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Revision as of 16:11, 17 January 2002 by Slrubenstein (talk | contribs) (Fixed vandalization of article)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)The term communism refers to various systems in which property, especially the means of production, is owned collectively. Used with a capital letter, Communism is the governing principles and practice of countries such as the Soviet Union which applied Marx's ideas in politics, economics and ideology at the national level. In Marxism, communism (lower case) is the final historical stage of society after capitalism has been overthrown socialism withers away.
Communism in Goverment
The dominant form of communism today is based on Marxism and sometimes called Marxism-Leninism, a theory of history in terms of class relations based on a political and economic philosophy derived from the teachings of Karl Marx. Various revolutionaries in the twentieth century have contributed to Marxist theory, especially Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, and Mao Zedong. In the twentieth century, a number of countries attempted to put Marx's ideas into practice, especially in the Soviet Union and the Peoples Republic of China; at various times they have had to allow or even encourage certain forms of private-property.
Communism claims that capitalist systems exist through the
exploitation of one class by another and argues that this
system is destined to be replaced by a more classless socialist
system. However, critics have often claimed that as practiced in nations such as the former Soviet Union it created a new division of power (see nomenklatura).
The term is also used to refer to historical instances of totalitarian socialism (as distinct from democratic socialism). Regimes
described as communistic have, according to most Western observers,
generally been despotic and extremely abusive of human rights. Examples
are the Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China and Cuba.
In Marxist theory, communism is the final stage of social
development, coming after socialism. Marx specified that the workers would rise up to destroy capitalism and replace it with socialism, but he did not explain how socialism would transform into capitalism, which anti-communists consider a serious theoretical flaw.
In theory, prior to this final stage, the state holds the property on behalf of its citizens.
In practice, communist ideology is widely regarded as failing to live up to its stated ideals, with members and especially high-ranking officials constituting a new privileged class (see Nomenklatura).
The term "communism" and ideology has a history that predates Marx, however, closely associated with (socialist) anarchism.
According to Marxist theory, the state will eventually wither away because the class divisions that underlie the existence of the state will have disappeared.
Prior to this final stage, however, state ownership is supposed to exist during a what is ostensibly a transitional period that Marxist theory describes as socialist.
No Marxist government actually claimed to have instituted a communist society; instead, the official doctrines of these regimes held that their governments were only transitional socialist regimes.
There are various kinds of communism or socialism; some kinds of communism
are varieties of ideology, while others are terms for practices or
styles of governance. Marxism holds--among other things--that human
history has had and will have a developmental structure, alternating between
slow development of technology/economy (and the according
philosophy/religion) and a rapidly changing short period of
technology/economy.
The short-lived Paris Commune of 1871, a brief revolutionary government after the defeat of France in the Franco-Prussian War, was an early attempt at instituting a socialist regime, and Marx wrote approvingly of it. Bolshevism and Menchevism were also two early forms of communism-in-practice, advocated by Russian (mainly ex-patriate) communists in the late 19th and early 20th century; the Mencheviks favored
peaceful change, while Bolsheviks called for, and eventually organised, a revolution, putting power in the hands of the soviets of workers and peasants.
Leninism is the name given to Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin's
system of thought, which emphasises a top-down party structure known as democratic centralism, and the need to spread the revolution to other countries, and to exclude any compromise with the bourgeoisie.
Lenin's rule
gave way to Joseph Stalin's and Stalin's style of communist dictatorship
is known as Stalinism; Stalin's government was violently repressive of
individual liberties and of political dissidents and featured more [[five-year
plans]] as well as massive industrialization, under the un-Marxist pretext of constructing "socialism in one country". Leon Trotsky opposed the doctrine of "socialism in one country", and criticized Stalin's regime as being a "bureacratically deformed" worker's state. Followers of Trotsky are known as Trotskyists.
The practices of Mao Tse Tung are known as Maoism.
See also:
Opposing view: classical liberalism.
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