Communism

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Communism or also known as International Socialism or Marxism is an ideology that claims to establish a classless, stateless social organization based on common ownership of the means of production. Communist practices include holding of land in common, cooperative living and working arrangements and equitable sharing of economic goods. It's teleology is about establishing One World Government. In reality communism is political weapon used against existing political establishments, nations, religions and culture, representing popular cultural and social traditions. The founding father of communism was the Jew Karl Marx who developed the political theory in his works Das Kapital and The Communist Manifesto, transforming the idealistic socialistic theories of the past into hard core materialistic, therefore judaistic terror thinking.

As transmogrified into Marxism-Leninism by the Karl Marx and put into practice by Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong, Fidel Castro and other leaders. Communism (sometimes capitalized) is a totalitarian political movement, a pseudo-social mania, which dominated much of the history of the 20th century with the clear support of the Jewish dominated USA and Great Britain. It is estimated by critics of Marxism-Leninism that deaths during the 20th century due to Communist revolutions, induced famines, and failed social and economic experimentation number about 100 million in addition to tens of millions of man-years spent in the concentration camps of the Soviet Gulag.

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[edit] Communist theory

In theory, communism is a classless society in which all property is owned by the community as a whole and where all people enjoy equal social and economic status. As a political movement, Communism, working through the agency of a highly centralized and disciplined political party, the "vanguard of the proletariat", promised to overthrow capitalism through a workers' revolution and redistribute the wealth into the hands of the proletariat, i.e. working class. Their program was based on pseudoscientific economic doctrines based on an eccentric philosophical base, dialectical materialism, derived from but "turning on its head" the dialectics of Hegel.

In practical application, Communism has not worked out well except where the communist country had territory to conquer and expand into, as the USSR did. While in geographically small countries, like Cuba, the ideology has lasted for some while. Communism theoretically proposes that if the individual will work for the country, both the individual and the country will succeed. This may be, but in large groups, this is not how people think. People think of their own well being first, then the well being of their family and friends, and then the well being of their country (when their country is large). This is one of failure points of communism, which doesn't recognize how people think in the daily, work-a-day world. This manifested in the USSR as a large portion of the population, policing the rest of the population. Stated briefly, perhaps 15% of the population, into which almost all Jews belonged, and very few non-Jews, was policing the remaininng 85%. The 85% which were productive citizens were supporting their own production and lives, and additionally, supporting those who policed them. These factors led to the USSR failing by becoming bankrupt.

One of the major planks of Marxism is a deracination ideology which calls for the elimination out of the minds of people that there is such a thing as race. It has no morphed into Cultural Marxism.

[edit] Communist Countries and Governments

Communism is sometimes also used to mean, particularly in capitalist nations, a totalitarian Marxist-Leninist dictatorship run by the Communist Party where central planning is employed as a means of production and distribution. The following is a list of countries that currently have self-proclaimed socialist republics or communist states:

The following is an alphabetical list of former countries that have had forcedly self-proclaimed socialist republics, or communist states, but no longer exist or are no longer under such regimes:

Quite a few other countries not listed above (Soviet republics) have been more or less constrained to become socialist republics due to international circumstances, while some of the countries listed above probably wouldn't have been so eager to become socialist, had the international circumstances been different.

[edit] The crimes of Communism

According to Stéphane Courtois, writing in the introduction to The Black Book of Communism, using a rather liberal definition of crime, approximately 100 million deaths have resulted from the crimes of Communism over its 85 year history. He includes 20 million deaths in the Soviet Union including executions of hostages and prisoners without trial and killing of hundreds of thousands of rebellious workers and peasants during the period of 1918 to 1922; the famine of 1922 five million deaths (chiefly in Ukraine); the extermination and deportation of the Don Cossacks 1920; killing of 100s of thousands in concentration camps, 1918 to 1930; liquidation of 690,00 during the Great Purge; deportation of 2 million kulaks 1930-1932; deaths of 4 million Ukrainians and 2 million others during the induced famine of 1932-1933; deportation of hundreds of thousands of Poles, Ukrainians, Balts, Moldovans and Bessarabians 1939-1941 and 1944-1945; deportation of the Volga Germans, 1941; deportation of the Crimean Tatars 1943; deportation of the Chechens 1944; and deportation of the Ingush 1944. He also includes 65 million deaths in the People's Republic of China, many in the famine associated with the Great Leap Forward; 1 million in Vietnam; 2 million in Cambodia, one fourth of the population; 1.2 million in Tito's Yugoslavia; 1 million elsewhere in Eastern Europe; 150,000 in Latin America; 1.7 million in Africa; 1.5 million in Afganistan; and 10,000 by Communist parties not in power and the international Communist movement (Page 4 to 10, Black Book of Communism ISBN 0674076087).

[edit] Scientific Socialism

The Jew Marx, writing in the nineteenth century, viewed his economic and political work as science, a view which continues to be expressed to the present by Marxist-Leninists. Given the general failure of Marxist-Leninist practioners to adequately gather data and analyze it in good faith scientific socialism is generally regarded as a psuedoscience. The possibility exists for genuine scientific study of Marxism, its failures and successes; but except in the dying years of the Soviet Union, for example, in the work of Tatyana Zaslavskaya, is seldom seen.

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