Valgslandian Socialism
3 min
valgslandian socialism is a distinct socialist framework developed by emmerich hegel, rooted in but deliberately divergent from leon "malenyev" chavatangakwunua's malenyevism where orthodox malenyevism concentrates revolutionary authority in a vanguard party of the proletariat, valgslandian socialism rejects single party centralism in favor of a decentralized structure built on labor union federations and layered people's assemblies its theoretical foundation holds that the socialist state must progressively give way to a federal, economic organization of society; one in which decisions flow upward from workers and local councils rather than downward from a central committee in practice, this vision has been partially realized through a system of dual stream governance the political stream decides ideological direction and foreign policy, while the economic stream decides production and allocation neither stream holds supremacy, and major policy only proceeds when both streams synthesize a common position through the people's congress, making political legitimacy and material capacity co equal foundations of government the people's congress is a bicameral legislature filled through layered delegation rather than direct national elections the assembly of the people, the political chamber, is formed by delegates elected upward from district people's assemblies to regional people's assemblies and then to the national level, where factional majorities shape ideological direction the council of regions, the economic chamber, is formed by delegates elected upward from workers' councils and enterprise union committees to district syndicate councils and regional economic councils, where representatives primarily argue sectoral and regional needs rather than ideology this economic stream is rooted in workplace authority workers' councils govern enterprises, elect management, approve plans, and can remove directors, while union committees send representation proportional to workforce size economic planning is drafted by the council of regional economic coordination (crec) and only takes effect after approval by both chambers once approved, the plan moves downward as targets and allocations crec sets national benchmarks, regions distribute assignments, districts coordinate labor and inputs through syndicates, and enterprises execute under workers' oversight the system is designed to make plans implementable, with production interests able to veto unrealistic quotas as effectively as political majorities can block policies that violate ideological commitments the people's party remains the dominant political vehicle, but it functions as a broad coalition rather than a vanguard factions compete openly within it, including the democratic left, orthodox continuists, productivists, agrarian socialists, anarcho syndicalists, and the hegelian center valgslandian socialism formally aspires to culminate in a fully plural multi party regime, but this transition has not yet been achieved; competition has largely remained internal, as factional splintering and rivalry have made durable external party formation difficult the hegelian center has become the prevailing status quo force and frequent broker between wings and between chambers, consolidating reforms and mediating disputes that commonly turn on independence versus alliance, local surplus retention versus redistribution, and sectoral demands versus national targets many revisionist hegelian centrists claim that valgslandian socialism cannot exist in its full form without transforming the factions of the pp into separate parties, and that it therefore exists only in a partial state it is rumored that chancellor hegel committed to reforms to convert these factions into independent parties by 1965