November 26, 2013

Sic


Siehe auch:
"(...) the thought and action of Che Guevara keeps alive a libertarian stand within Cuban communism. Che Guevara has been hailed as the 'new Bakunin'. He certainly shared the anarchist confidence in the revolutionary potential of the peasantry and sought to create a co-operative society of workers and peasants in which work is transformed into 'meaningful play'. He was very critical of any bureaucracy which checked individual initiative. (...) Although Guevara was unable to overcome his admiration for strong leaders, the early years of the Cuban Revolution, when his influence was at its height, proved the most creative and original phase. Since his death in 1967, his legacy has not been forgotten and libertarian socialists still exist in Cuba who call for direct democracy and self-management."

Gelesen bei Peter Marshall, Demanding the Impossible. A history of Anarchism, erweitere Ausgabe 2008 (1), S.517-518. Sam Dolgoff, der im gleichen Kapitel zitiert wird, dürfte sich im Grabe umdrehen!
Eine etwas gelungere Annäherung an Sankt Che aus anarchistischer Sicht findet man hier: http://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/larry-gambone-saint-che-the-truth-behind-the-legend-of-the-heroic-guerilla-ernesto-che-guevara

Übrigens wird laut Eigenwerbung des Autors Noam Chomsky zu diesem Buch mit folgenden Worten zitiert: ""Demanding the Impossible is the book I always recommend when asked - as I often am - for something on the history and ideas of anarchism."...

(1) Die Erstauflage stammt von 1992. In der mir vorliegenden Ausgabe sind übrigens alle von Bryan Caplan aufgelisteten faktischen Fehler im Kapitel zu den "Rechtslibertären" stillschweigend (und ohne Danksagung an Caplan) beseitigt worden.

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