Not exact matches
On the surface, China
identifies itself as a
socialist country, with Marxism enshrined in both the party's and the
state's constitutions.
These days I am amused rather than offended when I come under attack from some Conservative backwoodsmen — one recently
identified me as a member of the
Socialist Workers Party: that, for advocating policies which would be considered mainstream in successful Scandinavian countries or Germany or France or even, in that socialist paradise, the Unite
Socialist Workers Party: that, for advocating policies which would be considered mainstream in successful Scandinavian countries or Germany or France or even, in that
socialist paradise, the Unite
socialist paradise, the United
States.
Labour Party minister Peter Hain [219] has written in support of libertarian socialism,
identifying an axis involving a «bottom - up vision of socialism, with anarchists at the revolutionary end and democratic
socialists [such as himself] at its reformist end» as opposed to the axis of
state socialism with Marxist — Leninists at the revolutionary end and social democrats at the reformist end.
Calling this thing the «People's» Climate March is somewhat disturbing as things that are called the «People's» Thing have a tendency to be associated with totalitarian
socialist states, although it does help
identify it as unabashedly left wing.