I'm going to make this as concise as I possibly can. Today Communism (and Socialism) is a demagogical word (a word of prejudice). It has become a curse word which has nothing to do with it's original meaning. Capitalist societies, like the United States, have, through propaganda, convinced people that the Soviet Union was a Communist society. The Soviet Union itself used propaganda to convince people that it was a Communist society. This view is false. Capitalist societies persist to ruin the word "Communism" itself in order to convince the masses that Communism is harmful (as the Soviet Union undoubtedly was). The Soviet Union did so for entirely different reasons, it called itself Communist in order to gain support because in the early 20th century Communism was not a dirty word and was actually seen as morally desirable. Communism began as a political party in the 19th century and the main literature that defined it was written mostly by Karl Marx in collaboration with Friedrich Engels in a book called the "The Communist Manifesto." One of the main themes of The Manifesto is that of the proletarian revolution where the proletariat (the majority, the working class, those who sell their labour) overthrow the bourgeoise (the upper class, those who rent people for their labour) and in it's stead establish a state where the workers control their own production, where they do not sell the labour but in fact control the means of production and all the benefits of their labour. This is called a socialist state, or a "dictatorship of the proletariat". This state resolves the class imbalance inherent in past societies, leading to true equality and in turn true democracy, a democracy where the masses are actually educated and are involved in immediate decision making, not just one decision every four years. This would then, according to The Manifesto, become a stateless and classless society also known as a Communist Society. What actually happened in Russia was that in 1917 the Bolsheviks (the Communist party) led a revolution ("The October Revolution"). The revolution was a success and the Bolsheviks seized control of Russia. However, the actual revolution of the proletariat that it claimed to be was betrayed and the revolution, or rather coup d'état, simply led to the Bolsheviks becoming the new ruling class, becoming more and more authoritarian and corrupt until it took the form that it is remembered for, the totalitarian state of Stalin. This was acknowledged by the real Marxists, the real Communists, such as Antonie Pannekoek, who knew the revolution was betrayed. George Orwell was very aware of the danger that the leaders of the revolution would betray it and establish their own power (his book "Animal Farm" is a brilliant allegory for what happened in Russia). George Orwell also knew the danger of language to control the method of debate. He knew that people could use ambiguously defined words to make their arguments seem valid. "Newspeak" in his book "1984" represents the ultimate danger of this. Communism has become such a word, a word that in these days right-wing speakers (like those you hear on Fox News) use to inspire hatred and justify their arguments. Communism is not the Soviet Union, the Soviet Union is not Communism. Any society which has a state is not a Communist society. Any society where the workers do not control the means of production is not Socialist. Listen to Chomsky, he can perhaps illuminate more on what I have said: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4Tq4VE8eHQ&feature=related and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQsceZ9skQI&feature=related
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