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"Marx's ideas about government"

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Blogger Doug1943 said...

An excellent essay.

I think of Marx as the Isaac Newton of social analysis, not so much in the sense of being the originator of this mode of thinking, (although he was, despite his modestly assigning this honor to predecessors) but in the sense that his analysis is to social reality as classical Newtonian mechanics is to quantum electro-dynamics. (Not an original thought -- I think Che Guevara said something along these lines.)

Had he been given another fifty years to live, he might have changed/developed his ideas about politics and power, especially as he saw the great attraction that bourgeois democracy held -- and rightly so -- for the masses. He would have been helped by Engels, who was always aware that 'Marxism' could be interpreted too mechanically, all base and no superstructure, so to speak.

How he would have dealt with the economic failure of socialism is another matter. Marx on the 'socialist calculation problem' -- what an interesting encounter that would be!

February 21, 2019 at 5:00 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

Socialism was frustratingly crudely sketched out by Marx –– crudely because so much is missing; how should a Socialist State be built?, what institutions, what of pluralism, a choice of political parties? what if the proletariat barely exist, as in rural Russia or China, should the revolution still proceed? once the State has acquired all capital and all power, what is to stop those in control from simply exercising power in their own interests, regardless of their class-status, etc.

Socialism didn't just fail economically, but by some calculations caused the early deaths of 150 million people*.

Yet still we regard Marx's ideas as 'useful'??

Less the Isaac Newton, more the Vlad Dracul.

*https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_killings_under_communist_regimes

June 14, 2021 at 2:23 PM

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