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On April 1st, 2016, during its eighth international convention in Chicago, Illinois, the Platypus Affiliated Society hosted a panel discussion entitled, “What is socialism? International social democracy.” The panelists were Bernard Sampson, a member of the CPUSA and a precinct chair in Houston, Texas, for the Democratic Party; Karl Belin, a socialist worker, writer, and member of the Pittsburgh Socialist Organizing Committee; Jack Ross, a freelance editor and historian, and author of The Socialist Party of America: A Complete History (2015); and Chris Cutrone, president of the Platypus Affiliated Society.
Against the backdrop of the numerous discussions of the political agenda, appearance, and vocabulary of the candidates running in the American presidential election, there is almost no demand for one subject: What is the class nature and mass social base of each politician?
In April, the Platypus Affiliated Society held its Eighth Annual International Convention, based on the question, “What is socialism?” On April 2, 2016, Platypus held the convention’s closing plenary, “The Death of Social Democracy,” a discussion and Q&A moderated by Pam Nogales of Platypus, with the following panelists: Jason Schulman of the Democratic Socialists of America; Christoph Lichtenberg of the International Bolshevik Tendency; Brian Tokar, former director and current board member of the Institute for Social Ecology; and William Pelz, director of the Institute of Working Class History. What follows is an edited transcript of this event.
Bruce E. Parry The role of revolutionaries is to lead the working class. To follow the ruling class is not to lead but to tail after its leaders. Through this strategy, the CPUSA has discouraged and prevented the political independence of the working class since the 1980s.

"Es ist sicherlich nicht einfach, das globale Kapital zu begreifen und ihm entgegenzutreten – in jedem Fall ist es von entscheidender Bedeutung, einen Internationalismus wieder herzustellen und neu zu formulieren, der ohne jeden Dualismus auskommt. Wer am verdinglichten Dualismus des Kalten Krieges festhält, läuft Gefahr, eine Politik zu treiben, die vom Standpunkt menschlicher Emanzipation, vom Standpunkt des »Kommunismus« aus, bestenfalls fragwürdig wäre, wie viele Menschen sie auch ansprechen mag."

- Moishe Postone "Geschichte und Ohnmacht" (2005)

Eine moderierte Podiumsdiskussion über Fragen des globalen Kapitals, Imperialismus und Krieg, die Möglichkeiten für progressive politische Opposition und die Probleme und Aufgaben einer Linken in einer Welt nach dem "Kalten Krieg" und nach "9/11", wie sie durch die Invasion und Besetzung von Afghanistan und Irak und den militärischen Interventionen in Libyen, Jemen und Syrien gestellt wurden.

Mit:

Manfred Dahlmann (Ca ira, sans phrase)
Matthias (Gruppe Arbeitermacht, Liga fĂĽr die 5. Internationale)
Jan Schröder (Platypus)