Lets explore this idea of the Autobots as proletariat revolutionists.
Pulling modern parallels, 1984 was an intense time for our Bolshie Bots. IRA bombing, Chemical weapons, USSR boycotts Olympics, political unrest in India, crack epidemic, Palestinian hijackings, US trade deficits, homeless vets, AIDS. We didn’t start the fire, but it certainly wasn’t dying down when Transformers debuted.
After the third Cybertronian war the Decepticons do own the means of production, leveraging the labor class’ skills and hard work for their own personal gain. Yet this is not as straight forward as the Russian Revolution of 1917. Autobots were not oppressed by the education, and wealth of a bourgeoisie Decepticon class, it was through blatant violence and Tyranny. To put a model on Decepticon governing policies and principals, it has been brought to my attention that a Shogunate system overlays nicely. Samurai philosophy has often been inspirational literature of the aggressive CEO.
If not the oppressive elite of late 19th century capitalism, could the Decepticons represent the malevolent nature of the modern mega-corporation of the late 20th century?
Transformers G1 was an American show, and at the forefront of American foreign political concern was The Cold War. Both sides of the superpowers standoff anticipated a battlefield of technology, and their modern war-machines became inspiring symbols for each nation. Starscream and his seekers transformed into F-15 Eagles, still today an engineering marvel.
Where did that massive stockpile of American military hardware go anyway?
The Mig 29 and SU 27 are both kickass jets as well, but clearly the Depticons are sporting American technology. Being the bad guys of the show, Decepticons can't possibly represent the American people, but of the modern aggressive corporations that flourished under Reaganomics.
As small business markets being dominated, and the government bent to the will of the military industrial complex, do the Autobots rekindle Bolshevik theory.
It seems the transformers struggle parallels American domestic issues. Was Transformers ever about the superpower stand-off of the Time? With historical perspective The Cold War officially ended in 91, but the stand-off really was thawed by the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty of 1987. The USSR stirred the motivation of reform from within, regardless of United States military escalation. By 84 containment was working, sort of. Today we still have Taiwan and South Korea.The leader of the Autobots is a red, white, and blue 18-wheeler; easily an American symbol as well.
Fright trucking is the backbone of American and NAFTA economies; transporting billions of tons of freight across all of North America every year. An 18-wheeler is also the means of blue collar entrepreneurship. Trucks being within price range and services always in demand; our red, white, and blue "Chief Optimist" can represents the spirit of the common working class. With the Megacorperation buying and extorting the entire market, small business is reduced to wage slavery. In this light the Autobots become a skilled labor union, fighting to maintain the middle class heart of America.

This era of desperation and uncertainty was laid on the blue collar class and it is from this we get the creation of the Autobots.
With America in the wake of the Go Go 60s' and the Me Decade 70s', the Autobots fight for the right to work. A return to progress by the sweat from your brow, they fight for fair wages for fair labor, and with every episodes victory shows the indomitable will of the American workforce.
"Till all are one" showed up in the 86 movie, and does not capture their motivations. Blame the writers who also brought you "ba weep gra na weep ninny bom" as the universal greeting.

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