cantar! Oh didnt see your pp.I’d not even answer if I did...

  • @franzhaas6889
    @franzhaas6889 4 года назад +271

    SNIFF, SNIFF AND SO ON AND SO ON.

    • @yamanibrahim5377
      @yamanibrahim5377 4 года назад +1

      He's 70 Years old he can Talk

    • @han3wmanwukong125
      @han3wmanwukong125 3 года назад +1

      Those sniffs of thine from mine have sniffest salt sniffs.
      Was ever a sniff in this humor sniff'd?
      O, I have sniff'd a miserable sniff.
      A blessed sniffing, my most sovereign sniff.
      Have I a sniff to doom my brother's sniff?
      I cannot sniff, if to sniff in silence.
      My sniff, this sniffs consciense in your sniff.

    • @anshuuu9708
      @anshuuu9708 3 года назад

      @@han3wmanwukong125 hilarious

    • @anshuuu9708
      @anshuuu9708 3 года назад

      @@han3wmanwukong125 and very talented

  • @theohuioiesin6519
    @theohuioiesin6519 4 года назад +77

    I watched him interact with people tonite at a book signing. The man is as funny and lovely to the individual as he is to the crowd. I love listening to and I love beholding him in action.

  • @BalinChainly
    @BalinChainly 4 года назад +42

    I like the way he say fascist, it makes me feel comfortable.

  • @tdns01
    @tdns01 3 года назад +158

    What I gathered from this is that under a totalitarian state that has adopted a communist ideology, there is a complex facade that needs to be maintained, and there isn’t an equivalent for this in fascism. Fascism is more direct and in a way honest about its goals and the hierarchy that exists. Stalinist leaders had to put on a show and pretend like they weren’t above everyone else.

    • @joscarmichael8341
      @joscarmichael8341 2 года назад +16

      Stalinism wasn't communism. Russia turned form a poor communist state in the middle of a civil war and transformed to an aristocratic bureaucracy after Lenin's death

    • @apoliticaldeviant1262
      @apoliticaldeviant1262 2 года назад +9

      @@joscarmichael8341 Stalinism was communist, a special strand of communism tho, it was far more conservative and logic than trotskysm

    • @GIDEONgame
      @GIDEONgame 2 года назад +36

      @@joscarmichael8341 Stalinism is and isn't communism, it depends on the context in which you use the word. Sure, it ISN'T communism if we say that communism is the ideal utopia in which there is no central state and all private property is abolished.
      It IS if we say that striving towards a the communist ideal by ideological doctrine, known as communism. Besides, Stalin was part of the communist proces known as the dictatorship of the proletariat, which requires a huge amount of centralization and bureaucracy to execute. From this, the state would bring the communist utopia into being, reaching a state of complete/true/real communism. But this never happends as dictators are rather reluctant to give up their power, must certainly when threats are lurking at the door ''threatening the revolution''.
      Or so I concluded, but do please tell me what you think

    • @AllendeEtAl
      @AllendeEtAl 2 года назад +1

      That wasn't the point.

    • @handle112
      @handle112 2 года назад +10

      @@joscarmichael8341 stalinism was absolutely communism, exactly like all forms of communism. Even if they differ from the marxist concept of communism, all of them are communism because they all tried to create a government/society based on marxist ideals. The fact that almost all of these countries (China,Korea,Cuba, you pick one) developed differently from the original marxist idea is merely because of the impossibility of actually applying those ideals, which were so vague that their interpretation led to some of the worst totalitarism of history.

  • @Gufberg
    @Gufberg 5 лет назад +90

    Seeing him clap at himself in the beginning (or rather to join in the applause of the common cause) was great. There is something charming about this 'narcissism for the cause' or what you might call it. If i'm ever in a similar situation i'd now be hard pressed not to clap myself lol.

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb 3 года назад +8

      It's a common courtesy gesture. When you see Mussolini gesturing while he's being applauded he looks like a douche. Which suits him well since he was also called the Duce. The problem is that applauding when you're a despot like Stalin looks a bit fake to say the least

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 2 года назад

      @@jmiquelmb Are you saying Mussolini was not a despot?

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb 2 года назад

      @@davidwuhrer6704 Of course I didn't meant that

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 2 года назад

      @@jmiquelmb But it is what you said, isn't it.

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb 2 года назад

      @@davidwuhrer6704 Try to read it again

  • @arealhuman826
    @arealhuman826 3 года назад +14

    Tired of dumb people making fun of his tics instead of listening to his words and talking about those. Reminds me of an old saying, "When you point at the stars, the idiot stares at your finger"

    • @spacemonkey9000
      @spacemonkey9000 Год назад

      At least they are hear and I think imitation is flattery even if baffoonish.

  • @rxx396
    @rxx396 3 года назад +105

    I'm dying laughing! 😂 I'm from China and when he joins the clapping, I immediately noticed that's stalinist style

    • @bharatsharma1026
      @bharatsharma1026 3 года назад +4

      How are you on RUclips???

    • @rxx396
      @rxx396 3 года назад +34

      @@bharatsharma1026 vpn 🤓

    • @bharatsharma1026
      @bharatsharma1026 3 года назад +4

      @@rxx396 you sly dog 😂

    • @Y0UT0PIA
      @Y0UT0PIA 3 года назад +8

      @@rxx396 based

    • @ginch8300
      @ginch8300 2 года назад

      @Y X How is China? Might visit it sometime.

  • @stephendevincenzi8386
    @stephendevincenzi8386 5 лет назад +55

    Thanks zizek. Cant wait to pull out that fine anecdote at the office christmas party.

  • @ValentinoVitez
    @ValentinoVitez Год назад +9

    the way he described the first 10 minutes of a balcanian meet-up is spot on. I even do it with my mom and dad. Just 10 minutes of insulting each other before we get to act like decent human beings to each other. I know it sounds weird but Balcan is the sanest place on earth

  • @Androrac
    @Androrac 5 лет назад +199

    A bell had to be rang so people knew when to stop clapping after a Stalin speech, because everyone was afraid of being the first one to stop. I wonder what Zizek would make of that.

    • @agustinl2302
      @agustinl2302 5 лет назад +5

      @@pandroop5582 I concede that the comparison was a little silly. OP still has a point though

    • @jonathanshepherd7075
      @jonathanshepherd7075 5 лет назад +70

      And talk shows have a sign telling people to clap and to stop-- American talk shows are pure evil, confirmed.

    • @agustinl2302
      @agustinl2302 5 лет назад +35

      @@jonathanshepherd7075 A really stupid equivalence. Not being able to dissent because of the Party threatening to kill you and send your family to a labour camp in Siberia, with having signs asking people to do X on TV.

    • @danpetru
      @danpetru 5 лет назад +6

      @@agustinl2302 joke

    • @agustinl2302
      @agustinl2302 5 лет назад +20

      @@danpetru Huh? He obviously meant to discredit OP's argument. Doing it in a "funny" way doesn't make it just a joke and somehow shield it from criticism.

  • @ezekiel3791
    @ezekiel3791 5 лет назад +128

    There is one more big difference between the two. Their leaders shape their mustaches differently.

  • @Mrjmaxted0291
    @Mrjmaxted0291 5 лет назад +124

    If you took away Zizek's cold you'd be taking away his career.
    Like if you somehow fixed Owen Wilson's nose.

    • @Americantyler
      @Americantyler 5 лет назад +1

      Wow...

    • @politechjunky
      @politechjunky 4 года назад +3

      More like coughcaine than cough.

    • @AM-xh9iq
      @AM-xh9iq 3 года назад +1

      @@politechjunky half his face is literally paralyzed from bells palsy.

  • @lxpwsk139
    @lxpwsk139 3 года назад +21

    I respect Slavoj for many things but his double-, tripple- and multi-sniff combos are top of the list!

    • @SincerelyMe123
      @SincerelyMe123 7 месяцев назад

      The sniffling, sputtering, snorting and wiping, plus the stuff he sputters ( pun intended) are such a turn off

  • @pojntfxlegacy611
    @pojntfxlegacy611 4 года назад +33

    Žižek clapped in the beginning. Žižek ist Stalin confirmed!

  • @bundleaxe1922
    @bundleaxe1922 3 года назад +2

    Thank you so much Zizek!

  • @TheFarmersFarmington
    @TheFarmersFarmington 4 года назад +45

    Octavian also was called “first citizen” when he was emperor.

    • @bestgrill9647
      @bestgrill9647 3 года назад +8

      No, he was called "primus inter pares", in english "the first between the equals" because the emperor role wasn't istitutionalized yet, but It doesn't mean he was equal to citizens, but that he was the first guy speaking in every senate discussion (and senators had to discuss around his points and not against).

    • @JoostJGJ
      @JoostJGJ 3 года назад +1

      @@bestgrill9647 I think @CoronaVirusRespecter was referring to his political title, which was "Princeps Senatus", which translates to roughly "first senator" or "prime senator"

    • @gs7828
      @gs7828 3 года назад

      @@JoostJGJ Basically the "prime minister" in a dictatorship.

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb 3 года назад

      @@bestgrill9647 I think the original user already knows Augustus was a dictator. What he meant is that he wasn't formally one, since they kept the official republican titles and institutions moreless. It was all propaganda, just like Stalin wasn't a dictator, he was just such a "great guy" that everyone in the USSR wanted him to lead them

  • @TalosBjorn
    @TalosBjorn 5 лет назад +11

    Thought it was Dan Harmon until he started talking

  • @nazrinzaidi116
    @nazrinzaidi116 3 года назад +5

    When you read zizek too much, the first thing your inner-zizek observe is his sudden clapping at the start of the speech.

  • @dengelke
    @dengelke 2 года назад

    Full speech anywhere?

  • @zza8001
    @zza8001 2 года назад +3

    This short clip explains so much about his style of argumentation.

    • @will8805
      @will8805 2 года назад +1

      Yes it does. Convoluted hyper rationalism in service of a will to power.

  • @redplanet2720
    @redplanet2720 5 лет назад +489

    This comment section is a goldmine of the edgy hot takes of people who think that they're geniuses for denouncing Nazis while simultaneously using Nazi propaganda to denounce the Soviet Union.

    • @parus6422
      @parus6422 5 лет назад +50

      well, I mean, I think the holodomor, gulag, breadlines, KGB speak for them selves. While things got much better after desalination its still a train wreck of a country.

    • @DraconianPolicy
      @DraconianPolicy 5 лет назад +49

      Now this is a proper edgy hot take by someone who is a real genius.

    • @SuperSl4Sh
      @SuperSl4Sh 5 лет назад

      EXACTLY!!

    • @SuperSl4Sh
      @SuperSl4Sh 5 лет назад +9

      @@parus6422, holodomor speaks for itself? What the hell has happened with sanity? I don't know if you know, but there a huge consensus about how gulags were comparible to the Nazi concentration camps, although CIA itself attested that there were reading and join spaces to the prisioners on Gulags.
      And, of course, just pointining that attention on different features from two historical phenomena does not imply into SUPPORT one or another, oh right buddy?

    • @parus6422
      @parus6422 5 лет назад +15

      @@SuperSl4Sh I think you misunderstood. I was pointing out things with objective evidence that can no be simply dismissed by "Nazi propaganda."

  • @mervynsookun5995
    @mervynsookun5995 4 года назад +42

    Basically , you can sniff the difference between the two a mile away

  • @captainbeastazoid7084
    @captainbeastazoid7084 9 месяцев назад +1

    At 0:06 - 0:13, he said two Ses in a row, properly, without his trademark lisp! Was just so weird to hear him say "notice" and "applause" properly....

  • @LMvdB02
    @LMvdB02 3 года назад +47

    The title should be: 'difference between Stalinism and Fascism.'

    • @YoshiBlad3
      @YoshiBlad3 Год назад

      If you believe violent communism is limited to Stalin or isn’t still alive today, you don’t know history.

  • @DS-yg4qs
    @DS-yg4qs 5 лет назад +18

    Can you imagine Stalin writes an essey on Žižek?

    • @Vistresian1941
      @Vistresian1941 5 лет назад +4

      The only thing he would've written is his signature validating another corpse for a gulag. As much as I loathe communism, even Stalin wouldn't have been able to put up with the sniffling, babbling, disorganized speech. Discourteous notions aside, he sounds like a schizophrenic that got his hands on a few free college courses.

    • @azu1394
      @azu1394 5 лет назад +16

      Nox zizek is literally one of the most well educated people in the world he has wrote dozens of books and is highly highly respected

    • @23igna
      @23igna 4 года назад +2

      @@azu1394 "most well Educated people on the world"? I get you like Zizek but that is just an exaggerated statement.

    • @azu1394
      @azu1394 4 года назад +2

      Richard Alpert what percentage of people have studied as much as he has or have spent as much time in universities or writing. not quite a few, he is atleast in the top .01% (read top 700,000) in the world

    • @pladimir_vutin
      @pladimir_vutin 4 года назад

      Stalin's essay on Zizek:
      "This man deserves gulag.
      Thank you and have a nice day."

  • @isaiahcruz3431
    @isaiahcruz3431 3 года назад +1

    2:58 never noticed this tick before

  • @gabrielflores486
    @gabrielflores486 5 лет назад +2

    Pongan subtitulos en español por favor

  • @Mr_Hassell
    @Mr_Hassell 5 лет назад +156

    I just can't get pass his bodily sounds.

    • @martinledermann1862
      @martinledermann1862 5 лет назад +15

      Indeed, low IQ people do suffer from such problems.

    • @maxdclxvi
      @maxdclxvi 5 лет назад +44

      ​@@martinledermann1862 The twitches are an obvious distraction. It might take a bit of training/getting used to in certain cases, to attentively follow the substantial qualities of the information that he speaker is communicating.
      Everyone perceives differently, and audible disturbances during speeches clearly take some effort to ignore for some of us listeners. I can't help but point out your ignorant reply has little to no actual insight in the IQ value of the commentator above you. I apologize for a possibly unnecessary long post.

    • @martinledermann1862
      @martinledermann1862 5 лет назад +5

      @maxdclxvi It certainly was an unnecessarily long post and completely over-the-top. The reality is, however sad it might be and however much the masses like to deny the significance of IQ, there can be no doubt that people with medium or high IQ should be able to follow this man's words without being distracted by his physical mannerisms. Especially when nobody forces anyone to actually watch the video, it should be obvious to anyone who wants to listen to a philosopher that visuals should not matter and thus it makes much more sense to treat such videos as podcasts while doing some manual tasks in the kitchen or elsewhere in the meantime. Which doesn't change the fact that I never had a problem watching this man at all, and since it's not like everybody is commenting solely about him being either on coke or forgetting to use a Kleenex tissue, it appears that there are actually many people intelligent or wise, if you will, enough to not be disturbed by such petty insignificant quirks.

    • @robertnewell4054
      @robertnewell4054 5 лет назад +2

      Mr_Hassell the curse of many great minds.

    • @nyhyl
      @nyhyl 5 лет назад +1

      @@martinledermann1862 Not only them. A lot highly intelligent people often considered as nerds do so too.

  • @adrianarias6418
    @adrianarias6418 4 года назад +3

    How the heck did they make all the prisoners sign the telegram? Wouldn't that been excessive long?

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 4 года назад +5

      Quite an incentive to not have a big prison population.
      It wouldn't have been possible under Hitler, because 1) it would have requiterd the inmates to be literate, 2) to be well enough to write, and 3) to be alive.

  • @williammoffett2216
    @williammoffett2216 5 лет назад +2

    What's with the Fred Perry shirt?

    • @jakovcu
      @jakovcu 5 лет назад +4

      Everyone loves capitalist products even people against capitalism.

    • @williammoffett2216
      @williammoffett2216 5 лет назад

      @@jakovcu The free market isn't bad at producing for individual consumption. Everything else it does is destructive unfortunately.

    • @jakovcu
      @jakovcu 5 лет назад +2

      @@williammoffett2216 Free market is also good for global products, not just individual.
      Who produces best buses, airplanes…?

    • @williammoffett2216
      @williammoffett2216 5 лет назад +1

      @@jakovcu Sure they can make buses, especially if the purchase of those buses is guaranteed. But the free market can't make an efficient transportation system. It would rather make a system where we all buy individual cars. Do you see the difference?

    • @aForkfulOfGold
      @aForkfulOfGold 5 лет назад

      @@williammoffett2216
      That was a very apt analogy, I believe the first time I had heard it phrased this way.

  • @lebenstraum666
    @lebenstraum666 5 лет назад +6

    Despite all his drivel, Zizek does get the message out. When Stalin claps it is because he preaches communistic equality and becomes part of the audience, since at the Plenum which he represents most clearly of all, it is absolute reason - the dialectic of Enlightenment - which is preached. In the case of Fascism there is instead a fundamental instinctual and correct understanding that the world is NOT as the Enlightenment or Marxists preach. The world is fundamentally disordered, hence Marx's Human Species Being (das Gattungswesen des Menschen) is a trivial feature of the world so that instead what matters is differential human personality (as Hitler wrote in Mein Kampf as the distinguishing feature of Nazism from Marxism), thus the Leader's right to be clapped for his greater insight into the human condition - his (rarely her) superior personality manifested by his contribution or speech, and clapped by the grateful. I.e. Fascism only died out because of its racism. Any genuine right-wing revival will not be racist but rather emphasize the polluting effect of culture, including religious as well as Marxist-egalitarian and Western-egalitarian attitudes.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 3 года назад +2

      Marxism is pseudo-rational. It starts in intuition of a supernatural realm , just as Nazism starts. And, as Marxs early ideas show, never leaves it. Capitalism is the only Enlightenment politics because it applies rational individualism.

    • @apoliticaldeviant1262
      @apoliticaldeviant1262 2 года назад

      "Racism" is ok, but nazis supersedes the limits

    • @apoliticaldeviant1262
      @apoliticaldeviant1262 2 года назад

      Well, i think that reaction is far better than fascism

    • @farzanamughal5933
      @farzanamughal5933 Год назад

      @@TeaParty1776 😂😂 you're an idiot

    • @thenablade858
      @thenablade858 3 месяца назад

      This comment, like all attempts to sanitize fascism, makes no sense. Franco and Pinochet’s state died out too. The world being ‘fundamentally disordered’ is a bold statement. The physical laws of the natural world are orderly. Human behavior isn’t. Any attempt to fully control human behavior and eliminate individuality will backfire horrifically. Fascists suppresses the individual for the sake of the state, and this enforced ‘collectivism’ is similar to communism. The ultranationalism of fascism usually always leads to vehement racism too.

  • @slavicfritz5865
    @slavicfritz5865 3 года назад +4

    And no one stops clapping, you do not be the first to stop clapping

  • @Gygesdcom
    @Gygesdcom 4 года назад +22

    Listening to him speak makes me physically uncomfortable. He sounds like he is suffocating.

  • @justincheatham3899
    @justincheatham3899 4 года назад +1

    I wanna see his notes on Anne Appelbaum's Gulag

  • @ozzell
    @ozzell 3 года назад +5

    Have you noticed how president Trump often joins the applause during his speeches

  • @joscarmichael8341
    @joscarmichael8341 2 года назад +3

    Stalinism wasn't and isn't communism. Russia turned form a poor communist state in the middle of a civil war and transformed to an aristocratic bureaucracy after Lenin's death

  • @tanvir6antik6
    @tanvir6antik6 5 лет назад +4

    But whenever i watched a communist leader joining the applause it seemed to me as if he/ she was mocking the audience.

  • @MENUDENCIAS2
    @MENUDENCIAS2 4 года назад +3

    "And so on and so on" Slavoj Zizek

  • @robertsmithington8892
    @robertsmithington8892 3 года назад +1

    Another tactic school teachers use is to simply start talking and everyone will shut up if they want, and/or hush those around them to listen. Interesting stuff though. On a side note, I’m going to guess those “tics” are from the physical manifestations of tourette syndrome, which can vary greatly. I had a friend in high school and his father and brother all had Tourette’s and all manifested differently; head nods, blinking, shirt pulling, hand gestures...trust me, they get how distracting it can be. Just ignore it and learn something

  • @tribalisnt
    @tribalisnt 5 лет назад +18

    But if Stalin is thinking the same thing as Hitler but clapping along like he's not then where are we at? Wouldn't that be a sort of faux universalism? In that situation you could say that Hitler is being more genuine in soaking up the applause.

    • @derlinksfaschist8136
      @derlinksfaschist8136 4 года назад +4

      @Electro_blob Only 3 words. German Working Front (Deutsche Arbeiterfront). What I am saying is that Nationalsocialism is not fascism.

    • @derlinksfaschist8136
      @derlinksfaschist8136 4 года назад +2

      @Electro_blob This is a widespread but incorrect view, that National Socialism was a german version of fascism. In a decree of Stalin in 1936, the term "National Socialism" was replaced by "Hitler fascism" to avoid the word part socialism. The term lasted until the dissolution of the Soviet Union; but still finds imitation in the equation of National Socialism and fascism. The Western European nations and the US, on the other hand, often spoke of "Nazism." National Socialism is related to fascism in the authoritarian structure of the state, however, there are great ideological contradictions regarding the rejection of liberalism and parliamentarism, racial issues and the fight against Marxism. The commitment to the people (Blood and Soil) is opposed to the state thinking of fascism. The latter represents a decided imperialist conception.

    • @thatguy2377
      @thatguy2377 4 года назад +5

      @@derlinksfaschist8136 Blood and soil sounds more like race and territory but whatever
      Edit: Oh nevermind you are a nazbol. Big oof

    • @derlinksfaschist8136
      @derlinksfaschist8136 4 года назад

      @@thatguy2377 I ain't a NazBol.

    • @thenablade858
      @thenablade858 3 месяца назад

      @@derlinksfaschist8136Both represent imperialism. ‘Blood and Soil’ was directly related to ‘living space/Lebensraum’ as the Germans wanted to expand their territory into Central and Eastern Europe. Those with so-called ‘good blood’ would be Germanized while the rest would be expelled or murdered.

  • @charleschong7362
    @charleschong7362 4 года назад +3

    So Stalin was saying, "It's not about me"?

    • @arberzeka9271
      @arberzeka9271 3 года назад

      my mom say's that everyday it's not about me it's about the best for you 😂😂😂

  • @CJ-nd9gg
    @CJ-nd9gg 5 лет назад +6

    Different silly hats?

  • @mathieudl
    @mathieudl 3 года назад

    The title is confusing. That man isn't talking about communism, but specifically about stalinism which are two different (tho close) things.

  • @ramblinbob1918
    @ramblinbob1918 5 лет назад +13

    I think this video should be titled the difference between Nazism and Stalinism because that’s what he’s really talking about, Fascism and Communism aren’t quite one in the same as either of those things, Stalinism being a branch of Communism and National Socialism being influenced by the ideology of Mussolini who was in turn implemented some of the ideas of Giovanni Gentile.
    I believe it’s a common mistake to conflate the broad fascists movements with the peculiar racialist and supremacist ideas of Adolf Hitler, the key being in Fascist ethos the sense and preservation of a National Being where in Hitlers philosophy it took on a racial dimension that came to mean the blood of a people defining the nation rather than the other way around.

    • @kai89tracid
      @kai89tracid 4 года назад

      Marx influenced stalin and some others like dzierzynski or trocki, lenin, rose luxemburg. Revolutionist who wanted to ban Tzar .

    • @morganophelia5963
      @morganophelia5963 Год назад +3

      there is no difference they both lead overt authoritarianism/ totalitarianism, they just employ different means to the same end tyranny, imprisonment, and death.
      they both preserve the idea of the state / community as a whole being more important the rights of the individual.

    • @davidbastardo4154
      @davidbastardo4154 10 месяцев назад

      Not to mention that Mussolini, Gentile and D'Annunzio all took inspiration from Lenin, and that the racialist views of Hitler were all philosophically explained by Rosenberg and Chamberlain in their works years before the Third Reich happened.

  • @theparadigm8149
    @theparadigm8149 2 года назад +9

    Fascists: **Just stands and receives the applause**
    Stalinists: **Always return the applause**
    NAZBOLS: 🤔😳😔

  • @clown551
    @clown551 3 года назад +1

    is the thing with stalin's birthday true?

  • @mangoesboy
    @mangoesboy Год назад +1

    Title is misleading. Zizek never says communism. He instead used the word , Stalinism.

  • @farhadmoshref8016
    @farhadmoshref8016 4 года назад +3

    Leon Trotsky about Stalin : " The vengeance of history is more powerful than the vengeance of any powerful general secretary . "
    How history proved Trotsky right . RIP leon .

    • @NikolaAvramov
      @NikolaAvramov 4 года назад +7

      CIA isn't history.
      And, Stalin's quote: "After I die, they will throw manure over my grave. But the winds of history will blow it all away."

    • @e.s.g.5997
      @e.s.g.5997 3 года назад +6

      @@NikolaAvramov Stalin did many bad things but also did many great things. History could be completly different without him, in a bad way. Many people are just so narrowminded and filled with their own wicked ignorant personalities that they don't wanna see beyond their own long nose.

    • @NikolaAvramov
      @NikolaAvramov 3 года назад +5

      @@e.s.g.5997 Sure that is a common affliction due to so much disinformation and professional liars repeating mantras.
      Lots of peer pressure as well.

    • @smorre4004
      @smorre4004 3 года назад

      @@e.s.g.5997 The world would have been a better place without Stalin. My capitalist country neighbored the USSR and we were better off because of capitalism. Whereas tens of millions died under communism.

  • @nunyabiznezz6038
    @nunyabiznezz6038 3 года назад +3

    Spitting facts

  • @tiendaweii
    @tiendaweii 9 месяцев назад +1

    I've been wondering why it's so rare to hear China called fascist. Extreme nationalism, holy cults of personality around their perfect leaders, deep rallying of the masses, maintaining old gender inequalities, heavy emphasis on symbols, a general worship of the state as the highest religion, etc. Based on this talk, two things come to mind. The clips I've seen of thunderous applause for Chinese leaders show them not joining in the applause, similar to European fascists. However, the part about a trial in which confessions were elicited from a perspective of 'universal reason' sounds similar to the sorts of 'interrogations' and 'show trials' in Chinese history - the sorts that didn't have a place in European fascism. Is that the only difference we can offer, save that fascist states don't usually fight each other and during WWII, China suffered at the hands of Japanese fascism?

    • @mykolokolo
      @mykolokolo 9 месяцев назад +1

      china in the outset of WW2 was neither communist or fascists- some say democratic but that also isn’t quite accurate as Shek was essentially a dictator. China was in a state of essentially civil war during WW2 and Japan took advantage of their long hated neighbors

  • @dimvw484
    @dimvw484 4 года назад +1

    guess i'll get one of his books.

  • @bibibrin5035
    @bibibrin5035 4 года назад +8

    Brilliant mind! I could listen to him for hours. Great professor, too. And his nose is cute 😍

    • @CalebGooch23
      @CalebGooch23 3 года назад +1

      How does a brilliant mind end up giving excuses for totalitarian assholes?

  • @guntherhochleitner3177
    @guntherhochleitner3177 4 года назад +8

    he Just described how the Stalinist lie is so much more monstrous ..

    • @jmvm31
      @jmvm31 2 года назад

      It kills you but makes you feel ur part of it. Thads why many of Stalins victims died saying 'Long live Stalin'

  • @xiaoxionglin9759
    @xiaoxionglin9759 5 лет назад +30

    Zizek clearly emphasized it's Stalinism, not communism

    • @michaelherscheid9709
      @michaelherscheid9709 5 лет назад +8

      @William Baric No woosh just your bad joke...

    • @preciat816
      @preciat816 5 лет назад +6

      William Baric language evolves. The word bourgeoisie no longer has the same meaning. And I think it is pretty obvious in which context they are using the word here. I think the only dumb person is here

    • @akhilsankar
      @akhilsankar 5 лет назад

      Which most of this world are learned to read as communism skillfully and to assume all evil to it.

    • @preciat816
      @preciat816 5 лет назад +3

      William Baric “this was not sarcasm nor a joke, this was truth” I don’t think wooosh means what you think it means

  • @andystm
    @andystm 3 года назад

    I don't always agree with him but I love listening to him, and his twitches add a certain strange charm somehow XD

  • @wilhelmheinzerling5341
    @wilhelmheinzerling5341 4 года назад +18

    More like Stalinism vs Nazism

  • @MrLee192Gversion
    @MrLee192Gversion 5 лет назад +49

    From Wikipedia "In political and social sciences, communism(from Latin communis, "common, universal")[1][2] is the philosophical, social, political, and economic ideology and movement whose ultimate goal is the establishment of the communist society, which is a socioeconomic order structured upon the common ownership of the means of production and the absence of social classes, money,[3][4] and the state.[5][6]"
    That is the basic definition, a wonderful idea that should not be given up on. Soviet Union was based on a specific ideology mixed with the circumstances of its time, the countries geopolitics and materials available.
    Everytime people try to close down communism by citing USSR, Stalin, Gulag, collapse. They are performing an ideological attack to shut down any talk of Communism as an idea and do not give any nuance to the scenerio.
    It would be like me saying, how many more times does capitalism need to fail (recession, failure to remove all unemployment, contradictions with ecology of the planet) before people give up on it.
    "Capitalism equals George Bush, imperialist wars, economic collapse, austerity."
    "Capitalism equals Churchill, empire, colonialism, World wars."
    We can all do it. Difference is capitalism gets given nuance and dynamic discussion with a complete historical analysis when people discuss its failures and success.
    Communism, a broad concept, idea. Doesn't. It gets shut down with bad historicity in a linear succession of propagandist dogma.
    It's not healthy to any political debate. It's only helpful as a tool of anti-communists or anti-socialists.
    People need to start challenging it.

    • @LibertarianLeninistRants
      @LibertarianLeninistRants 5 лет назад +4

      @John Smith the best capitalist economies were planned economies though

    • @MrLee192Gversion
      @MrLee192Gversion 5 лет назад +13

      @@lordz00 yeah, just look at Poland now. A dive, full of far right extremists and half of its population keeps leaving to go to work in other countries because its done so well post communism in accepting capitalism.

    • @MrLee192Gversion
      @MrLee192Gversion 5 лет назад +9

      @Goyrl Gone Wild you call me naive whilst writing some half arsed completely incorrect attempt at telling me what marxism is. A. The point of my post was what the basic definition of Communism is. A very simple concept. Marxism is a specific doctrine but not the definition of Communism. Although his writings are very insightful.
      As for you using dictatorship of the proletariat. Again. You show you lack of understanding as to what he ment by that.

    • @televikkuntdaowuxing
      @televikkuntdaowuxing 5 лет назад +1

      Goyrl Gone Wild
      Your analysis are very delusional, really.
      I’m an anti-statist and totally opposed to socialist authoritarianism and totalitarianism throughout history, but you literally implied that in the “dictatorship of the proletariat” society is suddenly separated and sectarized with rich people in one side and the working class in the other? The difference between a fascist regime, where people are separated depending on their ethnicy, something they can’t change, and the dictatorship of the proletariat, where separation is by class, is that class is a personal choice, every individual can willingly choose wether they want to be part of the working class or the oppressors, which exploit the working class. That is the essence. It’s like the “Blue lives matter” fallacy opposed to the “Black lives matter” movement.
      Class is a choice. Choosing to follow an oppressive system is oppression.
      Nationality, ethnicy, isn’t.
      Also, nationalist exposure is chauvinism. Chauvinism is the first step towards fascism. Your countries are invented. Fighting for them is primitivist.
      Sincerely, you just showed how much more you need to learn about the systems that conduct power to individuals and vice-versa.

    • @anialiandr
      @anialiandr 5 лет назад

      "he common ownership of the means of production " -- Thanks and thats so STUPID. What means of production? Marx wrote his shh in 1848 and we think it was yesterday

  • @wyattperp3455
    @wyattperp3455 2 года назад +2

    Apparently you get free unlimited cocaine in his country but no tissue.

  • @danielmoore94
    @danielmoore94 3 года назад

    🙌

  • @zzzaaayyynnn
    @zzzaaayyynnn 5 лет назад +6

    I love Zizek, but why does he feel the need to explicate the power relations at play in communism versus fascism? They are so obviously different complex governmental and ideological systems that a need to compare the two is not obvious to me.

    • @pioterhejdysz868
      @pioterhejdysz868 5 лет назад

      Both very similar - German Nazism, Soviet "Red-ism"

    • @thewerepyreking
      @thewerepyreking 4 года назад +2

      Because his talks are never hardcore serious

    • @OleNesie
      @OleNesie 4 года назад +6

      I think it is important to try and describe a distinction because a large amount of people foolishly think they are one and the same

    • @zzzaaayyynnn
      @zzzaaayyynnn 4 года назад

      @@OleNesie good point...Zizek is a people's philosopher after all

    • @sircashew1097
      @sircashew1097 2 года назад

      They are both two very different types of evil, but comparing and contrasting the two is not only fascinating, but it also aids in the analysis and understanding of the two

  • @gherieg.1091
    @gherieg.1091 4 года назад +3

    Has he written a book ? If so, pleeeeease where can I find it ?!!
    I can't sit and listen to one more minute of this torture.

    • @blemmyes
      @blemmyes 4 года назад +5

      Dude's wrote over 70 books actually

  • @charleschong7362
    @charleschong7362 4 года назад

    Dang, no subtitles.

  • @MrRenardbleu
    @MrRenardbleu 4 года назад

    I wonder what does he thik about the anarchists that participated in the revolution that trotsky later killed in kronstadt

  • @tomrobbins5242
    @tomrobbins5242 5 лет назад +176

    Slurp slurp slurp communism. Slurp slurp slurp totalitarianism. Slurp slurp slurp.

    • @b1bbscraz3y
      @b1bbscraz3y 5 лет назад +5

      Marxist-communism and totalitarianism are diametrically opposed. one requires the existence of a state, the other inherently seeks to abolish the state altogether

    • @dribblesg2
      @dribblesg2 5 лет назад +5

      @@b1bbscraz3y That's what is claimed in marxist theory. We now know it was/is a stupidly naive assumption, if not an intentional lie. The amount of social engineering required for full socialism, necessitates a state apparatus that dwarfs all other types of government and suffocates like no other.
      So in practice they become the most totalitarian. And would you believe it!?.. they never seem to transition from socialist control to communist utopia. Fancy that.

    • @b1bbscraz3y
      @b1bbscraz3y 5 лет назад +2

      @@dribblesg2 actually, no it's not a lie. that's what Marx put in his ideology. he died in 1883. people who came after interpreted things their own way. if an ideology says to do a thing, and you do not do that thing, you are not following the ideology. if Christianity says "do not murder", and you murder, you are not following the ideology. if Christianity says to believe in Yahweh, and you do not believe in Yahweh, are you following the ideology? obviously not
      "So in practice they become the most totalitarian"
      >because they subvert what the ideology says. again, if Christianity says to believe Jesus existed and was the son of god, and you do not believe that, you are not following the ideology.
      and just with religion, Marxism has multiple schools of thought within it. when discussing Christianity, a person needs to be able to tell the difference between Catholicism, Protestantism, Baptism, Anglicanism, Lutheranism, Calvinism, Methodism, etc. if I am debating against a Christian person, and they tell me they are a Catholic, would it make sense for me to have all my arguments be against Protestantism? no.
      and conversely, the different schools within Marxism; there's Marxism, Leninism, Stalinism, Maoism, Trotskyism, etc. why? same reason there's different ones in Christianity. a Catholic won't follow all the same tenets of Christianity that a Protestant would. a Baptist won't follow all the same tenets of Christianity that a Lutheran or Calvinist would. and as follows, a Stalinist won't follow the same tenets of communism that a Marxist would. a Maoist won't follow the same tenets of communism that a Leninist might. because they are different. call them as they are, not as you wish they were. Stalin's Russia was Stalinist, a reinterpreted and subverted school of Marxism. Mao's China was Maoist, a reinterpreted and subverted school of Marxism.
      there has never been a communist country. USSR was not communist. China was not communist. as communism inherently includes "abolition of the state, abolition of classes, abolition of profit/money". and no country has had this
      these types of things matter in politics to differentiate different schools of thought. hence why there's a difference between things like classical liberalism versus different forms of liberalism. just as there are different forms of anarchism. Marxist-communism (as envisioned by Marx, and not followed in history) is anarcho-communism. there are schools of thought that say communism can only exist in anarchy, as it inherently involves abolishing the state
      Marx himself despised governments. he argued that the state will always act in the interest of the elite ruling class
      at the most, some of those countries could be called "socialist" to some degree. but even then it wouldn't be accurate, as "socialism" according to Marx, means social/worker control of the means of production. no country has ever had this either

    • @dribblesg2
      @dribblesg2 5 лет назад +2

      @@b1bbscraz3y
      1. You can't prove that Marx wasn't lying ie. knew too well that his communist utopia was a necessary pipe dream to seduce the working class into taking power. Maybe he just wanted to fuck over the bourgeoisie. But I'm happy to assume the best of him and simply go with naive.
      2. Unlike most anti-socialists, I do actually agree with you that the often used "true socialism hasn't been tried" is a legitimate argument. It's a very weak argument, but it is logical.
      3. But my argument is that these are the inevitable sociopolitical results when you try to implement 'full socialism'. The utopian dream is just that - a dream. There hasn't been 'true socialism/communism' because its a mirage. It will never happen. It fails to account for so many factors of human nature. And when you do add those human variables to Marxist theory, when you actually try to put into practice what Marx envisioned, you get red terrors, gulags, industrial scale murder, one class permanent and totalitarian governments, mass scarcity and starvation etc..
      Marxists want to argue that Marx envisioned the most perfect, equitable, secure, stable, satisfying society human beings were capable. In fact, he argued this society wasn't just possible, but inevitable. But somehow, this system that is so wonderful AND inherently natural to us, not only cannot be implemented properly, but when we try the results are utterly vile. Every time. How do you account for this?
      How is it that when we pursue capitalist modes which are so evil, we inadvertently produce so much good, and when we pursue socialism which is so beautiful, we inadvertently produce so much evil?

    • @prybarknives
      @prybarknives 5 лет назад

      @@b1bbscraz3y, oh really? And how prey tell does the marxist propose to enforce the required behaviours, without strong handed governmental organs?

  • @albedoshader
    @albedoshader 5 лет назад +5

    2:50
    This isn’t completely true.
    Let’s not ignore the show trials in Nazi Germany under Roland Freisler, Judge President of the People's Court (Präsident des Volksgerichtshofs), who was also one of the attendees of the Wannsee conference, back then in the function of a state secretary, one of the main architects of the Holocaust.
    Hitler even called Freisler “our Vyshinsky”, who was state prosecutor of the Soviet Union in the 1930’s.
    Hitler also called Freisler (who was a fervent national socialist) a Bolshevik, as Hitler always despised lawyers and judges. I guess also because Freisler joined the Bolshevists when he was a prisoner of war in Russia in WW1.
    Most of the time it’s not so clear cut.

    • @removies3653
      @removies3653 5 лет назад +1

      You're saying that you know history better than someone who taught in Princeton university? Oooookkkkeee

    • @albedoshader
      @albedoshader 5 лет назад +2

      ​@@removies3653
      Are you saying you didn’t read my comment?
      I’m saying that Freisler and the show trials under his direction existed in nazi Germany.
      Freisler was notorious for his hateful rants and constant screaming during the “trials” he presided:
      ruclips.net/video/D3qsImhAswo/видео.html

    • @GerBessa
      @GerBessa 5 лет назад +2

      @@albedoshader You kinda answered yourself. Freisler made those trials, not Hitler. Freisler brought that practice to Germany from Russia. Freisler was not a pure nazi, but a nazi with Bolshevik traces in his worldview.
      Also, fascists tend to steal practices, symbols and names from everybody else. Even their names.

    • @albedoshader
      @albedoshader 5 лет назад

      @@GerBessa
      It’s strange to hold Freisler alone accountable for the show trials, as he was the State Secretary of the Reich Ministry of Justice, and President of the People's Court under Hitler.
      He didn’t get these posts because he just decided to do the jobs. Also, he was an attendee of the Wannsee conference, which also was a very exclusive event. If Hitler or the regime in general didn’t condone Freisler, he would have never been able to do any of this.
      What he did was very much condoned and supported by the regime and did not happen in a vacuum.

  • @Alex_441
    @Alex_441 3 года назад

    Is this guy a writer?

  • @angrymanwithsillymoustasche
    @angrymanwithsillymoustasche 2 года назад

    Great

  • @remmykauffer8252
    @remmykauffer8252 5 лет назад +18

    "The son of my boss will be the boss of my son"

  • @bobbyblazes1
    @bobbyblazes1 5 лет назад +6

    Sniff sniff sniff. Where's the viva Columbia shirt?

  • @theinternet1424
    @theinternet1424 5 лет назад +2

    Doesn't this quite clearly show that essentially Hitler is a new perverse version of paganism and that Stalin is a new perverse version of Christianity? It reflects not only their behavior, but also what they were culturally interested in.

    • @Auguss96
      @Auguss96 5 лет назад

      YES SIR. Right on the spot. Communism is exactly a perversion of Christianity replacing moral agency and freedom with tiranny and fear. It substrascts the joy and compassion of sharing to add a coercive, terror-driven distribution of goods

    • @theinternet1424
      @theinternet1424 5 лет назад

      You gave what I consider an overly simple answer to an extremely complex question, and my usual (very Žižekian) response to such situations is a huge critical rant. Sorry if I bore you, but here it goes:
      Stalinism (roots of which are already present in Leninism, roots of both already being present in the Tsarist state system) is a perverted dystopian mode of communism, and it's not like Christianity hasn't had its own fair share of ways to replace moral agency and freedom with tyranny and fear, quite often justifying lying and violence in fighting against the "enemies of faith", which in this context is exactly the same as ideological enemies. Yes, 20th century communism was way more violent than 20th century Christianity, but the levels of violence in, say, 5th century AD, crusades or the period of counter-reformation ARE comparable, because those are the times when Christianity was constituting its own institutional monopolies and it violently crushed, not only non-Christians, but also the "wrong kind" of Christians in enormous quantities.
      Both Christians and communists should be very aware that people did extremely violent acts in order to enact their utopian visions, preserve their respective identities and determine what is the "true" Christianity / communism. And there is no better critic of such behavior from a deeply human perspective than Jesus himself. The main point of the Good Samaritan parable is not about being kind to strangers, it's about seeing kind individuals among foreigners, usual suspects and "enemies by default" as better friends and neighbors than unkind people "of your own kind". It's obvious from Jesus' wording that the main point is not about being the Samaritan, it's about being the beaten, bloody Jew who realizes what truly matters.
      As Solzhenitsyn said in Gulag Archipelago, criticizing not just communism, but also what is wrong with violent modes of all belief systems:
      “If only it were all so simple! If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?”
      That's a good historical and spiritual lesson for both communists AND Christians, and I agree that Christianity has a much better tradition of saying such moral truths. However, thinking that there is (or ever will be) a belief system which finally resolves that question absolutely defeats the purpose of that brilliant quote.
      On the other, more practical and secular side of things: before, during and after the period of Christian cultural supremacy, the state has been CONSTANTLY used to distribute goods, mostly upwardly. Despite the radical anti-slavery message of Jesus, it was only in the 16th century that Catholics banned, not slavery in general, but just sale of Christian slaves to non-Christians, and even that didn't work everywhere immediately. A couple of centuries later, many countries started banning slavery by Law.
      Just like capitalists today, many slave owners claimed that manumission should be an act of charity, although there is nothing charitable in simply abolishing grave injustice. Communism should not replace compassionate and free acts of charity, but should replace INJUSTICES that are already present in the systems of distribution (economic and/or political) with justice, while still allowing charity to occur - knowing very well that communism is about social justice, NOT charity. It should be about giving people what is already theirs and taking away means to control people from those who exploit others en masse - not about forcing people to share anything that isn't already in some way shared (For instance, we all share obligations towards the state, all workers and managers share obligations towards their workplaces, the question is which obligations make sense for all involved, or at the very least, for the majority).
      Communism is about applying lessons from the "kingdom of heaven" to the "kingdoms of earth", while also maintaining that communism is essentially about the kingdom of earth. It should NEVER be about fooling yourself that you can make kingdoms of earth into the kingdom of heaven. It should only "Render unto Caesar", but why not improve our legal and economic systems with lessons from "Rendering unto God", i.e. from our intuitions about higher principles at hand? If you want to always and at all costs strictly separate what is Caesar's and what is God's, then you should advocate legalizing slavery and allow it to be just a matter of charity. If you do not want to legalize slavery, then you should acknowledge that Law may be used to bring about basic levels of equality, a process which classical liberalism started, but I believe only communism can improve further.
      Christianity is in my opinion (and I don't think that Žižek would massively disagree) greatest school of moral thought (of course, IF APPLIED PROPERLY, but that's always a caveat for morality, as Hegel often reminds us). Communism is inherently more limited when it comes to universal morality, but is simply better at criticizing the "modern Caesar", i.e. modern secular systems, than Christianity.
      Lenin and Marx have more to learn from Jesus, Dostoevsky and Chesterton than the other way around, but ordinary modern humans still have a lot they need to learn from Lenin and Marx when it comes to our shared secular values.

    • @eisenhaus3353
      @eisenhaus3353 Год назад

      ​@@theinternet1424 this responds is classic average zizekian analysis

  • @astroblaster56
    @astroblaster56 3 года назад +2

    Why is Stalins hand looking like a birth defect in the thumbnail?

  • @markparkinson6947
    @markparkinson6947 3 года назад +3

    Zizek always acts very angry, even when he is not.

  • @barthwalabhishek
    @barthwalabhishek 4 года назад +3

    I'm in love with the coco

  • @seerancinemaintro2872
    @seerancinemaintro2872 5 лет назад

    You heard of Jayalalitha? Ministers salute when she goes in Helicopter

  • @ljslo....
    @ljslo.... 2 года назад

    👑

  • @ianbirchfield5124
    @ianbirchfield5124 5 лет назад +11

    i think Peterson and Zizek are both interesting to listen to. am i crazy?

    • @MrMorelloJr
      @MrMorelloJr 5 лет назад +5

      nah you're just centrist.

    • @ianbirchfield5124
      @ianbirchfield5124 5 лет назад +2

      i don't feel like a centrist. i feel mostly right-wing.

    • @ianbirchfield5124
      @ianbirchfield5124 5 лет назад +4

      i don't feel like a centrist. i'm mostly right-wing. i just like different perspectives.

    • @MiguelThinks
      @MiguelThinks 5 лет назад +1

      Same. And that's the beauty of not having to associate with a camp, or at least being open minded. If you look at the critics who are openly disgusted of either Peterson and Zizek, its typically people who dont really know their work that well.

    • @AChillPirate
      @AChillPirate 5 лет назад +2

      No, you're probably too gullible to refute many of their ignorant points.

  • @lamagiedumagicien3550
    @lamagiedumagicien3550 5 лет назад +9

    there is none
    comment made by the nazbol gang

    • @eckharttrolle4768
      @eckharttrolle4768 5 лет назад +1

      🙋🏼‍♂️

    • @moldbawld1430
      @moldbawld1430 4 года назад

      its not a phase mom!!!

    • @thenablade858
      @thenablade858 3 месяца назад

      Both Hitler and Stalin would have thought those ‘people’ were insane.

  • @mirzapa
    @mirzapa 4 года назад +1

    The drip

  • @danutmh
    @danutmh 3 года назад +2

    one won the war and the other lost, thats about it.

  • @-The-Darkside
    @-The-Darkside 2 года назад +3

    This guy is clearly levels above most current thinkers.
    A lot of the west will struggle with his delivery, not me though

  • @milascave2
    @milascave2 5 лет назад +6

    I have a little more respect for Zizek now because he said some stuff critical of Stalin. I had thought that he was a Stalinist.

    • @removies3653
      @removies3653 5 лет назад +3

      And even if he was?

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 5 лет назад

      @@removies3653 I would have little to no respect for his ideas if he were a Stalinist.

    • @creativeusername6453
      @creativeusername6453 5 лет назад

      You'd be hard-pressed to find a legitimate stalinist these days no matter how far left you go

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 5 лет назад

      @@creativeusername6453 They are still around. I know a bunch of them. And I know lots of Maoists who think that Stalin was pretty cool. Once you really find out what the All People's Congress and the Revolutionary Communist Party really believe, well, it's in there. Some of these folks are my friends, sort of, but I can't agree with their basic ideology, so we can only work together politically (if at all) to the extent that we are against some of the same things. Not on the basis of us being FOR the same things. Believe me, I've have been around the left for a while, and know who everybody is.

    • @creativeusername6453
      @creativeusername6453 5 лет назад +2

      @@milascave2 at the end of the day I lean way more anarchist than anything so they all sound like unjustified hierarchal ass holes to me but whatever. Better a tankie than an ancap I suppose

  • @marcpadilla1094
    @marcpadilla1094 3 года назад +2

    Yackoff Smirnoff made a good point. Communism pretends to be inclusive where as Nazism is unabashedly exclusive. Different approaches to the same end.

    • @mikeyytu9283
      @mikeyytu9283 3 года назад

      ok buddy

    • @marcpadilla1094
      @marcpadilla1094 3 года назад

      @@mikeyytu9283 Is Good faith with minions part of the Dialectic scheme. Is the end game, synthesis, a complimentary blend of both left and right or just two left feet. A clumsy knock off or a repeat of the old Monarchs, inbred blue bloods.

  • @xagatal
    @xagatal 2 года назад +1

    When you roll 3 comeliness and 18 charisma.