Engels' was one of the best.
No way. Lenin actually made male pattern baldness look good.
Engels' was one of the best.
I think the USSR is used as a convenient example of communism used by people who are against it, as lots of bad stuff happened and it ultimately failed, but was it really communism?
I suppose what i'm saying is, i wouldn't say Marxism and Communism are different, just because Marxism is different to Communism in the USSR, as i don't think what happened there was Communism. I don't know enough about China or Korea to comment on them so they may prove otherwise.
The important point is that the communism we've seen implemented in our lifetimes (USSR, China, Vietnam, North Korea, Cuba and a few others), and the philosophy of Marx are not just different, but almost exact opposites. Like Redshield said, if you want to keep the term "Communism" to describe Marxist thought then that means we have to stop calling Stalin, Lenin, Mao etc communists.it is important to know that the original thoughts of Marx and Engels were indeed the absolute opposite of Stalinism, Maoism etc. The fact that one can create a system and label it “Communism” does not make it so, anymore than North Korea is a “Democracy” or a “Republic”. Perhaps one can label it “Socialism” but this term is by itself ambiguous and does not necessarily equate to Marxism.
Well we'll do that then, as that would be more accurate!I think that's the point though. The reason we refer to Marx's ideas as Marxist, rather than Communist, is because those that took the Communist label, changed it's meaning by instituting an overbearing, restrictive, controlling State - the exact opposite of what Marx's communism called for.
If that had never happened, I don't think we would have a need for the word "Marxist". We use that word to differentiate the communism codified by Marx and Engels, from the "communism" put into practice by Lenin (and especially Stalin, Mao, etc).
Again, that's the point - but maybe it's semantics. I like the way it was summed up on ADivisionByZero:
The important point is that the communism we've seen implemented in our lifetimes (USSR, China, Vietnam, North Korea, Cuba and a few others), and the philosophy of Marx are not just different, but almost exact opposites. Like Redshield said, if you want to keep the term "Communism" to describe Marxist thought then that means we have to stop calling Stalin, Lenin, Mao etc communists.
That's all.
Also, if Marxism is not Communism, why is it in the title of his Manifesto?
I sympathize with the idea that we shouldn't call Leninism Communism, but you certainly wouldn't call it Capitalism.
The article on ADivisionByZero basically says that the USSR wasn't communist, which is what i was saying.
I'd rather take the Communist Manifesto as the basis for the ideas of communism, than a right wing dictatorship.